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branches ::: Diplomat

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object:Diplomat
class:archetype

see also :::

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now begins generated list of local instances, definitions, quotes, instances in chapters, wordnet info if available and instances among weblinks


OBJECT INSTANCES [0] - TOPICS - AUTHORS - BOOKS - CHAPTERS - CLASSES - SEE ALSO - SIMILAR TITLES

TOPICS
SEE ALSO


AUTH

BOOKS
Blazing_the_Trail_from_Infancy_to_Enlightenment
Kosmic_Consciousness
The_Use_and_Abuse_of_History

IN CHAPTERS TITLE

IN CHAPTERS CLASSNAME

IN CHAPTERS TEXT
01.03_-_The_Yoga_of_the_King_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Souls_Release
0_1961-11-05
0_1967-01-28
0_1967-03-07
0_1967-06-07
0_1967-08-26
0_1969-07-19
03.11_-_The_Language_Problem_and_India
07.03_-_The_Entry_into_the_Inner_Countries
1.05_-_Knowledge_by_Aquaintance_and_Knowledge_by_Description
1.22_-_Tabooed_Words
1929-07-28_-_Art_and_Yoga_-_Art_and_life_-_Music,_dance_-_World_of_Harmony
1956-12-19_-_Preconceived_mental_ideas_-_Process_of_creation_-_Destructive_power_of_bad_thoughts_-_To_be_perfectly_sincere
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Challenge_from_Beyond
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dream-Quest_of_Unknown_Kadath
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Electric_Executioner
2.18_-_January_1939
2.19_-_Feb-May_1939
2.21_-_1940
3.7.2.03_-_Mind_Nature_and_Law_of_Karma
Blazing_P2_-_Map_the_Stages_of_Conventional_Consciousness
Blazing_P3_-_Explore_the_Stages_of_Postconventional_Consciousness
Conversations_with_Sri_Aurobindo
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_1
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_2
The_Act_of_Creation_text
The_Dwellings_of_the_Philosophers

PRIMARY CLASS

archetype
SIMILAR TITLES
Diplomat

DEFINITIONS


TERMS STARTING WITH

diplomate ::: n. --> A diplomatist. ::: v. t. --> To invest with a title o/ privilege by diploma.

diplomatial ::: a. --> Diplomatic.

diplomatic ::: a. --> Alt. of Diplomatical ::: n. --> A minister, official agent, or envoy to a foreign court; a diplomatist.
The science of diplomas, or the art of deciphering ancient writings, and determining their age, authenticity, etc.;


diplomatical ::: a. --> Pertaining to diplomacy; relating to the foreign ministers at a court, who are called the diplomatic body.
Characterized by tact and shrewdness; dexterous; artful; as, diplomatic management.
Pertaining to diplomatics; paleographic.


diplomatically ::: adv. --> According to the rules of diplomacy; in the manner of a diplomatist; artfully.

diplomatism ::: n. --> Diplomacy.

diplomatist ::: n. --> A person employed in, or skilled in, diplomacy; a diplomat.

diplomat ::: n. --> Alt. of Diplomate

diplomat ::: one who is tactful and skilful in negotiating and managing delicate situations, handling people, etc. diplomatic.


TERMS ANYWHERE

accredit ::: v. t. --> To put or bring into credit; to invest with credit or authority; to sanction.
To send with letters credential, as an ambassador, envoy, or diplomatic agent; to authorize, as a messenger or delegate.
To believe; to credit; to put trust in.
To credit; to vouch for or consider (some one) as doing something, or (something) as belonging to some one.


ambassadors ::: 1. Diplomatic officials of the highest rank. 2. Authorized messengers or representatives.

Asoka. (P. Asoka; T. Mya ngan med; C. Ayu wang; J. Aiku o; K. Ayuk wang 阿育王) (c. 300-232 BCE; r. c. 268-232 BCE). Indian Mauryan emperor and celebrated patron of Buddhism; also known as DharmAsoka. Son of BindusAra and grandson of Candragupta, Asoka was the third king of the Mauryan dynasty. Asoka left numerous inscriptions recording his edicts and proclamations to the subjects of his realm. In these inscriptions, Asoka is referred to as DEVANAM PRIYAḤ, "beloved of the gods." These inscriptions comprise one of the earliest bodies of writing as yet deciphered from the Indian subcontinent. His edicts have been found inscribed on boulders, on stone pillars, and in caves and are widely distributed from northern Pakistan in the west, across the Gangetic plain to Bengal in the east, to near Chennai in South India. The inscriptions are ethical and religious in content, with some describing how Asoka turned to the DHARMA after subjugating the territory of Kalinga (in the coastal region of modern Andhra Pradesh) in a bloody war. In his own words, Asoka states that the bloodshed of that campaign caused him remorse and taught him that rule by dharma, or righteousness, is superior to rule by mere force of arms. While the Buddha, dharma, and SAMGHA are extolled and Buddhist texts are mentioned in the edicts, the dharma that Asoka promulgated was neither sectarian nor even specifically Buddhist, but a general code of administrative, public, and private ethics suitable for a multireligious and multiethnic polity. It is clear that Asoka saw this code of ethics as a diplomatic tool as well, in that he dispatched embassies to neighboring states in an effort to establish dharma as the basis for international relations. The edicts were not translated until the nineteenth century, however, and therefore played little role in the Buddhist view of Asoka, which derives instead from a variety of legends told about the emperor. The legend of Asoka is recounted in the Sanskrit DIVYAVADANA, in the PAli chronicles of Sri Lanka, DĪPAVAMSA and MAHAVAMSA, and in the PAli commentaries, particularly the SAMANTAPASADIKA. Particularly in PAli materials, Asoka is portrayed as a staunch sectarian and exclusive patron of the PAli tradition. The inscriptional evidence, as noted above, does not support that claim. In the MahAvaMsa, for example, Asoka is said to have been converted to THERAVADA Buddhism by the novice NIGRODHA, after which he purifies the Buddhist SAMGHA by purging it of non-TheravAda heretics. He then sponsors the convention of the third Buddhist council (SAMGĪTĪ; see COUNCIL, THIRD) under the presidency of MOGGALIPUTTATISSA, an entirely TheravAda affair. Recalling perhaps the historical Asoka's diplomatic missions, the legend recounts how, after the council, Moggaliputtatissa dispatched TheravAda missions, comprised of monks, to nine adjacent lands for the purpose of propagating the religion, including Asoka's son (MAHINDA) and daughter (SAnGHAMITTA) to Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka, where the legend appears to have originated, and in the TheravAda countries of Southeast Asia, the PAli account of King Asoka was adopted as one of the main paradigms of Buddhist kingship and models of ideal governance and proper saMgha-state relations. A different set of legends, which do not recount the conversion of Sri Lanka, appears in Sanskrit sources, most notably, the AsOKAVADANA.

Bayinnaung. (r. 1551-1581). Burmese king and third monarch of the Taungoo dynasty. Bayinnaung was the brilliant general and brother-in-law of King Tabinshwehti (r. 1531-1550), who first expanded the territory of the city-state Taungoo to create the Taungoo empire (1531-1752). Tabinshwehti sought to reunify the various kingdoms and petty states that had once been vassals to the first Burmese empire of Pagan (1044-1287). To this end, he followed a policy of conciliation toward vanquished peoples, especially the Mon, whose brand of reformed Sinhalese THERAVADA Buddhism he favored. Bayinnaung continued this ecumenical religious policy even while he aggressively extended the borders of his empire eastward through military campaigns launched in the name of the Buddha. In a series of campaigns, he subdued the Shan tribes, the Lao kingdom of Vientiane, and the Thai kingdoms of AYUTHAYA and Chiangmai, creating briefly Southeast Asia's largest polity. Throughout these territories, he built pagodas and distributed copies of PALI scriptures. In the Shan hills, he compelled the local warlords to abandon human sacrifice and convert to Buddhism, requiring them to provide material support to missionary monks dispatched from his capital. While officially promoting the reformed Buddhism of the Mon, Bayinnaung remained tolerant of local Buddhist custom and allowed independent monastic lineages to continue. He maintained close diplomatic relations with the Buddhist kingdom of Sri Lanka and offered munificent gifts to its palladium, the TOOTH RELIC at Kandy. In 1560, when the Portuguese captured the relic, Bayinnaung sought to ransom it for 300,000 ducats, only to have his emissaries witness its destruction in a public ceremony ordered by the archbishop of Goa. Legend says that the tooth miraculously escaped and divided itself into two, one of which was returned to Kandy, while the other was gifted to Bayinnaung, who enshrined it in the Mahazedi pagoda at his capital Pegu. The religious policies of Bayinnaung and his successors greatly influenced the character of Burmese Buddhism and society. Royal patronage of Buddhist scholarship coupled with the proliferation of village monastery schools fostered a common Buddhist identity among the populace that crossed ethnic boundaries and facilitated a degree of peasant literacy that was unusual in premodern societies.

Bunkyo hifuron. (文鏡秘府論). In Japanese, "A Mirror on Literature and a Treasury of Marvels Treatise"; a work on classical Chinese poetics and prosody, composed by the Japanese SHINGONSHu monk KuKAI, probably in the early ninth century. The work was intended to serve as a vade mecum on classical Chinese writing style and literary allusions for Japanese ranging from novice monks who needed to know how to parse Buddhist MANTRAs and DHARAnĪs to diplomats or scribes who had to compose elegant Chinese prose and verse. The treatise is titled a "mirror on literature" because it describes correct Chinese style and a "treasury of marvels" because it serves as a literary compendium and thesaurus. The text is significant not only because of its impact on the development of Japanese classical-Chinese writing, but also because its extensive extracts of original Chinese sources (most now lost) stand as a valuable resource for the study of Tang literature.

Bureau International des Poids et Mesures "body, standard" (BIPM) The standards body that ensures world-wide uniformity of measurements and their traceability to the {International System of Units} (SI). The BIPM is based in France and operates with the authority of the Convention of the Metre, a diplomatic treaty between fifty-one nations. It operates through a series of committees, whose members are the national metrology laboratories of the member states of the convention, and through its own laboratory work. The BIPM carries out measurement-related research. It takes part in, and organises, international comparisons of national measurement standards, and it carries out calibrations for member states. {BIPM Home (http://www.bipm.org/)}. (2014-07-08)

consideration ::: n. --> The act or process of considering; continuous careful thought; examination; contemplation; deliberation; attention.
Attentive respect; appreciative regard; -- used especially in diplomatic or stately correspondence.
Thoughtful or sympathetic regard or notice.
Claim to notice or regard; some degree of importance or consequence.
The result of delibration, or of attention and


Dga' ldan pho brang. (Ganden Podrang). In Tibetan, lit. "Palace of TUsITA," the name by which the central government of Tibet was known from the time of fifth DALAI LAMA's ascension to power in the seventeenth century until 1959. The Dga' ldan pho brang was originally the residence or estate of Dge 'dun rgya mtsho (retrospectively named the second Dalai Lama) in 'BRAS SPUNGS monastery. He was a learned and diplomatic figure who protected the interests of the fledgling DGE LUGS sect during a difficult period when its original patron, the Sne'u dong royal family, was in decline. The residence, originally called the Rdo khang sngon mo, was given to him by the Sne'u dong princes in 1518, when he was the unquestioned leader of the major emerging Dge lugs monasteries. From this point, the Dga' ldan pho brang became the seat of the Dalai Lamas. NGAG DBANG BLO BZANG RGYA MTSHO, the fifth Dalai Lama, enlisted the help of the Qoshot Mongols and their leader, Gushri Khan, to decisively crush the KARMA PA and his patron, the King of Gtsang. From this point, the Dga' ldan pho brang came to designate not the residence of the Dalai Lama but the seat of the Dalai Lama's rulership of substantial regions of Tibet, from which he collected taxes. By extension, the term Dga' ldan pho brang has come to mean the government of Tibet during the reign of the Dalai Lamas. To consolidate Dge lugs power and prevent the the large Dge lugs monasteries (GDAN SA GSUM) from usurping his power, the fifth Dalai Lama moved the Dga' ldan pho brang into the PO TA LA palace, which then became the seat of the government he established.

diplomacy ::: n. --> The art and practice of conducting negotiations between nations (particularly in securing treaties), including the methods and forms usually employed.
Dexterity or skill in securing advantages; tact.
The body of ministers or envoys resident at a court; the diplomatic body.


diplomate ::: n. --> A diplomatist. ::: v. t. --> To invest with a title o/ privilege by diploma.

diplomatial ::: a. --> Diplomatic.

diplomatic ::: a. --> Alt. of Diplomatical ::: n. --> A minister, official agent, or envoy to a foreign court; a diplomatist.
The science of diplomas, or the art of deciphering ancient writings, and determining their age, authenticity, etc.;


diplomatical ::: a. --> Pertaining to diplomacy; relating to the foreign ministers at a court, who are called the diplomatic body.
Characterized by tact and shrewdness; dexterous; artful; as, diplomatic management.
Pertaining to diplomatics; paleographic.


diplomatically ::: adv. --> According to the rules of diplomacy; in the manner of a diplomatist; artfully.

diplomatism ::: n. --> Diplomacy.

diplomatist ::: n. --> A person employed in, or skilled in, diplomacy; a diplomat.

diplomat ::: n. --> Alt. of Diplomate

diplomat ::: one who is tactful and skilful in negotiating and managing delicate situations, handling people, etc. diplomatic.

  “He never laid claim to spiritual powers, but proved to have a right to such claim. He used to pass into a dead trance from thirty-seven to forty-nine hours without awakening, and then knew all he had to know, and demonstrated the fact by prophesying futurity and never making a mistake. It is he who prophesied before the Kings Louis XV. and XVI., and the unfortunate Marie Antoinette. Many were the still-living witnesses in the first quarter of this century who testified to his marvellous memory; he could read a paper in the morning and, though hardly glancing at it, could repeat its contents without missing one word days afterwards; he could write with two hands at once, the right hand writing a piece of poetry, the left a diplomatic paper of the greatest importance. He read sealed letters without touching them, while still in the hand of those who brought them to him. He was the greatest adept in transmuting metals, making gold and the most marvellous diamonds, an art, he said, he had learned from certain Brahmans in India, who taught him the artificial crystallisation (‘quickening’) of pure carbon. As our Brother Kenneth Mackenzie has it: — ‘In 1780, when on a visit to the French Ambassador to the Hague, he broke to pieces with a hammer a superb diamond of his own manufacture, the counterpart of which, also manufactured by himself, he had just before sold to a jeweller for 5500 louis d’or.’ He was the friend and confidant of Count Orloff in 1772 at Vienna, whom he had helped and saved in St. Petersburg in 1762, when concerned in the famous political conspiracies of that time; he also became intimate with Frederick the Great of Prussia. As a matter of course, he had numerous enemies, and therefore it is not to be wondered at if all the gossip invented about him is now attributed to his own confessions: e.g., that he was over five hundred years old; also, that he claimed personal intimacy ‘with the Saviour and his twelve Apostles, and that he had reproved Peter for his bad temper’ — the latter clashing somewhat in point of time with the former, if he had really claimed to be only five hundred years old. If he said that ‘he had been born in Chaldea and professed to possess the secrets of the Egyptian magicians and sage,’ he may have spoken truth without making any miraculous claim. There are Initiates, and not the highest either, who are placed in a condition to remember more than one of their past lives. But we have good reason to know that St. Germain could never have claimed ‘personal intimacy’ with the Saviour. However that may be, Count St. Germain was certainly the greatest Oriental Adept Europe has seen during the last centuries. But Europe knew him not. Perchance some may recognise him at the next Terreur, which will affect all Europe when it comes, and not one country alone” (TG 308-9).

Hindawi Affair (1986) ::: On April 17, 1986, a Jordanian journalist with a Syrian diplomatic passport attempted to blow up an El Al plane en route from Heathrow Airport to London to Tel Aviv by hiding an explosive in his Irish girlfriend’s bag. Security officers discovered the explosive device which led to Great Britain temporarily severing diplomatic ties with Syria.

Khuông Viẹt. (匡越) (933-1011). Prominent Vietnamese monk and royal advisor, a native of Thửờng Lạc (nowadays Thanh Hóa Province, in northern Vietnam). His personal name was Ngô Chan Lưu. According to the THIỀN UYỂN T̤P ANH, he was a descendent of Ngô Thuận Đé. As a young man, he studied Confucianism but later turned to Buddhism, receiving full ordination from CHAN Master Van Phong. Khuông Việt was widely read in the Buddhist scriptures and diligently investigated the teachings of Chan. When he was in his forties, his fame reached the royal court, and King Đinh Tien Hoàng (r. 968-979), the founder of the Đinh dynasty (968-980), summoned him to the capital city and honored him with the rank General Supervisor of Monks. The king also granted him the sobriquet Khuông Việt Thái Sư (Great Master Who Brings Order to Việt). King Le Đại Hành (r. 980-1005), the founder of the former Le dynasty (980-1009), invited him to participate in all military, administrative, and diplomatic affairs, and he was often appointed to receive Chinese envoys. Khuông Việt was particularly famed for his exchange of couplets and poems with the Song-dynasty envoy Li Jue, who reported favorably on Vietnam to the Song-dynasty Emperor.

Kihwa. (己和) (1376-1433). Korean SoN master of the Choson dynasty, also known as Hamho Tŭkt'ong and Mujun. Kihwa was a native of Ch'ungju in present-day North Ch'ungch'ong province. The son of a diplomat, Kihwa entered the Songgyun'gwan academy and received a traditional Confucian education, although even there he already showed strong interests in Buddhism. In 1396, after the death of a close friend, Kihwa decided to become a monk, eventually becoming a disciple of the eminent Son master MUHAK CHACH'O (1327-1405) at the monastery of Hoeamsa. After studying kanhwa Son (see KANHUA CHAN) under Chach'o, Kihwa is said to have attained his first awakening at a small hut near his teacher's monastery. Kihwa devoted the next few years to teaching and lecturing at various monasteries around the Korean peninsula. In 1412, Kihwa began a three-year retreat at a small hermitage named Hamhodang near the monastery of Yonbongsa on Mt. Chamo in P'yongsan. In 1420, he made a pilgrimage to Mt. Odae, and the following year he was invited to the royal monastery of Taejaoch'al. In 1424, King Sejong (r. 1419-1450) forcibly consolidated the different schools of Korean Buddhism into the two branches of Son (CHAN; Meditation) and KYO (Doctrine), reduced the number of officially recognized monasteries, and limited the number of monks allowed to ordain. Perhaps in reaction to this increasing persecution of Buddhism, Kihwa left the royal monastery that same year. In response to the growing criticisms of Buddhism by the Confucian scholars at court, Kihwa composed his HYoNJoNG NON. Kihwa also composed influential commentaries on the VAJRACCHEDIKĀPRAJNĀPĀRAMITĀSuTRA ("Diamond Sutra") and the YUANJUE JING ("Perfect Enlightenment Sutra"). In 1431, he began restorations on a monastery known as Pongamsa on Mt. Hŭiyang in Yongnam and died at the monastery two years later in 1433.

legation ::: n. --> The sending forth or commissioning one person to act for another.
A legate, or envoy, and the persons associated with him in his mission; an embassy; or, in stricter usage, a diplomatic minister and his suite; a deputation.
The place of business or official residence of a diplomatic minister at a foreign court or seat of government.
A district under the jurisdiction of a legate.


Leibniz, Gottfried Withelm: (1646-1716) Born in Leipzig, where his father was a professor in the university, he was educated at Leipzig, Jena, and Altdorf University, where he obtained his doctorate. Jurist, mathematician, diplomat, historian, theologian of no mean proportions, he was Germany's greatest 17th century philosopher and one of the most universal minds of all times. In Paris, then the centre of intellectual civilization (Moliere was still alive, Racine at the height of his glory), where he had been sent on an official mission of state, he met Arnauld, a disciple of Descartes who acquainted him with his master's ideas, and Huygens who taught him as to the higher forms of mathematics and their application to physical phenomena. He visited London, where he met Newton, Boyle, and others. At the Hague he came face to face with the other great philosopher of the time, Spinoza. One of Leibniz's cherished ideas was the creation of a society of scholars for the investigation of all branches of scientific truth to combine them into one great system of truth. His philosophy, the work "of odd moments", bears, in content and form, the impress of its haphazard origin and its author's cosmopolitan mode of large number of letters, essays, memoranda, etc., published in various scientific journals. Universality and individuality characterize him both as a man and philosopher.

Malalasekera, Gunapala Piyasena. (1899-1973). One of the most influential Sinhalese scholars of the twentieth century. Born in Malamulla Panadura, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), Malalasekera entered the Ceylon Medical College in 1917. He attended the School of Oriental Studies at the University of London from 1923 to 1926, where he was a student of CAROLINE A. F. RHYS DAVIDS. He later taught Pāli and Buddhist civilization, Pāli language, Sanskrit, and Sinhalese at the University of Ceylon. Aside from an immense influence on at least two generations of Indologists and Buddhologists in Sri Lanka, Malalasekera was also a distinguished diplomat, serving as the Ceylonese ambassador to the then-Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Romania. He served as the permanent representative for Ceylon at the United Nations from 1961 to 1963, and as the high commissioner in Great Britain for four years after that. He was the president of the All Ceylon Buddhist Congress from 1939 to 1957 and then again in 1967. He led the first conference of the WORLD FELLOWSHIP OF BUDDHISTS in 1950 and became editor-in-chief of the Encyclopaedia of Buddhism in 1956. Malalasekera published many books and articles, including The Pāli Literature of Ceylon and A Dictionary of Pāli Proper Names.

minister ::: n. --> A servant; a subordinate; an officer or assistant of inferior rank; hence, an agent, an instrument.
An officer of justice.
One to whom the sovereign or executive head of a government intrusts the management of affairs of state, or some department of such affairs.
A representative of a government, sent to the court, or seat of government, of a foreign nation to transact diplomatic


negotiation ::: n. --> The act or process of negotiating; a treating with another respecting sale or purchase. etc.
Hence, mercantile business; trading.
The transaction of business between nations; the mutual intercourse of governments by diplomatic agents, in making treaties, composing difference, etc.; as, the negotiations at Ghent.


outfit ::: n. --> A fitting out, or equipment, as of a ship for a voyage, or of a person for an expedition in an unoccupied region or residence in a foreign land; things required for equipment; the expense of, or allowance made for, equipment, as by the government of the United States to a diplomatic agent going abroad.

paleography ::: n. --> An ancient manner of writing; ancient writings, collectively; as, Punic paleography.
The study of ancient inscriptions and modes of writing; the art or science of deciphering ancient writings, and determining their origin, period, etc., from external characters; diplomatics.


