Timothy M. Carney

Timothy M. Carney
45th United States Ambassador to Haiti
In office
January 14, 1998 – December 11, 1999
PresidentBill Clinton
Preceded byWilliam L. Swing
Succeeded byBrian D. Curran
14th United States Ambassador to Sudan
In office
June 27, 1995 – November 30, 1997
PresidentBill Clinton
Preceded byDonald K. Petterson
Succeeded byRobert E. Whitehead (acting)
Personal details
Born
Timothy Michael Carney

(1944-07-12) July 12, 1944 (age 79)
St. Joseph, Missouri
SpouseVictoria Butler
Children1 daughter
Alma materM.I.T., B.S. degree, 1966
Cornell University, 1975-76
Southeast Asian Studies
ProfessionCareer U.S. Diplomat
Democracy Projects (Haiti)
Consultant

Timothy Michael Carney (born July 12, 1944) is a retired American diplomat and consultant. Carney served as a career Foreign Service Officer for 32 years, with assignments that included Vietnam and Cambodia as well as Lesotho and South Africa before being appointed as ambassador to Sudan and later in Haiti. Carney served with a number of U.N. Peacekeeping Missions, and until recently led the Haiti Democracy Project, an initiative launched under the presidency of George W. Bush to build stronger institutional foundations for the country's long-term relationship with the United States.

In 2003, Carney was appointed to oversee America's reconstruction efforts in Iraq after the war that deposed Saddam Hussein. After a long diplomatic career, Carney served as Executive Vice President of the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund, a non-profit organization whose principal purpose was to assist Haiti's redevelopment in the aftermath of the January 2010 earthquake until the Fund rolled over operations in December 2012 to a domestic Haitian non-profit organization.

Carney's appointment to diplomatic postings in countries that had often difficult relations with the United States earned him both praise and criticism from observers for his hands-on diplomatic style. His strong views on Iraq's reconstruction efforts after the war in 2003 were in part responsible for a wholesale change in the Bush administration's strategy to stabilize the war-torn nation. He also advocated engagement with Sudan at a time when White House officials and the C.I.A. wanted the U.S. Embassy closed in Khartoum.


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