Robert Cekuta | |
---|---|
United States Ambassador to Azerbaijan | |
Assumed office February 9, 2015 |
|
President |
Barack Obama Donald Trump |
Deputy | William R. Gill |
Preceded by | Richard Morningstar |
Personal details | |
Born | 1954 (age 62–63) New York City, United States |
Children | 3 |
Alma mater |
Georgetown University Thunderbird School of Global Management National War College |
Robert Francis Cekuta (born 1954) is a career Foreign Service Officer and the current U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan.
Cekuta attended Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, graduating in 1976 with a B.S. He then went to the Thunderbird School of Global Management, earning a master’s degree in international marketing in 1978. He later earned another master's degree in national security strategies from the National War College.
Cekuta joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1978 and his early assignments included Vienna, Austria; Baghdad, Iraq; Johannesburg, South Africa; and Sana’a, Yemen. He also directed a task force in Kosovo during the conflict there and served in the Bureau of Near East and South Asian Affairs. From 1996 to 1999, he was deputy chief of mission in the U.S. Embassy in Tirana, Albania.
Much of Cekuta’s career has focused on business and trade issues. In 1999, he was senior advisor to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative and in 2000 he was named director of Economic Policy Analysis and Public Diplomacy in the State Department. Cekuta in 2002 was named director of the Iraq Economic Group in the Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs. In 2002, he was also the bureau's special negotiator for biotechnology. Beginning in 2003, Cekuta was economic minister-counselor at the embassy in Berlin and in 2007 he was sent to Tokyo as the minister-counselor for economic affairs.
Cekuta came home in 2010, first as senior advisor for food security in the State Department and later that year as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Energy, Sanctions and Commodities. One of his more prominent roles involved working with the jewelry industry on compliance with regulations on conflict diamonds and gold.