Pātaliputra. (P. Pātaliputta; T. Pa ta la yi bu; C Huashi cheng; J. Keshijo; K. Hwassi song 華氏城). Capital of the kingdom of MAGADHA and later of the Mauryan empire, ruins of which are located near (and beneath) the modern city of Patna in Bihar. The place is described as having been a village named Pātaligāma at the time of the Buddha who, upon visiting the site, prophesied its future greatness. At that time Magadha's capital city was RĀJAGṚHA. It is not known when the capital was transferred to Pātaliputra, but it probably occurred sometime after the reign of the Buddha's junior contemporary, King AJĀTAsATRU. The city reached its greatest glory during the reign of the third Mauryan emperor, AsOKA, whose realm extended from Afghanistan in the west to Bengal in the east, and to the border of Tamil Nadu in the south. According to the Pāli chronicles DĪPAVAMSA and MAHĀVAMSA, it was in the royal palace of Pātaliputra that Asoka was converted to Buddhism by the seven-year-old novice Nigrodha. The same sources state that Pātaliputra was the site of the third Buddhist council (SAMGĪTI; see COUNCIL, THIRD), whence Buddhist missions were dispatched to nine adjacent lands (paccantadesa). These reports are partially confirmed by Asoka's own inscriptions. in which he describes his adoption and promotion of Buddhism and his dispatch of what appear to be diplomatic missions to several neighboring states. The city was known to the Greeks as Pālibothra and was described by Megasthenes, who dwelled there for a time. It continued to be the capital of Magadha after the fall of the Mauryans and served again as an imperial capital between the fourth and sixth centuries under the Gupta dynasty. By the time the Chinese pilgrim XUANZANG (600/602-664) visited India during the seventh century, Pātaliputra was mostly in ruins; what little remained was destroyed in the Muslim invasions of the twelfth century. See also MOGGALIPUTTATISSA.

protocol ::: n. --> The original copy of any writing, as of a deed, treaty, dispatch, or other instrument.
The minutes, or rough draught, of an instrument or transaction.
A preliminary document upon the basis of which negotiations are carried on.
A convention not formally ratified.
An agreement of diplomatists indicating the results


referendum ::: n. --> A diplomatic agent&

Sukhothai. The first Thai polity in mainland Southeast Asia. Located in the central Menam valley, it began as a frontier outpost of the Khmer empire. In 1278 two local princes raised a successful rebellion to create a new kingdom with the city of Sukhothai as its capital. Under King Ramkhamhaeng (r. 1279-1298), Sukhothai brought several neighboring states under its sway and by the early 1300s enjoyed suzerainty over entire the Menam river basin, and westward across the maritime provinces of Lower Burma. Ramkhamhaeng established diplomatic and commercial relations with China and its envoys twice visited the Chinese capital on tributary missions to the emperor. Having won independence, the kings of Sukhothai chose a new cultural orientation to buttress their rule. The former Khmer overlords were votaries of Hinduism and MAHĀYĀNA Buddhism and the earliest CAITYAs in the city display the architectural features of traditional Khmer tower pyramids. The Thai ruling house abandoned these traditions in favor of Sinhalese-style Pāli Buddhism. In the 1330s a charismatic monk named Si Satha introduced a Sinhalese ordination lineage into the kingdom along with a collection of buddha relics around which was organized a state cult. The shift in religious affiliation is reflected in the lotus-bud and bell-shaped caityas built during the period, which have their prototypes in Sri Lanka. Sukhothai is upheld as a golden age in Thai cultural history. Known for its innovations in architecture and iconography, the kingdom also gave definitive form to the modern Thai writing system which is based on Mon and Khmer antecedents. By the mid-fourteenth century, with the rise of the kingdom of AYUTHAYA to its south, Sukhothai entered a period of decline from which it never recovered. In 1378, Ayuthaya occupied Sukhothai's border provinces, reducing it to the status of a vassal state. After unsuccessful attempts to break free from her southern overlord, Sukhothai was finally absorbed as a province of the Ayuthaya kingdom in the fifteenth century.

Tsung heng: Diplomatists in ancient China. -- W.T.C.

ultimatum ::: n. --> A final proposition, concession, or condition; especially, the final propositions, conditions, or terms, offered by either of the parties in a diplomatic negotiation; the most favorable terms a negotiator can offer, the rejection of which usually puts an end to the hesitation.

Vạn Hạnh. (萬行) (d. 1025). An influential monk during the Vietnamese Lý dynasty (1010-1225); his family name was Nguyễn. Vạn Hạnh was a native of Cổ Pháp Village, Thien Đức Prefecture, in northern Vietnam. The THIỀN UYỂN TẬP ANH reports that at the age of twenty-one, he left home to become a monk and served the monk Thiền Ông of Lục Tổ monastery. After Thiền Ông passed away, Vạn Hạnh devoted himself to the practice of DHĀRAnĪ (spells or mnemonic codes) and SAMĀDHI. King Le Đại Hành (r. 980-1005), founder of the Former Le dynasty (980-1009), greatly revered him and relied on his prophecies in political and diplomatic matters. When Le Ngọa Triều (r. 1005-1009), the last king of the Le dynasty, appeared to be a cruel tyrant, Vạn Hạnh masterminded the overthrow of the latter and helped Lý Công Uẩn ascend the throne to establish the Lý dynasty (1010-1225). Vạn Hạnh remains the most beloved eminent monk among modern Vietnamese Buddhists. In his honor, in 1964, the first nonmonastic Buddhist university was established in Saigon and named after him. Vạn Hạnh University was the first Vietnamese university to be established following the model of an American liberal arts college.

Wallenberg, Raoul ::: (1912- c. 1945) Swedish diplomat who, in 1944, went to Hungary on a mission to save as many Jews as possible by handing out Swedish papers, passports and visas. He is credited with saving the lives of at least 30,000 people. After the liberation of Budapest, he was mysteriously taken into custody by the Russians and his fate remains unknown.

Yujomsa. (楡岾寺). In Korean, "Elm Hillock Monastery"; one of the four major monasteries located in the Diamond Mountains (KŬMGANGSAN) in present-day North Korea, and best known traditionally for its fifty-three buddha images. Yujomsa claims to be one of the oldest monasteries on the Korean peninsula. According to its historical record, Kŭmgangsan Yujomsa sajokki, written in 1297 by the Koryo official and diplomat Min Chi (1248-1326), icons of fifty-three buddhas drifted to the Silla seashore in the year 4 CE through the intercession of an Indo-Scythian [alt. Yuezhi, Rouzhi] king from the northwestern region of India. These images were originally cast by MANJUsRĪ in the Indian city of sRĀVASTĪ and enshrined inside a large bell. After landing in Korea, the bell containing these fifty-three icons magically traveled inland and was eventually discovered in a branch of an elm tree by a Korean local official. To house these icons, the Silla king Namhae Ch'ach'aung (r. 4-24 CE) ordered the construction of this monastery, which he named after the elm tree in which the bell was discovered. Despite this legend of the monastery's origins, however, the main construction work at Yujomsa could not have begun before 1168. In the thirteenth century, during the late Koryo period, the monastery enjoyed the patronage of the Mongol-Korean court, which raised its political status and importance. The fifty-three buddhas of Yujomsa remained a popular destination for both literati tourists and Buddhist pilgrims to the Diamond Mountains throughout the Choson dynasty. When the site was surveyed in 1912 by the Japanese scholar Sekino Tadashi (1867-1935), only fifty small gilt bronze icons were displayed in the Nŭngin pojon on a unique screen altar that was ornamented with meandering tree branches. In contrast to Min Chi's description of the iconography, various other images, including bodhisattvas and monastic figures, were included along with the buddha icons. Stylistically, forty-three individual figures could be dated to the Unified Silla period, and the remaining seven were determined to be post-Koryo products. This incongruent mixture of styles is due to continuous devastations of the images by fire and theft and their subsequent restorations. Yujomsa burned to the ground during the Korean War (1950-1953) and the current whereabouts of the fifty-three icons are unknown.



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1:This too the supreme Diplomat can use,
He makes our fall a means for greater rise. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Yoga of the King, The Yoga of the Soul's Release,

*** WISDOM TROVE ***

1:A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman's birthday but never remembers her age. ~ robert-frost, @wisdomtrove
2:The [Carter] administration doesn't know the difference between a diplomat and a doormat. ~ ronald-reagan, @wisdomtrove
3:You use to ride on the chrome horse with your diplomat, who carried on his shoulder a Siamese cat. ~ bob-dylan, @wisdomtrove
4:The only real diplomacy ever performed by a diplomat is in deceiving their own people after their dumbness has got them into a war. ~ will-rogers, @wisdomtrove
5:I am a soldier and accustomed to risking my life every day. I am full of the fire of youth; I cannot act with the restraint of an accomplished diplomat. ~ napoleon-bonaparte, @wisdomtrove
6:Diplomacy, of course, is a subtle and nuanced craft, so much so that it's said that when the most wily diplomat of the nineteenth-century passed away, other diplomats asked, on reports of his death, "What do you suppose the old fox meant by that? ~ ronald-reagan, @wisdomtrove
7:Diplomacy, n : 1. The patriotic art of lying for one's country. 2. The art of letting someone have your way. 3. The art of saying &

*** NEWFULLDB 2.4M ***

1:A sincere diplomat is like dry water or wooden iron. ~ Joseph Stalin,
2:I have to be as much diplomat as a photographer. ~ Alfred Eisenstaedt,
3:I must say I've rarely been described as 'diplomat. ~ Richard Armitage,
4:A diplomat is a man who thinks twice before he says nothing. ~ Edward Heath,
5:Michael Anthony is the Diplomat of Rock N Roll. He is the regular guy. ~ Gary Cherone,
6:A really good diplomat does not go in for victories, even when he wins them. ~ Walter Lippmann,
7:I’m a diplomat, I make myself agreeable to some of the most vile people on earth, ~ Alan Furst,
8:This will be the most expensive ‘no’ vote you ever cast,” Baker told the diplomat. ~ Gregory D Johnsen,
9:A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman's birthday but never remembers her age. ~ Robert Frost,
10:the aging diplomat sits down at the desk of French foreign minister Charles Gravier, the ~ Bill O Reilly,
11:Diplomacy is the art of letting someone else have your way. —Daniele Vare, Italian diplomat ~ William Ury,
12:The [Carter] administration doesn't know the difference between a diplomat and a doormat. ~ Ronald Reagan,
13:A diplomat these days is nothing but a head waiter who's allowed to sit down occasionally. ~ Peter Ustinov,
14:A real diplomat is one who can cut his neighbor's throat without having his neighbor notice it. ~ Trygve Lie,
15:Diplomacy is the art of letting someone else have your way. —Daniele Vare, Italian diplomat We ~ William Ury,
16:who’s an ex-diplomat of all people to complain if the wrapping is prettier than what’s inside? ~ John le Carr,
17:You use to ride on the chrome horse with your diplomat, who carried on his shoulder a Siamese cat. ~ Bob Dylan,
18:An American diplomat is sometimes like a bull who carries his own china shop around with him. ~ Winston Churchill,
19:The verdict on Prince Metternich will soon be out: An excellent diplomat and a bad politician. ~ Franz Grillparzer,
20:Show me one Iranian diplomat we killed! I can show you many Saudi diplomats who were killed by Iran. ~ Adel al Jubeir,
21:My father was a diplomatic officer. As a diplomat's daughter, you have to learn to present yourself very early on. ~ Kathleen Turner,
22:She studies Shara for a long while. “Why do you care? You’re a diplomat. You’re just here for the parties. Right? ~ Robert Jackson Bennett,
23:If a diplomat says yes, he means perhaps. If he says perhaps he means no. And if he says no, he's the hell of a diplomat. ~ Agnes Sligh Turnbull,
24:When a diplomat says ‘yes’ he means ‘maybe.’ When a diplomat says ‘maybe’ he means ‘no.’ But if a diplomat says ‘no’ he’s no diplomat. ~ Alan Furst,
25:No wonder this man was a diplomat. You couldn't trust him an inch, he thought in loops, and you couldn't help liking him despite it. ~ Terry Pratchett,
26:His mother’s father had been a diplomat, an architect of fortunes; his father’s father had been an architect, a diplomat of styles. ~ Maggie Stiefvater,
27:I began to feel like Sarpi, that Venetian priest and diplomat, who said he never told a lie but didn't tell the truth to everyone. ~ Jeanette Winterson,
28:I was going to study at the Sorbonne and become a diplomat. Being a diplomat comes in handy when you are dealing with record companies. ~ Gloria Estefan,
29:Send a patroller to check,” said Miles a little tightly. Remembering he was supposed to be a diplomat, he added, “If you please.” Teris ~ Lois McMaster Bujold,
30:Diplomacy," Roosevelt insisted, "is utterly useless when there is no force behind it; the diplomat is the servant, not the master of the soldier. ~ Edmund Morris,
31:This too the supreme Diplomat can use,
He makes our fall a means for greater rise. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Yoga of the King, The Yoga of the Soul’s Release,
32:Madman drummers, bummers, Indians in the summer with a teenage diplomat. In the dumps with the mumps as the adolescent pumps his way into his hat. ~ Bruce Springsteen,
33:To say that politics is not a part of sports is not being realistic. When I run, I am more than a runner. I am a diplomat, an ambassador for my country. ~ Filbert Bayi,
34:diplomat and courtier Niccolò Machiavelli wrote, “Any man who tries to be good all the time is bound to come to ruin among the great number who are not good. ~ Anonymous,
35:The [Donald] Trump folks chose not to keep [Dan Fried] on. He was actually - I said he was actually the third-most senior diplomat in the foreign service. ~ Rachel Maddow,
36:Words are one thing - deeds something entirely different. Fine words are a mask to cover shady deeds. A sincere diplomat is like dry water or wooden iron. ~ Joseph Stalin,
37:I am a soldier and accustomed to risking my life every day. I am full of the fire of youth; I cannot act with the restraint of an accomplished diplomat. ~ Napoleon Bonaparte,
38:It's a necessary quality of a diplomat or a politician that he will compromise. Uncompromising politicians or diplomats get you into the most terrible trouble. ~ John Keegan,
39:PRAY that your loneliness may spur you into finding something to live for, great enough to die for."
Dag Hammarskjold
Swedish diplomat (1905 - 1961) ~ Dag Hammarskj ld,
40:We grew up as poor people but we never knew poverty. I still love and miss the Somalia I grew up in. Things changed, when my father became a diplomat later on. ~ Iman Abdulmajid,
41:It’s so easy for people like me”—a diplomat’s son raised abroad and educated in America—“to be totally off base about this country and what it is ready to accept. ~ Geraldine Brooks,
42:Renaissance diplomat and courtier Niccolò Machiavelli wrote, “Any man who tries to be good all the time is bound to come to ruin among the great number who are not good. ~ Robert Greene,
43:God, a born extremist, is the diplomat's worst enemy. Quite apart from the fact that His decrees are irrevocable, the Absolute will not allow anyone to relativize matters. ~ Regis Debray,
44:I maintain that to-day many an inventor, many a diplomat, many a financier is a sounder philosopher than all those who practise the dull craft of experimental psychology. ~ Oswald Spengler,
45:Monsieur de Norpois is made to be ashamed of the fact that he expressed a different opinion. Proust did not consider that the diplomat might have changed his mind. We ~ Nassim Nicholas Taleb,
46:What happens if you need a diplomat who can also practice philosophy fight with a lightsaber and levitate small objects Who else are you going to call but us

Mara ~ Walter Jon Williams,
47:Only men of considerable vanity write books; consistently therewith, I worried lest the world were exchanging an irreplaceable author for a more easily purchased diplomat. ~ John Kenneth Galbraith,
48:Suppose the elections are free and fair and those elected are racists, fascists, separatists", said the American diplomat Richard Holbrooke about Yugoslavia in 1990s. "that is the dilemma ~ Fareed Zakaria,
49:Even when I was at CIA, I'd go to visit foreign leaders and I'd say, 'You know, I'm not a diplomat. I'm just an old CIA guy'... I said, 'If I wanted to be diplomatic, I'd have been a diplomat.' ~ Robert M Gates,
50:Unless this bear was some bio-engineered diplomat, some first contact specialist of the new animal kingdom. Perhaps Redmark would make all its corporate statements through random fauna now. ~ Adrian Tchaikovsky,
51:Hillary Rodham Clinton was America's chief diplomat. So let's look around at the violence and danger in our world today in every region of the world that has been infected with her flawed judgment. ~ Chris Christie,
52:When he undressed at night he was like a diplomat or a judge. A white body, gentle and powerless, emerged from his clothes, his position in the world lay tumbled on the floor, fallen from his ankles... ~ James Salter,
53:In a political discussion about the empire, Harold the diplomat argued for the benefits of colonial rule: ‘our English genius is for government.’ Raymond opposed him: ‘The governed don’t seem to enjoy it. ~ Hermione Lee,
54:From where I stood it was a pose that collapsed many periods in her life into one: mother and lover, big sister, best friend, superstar and diplomat, billionaire and street kid, foolish girl and woman of substance. ~ Zadie Smith,
55:Horace Walpole, the writer and politician, meanwhile, once saw Mademoiselle la Chevalière d’Éon, known in her day as a transvestite-diplomat-spy, teaching fencing to the Cosways’ guests in the midst of a party.16,17 ~ Jon Meacham,
56:A king and a diplomat both care about their people. The difference is the king has to make the hard decisions, even when lives are at risk." A steely glint surfaced in his eyes. "Peace often comes at the cost of war. ~ Julie C Dao,
57:A jazz musician is a combination orator, dialectician, mathematician, athlete, entertainer, poet, singer, dancer, diplomat, educator, student, comedian, artist, seducer, public masturbator, and general all-round good fellow. ~ Steve Lacy,
58:A diplomat had been kidnapped, a cabinet minister had been kidnapped, they were under threats of murder. The police forces were rather tired. After a whole week, we were unable to find those that had effected the kidnappings. ~ Robert Bourassa,
59:My father was the Prime Minister of Pakistan. My grandfather had been in politics, too; however, my own inclination was for a job other than politics. I wanted to be a diplomat, perhaps do some journalism - certainly not politics. ~ Benazir Bhutto,
60:Bannon said he’d tried to push John Bolton, the famously hawkish diplomat, for the job as national security advisor. Bolton was an Ailes favorite, too. “He’s a bomb thrower,” said Ailes. “And a strange little fucker. But you need him. ~ Michael Wolff,
61:I'm a diplomat by nature. I help find the middle ground. I crack a joke and use humour to help resolve potentially vicious situations quickly. It gets things in perspective and helps everyone to see that things aren't as bad as they seem. ~ Ronnie Wood,
62:...too many facts hamper a diplomat, especially an honest one.”
“I’m not especially honest.”
“But you have no talent for dishonesty, so your refuge must be ignorance and stubbornness. You have the latter; try to preserve the former. ~ Robert A Heinlein,
63:Diplomacy, of course, is a subtle and nuanced craft, so much so that it's said that when the most wily diplomat of the nineteenth-century passed away, other diplomats asked, on reports of his death, "What do you suppose the old fox meant by that? ~ Ronald Reagan,
64:He was everything. The soldier who loved poetry. The historian who loved to paint. The diplomat who thrived on indiscretion. The patriot with international vision. The orderly man given to electric spontaneities.
(on Winston Churchill) ~ William F Buckley Jr,
65:When a diplomat says yes, he means perhaps. When he says perhaps, he means no. When he says no, he is not a diplomat. When a lady says no, she means perhaps. When she says perhaps, she means yes. But when she says yes, she is no lady. ~ Alfred Denning Baron Denning,
66:A Foreign Office diplomat in London wrote in the margins of a Tehran report: “I tend to the view that Musaddiq still enjoys some public support, more than some of our close friends would have us believe. . . . Coup d’état may well be the only answer. ~ Ervand Abrahamian,
67:Diplomacy, n : 1. The patriotic art of lying for one's country. 2. The art of letting someone have your way. 3. The art of saying 'nice doggy' until you can find a rock. A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman's birthday but never remembers her age. ~ Robert Frost,
68:For me, the day job comes first. That's why I call myself a diplomat who writes, not a writer who masquerades as a diplomat. If the day job demands it, I won't write at all. I write in what I call 'the crevices of my day job', and that comes only on weekends. ~ Vikas Swarup,
69:Ralph Bunche, who is an internationally recognized and respected diplomat, can't stay in a hotel in Georgia, which means that no matter what the accomplishment, the intellectual, the academic, or professional level of a negro is, collectively he stands condemned. ~ Malcolm X,
70:The concept of Multiculturalism was actually first propounded by Count Richard Nikolaus Eijiro Coudenhove-Kalergi, an Austrian eugenics-philosopher, who was the principle founding father of the European Union and diplomat of mixed Japanese and Austrian parentage and ~ Citizen One,
71:My family moved - first to Washington, D.C., and then, in the spring of 1975, to Lebanon, where my father worked as a diplomat at the American embassy. My parents were enthusiastic about the move, so my older brother and I felt like we were off to some place kind of cool. ~ Greg Kinnear,
72:Vasily chortled. "What a diplomat you've become! You've a most refreshing way about you. Given time, I have no doubt that, despite your humble antecedents, you will learn to conduct yourself with the restraint and elegance of a noblewoman."
"You mean I'll learn to shut up? ~ Leigh Bardugo,
73:I started acting long before I decided to pursue it. I started acting as an amateur when I was a kid, but I wanted to become a diplomat. It was self-centered and weird, but I had this idea of going out in the world and solving conflicts and making the world a better place. ~ Stellan Skarsgard,
74:George Lansbury, an aging Labour Party official, backed up the Conservative PM by telling the House, “I hear all this denunciation of Herr Hitler and Signor Mussolini. I have met both of them, and can only say that they are very much like any other politician or diplomat one meets. ~ Thomas E Ricks,
75:What I'm loving about Hilary Clinton is that she has the job that's been held mostly by men. She's made it her job, not only to be a very tactful diplomat, but she travels the world, spotlighting what's going on with girls and women, in every country that she goes to. That has been so unique. ~ Marlo Thomas,
76:I have never considered myself a writer in exile because I grew up outside of my own country, because my father was a diplomat. Therefore, I grew up in Brazil, Chile, Argentina, the United States, I studied in Switzerland - so I've always had perspective on my country - I am thankful for that. ~ Carlos Fuentes,
77:The hot gossip in Washington is that Condoleezza Rice might have a new boyfriend. Secretary of State Rice is being linked to Canada's Foreign Minister, Peter MacKay. It's gotta be awkward dating a fellow diplomat. Like today, MacKay had to promise Condi he would get permission from the U.N. before he invaded her. ~ Jay Leno,
78:I've never written a song that's hopeless. I'm not a hopeless person. I'm crazily optimistic. I crazily see the good in people. I crazily see the way out of a terrible situation. I crazily try to be the diplomat. If there are two warring factions in my life, I want them to agree to disagree at the very least. ~ Michael Stipe,
79:The famous British child psychologist D. W. Winnicott called these aspects of personality our True Self and False Self. It is the True Self that lets us know what is authentic and what has become artificial, while the False Self is a diplomat of distrust, enforcing a lifestyle of guardedness, secrecy, and complaint. ~ Mark Nepo,
80:After reading Tolstoy’s lengthy essay “On Life” in 1889, Ernest Crosby, a thirty-three-year-old American diplomat who was working in Egypt at the time, decided that diplomacy wasn’t his calling and instead dedicated the next twenty-seven years of his life to writing and lecturing about Tolstoy throughout the United States. ~ Leo Tolstoy,
81:As a 29 year veteran of the US Army/Army Reserves, retiring as a Colonel and having served as a U.S. diplomat for 16 years and resigning in 2003 in opposition to the Iraq war, I firmly believe war does not resolve political issues. We must work diligently to force the governments of our nations to use diplomacy, not weapons. ~ Ann Wright,
82:What the Iranians are looking for is a narrative of victory,” one American diplomat said last week, “a way to say the West backed down, and admitted Iran will be able to produce its own nuclear fuel one day, in unlimited quantity.” What Congress needs, the diplomat said, “is a narrative that Iran was forced to dismantle what it has. ~ Anonymous,
83:Who am I? The shell-selling Lace girl, the attendant of Lady Arilou, Mother Govrie’s other daughter, the thing of dust, the victim, the revenger, the diplomat, the crowd-witch, the killer, the rescuer, the pirate?

I am anything I wish to be. The world cannot choose for me. No, it is for me to choose what the world shall be. ~ Frances Hardinge,
84:The scribe was no mere linguistic technician, but rather the sole possessor of the skill set that made civilization hum, a sort of investment banker, engineer, and diplomat all rolled up into one. Or, in the words of the linguist Ignaz Gelb, “Writing exists only in a civilization, and a civilization cannot exist without writing.”47 ~ William J Bernstein,
85:Most uncomfortable! Did we lose anyone? Head count! Lee Ark, Leetu, and Brunstetter. Three. Should we count the meech egg? No, I think not. Don't drop it, Brunstetter. I'm to take it home and raise it. Ridiculous. Being a parent at my age. Where were we? Oh, yes, three. One o'rant, two kimens, two minor dragons. Eight. A librarian and a diplomat. Ten. ~ Donita K Paul,
86:Nina and Matthias?" Jesper asked. "Far be it from me to doubt anyone's professionalism, but is that really the ideal pairing?"
"Matthias knows prison procedure, and Nina can handle any guards without a noisy fight. Your job is to keep them from killing each other."
"Because I'm the diplomat of the the group?"
"There is no diplomat of the group. ~ Leigh Bardugo,
87:The Brazilian diplomat Josué de Castro, in his book The Geopolitics of Hunger, was even bolder in his criticism of the neo-Malthusians, saying that ‘The road to survival, therefore, does not lie in the neo-Malthusian prescriptions to eliminate surplus people, nor in birth control, but in the effort to make everybody on the face of the earth productive.’ In ~ Matt Ridley,
88:For more than eight decades, Washington has been my hometown. ... It is a city that offers me more people -- more different kinds of people -- than I could otherwise possibly have come to know in a lifetime: the native Washingtonian, the local merchant, the foreign diplomat, the ever-present tourist, the public servant, the journalist, the president, the friend. ~ Katharine Graham,
89:I cannot imagine how any diplomat, or any dramatist, could improve on (Ronald Reagan's) words to Mikhail Gorbachev at the Geneva summit: 'Let me tell you why it is we distrust you.' Those words are candid and tough and they cannot have been easy to hear. But they are also a clear invitation to a new beginning and a new relationship that would be rooted in trust. ~ Margaret Thatcher,
90:Do you know the anecdote about Rubens? He was serving Holland as Ambassador to Spain and used to spend the afternoon in the royal gardens before his easel. One day a jaunty member of the Spanish Court passed and remarked, ‘I see that the diplomat amuses himself sometimes with painting,’ to which Rubens replied, ‘No, the painter amuses himself sometimes with diplomacy! ~ Irving Stone,
91:In private, he justified his stiffer attitude to Britain by the secret documents now found in Prague archives. ‘One day we'll publish them to all the world, to prove Britain's dishonesty,’ Bodenschatz told a French diplomat. ‘All we're asking for is our right to live, and we're not going to let a country that owns three-fifths of the earth deny us this elementary right. ~ David Irving,
92:My style hasn't changed much in all these sixty years. I still use, most of the time, existing light and try not to push people around. I have to be as much a diplomat as a photographer. People don't often take me seriously because I carry so little equipment and make so little fuss... I never carried a lot of equipment. My motto has always been, "Keep it simple". ~ Alfred Eisenstaedt,
93:The presentation of mathematics in schools should be psychological and not systematic. The teacher, so to speak, should be a diplomat. He must take account of the psychic processes in the boy in order to grip his interest, and he will succeed only if he presents things in a form intuitively comprehensible. A more abstract presentation is only possible in the upper classes. ~ Felix Klein,
94:For everyone who, having no artistic sense-that is to say, no submission to subjective reality-may have the knack of reasoning about art till doomsday, especially if he be, in addition, a diplomat or financier in contact with the 'realities' of the present day, is only too ready to believe literature is an intellectual game which is destined to gradually be abandoned as time goes on. ~ Marcel Proust,
95:In August 1947 on the cusp of Independence, my parents sat in the United Services Club in London with two friends, soldier comrades from the recent war. One of them – later to become a chief of the Indian army – raised his glass to the other – who became a general and diplomat in Pakistan. He said, “Let us drink to the aborted twins!” Attia records this with a sense of horror and disbelief. ~ Attia Hosain,
96:My dear son, when you're a woman and you get married, you enter irreversibly into a supervisory position. You have to keep an eye on everything—what your husband does and how he is. And later, when children arrive, on them too. You're a watchdog, a servant and a diplomat rolled into one. And something as trivial as divorce doesn't end that. Oh no—love may come and go, but the caring goes on. ~ Nina George,
97:My dear son, when you’re a woman and you get married, you enter irreversibly into a supervisory position. You have to keep an eye on everything—what your husband does and how he is. And later, when children arrive, on them too. You’re a watchdog, a servant and a diplomat rolled into one. And something as trivial as divorce doesn’t end that. Oh no—love may come and go, but the caring goes on. ~ Nina George,
98:But when Christopher mentioned that he and Talbott had been trying to package post-Cold War policy in a single phrase, Kennan said they shouldn't. "Containment" had been a misleading oversimplification; strategy could not be made to fit a "bumper sticker." The president laughed when Talbott told him what had happened: "that's why Kennan's a great diplomat and scholar but not a politician. ~ John Lewis Gaddis,
99:These, gentlemen, are my rules: if I don't succeed, I keep trying; if I do succeed, I keep quiet; and in any case I don't undermine anyone. I'm not an intriguer, and I'm proud of it. I wouldn't make a good diplomat. They also say, gentlemen, that the bird flies to the fowler. That's true, and I'm ready to agree: but who is the fowler here, and who is the bird? That's still a question, gentlemen! ~ Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
100:What constitutes a good manager in this field? He must be knowledgeable in the art with which he is concerned, an impresario, labor negotiator, diplomat, educator, publicity and public relations expert, politician, skilled businessman, a social sophisticate, a servant of the community, a tireless leader - becomingly humble before authority - a teacher, a tyrant, and a continuing student of the arts. ~ John D Rockefeller,
101:For, as the German diplomat and philosopher Max Scheler wrote, “He who has not, as it were, looked into the abyss of the absolute Nothing will completely overlook the eminently positive content of the realization that there is something rather than nothing.” Let us, then, dip briefly into that abyss, with full assurance that we will not come up empty-handed. For, as the old saying goes: Nothing seek, nothing find. ~ Jim Holt,
102:And all right, it’s Merrie bloody England, it’s Laura bloody Ashley, it’s ale and pasties and yo-ho for Cornwall, and tomorrow morning all these nice, sweet people will be back at each other’s throats, screwing each other’s wives and doing all the stuff the rest of the world does. But right now it’s their National Day, and who’s an ex-diplomat of all people to complain if the wrapping is prettier than what’s inside? ~ John le Carr,
103:They also reminded me of a story Dallas Fed president Richard Fisher included in one of his speeches about the early nineteenth-century French diplomat Talleyrand and his archrival, Prince Metternich of Austria. When Talleyrand died, Metternich was reported to have said, “I wonder what he meant by that?” It seemed that no matter what I said or how plainly I said it, the markets tried to divine some hidden meaning. ~ Ben S Bernanke,
104:I'd trained to be a diplomat but the state department said I was too liberal. I saw an ad in the New York Times ... a hack Californian editor came to New York to butcher some films and he needed an assistant. For some reason I read it that day and it changed my life. I went to work for him and he was horrible, butchering these masterpieces by Antonioni, Visconti, but I learned enough to know what he was doing wrong. ~ Thelma Schoonmaker,
105:Everyone who was ever a guest of Theodore Roosevelt was astonished at the range and diversity of his knowledge. Whether his visitor was a cowboy or a Rough Rider, a New York politician or a diplomat, Roosevelt knew what to say. And how was it done? The answer was simple. Whenever Roosevelt expected a visitor, he sat up late the night before, reading up on the subject in which he knew his guest was particularly interested. For ~ Dale Carnegie,
106:Halt," said the elegant diplomat, "when you asked me to marry you, did you think we could just sneak off to a glade in the woods with a few close friends and get it done?" Halt hesitated. "Well, no...of course not." As a matter of fact, that was exactly what he had thought. A simple ceremony, a few friends, some food and drink and then he and Pauline would be a couple. But he felt that it might not be wise to admit that right now. ~ John Flanagan,
107:Where on earth do you get a rose in Elsinore in the middle of winter?” “Don’t you want it?” She took the flower from him, kissed his cheek. No bristles. No beard. A clean-shaven man with a kind and amiable face. Scheming. She didn’t doubt it. But he was a diplomat by training. It was only to be expected. And if he’d lacked those skills perhaps neither of them would have managed Old Hamlet’s death, the marriage, the succession so easily. ~ A J Hartley,
108:Halt," said the elegant diplomat, "when you asked me to marry you, did you think we could just sneak off to a glade in the woods with a few close friends and get it done?"
Halt hesitated. "Well, no...of course not."
As a matter of fact, that was exactly what he had thought. A simple ceremony, a few friends, some food and drink and then he and Pauline would be a couple. But he felt that it might not be wise to admit that right now. ~ John Flanagan,
109:One reason why so many people are unhappy, not knowing why, is that they have burdened their minds with resentments. These evil thoughts pile right on top of happier and generous ones and smother them so that they never get expression. Resentments are a form of hate.... What a dearth of good will and co-operation there are among human beings and nations! What a world this would be if we all worked together, and as a popular diplomat recently expressed it-played together! ~ George Matthew Adams,
110:In 1941, Ribbentrop explained to the Turkish diplomat Acikalin: ‘I know I'm regarded in many quarters as the Führer's “evil genius’ in regard to foreign affairs. But the fact is I always advised the Führer to do his utmost to bring about Britain's friendship. . . . I warned the Führer in 1935 that in my view Britain was steering toward war.’ Now, as ambassador in London, Ribbentrop secretly offered Baldwin an ‘offensive and defensive alliance’: he told his staff two years later it had been refused. ~ David Irving,
111:Are you also a professional soldier?
He grinned. “I’m more of a gentleman of adventure.”
George laughed under his breath.
“I save these two from themselves,” Gaston continued. “Occasionally I do a bit of skullduggery.”
What? “Skullduggery?”
“Scale a ten-foot wall, jump out of the shadows, break a diplomat’s neck, plant false documents on his body, and prevent an international incident type of thing to keep the war from breaking out,” Gaston said helpfully. “Dreadful stuff, but quite necessary. ~ Ilona Andrews,
112:George Kennan, the American diplomat, described the scene in his memoirs: ‘The disaster that befell this area with the entry of the Soviet forces has no parallel in modern European experience. There were considerable sections of it where, to judge by all existing evidence, scarcely a man, woman or child of the indigenous population was left alive after the initial passage of Soviet forces . . . The Russians . . . swept the native population clean in a manner that had no parallel since the days of the Asiatic hordes. ~ Tony Judt,
113:You’re Piers Brandon, the Marquess of Granville, diplomat and secret agent in the Crown’s service.” She ran a fingertip down the noble slope of his nose. “And I’m Char—”
Her words were lost in a gasp.

With the speed and strength of a whip, he had her turned on her back, sprawled beneath him on the tufted carriage seat.
“You will be Lady Charlotte Brandon, the Marchioness of Granville, diplomat’s wife and mother of my heir.”
.......
“You’ll be mine,” he murmured. “I swear it, Charlotte. I will make you mine. ~ Tessa Dare,
114:At a reception at the National Academy of Sciences on Constitution Avenue, which now boasts the world's most interesting statue of Einstein, a twelve foot high, full-length bronze figure of him reclining, he listened to long speeches from honorees, including Prince Albert I of Monaco, who was an avid oceanographer, a North Carolina scholar of hookworms, and a man who had invented a solar stove. As the evening droned on Einstein turned to a Dutch diplomat seated next him and said, "I've just developed a new theory of eternity. ~ Walter Isaacson,
115:...the prominent Egyptian government minister, university professor, and writer Taha Hussein...devoted himself to the study of pre-Islamic Arabian poetry and ended up concluding that much of that body of work had been fabricated well after the establishment of Islam in order to lend outside support to Koranic mythology.... [T]he Iranian journalist and diplomat Ali Dashti...repeatedly took his fellow Muslims to task for not questioning the traditional accounts of Muhammad's life, much of which he called myth-making and miracle-mongering. ~ Toby Lester,
116:In The Cradle of Erotica by A. Edwardes and R.E.L. Masters, we are told that during the Tang Dynasty, the Empress Wu Hu ruled China. She knew that sex and power were inexorably linked, and she decreed that government officials and visiting dignitaries must pay homage to her imperial highness by performing cunnilingus upon her. No joke. Old paintings depict the beautiful, powerful empress standing and holding her ornate robe open while a high nobleman or diplomat is shown kneeling before her, applying his lips and tongue to her royal mound. ~ Ian Kerner,
117:Syria was milked of its more profitable resources,’ believed Lawrence’s wartime comrade W. F. Stirling, who noted that the country’s profitable utilities and monopolies were all French-owned and that what infrastructure existed was built ‘for strategic purposes and not for public benefit’.15 And corruption was pervasive: it was not long before one British diplomat reported that French officials were ‘expecting liberal presents for services rendered by them’.16 As even Catroux commented, ‘we were in the Orient where nothing comes for free’.17 ~ James Barr,
118:Richard Gansey III had forgotten how many times he had been told he was destined for greatness. He was bred for it; nobility and purpose coded in both sides of his pedigree. His mother’s father had been a diplomat, an architect of fortunes; his father’s father had been an architect, a diplomat of styles. His mother’s mother had tutored the children of European princesses. His father’s mother had built a girls’ school with her own inheritance. The Ganseys were courtiers and kings, and when there was no castle to invite them, they built one.
He was a king. ~ Maggie Stiefvater,
119:Here's a strange world. It's not post-American, in the sense that the countries that were supposed to have "emerged" by now are mired in their own unhappiness. Does any serious person still think—as the serious people at the Economist did back in 2008—that Brazil is the economic superpower of the future? Or that Turkey is on the cusp of neo-Ottoman splendor, a point argued by former U.S. diplomat Nicholas Burns as recently as 2012? Or that the European Union is the world's de facto second superpower? Or that the Chinese economy is going to power right through a burst housing bubble? ~ Anonymous,
120:It must be understood that while the majority of Zoon cannot lie they have great respect for any Zoon who can say that the world is other than it is, and the Liar holds a position of considerable eminence. He represents his tribe in all his dealings with the outside world, which the average Zoon long ago gave up trying to understand. Zoon tribes are very proud of their Liars. Other races get very annoyed about all this. They feel that the Zoon ought to have adopted more suitable titles, like “diplomat” or “public relations officer.” They feel they are poking fun at the whole thing. ~ Terry Pratchett,
121:Let me name three of the people who influenced me, although it's definitely not a complete list. Ayesha Jalal, the formidable Pakistani-American historian, has rigorously re-evaluated Jinnah's political strategies leading up to Partition. Akbar Ahmed, a former diplomat and now a distinguished scholar, has documented Jinnah's life as a man who welcomed, worked with, and even married people of other faiths. And then there is Ardeshir Cowasjee, the great Parsi newspaper columnist, who in his mid-80s is a kind of living history of all of Pakistan, old enough to have known Jinnah himself. ~ Steve Inskeep,
122:Jacquetta, Duchess of Bedford—grandmother to the White Princess. When I started my research, there was no biography of her at all. I had to find her through her husbands, her family, and by tracing her through royal service and her relationship with her daughter, the White Queen. Yet she was a woman whose life and work were outside the home and whose impact was far from the domestic. If she had been a man, we would surely have a biography describing her as a commander, a diplomat, a courtier, a landowner, and the founder of a dynasty. Since she was a woman she is all but ignored. I ~ Philippa Gregory,
123:Strange as it may seem, not all of the great mathematicians have been professors in colleges or universities. Quite a few were soldiers by profession; others went into mathematics from theology, the law, and medicine, and one of the greatest was as crooked a diplomat as ever lied for the good of his country. A few have had no profession at all. Stranger yet, not all professors of mathematics have been mathematicians. But this should not surprise us when we think of the gulf between the average professor of poetry drawing a comfortable salary and the poet starving to death in his garret. ~ Eric Temple Bell,
124:The president had much on his mind. It was the age of Napoleon and Nelson, of contending powers who seemed never truly at peace, and America remained a target for the designs of enemies determined to dominate all or part of it. His final four years in public office were like the previous decades: Jefferson still struggled to secure the nation. It began—but hardly ended—with Britain, which still harbored doubts about the wherewithal of the United States. “We drove them into being a nation when they were no more fit for it than the convicts of Botany Bay,” the British diplomat Augustus Foster wrote his mother in 1805. ~ Jon Meacham,
125:The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.” –G. K. Chesterton English philosopher known as the “prince of paradox” “All happiness depends on a leisurely breakfast.” –John Gunther American journalist, author of Death Be Not Proud “The acquisition of riches has been for many men, not an end, but a change, of troubles.” –Epicurus Ancient Greek philosopher, founder of the school of Epicureanism “To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart.” –Eleanor Roosevelt Longest-serving First Lady of the United States, diplomat, and activist ~ Timothy Ferriss,
126:Air Marshal Nur Khan, a war hero and former Pakistan air force chief, had once likened Pakistan’s aid dependency to ‘taking opium’. Speaking to an American diplomat soon after the loss of East Pakistan in December 1971, he said, ‘Instead of using the country’s own resources to solve the country’s problems, the aid craver, like the opium craver, simply kept on begging to foreigners to bail him out of his difficulties.’ Nur Khan proposed ‘a Chinese style austerity programme’ for Pakistan although he doubted if ‘many Pakistanis had the conviction and dedication to put up with the sacrifice that such a programme would entail’. ~ Husain Haqqani,
127:Do you know what an Asterion is?”

“Do you?”

Nika caught herself before she flinched, frowned, gasped or gave any other outward sign of surprise, but it was definitely not the response she’d anticipated.

“Explain your answer.”

“If you were capable of comprehending my explanation, my answer would no longer be needed. I will instead give you the answer you were expecting: Asterions are a species of hybrid synthetic-organic beings of moderate sapience who practice self-directed evolution.”

Moderate sapience? She bit back a tart retort; a diplomat never got offended or angry unless they intended to do so. ~ G S Jennsen,
128:I told them I'd been poor, I told them I'd been ignorant, and in telling them this I felt not the slightest prick of shame. Only then did I understand where the shame had come from: it wasn't that I hadn't studied in a marble conservatory, or that my father wasn't a diplomat. It wasn't that Dad was half out of his mind, or that Mother followed him. It had come from having a father who shoved me toward the chomping blades of the Shear, instead of pulling me away from them. It had come from those moments on the floor, from knowing that Mother was in the next room, closing her eyes and ears to me, and choosing, for that moment, not to be my mother at all. ~ Tara Westover,
129:I told them I’d been poor, I told them I’d been ignorant, and in telling them this I felt not the slightest prick of shame. Only then did I understand where the shame had come from: it wasn’t that I hadn’t studied in a marble conservatory, or that my father wasn’t a diplomat. It wasn’t that Dad was half out of his mind, or that Mother followed him. It had come from having a father who shoved me toward the chomping blades of the Shear, instead of pulling me away from them. It had come from those moments on the floor, from knowing that Mother was in the next room, closing her eyes and ears to me, and choosing, for that moment, not to be my mother at all. ~ Tara Westover,
130:When Arthur Lee was sent to France and England to serve as one of America’s diplomats during the Revolutionary War, instead of relishing the opportunity to work with his fellow diplomat Silas Deane and elder statesman Benjamin Franklin, he raged and resented them and suspected them of disliking him. Finally, Franklin wrote him a letter (one that we’ve probably all deserved to get at one point or another): “If you do not cure yourself of this temper,” Franklin advised, “it will end in insanity, of which it is the symptomatic forerunner.” Probably because he was in such command of his own temper, Franklin decided that writing the letter was cathartic enough. He never sent it. ~ Ryan Holiday,
131:Frederick William’s oddest whimsy was the collection of giants for his Potsdam Grenadiers. They were an obsession; he would spend any money, even risk going to war with his neighbours, to have tall men (often nearer seven than six feet in height, and generally idiotic) kidnapped, smuggled out of their native lands and brought to him. Finally, he acquired over two thousand of them. His agents were everywhere. Kirkman, an Irish giant, was kidnapped in the streets of London, an operation which cost £1,000. A tall Austrian diplomat was seized when getting into a cab in Hanover; he soon extricated himself from the situation, which remained a dinner-table topic for the rest of his life. ~ Nancy Mitford,
132:The sheriff's job was not an easy one, and that county which, out of the grab bag of popular elections, pulled a good sheriff was lucky. It was a complicated position. The obvious duties of the sheriff - enforcing the law and keeping the peace - were far from the most important ones. It was true that the sheriff represented armed force in the county, but in a community seething with individuals a harsh or stupid sheriff did not last long. There were water rights, boundary disputes, astray arguments, domestic relations, paternity matters - All to be settled without force of arms. Only when everything else failed did a good sheriff make an arrest. The best sheriff was not the best fighter but the best diplomat. ~ John Steinbeck,
133:the American Senate remained focused on domestic priorities and thwarted all expansionist projects. It kept the army small (25,000 men) and the navy weak. Until 1890, the American army ranked fourteenth in the world, after Bulgaria’s, and the American navy was smaller than Italy’s even though America’s industrial strength was thirteen times that of Italy. America did not participate in international conferences and was treated as a second-rank power. In 1880, when Turkey reduced its diplomatic establishment, it eliminated its embassies in Sweden, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the United States. At the same time, a German diplomat in Madrid offered to take a cut in salary rather than be posted to Washington.18 ~ Henry Kissinger,
134:Adjectives are used as nouns (“greats,” “notables”). Nouns are used as verbs (“to host”), or they are chopped off to form verbs (“enthuse,” “emote”), or they are padded to form verbs (“beef up,” “put teeth into”). This is a world where eminent people are “famed” and their associates are “staffers,” where the future is always “upcoming” and someone is forever “firing off” a note. Nobody in America has sent a note or a memo or a telegram in years. Famed diplomat Condoleezza Rice, who hosts foreign notables to beef up the morale of top State Department staffers, sits down and fires off a lot of notes. Notes that are fired off are always fired in anger and from a sitting position. What the weapon is I’ve never found out. ~ William Zinsser,
135:FOR SIX MONTHS in the winter, spring, and summer of 1919, Paris was the center of the world. The Great War had ended. The victorious Great Powers—Britain, France, Italy, and the United States—were redrawing much of the world’s map, “as if they were dividing cake,” one diplomat noted in his diary. The city’s streets teemed with petitioners from nearly everywhere on earth, eager to enhance their own position in the final settlement: Africans, Armenians, Bessarabians, Irishmen, Koreans, Kurds, Poles, Ukrainians, Palestinians, Zionists, and desert Arabs in flowing white robes all elbowed their way past French war widows dressed in black. The British diplomat Harold Nicolson compared the colorful scene to “a riot in a parrot house. ~ Geoffrey C Ward,
136:To prove to [her friend, Swedish diplomat Count] Gyllenborg that she was not superficial, Catherine composed an essay about herself, "so that he would see whether I knew myself or not." The next day, she wrote and handed to Gyllenborg an essay titled 'Portrait of a Fifteen-Year-Old Philosopher.' He was impressed and returned it with a dozen pages of comments, mostly favorable. "I read his remarks again and again, many times [Catherine later recalled in her memoirs]. I impressed them on my consciousness and resolved to follow his advice. In addition, there was something else surprising: one day, while conversing with me, he allowed the following sentence to slip out: 'What a pity that you will marry! I wanted to find out what he meant, but he would not tell me. ~ Robert K Massie,
137:Once war was considered the business of soldiers, international relations the concern of diplomats. But now that war has become seemingly total and seemingly permanent, the free sport of kings has become the forced and internecine business of people, and diplomatic codes of honor between nations have collapsed. Peace in no longer serious; only war is serious. Every man and every nation is either friend or foe, and the idea of enmity becomes mechanical, massive, and without genuine passion. When virtually all negotiation aimed at peaceful agreement is likely to be seen as 'appeasement,' if not treason, the active role of the diplomat becomes meaningless; for diplomacy becomes merely a prelude to war an interlude between wars, and in such a context the diplomat is replaced by the warlord. ~ C Wright Mills,
138:You can dance.
You can make me laugh.
You've got x-ray eyes.

You know how to sing.
You're a diplomat.
You've got it all.
Everybody loves you.

You can charm the birds out of the sky, But I, I've got
one thing.

You always know just what to say
And when to go,
But I've got one thing.

You can see in the dark,
But I've got one thing:
I loved you better.

Last night I woke up,
Saw this angel.
He flew in my window.
And he said,
Girl, pretty proud of yourself, huh?" And I looked around and said,
Who me?"
And he said, "The higher you fly, the faster you fall."

He said, "Send it up.
Watch it rise.
See it fall,
Gravity's rainbow.
Send it up.
Watch it rise.
See it fall,
Gravity's Angel. ~ Laurie Anderson,
139:The great difference is that this version relies on the work of W. W. Rockhill. Rockhill was an American diplomat who lived in China in the nineteenth century, a linguistic genius—he must have been the first American to know Tibetan; he also produced a Chinese-English dictionary. And in 1884 he published a life of the Buddha according to the Tibetan canoṇ It draws from material of equivalent antiquity to that of the Pali Canon, from a source called the Mūlasarvāstivāda Vinaya. He went through it in the 1870s and pulled out of it a story that is almost identical to the story that I reconstructed from the Pali materials. Somewhat embarrassingly, I hadn’t actually read Rockhill until quite recently. I didn’t think the Tibetan material would be relevant. But I was wrong. The Tibetan Vinaya, from the Mūlasarvāstivāda school, gives us the same story, with the same characters, and the same relationships. The two versions don’t agree in every detail, but they’re remarkably similar. ~ Stephen Batchelor,
140:There is a law in the Archipelago that those who have been treated the most harshly and who have withstood the most bravely, who are the most honest, the most courageous, the most unbending, never again come out into the world. They are never again shown to the world because they will tell tales that the human mind can barely accept. Some of your returned POW's told you that they were tortured. This means that those who have remained were tortured ever more, but did not yield an inch. These are your best people. These are your foremost heroes, who, in a solitary combat, have stood the test. And today, unfortunately, they cannot take courage from our applause. They can't hear it from their solitary cells where they may either die or remain for thirty years like Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who was seized in 1945 in the Soviet Union. He has been imprisoned for thirty years and they will not give him up. ~ Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,
141:You will leave as soon as our meeting concludes. Right under his nose. And when you return, you will praise him.”
Gauri balked. “Praise him? He did nothing!”
“You would do well to learn how to play the games of court,” I said. “Sometimes an illusion is just as good as the actual thing. The difference lies in the telling. Make this one concession. Find out what happens next. If you bring back these soldiers and word gets out that it was your idea and your escape, he may punish them on your behalf.”
Gauri considered me. “What are you?”
“A maybe-false queen!” butted in Kamala.
It must have come out as another deranged horse whinny because Gauri nearly jumped.
“I told you,” I said, not meeting her gaze. “I’m a person who lived here once upon a time.”
“You know far too much about the political schemes of Bharata.”
“My father was a diplomat.”
“No, he wasn’t! No, he wasn’t!” sang Kamala. “Lies are fun. Lies are nice. They taste like rice soaked in milk and sliced and diced with cardamom and--”
“Is your horse ill?” asked Gauri.
“No, not at all,” I said and smacked Kamala on her flank. “She’s eager.”
“For blood,” said Kamala. ~ Roshani Chokshi,
142:...potom brácha ten brovnink rozmontoval a už jsme to nedali dohromady, chtěli jsme se ze zoufalství zastřelit, ale nemohli jsme ten brovnink dát dohromady, to bylo naše štěstí, tak já jsem mohl kdykoliv přijít za slečinkama ke kostelu, vždycky jsem přišel nastrojenej, štráfový kalhoty, jak bankovní úředník a posadil jsem se na hilznu od minimaxu, jak diplomat, sluníčko svítilo a ty slečny ležely v plavkách na dekách, jako nějakej spolek 'Ctitelů slunce', bylo jich šest a ležely na znaku s rukama pod vytupírovanejma hlavinkama a dívaly se schválně do mračen, aby nechaly svoje tělička napospas mužskejm vočím, já, že jsem byl citlivej jak Mozart a ctitel evropský renesance, koukal jsem se jak krokodýl, jedním vokem do farní zahrady na pana děkana, a druhým vokem na ty nožky přehozený přes kolena, pořád ty krasavice houpaly kotníčkama a po mně lezli mravenci, komupak se to stane, aby byl s tolika krasotinkama? to jedině císař, nebo sultán, a tak jsem těm kráskám vypravoval, jak jsem měl příjemnej sen, jak se mi zdálo, že pekař sází do pece chleba a to je výhra na los, ale já los nemám, ovšem pekařství jako takové ve snách viděti, to znamená noční radovánky, ale co z radovánek?... ~ Bohumil Hrabal,
143:Standing, she turned toward him, dropped into an exaggerated curtsy, and, smiling broadly, said, “Your Grace. I trust I pass inspection?” He chuckled at her use of the ducal address and offered her a hand to lift her from her position. Tilting his head, he answered in a voice rich with humor. “Far be it from me to answer that particular question. I wouldn’t dare risk removing that opinion from the purview of the duchess. You know that.” Lowering his voice to a conspiratorial whisper, he continued, “Suffice to say, my lady, that I believe you are the most beautiful of my offspring.” Alex burst into laughter and leaned up to kiss her father’s cheek. “Well said…ever the diplomat. Although I rather think it shouldn’t be that difficult to be the most beautiful when compared to the hulking brutes you call sons.” “Not diplomacy at all, daughter. You look lovely. And, sadly, very grown up. When did you get so tall?” Alex was just a few inches from her father’s height, and she smiled at the question. “Strong Stafford blood, of course, Father. Are you certain we’re not descended from the Vikings?” “Looking at the four of you, one does wonder. But then there is I, the diminutive duke…pathetically small and not at all Norse. ~ Sarah MacLean,
144:Criminals beheaded in Palermo, heretics burned alive in Toledo, assassins drawn and quartered in Paris—Europeans flocked to every form of painful death imaginable, free entertainment that drew huge crowds. London, the historian Fernand Braudel tells us, held public executions eight times a year at Tyburn, just north of Hyde Park. (The diplomat Samuel Pepys paid a shilling for a good view of a Tyburn hanging in 1664; watching the victim beg for mercy, he wrote, was a crowd of "at least 12 or 14,000 people.") In most if not all European nations, the bodies were impaled on city walls and strung along highways as warnings. "The corpses dangling from trees whose distant silhouettes stand out against the sky, in so many old paintings, are merely a realistic detail," Braudel observed. "They were part of the landscape." Between 1530 and 1630, according to Cambridge historian V.A.C. Gatrell, England executed seventy-five thousand people. At that time, its population was about three million, perhaps a tenth that of the Mexica empire. Arithmetic suggests that if England had been the size of the Triple Alliance, it would have executed, on average, 7,500 people per year, roughly twice the number Cortes estimated for the empire. France and Spain were still more bloodthirsty than England, according to Braudel. ~ Charles C Mann,
145:It had been years since he'd seen a woman handle a crowd of admirers so deftly- not since Lily in her gambling days. Fascinated, he wondered where the hell she had come from. He knew about all the new arrivals in London, and he'd never seen her before. She must be some diplomat's wife, or some exclusive courtesan. Her lips were red and pouting, her pale white shoulders enticingly bare above the blue velvet of her gown. She laughed frequently, tossing her head back in a way that caused her chestnut curls to dance. Like the other men present, Derek was captivated by her figure, the luscious round breasts, the tiny waist, all revealed by a well-fitted gown that was unlike the shapeless Grecian styles of the other women.
"A toast to the loveliest bosom in London!" Lord Bromley, a rakish ne'er-do-well, exclaimed. Titillated and excited, the crowd raised their glasses with a cheer. Waiters rushed to bring more liquor.
"Miss," one of them begged, "I entreat you to cast my dice for me."
"Whatever good luck I have is yours," she assured him, and shook the dice in the box so vigorously that her breasts quivered beneath their shallow covering. The temperature in the room escalated rapidly as a host of admiring sighs greeted the display. Derek decided to intervene before the crowd's mood became too highly charged. Either the vixen didn't realize the lust she was inciting, or she was doing it deliberately. Either way, he wanted to meet her. ~ Lisa Kleypas,
146:REQUIREMENTS TO BE GREAT AT RUNNING HR What kind of person should you look for to comprehensively and continuously understand the quality of your management team? Here are some key requirements:   World-class process design skills Much like the head of quality assurance, the head of HR must be a masterful process designer. One key to accurately measuring critical management processes is excellent process design and control.   A true diplomat Nobody likes a tattletale and there is no way for an HR organization to be effective if the management team doesn’t implicitly trust it. Managers must believe that HR is there to help them improve rather than police them. Great HR leaders genuinely want to help the managers and couldn’t care less about getting credit for identifying problems. They will work directly with the managers to get quality up and only escalate to the CEO when necessary. If an HR leader hoards knowledge, makes power plays, or plays politics, he will be useless.   Industry knowledge Compensation, benefits, best recruiting practices, etc. are all fast-moving targets. The head of HR must be deeply networked in the industry and stay abreast of all the latest developments.   Intellectual heft to be the CEO’s trusted adviser None of the other skills matter if the CEO does not fully back the head of HR in holding the managers to a high quality standard. In order for this to happen, the CEO must trust the HR leader’s thinking and judgment.   Understanding things unspoken When management quality starts to break down in a company, nobody says anything about it, but super-perceptive people can tell that the company is slipping. You need one of those. ~ Ben Horowitz,
147:The most remarkable thing is that even in Adam Smith’s examples of fish and nails and tobacco being used as money, the same sort of thing was happening. In the years following the appearance of the Wealth of Nations, scholars checked into most of these examples and discovered that in just about every case, the people involved were quite familiar with the use of money, and in fact, were using money- as a unit of account. Take the example of dried cod, supposedly used as money in Newfoundland. As the British diplomat A. Mitchell pointed out almost a century ago, what Smith describes was really an illusion, created by a simple credit arrangement: In the early days of the Newfoundland fishing industry, there was no permanent European population, the fishers went there for the fishing season only, and those who were not fishers were traders who bought the dried fish and sold to the fishers their daily supplies. The latter sold their catch to the traders at the market price in pounds, shilling and pence, and obtained in return a credit on their books, which they paid for the supplies. Balances due by the traders were paid for by drafts on England or France. It was quite the same in the Scottish village. It’s not as if anyone actually walked into the local pub, plunked down a roofing nail, and asked for a pint of beer. Employers in Smith’s day often lacked coin to pay their workers; wages could be delayed by a year or more; in the meantime, it was considered acceptable for employees to carry off either some of their own products or leftover work materials, lumber, fabric, cord, and so on. The nails were de facto interest on what their employers owed to them. So they went to the pub, ran up a tab, and when occasion permitted, brought in a bag of nails to charge off against the debt. The law making tobacco legal tender in Virginia seems to have been an attempt by planters to oblige local merchants to accept their products as a credit around harvest time. In effect, the law forced all merchants in Virginia to become middlemen in tobacco business, whether they liked it or not; just as all West Indian merchants were obliged to become sugar dealers, since that’s what all their wealthier customers brought in to write off against their debt.
The primary examples, then, were ones in which people were improvising credit systems, because actual money- gold and silver coinage- was in short supply. ~ David Graeber,
148:The Reluctant Cowboy

I try never to go too far down the path of predicting what any of my children will do when they grow up, because I’ve learned firsthand that life can change on a dime and it very often turns out completely different than originally planned. And I haven’t even grown up yet myself, so who am I to even think about such things? Of all my children, though, I would say that (God willing and the creek don’t rise) my older son, Bryce, is the one who seems most destined to be a rancher. Since he was young, he has sprung out of bed when it’s time to saddle the horses, and the cowboy way of life just comes naturally to him.
Now, my youngest, Todd, on the other hand? Well…I’m not sure! While he started working on the ranch at the same age (birth) as his older brother, he’s never exactly inhaled and embraced his ranching duties in the same way. Oh, he shows up and he does the job, all right. He’s Todd Drummond, after all, and he’s a great kid! It’s just that he doesn’t lie awake at night thinking about the herd he’ll have one day.
But that’s the cool thing about Todd. There’s a whole world going on under the surface, and as he’s saddling and riding his horse, I can see that thirteen-year-old mind a-churning. He might be thinking about the next Marvel movie that’s on its way to theaters. He might be remembering the suit of armor he saved scrap metal to build when he was young. He might be imagining what position he’ll play in football (his favorite sport) next year. Or he might be noodling on the long conversation he had with one of the older congregants at our Presbyterian church last Sunday. He’s got a rich bank of memories and perspectives swimming around in that noggin of his. And this is only something a mama would say: I love to watch the kid think.
What will Todd be when he grows up? There’s no way of knowing. He might be an illustrator for a comic book series, the host of a radio sports show, an accountant, a doctor, a salesman, a diplomat, minister, missionary, or coach.
Although…I do know a certain cattle rancher around these parts who was reportedly exactly like Todd when he was a boy. His head was somewhere else when he was on his horse, and ranching wouldn’t have been described as his favorite line of work. This gentleman loved Spider-Man and football, and he never lay awake at night thinking about the herd he’d have one day. Then, when he grew up, his love for ranching set in. He realized he loved Osage County, raising cattle, and living on the land. And he made the choice to do the thing he never thought he’d wind up doing. And he’s never regretted it for a single day!
(I know the gentleman. I’m married to him.)
It’ll be fun to watch Todd’s future unfold. ~ Ree Drummond,
149:Fritzerl Schnall
ASH on de Alapama biz,
Deep sinnin long I sat,
I dinks von ding for dinkin
Py afery Diplomat;
Und dat ist: dat voll many a ding
Vot ist de facto done,
May pe de jure unbossible,
Und officiel unknown,
Von dimes in San Franciscus,
Im Californian land,
Among de Californaments
Dere woned a Deutscher band;
Und shief among dese heroes
Dere shone Herr Fritzerl Schnall,
Who nefer vouldt pelief in nichts
Dat vas not logical.
Vell den: von tay as Fritzerl
Vas valk Dolores Shtreet,
Mein Gott! how he vas over-rush
Ein gut oldt friendt to meet;
Hans Liederschnitz aus Augsburg,
Vot professed in Bayrisch bier'Gottskreuz! du alter Schlingel!'
Cried Fritz: 'Was mochst du hier?'
Now in des dimes I scribe of,
Dree ways der vere bakannt,
Und only dree, to get to
Das Californigen Landt.
De virst de Plains coom ofer;
De next, de Istmoos troo;
De dird aroundt Cape Horne,
All ofer de ocean plue.
But de first lot of surveyors
For de railroad overland,
Vas seek a new vay northwarts,
120
All for de Eisenbahn,
Und mit dem, der professor
Of Lager vent along;
So he kommed to San Franciscus,
Und den into dis song.
But ash unto Herr Fritzerl
Dis news vas unerheard,
He couldt not know de tidings
Wherevon he had no vord;
Und derefore dis here quesdion
He makes to Hans: 'Old hoss,
I kess de vay you kit hier,
You kommed de Blains agross?'
'Nein, nein,' sayt Liederschnitzerl;
'I komm not ash you say.'
'Vell, den,' antworded Fritzerl,
'It pe's anoder vay.
If you komm de Blains not uber,
I see vot you hafe do:
You make an longer um-way
Und gross de Istmoos troo.'
'Nein, nein,' acain saidt Schnitzerl,
'Dat road I nefer know,
Und vas not ride de Istmoose!'
Cried Fritz, erstaunisched, 'SO
You komm de Blains not uber,
Nor gross de Istmoose troo?
Vell, den - to make de Horn aroundt
Vas all dat you could do!'
'I shvears py Gott!' says Schnitzerl,
'So sure as you vas porn,
Exshept oopon some ochsen
I nefer saw a horn.
Dat ish - mitwiles, too - while-en-I hafe von in mine hand,
Und trink to dy Gesundheit,
Im lieben Vaterland.'
121
Erstaunished stoot der Fritzerl:
No wort herout brought he:
Und sinned, und sinned - den sighftserd.
'Potz blitz! how vash dis pe?'
Ontill a light from Himmel
Vlash down into him shtraight,
Ash Heafen in Yacob Bohme
Vlash from a bewter blate.
Den laut he cry, eye-shbarklin,
Ash droonk mit Truth tifine,
Like der Wahrheitseher Novalis:
'Herr Gott! es leuch't mir ein!
If you komm de Blains not over,
Nor py Horn, nor py canal,
Den I shwears you dis, Hans Schnitzerl,
Du bist not here at all!'
MORAL.
Go in for Wahrheit,
Und for Pure Reason seek;
If it land you in a pog-hole,
Den die dere - like a brick!
Gott brosber all logikers,
Und pless deir nople breed;
Und so ist komm zu ende
Dis Breitmanns letzte Lied.
~ Charles Godfrey Leland,
150:These Claudines, then…they want to know because they believe they already do know, the way one who loves fruit knows, when offered a mango from the moon, what to expect; and they expect the loyal tender teasing affection of the schoolgirl crush to continue: the close and confiding companionship, the pleasure of the undemanding caress, the cuddle which consummates only closeness; yet in addition they want motherly putting right, fatherly forgiveness and almost papal indulgence; they expect that the sights and sounds, the glorious affairs of the world which their husbands will now bring before them gleaming like bolts of silk, will belong to the same happy activities as catching toads, peeling back tree bark, or powdering the cheeks with dandelions and oranging the nose; that music will ravish the ear the way the trill of the blackbird does; that literature will hold the mind in sweet suspense the way fairy tales once did; that paintings will crowd the eye with the delights of a colorful garden, and the city streets will be filled with the same cool dew-moist country morning air they fed on as children. But they shall not receive what they expect; the tongue will be about other business; one will hear in masterpieces only pride and bitter contention; buildings will have grandeur but no flowerpots or chickens; and these Claudines will exchange the flushed cheek for the swollen vein, and instead of companionship, they will get sex and absurd games composed of pinch, leer, and giggle—that’s what will happen to “let’s pretend.”

'The great male will disappear into the jungle like the back of an elusive ape, and Claudine shall see little of his strength again, his intelligence or industry, his heroics on the Bourse like Horatio at the bridge (didn’t Colette see Henri de Jouvenel, editor and diplomat and duelist and hero of the war, away to work each day, and didn’t he often bring his mistress home with him, as Willy had when he was husband number one?); the great affairs of the world will turn into tawdry liaisons, important meetings into assignations, deals into vulgar dealings, and the en famille hero will be weary and whining and weak, reminding her of all those dumb boys she knew as a child, selfish, full of fat and vanity like patrons waiting to be served and humored, admired and not observed.

'Is the occasional orgasm sufficient compensation? Is it the prize of pure surrender, what’s gained from all that giving up? There’ll be silk stockings and velvet sofas maybe, the customary caviar, tasting at first of frog water but later of money and the secretions of sex, then divine champagne, the supreme soda, and rubber-tired rides through the Bois de Boulogne; perhaps there’ll be rich ugly friends, ritzy at homes, a few young men with whom one may flirt, a homosexual confidant with long fingers, soft skin, and a beautiful cravat, perfumes and powders of an unimaginable subtlety with which to dust and wet the body, many deep baths, bonbons filled with sweet liqueurs, a procession of mildly salacious and sentimental books by Paul de Kock and company—good heavens, what’s the problem?—new uses for the limbs, a tantalizing glimpse of the abyss, the latest sins, envy certainly, a little spite, jealousy like a vaginal itch, and perfect boredom.

'And the mirror, like justice, is your aid but never your friend.' -- From "Three Photos of Colette," The World Within the Word, reprinted from NYRB April 1977 ~ William H Gass,
151:When the time comes, & I hope it comes soon, to bury this era of moral rot & the defiling of our communal, social, & democratic norms, the perfect epitaph for the gravestone of this age of unreason should be Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley's already infamous quote:
"I think not having the estate tax recognizes the people that are investing... as opposed to those that are just spending every darn penny they have, whether it’s on booze or women or movies.”
Grassley's vision of America, quite frankly, is one I do not recognize. I thought the heart of this great nation was not limited to the ranks of the plutocrats who are whisked through life in chauffeured cars & private jets, whose often inherited riches are passed along to children, many of whom no sacrifice or service is asked. I do not begrudge wealth, but it must come with a humility that money never is completely free of luck. And more importantly, wealth can never be a measure of worth.
I have seen the waitress working the overnight shift at a diner to give her children a better life, & yes maybe even take them to a movie once in awhile - and in her, I see America.
I have seen the public school teachers spending extra time with students who need help & who get no extra pay for their efforts, & in them I see America.
I have seen parents sitting around kitchen tables with stacks of pressing bills & wondering if they can afford a Christmas gift for their children, & in them I see America.
I have seen the young diplomat in a distant foreign capital & the young soldier in a battlefield foxhole, & in them I see America.
I have seen the brilliant graduates of the best law schools who forgo the riches of a corporate firm for the often thankless slog of a district attorney or public defender's office, & in them I see America.
I have seen the librarian reshelving books, the firefighter, police officer, & paramedic in service in trying times, the social worker helping the elderly & infirm, the youth sports coaches, the PTA presidents, & in them I see America.
I have seen the immigrants working a cash register at a gas station or trimming hedges in the frost of an early fall morning, or driving a cab through rush hour traffic to make better lives for their families, & in them I see America.
I have seen the science students unlocking the mysteries of life late at night in university laboratories for little or no pay, & in them I see America.
I have seen the families struggling with a cancer diagnosis, or dementia in a parent or spouse. Amid the struggles of mortality & dignity, in them I see America.
These, & so many other Americans, have every bit as much claim to a government working for them as the lobbyists & moneyed classes. And yet, the power brokers in Washington today seem deaf to these voices. It is a national disgrace of historic proportions.
And finally, what is so wrong about those who must worry about the cost of a drink with friends, or a date, or a little entertainment, to rephrase Senator Grassley's demeaning phrasings? Those who can't afford not to worry about food, shelter, healthcare, education for their children, & all the other costs of modern life, surely they too deserve to be able to spend some of their “darn pennies” on the simple joys of life.
Never mind that almost every reputable economist has called this tax bill a sham of handouts for the rich at the expense of the vast majority of Americans & the future economic health of this nation. Never mind that it is filled with loopholes written by lobbyists. Never mind that the wealthiest already speak with the loudest voices in Washington, & always have. Grassley’s comments open a window to the soul of the current national Republican Party & it it is not pretty. This is not a view of America that I think President Ronald Reagan let alone President Dwight Eisenhower or Teddy Roosevelt would have recognized. This is unadulterated cynicism & a version of top-down class warfare run amok. ~ Dan RatherFacebook 12/4/17 ~ Dan Rather,
152:Aspirants Three
DRAMATIS PERSONAE.
_QUICK_:
DE YOUNG _a Brother to Mushrooms_
_DEAD_:
SWIFT _an Heirloom_
ESTEE _a Relic_
_IMMORTALS_:
THE SPIRIT OF BROKEN HOPES. THE AUTHOR.
_MISCELLANEOUS_:
A TROUPE OF COFFINS. THE MOON. VARIOUS COLORED FIRES.
_Scene_-The Political Graveyard at Bone Mountain.
DE YOUNG:
This is the spot agreed upon. Here rest
The sainted statesman who upon the field
Of honor have at various times laid down
Their own, and ended, ignominious,
Their lives political. About me, lo!
Their silent headstones, gilded by the moon,
Half-full and near her setting-midnight. Hark!
Through the white mists of this portentous night
(Which throng in moving shapes about my way,
As they were ghosts of candidates I've slain,
To fray their murderer) my open ear,
Spacious to maw the noises of the world,
Engulfs a footstep.
(_Enter Estee from his tomb._)
Ah, 'tis he, my foe,
True to appointment; and so here we fight
Though truly 'twas my firm belief that he
Would send regrets, or I had not been here.
179
ESTEE:
O moon that hast so oft surprised the deeds
Whereby I rose to greatness!-tricksy orb,
The type and symbol of my politics,
Now draw my ebbing fortunes to their flood,
As, by the magic of a poultice, boils
That burn ambitions with defeated fires
Are lifted into eminence.
(_Sees De Young._)
What? you!
Faith, if I had suspected you would come
From the fair world of politics wherein
So lately you were whelped, and which, alas,
I vainly to revisit strive, though still
Rapped on the rotting head and bidden sleep
Till Resurrection's morn,-if I had thought
You would accept the challenge that I flung
I would have seen you damned ere I came forth
In the night air, shroud-clad and shivering,
To fight so mean a thing! But since you're here,
Draw and defend yourself. By gad, we'll _see_
Who'll be Postmaster-General!
DE YOUNG:
We willI'll fight (for I am lame) with any blue
And redolent remain that dares aspire
To wreck the Grand Old Grandson's cabinet.
Here's at you, nosegay!
(_They draw tongues and are about to fight, when from an
adjacent whited sepulcher, enter Swift._)
SWIFT:
Hold! put up your tongues!
Within the confines of this sacred spot
Broods such a holy calm as none may break
By clash of weapons, without sacrilege.
180
(_Beats down their tongues with a bone._)
Madmen! what profits it? For though you fought
With such heroic skill that both survived,
Yet neither should achieve the prize, for I
Would wrest it from him. Let us not contend,
But friendliwise by stipulation fix
A slate for mutual advantage. Why,
Having the pick and choice of seats, should we
Forego them all but one? Nay, we'll take three,
And part them so among us that to each
Shall fall the fittest to his powers. In brief,
Let us establish a Portfolio Trust.
ESTEE:
Agreed.
DE YOUNG:
Aye, truly, 'tis a greed-and one
The offices imperfectly will sate,
But I'll stand in.
SWIFT:
Well, so 'tis understood,
As you're the junior member of the Trust,
Politically younger and undead,
Speak, Michael: what portfolio do you choose?
DE YOUNG:
I've thought the Postal service best would serve
My interest; but since I have my pick,
I'll take the War Department. It is known
Throughout the world, from Market street to Pine,
(For a Chicago journal told the tale)
How in this hand I lately took my life
And marched against great Buckley, thundering
My mandate that he count the ballots fair!
Earth heard and shrank to half her size! Yon moon,
Which rivaled then a liver's whiteness, paused
181
That night at Butchertown and daubed her face
With sheep's blood! Then my serried rank I drew
Back to my stronghold without loss. To mark
My care in saving human life and limb,
The Peace Society bestowed on me
Its leather medal and the title, too,
Of Colonel. Yes, my genius is for war. Good land!
I naturally dote on a brass band!
(_Sings._)
O, give me a life on the tented field,
Where the cannon roar and ring,
Where the flag floats free and the foemen yield
And bleed as the bullets sing.
But be it not mine to wage the fray
Where matters are ordered the other way,
For that is a different thing.
O, give me a life in the fierce campaignLet it be the life of my foe:
I'd rather fall upon him than the plain;
That service I'd fain forego.
O, a warrior's life is fine and free,
But a warrior's death-ah me! ah me!
That's a different thing, you know.
ESTEE:
Some claim I might myself advance to that
Portfolio. When Rebellion raised its head,
And you, my friends, stayed meekly in your shirts,
I marched with banners to the party stump,
Spat on my hands, made faces fierce as death,
Shook my two fists at once and introduced
Brave resolutions terrible to read!
Nay, only recently, as you do know,
I conquered Treason by the word of mouth,
And slew, with Samson's weapon, the whole South!
SWIFT:
182
You once fought Stanford, too.
ESTEE:
Enough of thatGive me the Interior and I'll devote
My mind to agriculture and improve
The breed of cabbages, especially
The _Brassica Celeritatis_, named
For _you_ because in days of long ago
You sold it at your market stall,-and, faith,
'Tis said you were an honest huckster then.
I'll be Attorney-General if you
Prefer; for know I am a lawyer too!
SWIFT:
I never have heard that!-did you, De Young?
DE YOUNG:
Never, so help me! And I swear I've heard
A score of Judges say that he is not.
SWIFT (_to Estee_):
You take the Interior. I might aspire
To military station too, for once
I led my party into Pixley's camp,
And he paroled me. I defended, too,
The State of Oregon against the sharp
And bloody tooth of the Australian sheep.
But I've an aptitude exceeding neat
For bloodless battles of diplomacy.
My cobweb treaty of Exclusion once,
Through which a hundred thousand coolies sailed,
Was much admired, but most by Colonel Bee.
Though born a tinker I'm a diplomat
From old Missouri, and I-ha! what's that?
(_Exit Moon. Enter Blue Lights on all the tombs, and a circle of Red Fire on the
grass; in the center the Spirit of Broken Hopes, and round about, a Troupe of
183
Coffins, dancing and singing._)
CHORUS OF COFFINS:
Two bodies dead and one aliveYo, ho, merrily all!
Now for boodle strain and striveBuzzards all a-warble, O!
Prophets three, agape for bread;
Raven with a stone insteadProvidential raven!
Judges two and Colonel oneRun, run, rustics, run!
But it's O, the pig is shaven,
And oily, oily all!
(_Exeunt Coffins, dancing. The Spirit of Broken Hopes advances, solemnly
pointing at each of the Three Worthies in turn._)
SPIRIT OF BROKEN HOPES:
Governor, Governor, editor man,
Rusty, musty, spick-and-span,
Harlequin, harridan, dicky-dout,
Demagogue, charlatan-o, u, t, OUT!
(_De Young falls and sleeps._)
Antimonopoler, diplomat,
Railroad lackey, political rat,
One, two, three-SCAT!
(_Swift falls and sleeps._)
Boycotting chin-worker, working to woo
Fortune, the fickle, to smile upon _you_,
Jo-coated acrobat, shuttle-cock-SHOO!
(_Estee falls and sleeps._)
Now they lie in slumber sweet,
Now the charm is all complete,
Hasten I with flying feet
Where beyond the further sea
A babe upon its mother's knee
184
Is gazing into skies afar
And crying for a golden star.
I'll drag a cloud across the blue
And break that infant's heart in two!
(_Exeunt the Spirit of Broken Hopes and the Red and Blue Fires. Re-enter
Moon._)
ESTEE (_waking_):
Why, this is strange! I dreamed I know not what,
It seemed that certain apparitions were,
Which sang uncanny words, significant
And yet ambiguous-half-understood
Portending evil; and an awful spook,
Even as I stood with my accomplices,
Counted me out, as children do in play.
Is that you, Mike?
DE YOUNG _(waking):_
It was.
SWIFT _(waking):_
Am I all that?
Then I'll reform my ways.
_(Reforms his ways.)_
Ah! had I known
How sweet it is to be an honest man
I never would have stooped to turn my coat
For public favor, as chameleons take
The hue (as near as they can judge) of that
Supporting them. Henceforth I'll buy
With money all the offices I need,
And know the pleasure of an honest life,
Or stay forever in this dismal place.
Now that I'm good, it will no longer do
To make a third with such, a wicked two.
_(Returns to his tomb.)_
DE YOUNG:
185
Prophetic dream! by some good angel sent
To make me with a quiet life content.
The question shall no more my bosom irk,
To go to Washington or go to work.
From Fame's debasing struggle I'll withdraw,
And taking up the pen lay down the law.
I'll leave this rogue, lest my example make
An honest man of him-his heart would break.
_(Exit De Young.)_
ESTEE:
Out of my company these converts flee,
But that advantage is denied to me:
My curst identity's confining skin
Nor lets me out nor tolerates me in.
Well, since my hopes eternally have fled,
And, dead before, I'm more than ever dead,
To find a grander tomb be now my task,
And pack my pork into a stolen cask.
_(Exit, searching. Loud calls for the Author, who appears, bowing and smiling_.)
AUTHOR _(singing):_
Jack Satan's the greatest of gods,
And Hell is the best of abodes.
'Tis reached, through the Valley of Clods,
By seventy different roads.
Hurrah for the Seventy Roads!
Hurrah for the clods that resound
With a hollow, thundering sound!
Hurrah for the Best of Abodes!
We'll serve him as long as we've breath
Jack Satan the greatest of gods.
To all of his enemies, death!
A home in the Valley of Clods.
Hurrah for the thunder of clods
That smother the soul of his foe!
Hurrah for the spirits that go
To dwell with the Greatest of Gods;
186
_(Curtain falls to faint odor of mortality. Exit the Gas_.)
~ Ambrose Bierce,

IN CHAPTERS [25/25]



   14 Integral Yoga
   3 Fiction
   1 Occultism
   1 Alchemy


   8 The Mother
   7 Sri Aurobindo
   6 Satprem
   3 H P Lovecraft
   3 A B Purani


   4 Agenda Vol 08
   3 Lovecraft - Poems
   3 Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo
   2 Savitri


01.03 - The Yoga of the King - The Yoga of the Souls Release, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  This too the supreme Diplomat can use,
  He makes our fall a means for greater rise.

0 1961-11-05, #Agenda Vol 02, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Once there (this would also make a great novel), Richard continued writing and sending his manuscripts to Sri Aurobindo. Finally, when the Peace Treaty was signed and it was possible to travel, the English said that if we tried to return to India they would throw us in jail! But it all worked out miraculously, almost becoming a Diplomatic incident: the Japanese government decided that if we were put in prison they would protest to the British government! (What a story I could write novels!) In short, Richard returned here with me. And thats when the tragi-comedy began.
   I will tell you about it one dayfantastic!

0 1967-01-28, #Agenda Vol 08, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Not very Diplomatically, by the way. I said it had nothing to do with Tantrism. But the strange thing is that despite all this sexual atmosphere, the man still has an opening: one day, about twelve years ago, as he had a problem, instead of writing to Sri Aurobindo (he had read Sri Aurobindo), he said to himself, But why dont I concentrate on Sri Aurobindo to get the answer to my problem? He concentrated, and in the night he suddenly saw a big golden disk come and fill him, and a voice of extraordinary force told him the words he was waiting for, words of revelation. So the man has an opening.
   Oh, yes.

0 1967-03-07, #Agenda Vol 08, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Mother is referring to the Diplomat's son she already spoke of who merged with Pavitra. (See Agenda VII of February 23, 1966).
   ***

0 1967-06-07, #Agenda Vol 08, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   For the moment, in any case, all Diplomatic relations are based on falsehood and the crudest falsehood at that: its recognized as a necessity and the only way out. Thats how they consider it. So thats what must be abolished to begin with.
   (silence)

0 1967-08-26, #Agenda Vol 08, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   It may be noted that this lady holds an important Diplomatic post, hence the difficulty to send her ... for a "breath of fresh air."
   ***

0 1969-07-19, #Agenda Vol 10, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
   Also in 1967, about the story of a Diplomat's son killed during the war who had merged with Pavitra, Mother said, "It's a knowledge of the CELLS' consciousness." See Agenda VIII of March 7, 1967.
   Could it be the transition from the physical, material consciousness as we know it to the cellular consciousness in which there are not two "sides"one of "life" and one of "death"but something else?

03.11 - The Language Problem and India, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   There are certain externalsocial and politicalcircumstances in existence today and will be more and more in evidence perhaps with the lapse of time which tend to corroborate and streng then that possibility. A language learnt for commercial or Diplomatic transaction cannot remain limited to that function. Those who intend merely to learn may end very probably by cultivating it. And then it has been suggested that in the march of evolution towards world unity, there is likely to be an intermediate stage or rung where nations with special affinities or common interests will group together forming larger collectivities: there will be free associations of free nations, the Commonwealth as it has been termed. If India is to link herself specially to the English-speaking group, the English language will not cease to be an acquaintance but continue to be or develop into a very good friend.
   It may be argued that a foreign language, in order that it may be the medium of literary expression even for the few, must have some living contact with the many, the people themselves. Some kind of atmosphere is needed where the few can brea the and live the language they adopt. Even for an individual when he takes to a foreign tongue, it is necessary in order to be perfectly at home and master in that language that he should live sometime (seven years is the minimum given by a French critic) in the country of the language adopted. In India, now that the British are gone, how can that atmosphere or influence be maintained? English letters may yet flourish here for a few years, because of the atmosphere created in the past but they are sure to dwindle and fade away like flowers on a plant without any roots in a sustaining soil. Indeed English was never a flowering from the mother soil, it was something imposed from above, at best grafted from outside. Circumstances have changed and we cannot hope to eternalise it.

07.03 - The Entry into the Inner Countries, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Or the careful reason's Diplomatic moves
  Testing the means to a prefigured end,

1.05 - Knowledge by Aquaintance and Knowledge by Description, #The Problems of Philosophy, #Bertrand Russell, #Philosophy
  But if we are to obtain a description which we know to be applicable, we shall be compelled, at some point, to bring in a reference to a particular with which we are acquainted. Such reference is involved in any mention of past, present, and future (as opposed to definite dates), or of here and there, or of what others have told us. Thus it would seem that, in some way or other, a description known to be applicable to a particular must involve some reference to a particular with which we are acquainted, if our knowledge about the thing described is not to be merely what follows _logically_ from the description. For example, 'the most long-lived of men' is a description involving only universals, which must apply to some man, but we can make no judgements concerning this man which involve knowledge about him beyond what the description gives. If, however, we say, 'The first Chancellor of the German Empire was an astute Diplomatist', we can only be assured of the truth of our judgement in virtue of something with which we are acquainted--usually a testimony heard or read. Apart from the information we convey to others, apart from the fact about the actual Bismarck, which gives importance to our judgement, the thought we really have contains the one or more particulars involved, and otherwise consists wholly of concepts.
  All names of places--London, England, Europe, the Earth, the Solar
  --
  It would seem that, when we make a statement about something only known by description, we often _intend_ to make our statement, not in the form involving the description, but about the actual thing described. That is to say, when we say anything about Bismarck, we should like, if we could, to make the judgement which Bismarck alone can make, namely, the judgement of which he himself is a constituent. In this we are necessarily defeated, since the actual Bismarck is unknown to us. But we know that there is an object B, called Bismarck, and that B was an astute Diplomatist. We can thus _describe_ the proposition we should like to affirm, namely, 'B was an astute Diplomatist', where B is the object which was Bismarck. If we are describing Bismarck as 'the first
  Chancellor of the German Empire', the proposition we should like to affirm may be described as 'the proposition asserting, concerning the actual object which was the first Chancellor of the German Empire, that this object was an astute Diplomatist'. What enables us to communicate in spite of the varying descriptions we employ is that we know there is a true proposition concerning the actual Bismarck, and that however we may vary the description (so long as the description is correct) the proposition described is still the same. This proposition, which is described and is known to be true, is what interests us; but we are not acquainted with the proposition itself, and do not know it, though we know it is true.
  It will be seen that there are various stages in the removal from acquaintance with particulars: there is Bismarck to people who knew him;

1.22 - Tabooed Words, #The Golden Bough, #James George Frazer, #Occultism
  point-blank refusal or the more Diplomatic evasion that he cannot
  understand what is wanted of him. The moment a friend approaches,

1929-07-28 - Art and Yoga - Art and life - Music, dance - World of Harmony, #Questions And Answers 1929-1931, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  The discipline of Art has at its centre the same principle as the discipline of Yoga. In both the aim is to become more and more conscious; in both you have to learn to see and feel something that is beyond the ordinary vision and feeling, to go within and bring out from there deeper things. Painters have to follow a discipline for the growth of the consciousness of their eyes, which in itself is almost a Yoga. If they are true artists and try to see beyond and use their art for the expression of the inner world, they grow in consciousness by this concentration, which is not other than the consciousness given by Yoga. Why then should not Yogic consciousness be a help to artistic creation? I have known some who had very little training and skill and yet through Yoga acquired a fine capacity in writing and painting. Two examples I can cite to you. One was a girl who had no education whatever; she was a dancer and danced tolerably well. After she took up Yoga, she danced only for friends; but her dancing attained a depth of expression and beauty which was not there before. And although she was not educated, she began to write wonderful things; for she had visions and expressed them in the most beautiful language. But there were ups and downs in her Yoga, and when she was in a good condition, she wrote beautifully, but otherwise was quite dull and stupid and uncreative. The second case is that of a boy who had studied art, but only just a little. The son of a Diplomat, he had been trained for the Diplomatic career; but he lived in luxury and his studies did not go far. Yet as soon as he took up Yoga, he began to produce inspired drawings which carried the expression of an inner knowledge and were symbolic in character; in the end he became a great artist.
  Why are artists generally irregular in their conduct and loose in character?

1956-12-19 - Preconceived mental ideas - Process of creation - Destructive power of bad thoughts - To be perfectly sincere, #Questions And Answers 1956, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  Naturally, this is the maximum. There are crass insincerities which everybody understands and which, I believe, it is not necessary to dwell upon, as for example, saying one thing and thinking another, pretending that you are doing one thing and doing another, expressing a wish which is not your real wish. I am not even speaking of the absolutely glaring lie which consists in saying something different from the fact, but even that Diplomatic way of acting which consists in doing things with the idea of obtaining a certain result, in saying something and expecting it to have a certain effect; every combination of this kind which naturally makes you contradict yourself, is a kind of insincerity gross enough for everybody to easily recognise.
  But there are others more subtle which are difficult to discern. For instance, so long as you have sympathies and antipathies, quite naturally and as it were spontaneously you will have a favourable perception of what is sympathetic to you and an unfavourable perception of whator whomyou dislike. And there too the lack of sincerity will be flagrant. However, you may deceive yourself and not perceive that you are being insincere. Then in that case, you have, as it were, the collaboration of mental insincerity. For it is true that there are insincerities of slightly different types according to the state of being or the parts of the being. Only, the origin of these insincerities is always a similar movement arising from desire and the seeking of personal endsfrom egoism, from the combination of all the limitations arising from egoism and all the deformations arising from desire.

1f.lovecraft - The Challenge from Beyond, #Lovecraft - Poems, #unset, #Zen
   extirpate the race for Diplomatic reasonsusing the exploring minds as
   agents of destruction.

1f.lovecraft - The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, #Lovecraft - Poems, #unset, #Zen
   for removal and later use in Diplomatic dealings, though the rescued
   trio, remembering its effect on them in Dylath-Leen, had warned their

1f.lovecraft - The Electric Executioner, #Lovecraft - Poems, #unset, #Zen
   There would, I thought, be two distinct times for Diplomatic stalling.
   If I could get him to postpone the slipping on of the hood, that much

2.18 - January 1939, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
   Sri Aurobindo: Why not? Chamberlain has said that as long as England's interests are not involved she is not obliged to fight. England will say that Italy's demands have not been satisfied and so she has gone to war and Germany has joined her. There was no aggression on Italy's part, and so England is not obliged to come to the aid of France; any number of excuses could be given. Daladier told a friend (who is also a friend of our Suryakumari) that he had to betray Czechoslovakia because Chamberlain told him that England will support him as far as it is Diplomatically possible, but in case of war France should not count on England.
   Disciple: I wonder why Flandin wants to support Franco when Blum is against him. You know Flandin even sent a telegram to Mussolini conveying his congratulations! Hitler counts Flandin as a friend does he intend to join the Rome-Berlin axis and thus keep out England?

2.19 - Feb-May 1939, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
   Sri Aurobindo: He is not reliable. Daladier has at least some force. On one occasion he refused to listen to Bonnet and said he would not tolerate any English interference in connection with the Italian question. The French people don't know that they have to stand up to the British and speak to them bluntly. During the Czech crisis when Chamberlain told them that he would help them Diplomatically as far as possible but they should not count on his military support, they should have replied that if England was attacked by Germany they should not count on them as allies. Then Chamberlain would have come down.
   9 FEBRUARY 1939
  --
   Sri Aurobindo: He will be one of the greatest Diplomats in the world if he can reconcile their interests and have a common programme.
   Disciple: Subhas and his Conference don't seem to have settled on any programme. Today's paper says that Gandhiji wired to him not to stand for the presidentship. But he did not pay any heed to it. Now many delegates may vote against him.

2.21 - 1940, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
   Disciple: She described the condition of her friend's son, a young Diplomat who had been to Berlin. His people could not recognise him when he returned. He told them that in Germany he had felt as if he were put inside a metallic bomb and every minute somebody was putting more pressure on it so that he couldn't breathe freely.
   Sri Aurobindo: Yes, practically the whole atmosphere in Germany seems to be dominated by these forces. The young men are actually taught to be devilish. In Poland, when the Poles complained about cruelty by the German soldiers people said, "Don't complain, this is nothing. Wait till the Nazis come to power here; then you will know what cruelty is."

3.7.2.03 - Mind Nature and Law of Karma, #Essays In Philosophy And Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  At first however the moral conceptions of man and the direction and output and the demand of return of the ethical energy in him get themselves inextricably mixed with his vital conceptions and demands and even afterwards lean on them very commonly and very considerably for a support and incentive. Human morality first takes up an enormous mass of customary rules of action, a conventional and traditional practice much of which is of a very doubtful moral value, gives to it an imperative sanction of right and slips into the crude mass or superimposes on it, but still as a part of one common and equal code, the true things of the ethical ideal. It appeals to the vital being, his desires, hopes and fears, incites man to virtue by the hope of rewards and the dread of punishment, imitating in this device the method of his crude and fumbling social practice: for that, finding its law and rule which, good or bad, it wishes to make imperative as supposing it to be at least the best calculated for the order and efficiency of the community, opposed by mans vital being, bribes and terrifies as well as influences, educates and persuades him to acceptance. Morality tells man, accommodating itself to his imperfection, mostly through the mouth of religion, that the moral law is imperative in itself, but also that it is very expedient for him personally to follow it, righteousness in the end the safest policy, virtue the best paymaster in the long run,for this is a world of Law or a world ruled by a just and virtuous or at least virtue-loving God. He is assured that the righteous man shall prosper and the wicked perish and that the paths of virtue lie through pleasant places. Or, if this will not serve, since it is palpably false in experience and even man cannot always deceive himself, it offers him a security of vital rewards denied here but conceded in some hereafter. Heaven and hell, happiness and suffering in other lives are put before him as the bribe and the menace. He is told, the better to satisfy his easily satisfied intellect, that the world is governed by an ethical law which determines the measure of his earthly fortunes, that a justice reigns and this is justice, that every action has its exact rebound and his good shall bring him good and his evil evil. It is these notions, this idea of the moral law, of righteousness and justice as a thing in itself imperative, but still needing to be enforced by bribe and menace on our human nature,which would seem to show that at least for that nature they are not altogether imperative,this insistence on reward and punishment because morality struggling with our first unregenerate being has to figure very largely as a mass of restraints and prohibitions and these cannot be enforced without some fact or appearance of a compelling or inducing outward sanction, this Diplomatic compromise or effort at equivalence between the impersonal ethical and the personal egoistic demand, this marriage of convenience between right and vital utility, virtue and desire,it is these accommodations that are embodied in the current notions of the law of Karma.
  What real truth is there behind the current notions of Karma in the actual facts or the fundamental powers of the life of man here or the visible working of the law of the energies of the cosmos? There is evidently a substantial truth, but it is a part only of the whole; its reign or predominance belongs to a certain element only, to the emphasis of one line among many of a transitional movement between the law of the vital energy and a greater and higher law of the mind and spirit. A mixture of any two kinds of energy sets up a mixed and complex action of the output of the energy and the return, and a too sharp-cut rule affixing vital returns to a mental and moral output of force is open to much exception and it cannot be the whole inner truth of the matter. But still where the demand is for the vital return, for success, an outer happiness, good, fortune, that is a sign of the dominant intention in the energy and points to a balance of forces weighing in the indicated direction. At first sight, if success is the desideratum, it is not clear what morality has to say in the affair, since we see in most things that it is a right understanding and intelligent or intuitive practice of the means and conditions and an insistent power of the will, a settled drive of the force of the being of which success is the natural consequence. Man may impose by a system of punishments a check on the egoistic will and intelligence in pursuit of its vital ends, may create a number of moral conditions for the worlds prizes, but this might appear, as is indeed contended in certain vitalistic theories, an artificial imposition on Nature and a dulling and impoverishment of the free and powerful play of the mind force and the life force in their alliance. But in truth the greatest force for success is a right concentration of energy, tapasy, and there is an inevitable moral element in Tapasya.

Conversations with Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Arthur C Clarke, #Fiction
  Now another question. Mr. G. spoke to the Governor about me and my positions as a teacher and as an examiner. I wonder whether it would not be good that I should pay a visit to the Governor. He is said to be a kind man, with interest in theosophy. And I would like to say to him, Diplomatically, that though he will not meet me in social gatherings my abstention only comes from the kind of studies I am pursuing.
  Let me consider that point. I will answer you later on.

Talks With Sri Aurobindo 1, #unset, #Arthur C Clarke, #Fiction
  had to betray Czechoslovakia because Chamberlain told him he would support him so long as it was Diplomatically possible but in case of war France
  should not count on England. This piece of information must be au thentic,

Talks With Sri Aurobindo 2, #Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
  SATYENDRA: He made a Diplomatic statement ending with "Long live
  Britain and France" and saying that he would align himself with the British
  --
  NIRODBARAN: And now if Diplomatic relations go, the British will take
  possession of Pondicherry.
  SRI AUROBINDO: Not necessarily. Even if Diplomatic relations go,
  Pondicherry may simply remain hostile without being at war.
  --
  PURANI: France has cut off all Diplomatic relations with England, Germany
  says. In that case the Indian Government naturally take stern measures and
  --
  SRI AUROBINDO: Diplomatic relations are already cut off here. It seems
  the Consul has gone to the North with the Vice-Consul. When the British
  --
  NIRODBARAN: So Pondicherry is becoming a British colony? And Diplomatic relations also seem to have been cut off.
  SRI AUROBINDO: The French charge d'affaires in London has resigned.

The Act of Creation text, #The Act of Creation, #Arthur Koestler, #Psychology
  journalist, pamphleteer, politician, wire-puller, Diplomat, and states-
  man; pioneer of electricity, founder of the physics of liquid surfaces,

The Dwellings of the Philosophers, #unset, #Arthur C Clarke, #Fiction
  language), and lengua cortesana (language of the court), that is, Diplomatic language, since it
  contains a double meaning corresponding to a double science, one apparent, the other
  --
  amphibolos) in that Diplomatic sentence. The same character engraved before quotidie and
  morimur testifies that these words remain invariable and retain their ordinary meaning.
  --
  under the veil of various emblems, are answerable to the science of Diplomatics and are
  presented with a double meaning, one apparent and understandable by everyone (exoteric),
  --
  eager to talk with Diplomats, whom she pleased to answer in their own tongue, which would
  justify the very careful multilingual education and probably also mastery of the hermetic
  --
  Ages by philosophers, scientists, men of letters, and Diplomats. Knights belonging to Orders
  and knights-errant, troubadours, trouveres, and minstrels, traveling students of the famous

WORDNET



--- Overview of noun diplomat

The noun diplomat has 2 senses (first 1 from tagged texts)
                  
1. (4) diplomat, diplomatist ::: (an official engaged in international negotiations)
2. diplomat ::: (a person who deals tactfully with others)


--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun diplomat

2 senses of diplomat                          

Sense 1
diplomat, diplomatist
   => official, functionary
     => skilled worker, trained worker, skilled workman
       => worker
         => person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
           => organism, being
             => living thing, animate thing
               => whole, unit
                 => object, physical object
                   => physical entity
                     => entity
           => causal agent, cause, causal agency
             => physical entity
               => entity

Sense 2
diplomat
   => mediator, go-between, intermediator, intermediary, intercessor
     => negotiator, negotiant, treater
       => communicator
         => person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
           => organism, being
             => living thing, animate thing
               => whole, unit
                 => object, physical object
                   => physical entity
                     => entity
           => causal agent, cause, causal agency
             => physical entity
               => entity


--- Hyponyms of noun diplomat

1 of 2 senses of diplomat                      

Sense 1
diplomat, diplomatist
   => ambassador, embassador
   => charge d'affaires
   => consul
   => envoy, envoy extraordinary, minister plenipotentiary
   => high commissioner
   => internuncio
   => minister, diplomatic minister
   => nuncio, papal nuncio
   => persona grata
   => persona non grata
   => plenipotentiary
   HAS INSTANCE=> Bunche, Ralph Bunche, Ralph Johnson Bunche
   HAS INSTANCE=> Dulles, John Foster Dulles
   HAS INSTANCE=> Galbraith, John Galbraith, John Kenneth Galbraith
   HAS INSTANCE=> Genet, Edmund Charles Edouard Genet, Citizen Genet
   HAS INSTANCE=> Grotius, Hugo Grotius, Huig de Groot
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hammarskjold, Dag Hammarskjold, Dag Hjalmar Agne Carl Hammarskjold
   HAS INSTANCE=> Harriman, Averell Harriman, William Averell Harriman
   HAS INSTANCE=> Harris, Townsend Harris
   HAS INSTANCE=> Hull, Cordell Hull
   HAS INSTANCE=> Jay, John Jay
   => Kennan, George F. Kennan, George Frost Kennan
   HAS INSTANCE=> Kissinger, Henry Kissinger, Henry Alfred Kissinger
   HAS INSTANCE=> Le Duc Tho
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lesseps, Ferdinand de Lesseps, Vicomte Ferdinand Marie de Lesseps
   HAS INSTANCE=> Lie, Trygve Lie, Trygve Halvden Lie
   HAS INSTANCE=> Nicolson, Harold Nicolson, Sir Harold George Nicolson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Page, Thomas Nelson Page
   HAS INSTANCE=> Roosevelt, Eleanor Roosevelt, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt
   HAS INSTANCE=> Stevenson, Adlai Stevenson, Adlai Ewing Stevenson
   HAS INSTANCE=> Waldheim, Kurt Waldheim


--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun diplomat

2 senses of diplomat                          

Sense 1
diplomat, diplomatist
   => official, functionary

Sense 2
diplomat
   => mediator, go-between, intermediator, intermediary, intercessor




--- Coordinate Terms (sisters) of noun diplomat

2 senses of diplomat                          

Sense 1
diplomat, diplomatist
  -> official, functionary
   => apparatchik
   => appointee
   => bailiff
   => beadle
   => bureaucrat, administrative official
   => caretaker
   => censor
   => census taker, enumerator
   => church officer
   => city father
   => civil servant
   => commissar, political commissar
   => Comptroller General
   => Comptroller of the Currency
   => diplomat, diplomatist
   => elected official
   => equerry
   => fire marshall
   => fire warden, forest fire fighter, ranger
   => hearing examiner, hearing officer
   => holdover, hangover
   => incumbent, officeholder
   => Inquisitor
   => invalidator, voider, nullifier
   => judge, justice, jurist
   => licenser
   => macebearer, mace, macer
   => mandarin
   => notary, notary public
   => noticer
   => officeholder, officer
   => agent, federal agent
   => provincial
   => postmaster general
   => proconsul
   => prosecutor, public prosecutor, prosecuting officer, prosecuting attorney
   => quaestor
   => recruiter
   => registrar, record-keeper, recorder
   => regulator
   => returning officer
   => sealer
   => searcher
   => teller, vote counter
   => town clerk
   => usher, doorkeeper
   => vizier
   => weigher

Sense 2
diplomat
  -> mediator, go-between, intermediator, intermediary, intercessor
   => mediatrix
   => conciliator, make-peace, pacifier, peacemaker, reconciler
   => diplomat
   => harmonizer, harmoniser
   => interpreter, translator
   => matchmaker, matcher, marriage broker
   => moderator
   => second hand




--- Grep of noun diplomat
diplomat
diplomate
diplomatic building
diplomatic corps
diplomatic immunity
diplomatic minister
diplomatic mission
diplomatic negotiations
diplomatic pouch
diplomatic service
diplomatist



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Wikipedia - Albrecht Haushofer -- German geographer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Alec Kirkbride -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Alejandro Daniel Wolff -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Aleksandar Cincar-Markovic -- Yugoslav diplomat
Wikipedia - Aleksander Kawalkowski -- Polish soldier and diplomat
Wikipedia - Aleksander M-EM-^AadoM-EM-^[ -- Polish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Aleksander Surdej -- Polish economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Aleksandra Bukowska-McCabe -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Aleksandr Kapto -- Russian sociologist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Alen Panov -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Benson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Bessmertnykh (politician) -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Griboyedov -- Russian diplomat, playwright, poet and composer (1795-1829)
Wikipedia - Alexander Keith McClung -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Kinshchak -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Kurakin (1697) -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Nikolayevich Abaza -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Pollock Moore -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Viktorovich Blokhin -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexander Yakovlev -- Soviet politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexandra Bugailiskis -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexandru Paleologu -- Romanian politician, diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Alexandr Vondra -- Czech politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Alexey Bestuzhev-Ryumin -- Russian diplomat and chancellor of the Russian Empire (1693-1768)
Wikipedia - Alex T. Johnson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Alfonso Fraga -- Cuban diplomat
Wikipedia - Alfred Atherton -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Alfredo Toro Hardy -- Venezuelan diplomat
Wikipedia - Alfred Stirling -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alger Hiss -- alleged Soviet agent and American diplomat
Wikipedia - Algernon Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale -- British diplomat, collector, and writer (1837-1916)
Wikipedia - Ali Akbar Tabatabaei -- Iranian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ali Aujali -- Libyan diplomat
Wikipedia - Ali Bagheri -- Iranian diplomat
Wikipedia - Alice Wells -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Alicia Castro -- Argentine diplomat
Wikipedia - Alina Romanowski -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ali Sheikh Abdullahi -- Somali diplomat
Wikipedia - Alison Blake -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Alister McIntosh -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Aljaz Gosnar -- Slovenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Allan Gotlieb -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Allan Taylor (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Al-Mawardi -- Judge, Scholar, Diplomat of later Abbasids
Wikipedia - Alusine Fofanah -- Sierra Leonean politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Aly Khan -- Pakistani diplomat and socialite
Wikipedia - Amadeu Altafaj -- Spanish journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ambassador -- Diplomatic envoy
Wikipedia - Ambroisine Kpongo -- Central African Republic diplomat
Wikipedia - Ambrose Dudley Mann -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Amerley Ollennu Awua-Asamoa -- Ghanaian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Amina Bazindre -- Nigerien diplomat
Wikipedia - Amma Twum-Amoah -- Ghanaian Diplomat
Wikipedia - Ana Maria Sanchez de Rios -- Peruvian diplomat
Wikipedia - Anatolius (consul) -- 5th century Eastern Roman Empire consul, diplomat and general
Wikipedia - Anatol Muhlstein -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Anatoly Blagonravov -- Russian scientist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Anatoly Torkunov -- Soviet/Russian diplomat and scholar
Wikipedia - Anders Hulden -- Finnish diplomat, journalist and writer
Wikipedia - Andreas Meyer-Landrut -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Andre de Longjumeau -- 13th-century friar and diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrei Dapkiunas -- Belarusian diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrei Gromyko -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrej BenedejM-DM-^MiM-DM-^M -- Slovenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Andre Negre -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Andres Vazquez de Prada -- Spanish historian and diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrew Mellon -- American diplomat, banker, businessman, industrialist, philanthropist, and art collector
Wikipedia - Andrew Palmer (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrew Pocock -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrew Robert Young -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Andrew Wood (diplomat)
Wikipedia - Andrew Young -- American politician, diplomat, activist and pastor from Georgia
Wikipedia - Andrey Denisov -- Russian diplomat, since
Wikipedia - Andrey Kelin -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrey Kemarsky -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Andris Piebalgs -- Latvian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrzej Jasionowski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrzej Kapiszewski -- Polish sociologist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrzej Rej (diplomat) -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrzej SadoM-EM-^[ -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Andrzej Wawrzyniak -- Polish diplomat and art collector
Wikipedia - Andy Kim (politician) -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Aneurin Hughes -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Angelo Accattino -- Italian prelate and diplomat of the Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Angelo Rotta -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Angilbert -- 8th and 9th-century Frankish poet, diplomat, and saint
Wikipedia - Angola-Uruguay relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Republic of Angola and the Eastern Republic of Uruguay
Wikipedia - Anila Bitri -- Albanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Anka Feldhusen -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Anna Azari -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Anna Barbarzak -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Anna Biolik -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Anna Pienkosz -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne Casper -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne de Montmorency -- French soldier, statesman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne Forrester -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne Hall -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne Meskanen -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne Plunkett -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Anne W. Patterson -- United States Department of State official and diplomat
Wikipedia - Anoushirvan Sepahbodi -- Iranian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Antanas Vinkus -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Anthony Cantor -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Anthony Forson -- Ghanaian lawyer, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Anthony Hastings George -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Anthony Hurrell -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Anthony Jenkinson -- English diplomat, traveller and explorer (1529-c.1611)
Wikipedia - Anthony Merry -- British diplomat (1756-1835)
Wikipedia - Anthony Mildmay -- English diplomat
Wikipedia - Anthony Parsons -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Antoine Boyellau -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Antoine Lefort -- Luxembourgian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Antoni Augustyn Deboli -- Polish noble and diplomat
Wikipedia - Antonio Cagnoli -- Italian astronomer, mathematician, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Antonio Crutta -- Albanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Antonio de Castro y Casaleiz -- Spanish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Antonio Franco (diplomat) -- Vatican diplomat
Wikipedia - Antonio Greppi (1722-1799) -- Italian banker, merchant, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Antonio Vieira -- 17th-century Portuguese diplomat and missionary
Wikipedia - Anton Smith-Meyer -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Anton von Prokesch-Osten -- Austro-Hungarian diplomat, statesman and general (1795-1876)
Wikipedia - Anu Laamanen -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Anvar Azimov -- Russian Diplomat
Wikipedia - Ara Ayvazyan -- Armenian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Araya Desta -- Eritrean diplomat
Wikipedia - Archiv fr Diplomatik
Wikipedia - Ardiana Hobdari -- Albanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arikana Chihombori Quao -- Doctor, activist, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Arizal Effendi -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arnaud du Ferrier -- French lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Arne Aasheim -- Norwegian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Arne Roy Walther -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arnold Wilson -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Aron Cotrus -- Romanian poet and diplomat
Wikipedia - Artak Apitonian -- Armenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arthur A. Ageton -- American diplomat, naval officer, and writer
Wikipedia - Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr. -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Arthur Canham -- South African diplomat
Wikipedia - Arthur Cooper (translator) -- British diplomat and translator
Wikipedia - Arthur de Gobineau -- French diplomat and writer known for racial theories
Wikipedia - Arthur F. Burns -- American economist, diplomat, and 10th Chairman of the Federal Reserve in the United States
Wikipedia - Arthur Grant Campbell -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arthur J. Collingsworth -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Arthur Morch Hansson -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arthur W. Hummel Jr. -- American diplomat (1920-2001)
Wikipedia - Artur Lompart -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Artur Michalski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Arturo Alfandari -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Arturo Cruz Jr. -- Nicaraguan academic, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Artur Orzechowski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Arundhati Ghose -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Asa Bafaqih -- Indonesian journalist, diplomat, and politician
Wikipedia - Ashraf Qazi -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Asif J. Chaudhry -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Asko Ivalo -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Asma Mohamed Abdalla -- Sudanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Assassination of Erkut Akbay -- Assassination of a Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Assassination of Orhan Gunduz -- Assassination of a Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Assassination of Taha Carim -- Assassination of a Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Assem Jaber -- Lebanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training -- United States non-profit organization about American diplomacy
Wikipedia - Atkins Hamerton -- Irish-born British soldier and diplomat
Wikipedia - Attila Demko -- Hungarian diplomat and writer (b. 1976)
Wikipedia - Aud Marit Wiig -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Audra PlepytM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - August Franz Essen -- Saxonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Augustin Cisar -- Slovak diplomat
Wikipedia - Augustine Mahiga -- Tanzanian diplomat
Wikipedia - August KoM-EM-^[ciesza-M-EM-;aba -- Polish diplomat and Orientalist
Wikipedia - Augustus Foster -- British diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Aurelia E. Brazeal -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Aurelien Lechevallier -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Aureliu Ciocoi -- Moldovan diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Avi Gil -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Axel Edelstam -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Ayesha Patricia Rekhi -- Canadian diplomat, from 2019 Ambassador to the Czech Republic
Wikipedia - Bahamas-Haiti relations -- Bilateral diplomatic relations
Wikipedia - Bai Tian -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Baltimore crisis -- 1891 diplomatic incident between Chile and the United States
Wikipedia - Bamir Topi -- Albanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Barakat Ahmad -- Indian scholar and diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara A. Leaf -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara Barrett -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara Jones (diplomat) -- Irish diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara Labuda -- Polish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara M-DM-^Fwioro -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara Nekesa Oundo -- Ugandan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Barbara Woodward -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Baron Karl von Macchio -- Austro-Hungarian diplomat
Wikipedia - Barrie Dexter -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Barrington King -- American diplomat (b. 1930, d. 2006)
Wikipedia - Baxter Hunt -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Beata PM-DM-^Yksa -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Bechir Guellouz -- Tunisian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bedia Afnan -- Iraqi diplomat
Wikipedia - Benedetto Cotrugli -- Ragusan merchant, economist, scientist, diplomat and humanist
Wikipedia - Benedict de Tscharner -- Swiss writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Benedikt de Cache -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Benedikt KuripeM-DM-^MiM-DM-^M -- Slovenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Benita Ferrero-Waldner -- Austrian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Benjamin Bathurst (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Benjamin Carrion -- Ecuadorian writer and diplomat (1897-1979)
Wikipedia - Benny Dagan -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Beno Zephine -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Berhanu Kebede -- Ethiopian diplomat
Wikipedia - Berkeley Ormerod -- English soldier, diplomat, and sportsman
Wikipedia - Bernadette Allen -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Bernard Bajolet -- French diplomat and civil servant
Wikipedia - Bernard Boursicot -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Bernardine do Rego -- Beninese diplomat
Wikipedia - Bernardo Attolico -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bernardo de Iriarte -- Spanish diplomat (1735-1814)
Wikipedia - Bertram Ballard -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Besnik Mustafaj -- Albanian writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Bhaswati Mukherjee -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bilahari Kausikan -- Singaporean former diplomat
Wikipedia - Bjorn Kristvik -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bjorn Prytz -- Swedish businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Bjorn Skogmo -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Boaz W. Long -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Bogdan Aurescu -- Romanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bo M-CM-^Edahl -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - BoM-EM-!ko Colak-Antic -- Serbian diplomat
Wikipedia - BoM-EM->o Cerar -- Diplomat and war veteran
Wikipedia - BoM-EM->o KovaM-DM-^Mevic (politician) -- Croatian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Bonnie McElveen-Hunter -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Borge Brende -- Norwegian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Boris Cepeda -- German-Ecuadorian Pianist and Diplomat
Wikipedia - Borislav MiloM-EM-!evic -- Yugoslav diplomat
Wikipedia - Boris Yeltsin circling over Shannon diplomatic incident -- Diplomatic incident
Wikipedia - Brahim Ghali -- Sahrawi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Breckinridge Long -- American diplomat (1881-1958)
Wikipedia - Brenda LaGrange Johnson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Brent Christensen -- United States career diplomat
Wikipedia - Brett McGurk -- Former American diplomat
Wikipedia - Brian Bowler -- Malawian Ambassador and diplomat
Wikipedia - Brian Crowe -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Brian Davidson -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Brian D. McFeeters -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Brian Houghton Hodgson -- British diplomat and naturalist
Wikipedia - Bridget Brind -- United Kingdom diplomat and ambassador to Jordan
Wikipedia - British High Commission, Nairobi -- Diplomatic mission in Nairobi
Wikipedia - Bruce Bucknell -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Bruce Grant (writer) -- Australian writer, journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Brunella Borzi Cornacchia -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bruno Figueroa Fischer -- Mexican diplomat
Wikipedia - Bruno Foucher -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Bruno Le Maire -- French politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Bryan Gould -- British former politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Budi Bowoleksono -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Bui M-DM-^PM-CM-,nh DM-DM-)nh -- Vietnamese diplomat
Wikipedia - Bui ViM-aM-;M-^Gn -- Vietnamese reformer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Bujari Ahmed -- Saharawi diplomat
Wikipedia - Burhanettin Muz -- Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Burhan Muhammad -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Callista Gingrich -- U.S. diplomat
Wikipedia - Cameron Munter -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Canada-Netherlands relations -- Diplomatic relations between Canada and the Kingdom of the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Canadian Caper -- Rescue of US diplomats from Iran, 1980
Wikipedia - Can Dizdar -- Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Cao Keqiang -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Cape Verde-Guinea-Bissau relations -- Diplomatic relations between two African nations
Wikipedia - Cape Verde-India relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Republic of India and the Republic of Cabo Verde
Wikipedia - Cape Verde-Portugal relations -- Diplomatic relations between Portugal and Cape Verde
Wikipedia - Carla Jazzar -- Lebanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Carl Bode -- Educator, diplomat, writer
Wikipedia - Carl Copeland Cundiff -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Carl Emil Moltke -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Carl Hochschild -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Carl Johan Ingman -- Swedish diplomatic secretary and spy
Wikipedia - Carl Lowenhielm -- 19th-century Swedish diplomat and nobleman
Wikipedia - Carlos Daniel Chavez-Taffur Schmidt -- Peruvian diplomat
Wikipedia - Carlos de Candamo -- Peruvian diplomat and sportsman
Wikipedia - Carlos Flores Vizcarra -- Mexican politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Carlos Garcia-Bedoya Zapata -- Peruvian diplomat
Wikipedia - Carlos Holmes Trujillo -- Colombian politician, diplomat, scholar and attorney
Wikipedia - Carlos Martinez de Irujo, 1st Marquess of Casa Irujo -- Spanish diplomat and politician (1763-1824)
Wikipedia - Carlos P. Romulo -- Filipino politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Carlos Robles Piquer -- Spanish diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Carma Elliot -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Carman Lapointe -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Carmen Cantor -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Carole Crofts -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Caroline affair -- 19th century diplomatic crisis
Wikipedia - Caroline Kennedy -- American author and diplomat
Wikipedia - Caroline Wilson (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Carolyn Browne -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Category:Diplomats of the Holy See
Wikipedia - Category:Swedish diplomats
Wikipedia - Catherine Boura -- Greek diplomat
Wikipedia - Catherine Colonna -- French diplomat and political figure
Wikipedia - Catriona Laing -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - C. Douglas Dillon -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Cecilia Nahon -- Argentine economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Celso Amorim -- Brazilian diplomat
Wikipedia - Cesar Benito Cabrera -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Cesare Alfieri di Sostegno -- Italian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ceslovas Gedgaudas -- Lithuanian diplomat, translator, and polyglot
Wikipedia - Chad-Israel relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Republic of Chad and the State of Israel
Wikipedia - Chaiyong Satjipanon -- Thai diplomat
Wikipedia - Chang Sung-hwan -- South Korean general, government minister and diplomat
Wikipedia - Charge d'affaires -- Head of diplomatic mission when no higher official exists
Wikipedia - Charles Blair Birkett -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk -- English diplomat (1484-1545)
Wikipedia - Charles Burke Elbrick -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles C. Hart -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles E. DeLong -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Edward Magoon -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Eliot (diplomat) -- British diplomat, colonial administrator and botanist
Wikipedia - Charles E. Redman -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Etienne Raymond Victor de Verninac -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles-Francois d'Iberville -- French aristocrat and diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Granville, 2nd Earl of Bath -- English diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles J. Nelson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles J. Vopicka -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Lee (general) -- British military diplomat and general of the Continental Army during the American War of Independence
Wikipedia - Charles Lyon Chandler -- American diplomat and historian
Wikipedia - Charles Manatt -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Maximilien de Lalaing -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles M. Dickinson -- American lawyer, editor, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Peake -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Philip Bassett -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Piguet -- Swiss diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Rivkin -- American businessman, diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Spencer Francis -- American diplomat and newspaper editor
Wikipedia - Charles Theodore Te Water -- South African diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Welter -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Whitworth, 1st Earl Whitworth -- 18th/19th-century British diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Charles Wiggin -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles W. Maynes -- American diplomat (1938-2007)
Wikipedia - Charlotta Schlyter -- Swedish diplomat and Swedish Ambassador to Bangladesh
Wikipedia - Cheikhna Ould Mohamed Laghdaf -- Mauritanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Chen Fengxiang -- Chinese diplomat and political figure
Wikipedia - Cheng Yonghua -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Cheng Youshu -- Chinese diplomat and poet (born 1924)
Wikipedia - Chen Jian (diplomat) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Chenkyab Dorji -- Bhutanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Chesapeake Affair -- International diplomatic incident that occurred during the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Chester Crocker -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Chilman Arisman -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - China-United Kingdom relations -- Diplomatic relations between the People's Republic of China and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Chinese Consulate-General, Houston -- Diplomatic mission of China in Houston, United States
Wikipedia - Chingiz Aidarbekov -- Kyrgyz diplomat
Wikipedia - Choi Young-jin -- South Korean diplomat
Wikipedia - Chris Alexander (politician) -- Canadian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Chris Beeby -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Chris Campbell (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Chris Hoornaert -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Chris Rampling -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Christiana Figueres -- Costa Rican diplomat
Wikipedia - Christian Rakovsky -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Christian Ulrik Gyldenlove -- Danish diplomat and military officer
Wikipedia - Christine A. Elder -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher Hatton, 1st Viscount Hatton -- English aristocrat and diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher Hughes (diplomat) -- American attorney and diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher Landau -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher P. Henzel -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher Prentice -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher W. Murray -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Christopher Yvon -- Diplomat
Wikipedia - Christophe Zakhia El-Kassis -- Priest and Vatican diplomat (b. 1968)
Wikipedia - Chun Beeho -- South Korean diplomat
Wikipedia - Cicely Mayhew -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Cincar-Marko -- Serbian aristocrat and diplomat
Wikipedia - C. Kevin Blackstone -- United States Department of State official, American diplomat
Wikipedia - Clarence Clyde Ferguson Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Clarence E. Gauss -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Claude Boucher (diplomat) -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Claude Breart de Boisanger -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Claude Ceberet du Boullay -- 17th-century French diplomat
Wikipedia - Claude-France Arnould -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Claude Louis Francois Regnier de Guerchy -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Claudia Chamorro Barrios -- Nicaraguan diplomat
Wikipedia - Clay Constantinou -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Clemente Cerdeira Fernandez -- Spanish Arabist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Cleo A. Noel Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Clifford Amon Kotey -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Cliff Seagroves -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Clifton Reginald Wharton Sr. -- American diplomat (1899-1990)
Wikipedia - Clovis Maksoud -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Colette Avital -- Israeli diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Colin Beck (diplomat) -- Solomon Islands diplomat
Wikipedia - Colin Budd -- British civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Colin Moodie -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Colin Munro (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Colin Roberts (diplomat) -- British diplomat and Governor of the Falkland Islands
Wikipedia - Color book -- Governmental publication of diplomatic and political content
Wikipedia - Cong Peiwu -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Consulate General of Germany, Chennai -- Diplomatic mission
Wikipedia - Consulate-General of Japan, Detroit -- Diplomatic mission of Japan
Wikipedia - Consulate General of Mexico, San Francisco -- Diplomatic mission of Mexico
Wikipedia - Consul (representative) -- Diplomatic rank
Wikipedia - Cornelius Hermanus Wessels -- South African farmer, statesman, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Cornelius Van Hemert Engert -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Cossva AnckarsvM-CM-$rd -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Courtland Cushing -- American lawyer, judge, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Craig B. Allen -- American diplomat (b. 1957)
Wikipedia - Craig Lewis Cloud -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Craig Roberts Stapleton -- American diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Cristobal R. Orozco -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Cuba-United States relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Republic of Cuba and the United States of America
Wikipedia - Cui Tiankai -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Cyril Tourneur -- 16th/17th-century English soldier, diplomat, and dramatist
Wikipedia - Czeslaw Milosz -- Polish poet, diplomat, prosaist, writer, and translator; Nobel Prize winner
Wikipedia - Dag Hammarskjold -- Swedish diplomat, economist, and author
Wikipedia - Dah Ould Abdi -- Mauritanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Dainius Kamaitis -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Dalius Cekuolis -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Damien de Martel -- French diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Damos Dumoli Agusman -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Daniel Ahmling Chapman Nyaho -- Ghanaian academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Daniel Cosio Villegas -- Mexican economist, diplomat, historian and essayist
Wikipedia - Daniel Georges Marc Baudouin -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Daniel Harvey (diplomat) -- English merchant and politician (1631-1672)
Wikipedia - Daniel Kutner -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Daniel Lascelles (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Daniel Lewis Foote -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Daniel Pruce -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Dante Mossi -- Honduran economist, international civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Danube River Conference of 1948 -- International diplomatic meeting
Wikipedia - Daphne and the Diplomat -- 1937 film
Wikipedia - Darja BavdaM-EM-> Kuret -- Slovenian diplomat, social scientist
Wikipedia - Darko Pajovic -- Montenegrin politician and diplomat, born 1972
Wikipedia - Darko Tanaskovic -- Serbian diplomat and philologist
Wikipedia - Dates of establishment of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - David Adam (diplomat) -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - David Aiers -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - David Anaglate -- Ghanaian diplomat, public servant and broadcasting executive
Wikipedia - David Belavary -- 17th-century diplomat and high official of Hungary
Wikipedia - David Coates (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - David Dale Reimer -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - David de Pury (diplomat) -- Swiss businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - David Hay (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat and public servant
Wikipedia - David H. Shinn -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - David L. Aaron -- American diplomat and writer (born 1938)
Wikipedia - David Lyle Mack -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - David MacNaughton -- Canadian diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - David Manker Abshire -- American diplomat ands politician
Wikipedia - David Merry -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - David Moss (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - David M. Satterfield -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - David Rawson -- US diplomat
Wikipedia - David Tatham -- British diplomat, governor and biographer
Wikipedia - David T. Fischer -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - David Walker (diplomat) -- New Zealander and diplomat
Wikipedia - David Ward (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - David Zalkaliani -- Georgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Davit Bakradze (born 1975) -- Georgian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Davit Bakradze -- Georgian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Davor BoM-EM->inovic -- Croatian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Death of Harry Dunn -- Fatal road traffic collision resulting in UK/US diplomatic controversy
Wikipedia - Deborah Birx -- American physician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Deborah Bronnert -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Deborah-Mae Lovell -- Antiguan and Barbudan diplomat
Wikipedia - Dempster McIntosh -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Denis Andriamandroso -- Malagasy diplomat
Wikipedia - Denis Godwin Antoine -- Grenadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Dennis Brian Browne -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Dennis Ross -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Dennis Walter Hearne -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Deo Rwabiita -- Ugandan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dereck J. Hogan -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Derek Clement Arnould -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Derek Day -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Des Alwi -- Indonesian historian, diplomat, writer, and advocate of the Banda Islands
Wikipedia - Desiree Bonis -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Devyani Khobragade -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Diana Abgar -- Armenian writer, humanitarian and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dianna Melrose -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Dick Carlson -- American journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Didarul Alam Chowdhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Diego von Bergen -- German diplomat and jurist
Wikipedia - Dimitrije Bodi -- Serbian journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dimitrije Davidovic -- Serbian politician, writer, philosopher, journalist, publisher, historian, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dino Patti Djalal -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Diplomat chess
Wikipedia - Diplomatic Academy of Vienna -- Postgraduate school in Vienna, Austria
Wikipedia - Diplomatic emblem of France
Wikipedia - Diplomatic history
Wikipedia - Diplomatic Immunity (1991 American film) -- 1991 film directed by Peter Maris
Wikipedia - Diplomatic immunity -- Form of legal immunity and a policy held between governments
Wikipedia - Diplomatic missions of the European Union -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Diplomatic mission -- Group of people from one state present in another state to represent the sending state
Wikipedia - Diplomatic rank
Wikipedia - Diplomatic recognition -- Unilateral political act whereby a state acknowledges an act or status of another state or government
Wikipedia - Diplomatics
Wikipedia - Diplomatic uniform -- Uniforms worn by diplomats on formal occasions
Wikipedia - Diplomatic vehicle registration plate -- Diplomatic vehicle license plates
Wikipedia - diplomatic
Wikipedia - Diplomatic Wireless Service -- British communications system
Wikipedia - Diplomat pudding -- Molded pudding dessert
Wikipedia - Diplomat Records -- American hip hop record label
Wikipedia - Diplomats (film) -- 1918 film
Wikipedia - Diplomat
Wikipedia - Dirk Stikker -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dissent Channel -- Official platform open to U.S. diplomats where they can criticize government policy
Wikipedia - Ditmir Bushati -- Albanian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dmitri Pozhidaev -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Dolf Joekes -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Domingos Culolo -- Angolan diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Domingos Teixeira de Abreu Fezas Vital -- Portuguese diplomat
Wikipedia - Dominican Republic-Mexico relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Dominican Republic and the United Mexican States
Wikipedia - Dominick Chilcott -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Dominika Krois -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Dominique Awono Essama -- Cameroonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Donald Alastair Cameron -- Australian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Donald Blome -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Donald Bobiash -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Donald Heflin -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Donald Lamont -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Donald M. Blinken -- American diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Donald Yamamoto -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Donatas Malinauskas -- Lithuanian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dora Vasconcellos -- Brazilian writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Dorothy Jane Armstrong -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Dorothy Shea -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Draft:Dominic Williams -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Draft:Jean-Louis Berthoud -- Swiss diplomat
Wikipedia - Dragoslav Pejic -- Yugoslav diplomat (1929-2016)
Wikipedia - Dragutin Mate -- Slovenian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Driss Dahak -- Moroccan civil servant, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Duke Buchan -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - DuM-EM-!an T. Batakovic -- Serbian diplomat and historian
Wikipedia - Durga Prasad Bhattarai -- Nepali career diplomat
Wikipedia - Durham Stevens -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Du Wei (diplomat) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Dwight Morrow -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Earle D. Litzenberger -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Earl M. Irving -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Earl R. Miller -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ebenezer Akuete -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ebenezer Moses Debrah -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Eb Gaines -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ebun Oyagbola -- Nigerian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Eddie Amkongo -- Namibian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Edgar G. Crossman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edgar James Banks -- American diplomat, antiquarian and writer
Wikipedia - Edith Sempala -- Ugandan civil engineer, civil servant, diplomat and political activist
Wikipedia - Edith S. Sampson -- American diplomat, lawyer and judge
Wikipedia - Edmond-Charles GenM-CM-*t -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Edmond de Fels -- French diplomat, writer, and historian
Wikipedia - Edmonde Dever -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Edmond Kofi Agbenutse Deh -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Edmund Hammond, 1st Baron Hammond -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Edmund Lyons, 1st Baron Lyons -- 19th-century British Royal Navy Admiral and diplomat
Wikipedia - Edmundo Jarquin -- Nicaraguan diplomat
Wikipedia - Edouard Mortier, Duke of TrM-CM-)vise -- French Marshal and diplomat
Wikipedia - Eduardo A. Roca -- Argentine diplomat
Wikipedia - Eduardo Santos Alvite -- Ecuadorian economist and retired diplomat
Wikipedia - Edvardas Turauskas -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Albright -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Everett -- American politician, pastor, educator, diplomat and orator
Wikipedia - Edward J. Perkins -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Lucien Bobinski -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward M. House -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Noel (Indian Army officer) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Peck (American diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward R. Dudley -- American lawyer, judge, civil rights activist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Vesey Bligh -- English cricketer, diplomat, and clergyman
Wikipedia - Edward Wortley Montagu (diplomat) -- British ambassador
Wikipedia - Edwin de Leon -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edwin McCarthy -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Edwin M. Cronk -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edwin O. Reischauer -- American diplomat, educator, and professor (1910-1990)
Wikipedia - Edy Korthals Altes -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Edzo Toxopeus -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Eelco van Kleffens -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Eeva-Kristiina Forsman -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Egypt-Pakistan relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Arab Republic of Egypt and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
Wikipedia - Einar M. Bull -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Eino WM-CM-$likangas -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Eklil Ahmad Hakimi -- Afghan diplomat
Wikipedia - Ekmeleddin M-DM-0hsanoM-DM-^_lu -- Turkish academic, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Eladio Loizaga -- Paraguayan lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Elaine Ayotte -- Canadian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Elbridge Gerry -- United States diplomat and Vice President; Massachusetts governor
Wikipedia - Eldon Gorst -- British barrister and diplomat and Consul-General in Egypt (1861-1911)
Wikipedia - Eleanor Roosevelt -- American political figure, diplomat, activist and First Lady of the United States
Wikipedia - Elisabeth Tichy-Fisslberger -- Austrian lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Eliseo Arredondo -- Mexican politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Adjei -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Brown Pryor -- American diplomat and historian
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Carriere -- British diplomat and civil servant; Governor of Montserrat
Wikipedia - Elliott Abrams -- American diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Elliott Skinner -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ellsworth Bunker -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Eloi Alphonse Maxime Dovo -- Malagasy diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Else Berit Eikeland -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ely Palmer -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Embassy of China, Jakarta -- Diplomatic mission
Wikipedia - Embassy of Finland, Washington, D.C. -- Diplomatic mission of Finland to the United States
Wikipedia - Embassy of France, Pretoria -- Diplomatic mission of France to the Republic of South Africa
Wikipedia - Embassy of Georgia in Washington, D.C. -- Diplomatic mission of the Republic of Georgia to the United States
Wikipedia - Embassy of Romania, Chisinau -- Diplomatic mission in Moldova
Wikipedia - Embassy of Russia in Kyiv -- Diplomatic mission of the Russian Federation to Ukraine
Wikipedia - Embassy of South Korea, Washington, D.C. -- Diplomatic mission of South Korea to the United States
Wikipedia - Embassy of Sweden, Tehran -- Sweden's diplomatic mission in Iran
Wikipedia - Embassy of The Gambia, London -- Diplomatic mission of The Gambia in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Bandar Seri Begawan -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Brunei
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Beirut -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Lebanon
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Buenos Aires -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Argentina
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Copenhagen -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Denmark
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Hanoi -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Vietnam
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Jakarta -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Indonesia
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, London -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Madrid -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Spain
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Mexico City -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Mexico
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Oslo -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Norway
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Ottawa -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Canada
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Santiago -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Chile
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Singapore -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Singapore
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Stockholm -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Sweden
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Tel Aviv -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Israel
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Tokyo -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Japan
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Warsaw -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Poland
Wikipedia - Embassy of the Philippines, Washington, D.C. -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in Washington, D.C., United States
Wikipedia - Embassy of the State of Palestine in United Arab Emirates -- Diplomatic embassy
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United Kingdom, Madrid -- Chief diplomatic mission of the United Kingdom in Spain
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United Kingdom, Washington, D.C. -- Diplomatic mission to the United States
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United States, Jerusalem -- diplomatic mission of the United States in Israel
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United States, Kyiv -- The diplomatic mission of the United States in Ukraine
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United States, London -- diplomatic mission of the United States of America in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United States, Singapore -- diplomatic mission of the United States of America in Singapore
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United States, The Hague -- Diplomatic mission of the United States in the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Embassy of the United States, Tokyo -- Diplomatic mission of the United States to Japan
Wikipedia - Embassy of Turkey, Brasilia -- Turkey's diplomatic mission to Brazil
Wikipedia - Embassy of Ukraine, Warsaw -- Diplomatic mission
Wikipedia - E. Michael Southwick -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Emil Druc -- Moldovan diplomat
Wikipedia - Emile de Cartier de Marchienne -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Emilio Rafael Izquierdo MiM-CM-1o -- Ecuadorian diplomat
Wikipedia - Emin Ali Bedir Khan -- Kurdish diplomat
Wikipedia - Emmanuel Chenda -- Zambian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Emmanuel Issoze-Ngondet -- Gabonese diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Emyr Jones Parry -- Welsh diplomat
Wikipedia - Enuga Sreenivasulu Reddy -- Diplomat and anti-apartheid activist
Wikipedia - Eoin MacWhite -- Irish diplomat, archaeologist, and scholar
Wikipedia - Erica Pappritz -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Eric Drummond, 7th Earl of Perth -- Scottish diplomat, Secretary General of the League of Nations (1876-1951)
Wikipedia - Eric Forbes Adam -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Eric Kwamina Otoo -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Eric M. Javits -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Eric Nelson (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Eric Phipps -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Eric Teichman -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Erika Feller -- Australian academic, diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Erik Belfrage -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Erik Boheman -- Swedish diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Erik Braadland -- Norwegian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Erin Elizabeth McKee -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ernest A. Gross -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Esko Hamilo -- Finnish under-secretary, diplomat
Wikipedia - Esther Rabasa Grau -- Andorran diplomat
Wikipedia - Eugene-Melchior de Vogue -- French diplomat, orientalist, travel writer, archaeologist, philanthropist and literary critic
Wikipedia - Eugene Plumacher -- American diplomat to Maracaibo, 1877-1890
Wikipedia - Eunice Reddick -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - European Union Police Mission in Afghanistan -- Diplomatic mission
Wikipedia - Eva Bugge -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Evelyn Baring, 1st Earl of Cromer -- British statesman, diplomat and colonial administrator (1841-1917)
Wikipedia - Everett Ellis Briggs -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Everett F. Drumright -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - E. Wilson Lyon -- American diplomatic historian
Wikipedia - Eyvind Bratt -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Ezzedine Choukri Fishere -- Egyptian novelist, diplomat and academic
Wikipedia - Faisal Mekdad -- Syrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Farooq Sobhan -- Bangladeshi diplomat
Wikipedia - Fathallah Sijilmassi -- Moroccan diplomat
Wikipedia - Fati Habib-Jawula -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Fatima Kyari Mohammed -- Nigerian diplomat
Wikipedia - Fatimo Isaak Bihi -- Somali former diplomat
Wikipedia - Fatuma Abdullahi Insaniya -- Somali diplomat
Wikipedia - F.C. Terborgh -- Dutch diplomat, prose writer and poet
Wikipedia - Federica Bigi -- Sammarinese diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Federico Cuello Camilo -- Dominican Republic diplomat
Wikipedia - Fedor Gusev -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Feliks M-EM-^Aojko-RM-DM-^Ydziejowski -- Polish nobleman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Felipe Francisco Molina y Bedoya -- Costa Rican diplomat
Wikipedia - Fernando Arias -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Fernando Chica Arellano -- Spanish Catholic priest and diplomat
Wikipedia - Fernando Martin Valenzuela Marzo -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Fernando M-CM-^Alvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba -- Spanish military leader and diplomat
Wikipedia - Fernando Moran (politician) -- Spanish diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Fessehaie Abraham -- Eritrean diplomat
Wikipedia - Finn Kristen Fostervoll -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Fitsum Arega -- Ethiopian diplomat
Wikipedia - Florea Dumitrescu -- Romanian economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Fode Dabo -- Sierra Leonean diplomat
Wikipedia - Folke Bernadotte -- Swedish diplomat (1895-1945)
Wikipedia - Foreign relations of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta -- Sovereign entity maintaining diplomatic relations worldwide
Wikipedia - Foreign Service Journal -- Monthly periodical for American diplomatic staff
Wikipedia - Frances Adamson -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Francesco La Camera -- Italian civil servant, academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Frances Colon -- American science diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Amanfoh -- Ghanaian military officer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Bertie, 1st Viscount Bertie of Thame -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Blondet -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Bradley Bradley-Birt -- British diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Francisco Bustillo -- Uruguayan diplomat
Wikipedia - Francisco Campbell -- Nicaraguan diplomat
Wikipedia - Francisco de Mendoza -- Spanish nobleman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Francisco Fernandez de la Cueva, 7th Duke of Alburquerque -- Spanish diplomat (1575-1637)
Wikipedia - Francisco Ribeiro Telles -- Portuguese diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Cornish (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Eustace Baker -- British diplomat, Governor of St. Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (born 1933)
Wikipedia - Francis Joseph Galbraith -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis L. Kellogg -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Lodowic Bartels -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Patrick Donovan -- Australian diplomat and legal professor
Wikipedia - Francis Rooney -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Francis Walsingham -- English spy, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Francois Georges-Picot -- French diplomat who signed Sykes-Picot Agreement during World War I
Wikipedia - Francois van der Delft -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank Baker (diplomat) -- British diplomat and civil servant
Wikipedia - Frank Belfrage -- Swedish economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank Carlucci -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank E. Maestrone -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank Majoor -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank Mills (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank M. Snowden Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Frank Rainieri -- Dominican diplomat (born 1944)
Wikipedia - Frans Beelaerts van Blokland -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Frants Hvass -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Franz Ceska -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Franz Deym -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Franz von Papen -- German general staff officer, politician, diplomat, nobleman and Chancellor of Germany (1879-1969)
Wikipedia - Franz von Werner -- Austrian writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Fraser Wilkins -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Frederick Blakeney -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Frederick Kuh -- American journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Frederick Ponsonby, 10th Earl of Bessborough -- British diplomat and peer
Wikipedia - Fredrik Stefan Eaton -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Fridolin Marinus Knobel -- Dutch diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Fridtjof Nansen -- Norwegian polar explorer, scientist, diplomat, humanitarian and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1861-1930)
Wikipedia - Friedrich Akel -- Estonian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Friedrich August von Staegemann -- Prussian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Friedrich Christian Weber -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Friedrich Melchior, Baron von Grimm -- German journalist, art critic, diplomat
Wikipedia - Friedrich-Werner Graf von der Schulenburg -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Fritz Kolbe -- German diplomat and resistance member
Wikipedia - Gabby Levy -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Gabriela Mistral -- Chilean poet, diplomat, writer, educator, and feminist
Wikipedia - Gabriel Keller -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Gabriella Gafni -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Gaitri Issar Kumar -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Galit Ronen -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Garcia de Silva Figueroa -- Spanish diplomat and traveller (1550-1624)
Wikipedia - Gegham Gharibjanian -- Armenian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Geir Otto Pedersen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Gela Dumbadze -- Georgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Geoffrey Franklin Bruce -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Geoffrey George Knox -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Geoffrey R. Pyatt -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Georg Adam, Prince of Starhemberg -- Austrian diplomat, 1724-1807
Wikipedia - George Adjei Osekre -- Ghanaian lawyer politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - George Atcheson, Jr. -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - George Buchanan (diplomat)
Wikipedia - George Charles Bruno -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - George Ciamba -- Romanian diplomat
Wikipedia - George Curtis Moore -- American diplomat (1925-1973)
Wikipedia - George Deek -- Arab-Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - George Dempsey (diplomat) -- American former diplomat
Wikipedia - George Edgar -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - George Edgcumbe (1800-1882) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - George F. Kennan -- American advisor, diplomat, political scientist and historian
Wikipedia - George Herbert Walker III -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - George Hermonymus -- 15th-century Greek scribe, diplomat, scholar and lecturer
Wikipedia - George Hervey, 2nd Earl of Bristol -- British diplomat and Court official
Wikipedia - George H. Flood -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - George Howard Earle III -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - George Jerningham -- British diplomat (1806-1874)
Wikipedia - George Mantello -- Jewish Salvadoran diplomat, saved Jews during Holocaust
Wikipedia - George McDade Staples -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - George Mu -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - George Nicholson (diplomat) -- Former English diplomat in Scotland
Wikipedia - George Odlum -- Saint Lucian diplomat (1934-2003)
Wikipedia - George P. Kent -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - George S. Morrison (diplomat) -- British diplomat (1830-1893)
Wikipedia - Georges Rebelo Chikoti -- Angolan diplomat
Wikipedia - George Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - George W. Erving -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - George W. Haley -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz -- German diplomat and Righteous Among the Nations
Wikipedia - Georgina Butler -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Gerald Edward O'Kelly de Gallagh et Tycooly -- Irish diplomat
Wikipedia - Gerard Araud -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Gerard Coste -- French painter and diplomat
Wikipedia - Gerard Latulippe -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Gerard Pokruszynski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Gerhard Pfanzelter -- Austrian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Germany-United States relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Federal Republic of Germany and the United States of America
Wikipedia - Gerrit Jan van Heuven Goedhart -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ghaffar Djalal -- Iranian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ghiyath al-dM-DM-+n Naqqash -- Iranian diplomat to China in the 15th century
Wikipedia - Giadalla Ettalhi -- Libyan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Giambattista Diquattro -- Italian archbishop and Vatican diplomat
Wikipedia - Giannos Kranidiotis -- Greek diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Gideon Rafael -- Israeli diplomat and one of the founders of the Israeli Foreign Ministry (1913-1999)
Wikipedia - Gilchrist Baker Stockton -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Giles Fletcher, the Elder -- English poet, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Gillian Milovanovic -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ginny Ferson -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Giorgi Avalishvili -- Georgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Giorgio Basta -- Italian general, diplomat and writer (1550-1607)
Wikipedia - Giovanni Gaspari -- Vatican diplomat
Wikipedia - Giovanni Villani -- Italian banker, diplomat, and chronicler
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zaccagnino -- Italian diplomat and art collector
Wikipedia - Gjorgji Filipov -- Macedonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Gleb Ivashentsov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Glen Buick -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Glenn A. Abbey -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Gloria Corina Peter Tiwet -- Malaysian diplomat, from 2018 High Commissioner to Nigeria
Wikipedia - Goli Ameri -- Businesswoman and Diplomat
Wikipedia - Gong Yuanxing -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Gonzalo Gutierrez Reinel -- Peruvian diplomat
Wikipedia - Gonzalo Zaldumbide -- Ecuadorian politician diplomat.
Wikipedia - Gordan Grlic-Radman -- Croatian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Gordan Jandrokovic -- Croatian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Gordon Sondland -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Gore Ouseley -- British entrepreneur, linguist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Govind Prasad Lohani -- Nepalese diplomat
Wikipedia - G. Philip Hughes -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Graciano Canteli -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Graham Feakes -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Graham Fletcher (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - GraM-EM- -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Greg Delawie -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Gregory Baker Wolfe -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Grzegorz Kowal -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Guillaume Pellicier -- French prelate and diplomat
Wikipedia - Guillermo Cosio Vidaurri -- Mexican diplomat
Wikipedia - Gu Maoxuan -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Gunaajav Batjargal -- Mongolian diplomat
Wikipedia - Gunther van Well -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Gustave Thuret -- French diplomat and botanist
Wikipedia - Gustav Hilger -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Gustavo Envela-Makongo Sr. -- Equatoguinean diplomat
Wikipedia - Guy Logiest -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Gwyneth Kutz -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - HachirM-EM-^M Arita -- Japanese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hadi Khosroshahi -- Iranian diplomat
Wikipedia - Hajdar Muneka -- Albanian journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hakam Balawi -- Palestinian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Hakim Hajoui -- Moroccan diplomat (born 1983)
Wikipedia - Hamid Aboutalebi -- Former Iranian diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Hanmer Warrington -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Han Nianlong -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Hanns Ludin -- German Nazi diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Bernd Gisevius -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Busing -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Corell -- Swedish lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Henrik Reventlow Bruun -- Danish sociologist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Hertell -- Puerto Rican diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Moritz von Bruhl -- German diplomat and astronomer
Wikipedia - Hans Ola Urstad -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans Prade -- Surinam diplomat
Wikipedia - Hans van den Broek -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hardeep Singh Puri -- 1=Indian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Harold Caccia, Baron Caccia -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Harold David Anderson -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Harold D. Langley -- American diplomat and naval historian
Wikipedia - Harold Fisch -- British-Israeli author, literary critic, translator, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Harold Forsyth -- Peruvian diplomat
Wikipedia - Harold George Parlett -- British diplomat and writer on Japanese Buddhism
Wikipedia - Harold Smedley -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Harriet Cross -- British diplomat and High Commissioner to Trinidad and Tobago
Wikipedia - Harry E. Bergold Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Harry G. Barnes Jr. -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Harry J. Gilmore -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Harry Reginald Amonoo -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Harsh Vardhan Shringla -- Indian diplomat (born 1962)
Wikipedia - Hasekura Tsunenaga -- Japanese Samurai and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hassan Ahmed (Ghanaian diplomat) -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Hassan Saab -- Lebanese diplomat and political scientist
Wikipedia - Hastings Ismay, 1st Baron Ismay -- British army officer and diplomat, 1st Secretary General of NATO
Wikipedia - Hayashi Akira -- Japanese scholar-diplomat
Wikipedia - Head of mission -- Top diplomatic representative such as ambassador
Wikipedia - Heads of Diplomatic Missions of the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Heather M. Hodges -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Hector Allard -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Hector Faundez -- Chilean diplomat
Wikipedia - Hector Morales (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Heide B. Fulton -- American diplomat, charge d'Affaires
Wikipedia - Heidi Hulan -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Heidi Tagliavini -- Swiss diplomat
Wikipedia - Heikki Talvitie -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Heinrich von Staden (author) -- German diplomat and author
Wikipedia - Helen Campbell -- British diplomat (b. 1964)
Wikipedia - Helga Hernes -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Helgi M-CM-^Agustsson -- Icelandic diplomat
Wikipedia - Hendrick Vaal Neto -- Angolan diplomat
Wikipedia - Hendrik Doeff -- Dutch diplomat and Japanologist
Wikipedia - Heneage Finch, 3rd Earl of Winchilsea -- English diplomat
Wikipedia - Henri Eyebe Ayissi -- Cameroonian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Henrik Jakob von Duben -- Swedish nobleman, diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Alabaster -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Berenger -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Boimah Fahnbulleh -- Liberian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Brind -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Bulwer, 1st Baron Dalling and Bulwer -- British Liberal politician, diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Henry Cobham (diplomat) -- 16th-century English politician
Wikipedia - Henry Coventry -- English politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Henryka MoM-EM-^[cicka-Dendys -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Knollys (died 1583) -- 16th-century English politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Lee Clarke -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Neville (died 1615) -- English courtier, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Rathbone -- US military officer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry S. Ensher -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry T. Wooster -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry Unton -- English diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry van Dyke Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Henry White (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Herbert Beukes -- South African journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Herbert E. Horowitz -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Herbert Fischer (diplomat)
Wikipedia - Herbert Giles -- British sinologist and diplomat (1845-1935)
Wikipedia - Herbert Stanley -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Herbert von Dirksen -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Hermann Eilts -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Hermann Ungar -- Slovak diplomat
Wikipedia - Herro Mustafa -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Herschel Grynszpan -- Polish Jew, confessed killer of German diplomat Ernst vom Rath
Wikipedia - H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - High Commissioner of Niue to New Zealand -- Niue diplomatic representative
Wikipedia - High Commission of Brunei, Ottawa -- Diplomatic establishment
Wikipedia - High Commission of Denmark in Greenland -- Diplomatic mission of Denmark to Greenland
Wikipedia - High Commission of India, Islamabad -- Diplomatic mission of India to Pakistan
Wikipedia - High Commission of Nigeria, London -- City of Westminster, Greater London, SW1A and diplomatic mission of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Hilary Reilly -- Irish diplomat
Wikipedia - Hilda al-Hinai -- Omani diplomat
Wikipedia - Hiroshi Ota -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Hjalmar J. Procope -- Finnish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - HM-CM-%kon Wexelsen Freihow -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Honorine Dossou Naki -- Gabonese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Honorio Hermeto Carneiro Leao, Marquis of Parana -- 19th-century politician, diplomat, judge, and monarchist of the Empire of Brazil
Wikipedia - Horace Francois Bastien Sebastiani de La Porta -- Soldier, diplomat
Wikipedia - House Grey Memorandum -- U.S. diplomatic proposal in World War I
Wikipedia - Hou Yanqi -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Howard Beale (politician) -- Australian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Howard Drake -- British former diplomat
Wikipedia - Howard Gutman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Howard Pearce -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Hugh Elliott (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Hugh Llewellyn Keenleyside -- Canadian university professor, diplomat, and civil servant
Wikipedia - Hugh McClure Smith -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Hugh S. Gibson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Hugo Tamm -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Humayun Rashid Choudhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Huseyin Numan MenemencioM-DM-^_lu -- Turkish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ian Buist -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Ian Cliff -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Ibrahim Dabbashi -- Libyan diplomat
Wikipedia - Ifigenia Martinez y Hernandez -- Mexican economist, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Ignaz von Olfers -- German naturalist, historian and diplomat
Wikipedia - Igor Pokaz -- Croatian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ihor Dolhov -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Imants LieM-DM-#is -- Latvian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Imre Hollai -- Hungarian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Imron Cotan -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - India-United States relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Republic of India and the United States of America
Wikipedia - In Diplomatic Circles -- 1913 film
Wikipedia - Ingrid Schulerud -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ingvard Havnen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - International Conference on the Situation in Venezuela -- Diplomatic conference
Wikipedia - Internationalization of the Danube River -- Diplomatic process in 19th-century Europe
Wikipedia - International recognition of Croatia -- Establishment of diplomatic relationships with Croatia
Wikipedia - Ioan C. Filitti -- Romanian historian and diplomat
Wikipedia - Iran hostage crisis -- 1979-1981 diplomatic standoff between the US and Iran
Wikipedia - Iran-Spain relations -- Bilateral and diplomatic relations between Iran and Spain
Wikipedia - Irena Lichnerowicz-Augustyn -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Irena Radovic -- Montenegrin diplomat
Wikipedia - Irina Bokova -- Bulgarian diplomat
Wikipedia - Irving Bedell Dudley -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Irving Florman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Isaac Bell Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Isaac Titsingh -- 18th and 19th-century Dutch diplomat, scholar, and merchant
Wikipedia - Isaac von Sinclair -- German writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Isabelle Rosabrunetto -- Monegasque diplomat
Wikipedia - Ismael Moreno Pino -- Mexican diplomat
Wikipedia - Israel Eliashiv -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Israel-United States relations -- Diplomatic relations between the State of Israel and the United States of America
Wikipedia - Issa Kassissieh -- Palestinian diplomat
Wikipedia - Itamar Rabinovich -- Israeli diplomat and academic
Wikipedia - Itata incident -- Diplomatic affair and military incident involving the United States and Chilean insurgents
Wikipedia - Ivan Hristov Bashev -- Bulgarian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ivan Mrkic -- Serbian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Ivan Zivkovic -- Serbian diplomat
Wikipedia - Iwakura Mission -- 1871-1873 Japanese diplomatic voyage
Wikipedia - Iwo Dolling -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Iwona Kozlowska -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Iwona Woicka-M-EM-;ulawska -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Izabela Matusz -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Iztok Jarc -- Slovenian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Jaakko Blomberg -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jaap de Hoop Scheffer -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jacek Gawryszewski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jacek Jankowski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jacob Tsur -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Jacques-Abraham Durand d'Aubigny -- French diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Jacques Bilodeau -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Jacques Edmond Brossard -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Jacques Senard -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - J. Adam Ereli -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Jaime Aparicio Otero -- Bolivian diplomat, lawyer, journalist (born 1955)
Wikipedia - Jaja Wachuku -- Nigerian lawyer, politician and diplomat (1918-1996)
Wikipedia - James A. Daley -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Adams (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - James Aggrey-Orleans -- Ghanaian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - James A. Joseph -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James A. Parker (foreign service officer) -- U.S. diplomat (1922-1994)
Wikipedia - James Baba -- Ugandan politician and former diplomat
Wikipedia - James Bartleman -- Canadian former diplomat and author
Wikipedia - James B. Cunningham -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin -- British colonial administrator and diplomat (1811-1863)
Wikipedia - James B. Story -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Burrill Angell -- American educator, diplomat
Wikipedia - James Byron Bissett -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - James Clark (British diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - James Clelland Britton -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - James C. O'Brien -- American attorney and diplomat
Wikipedia - James Costos -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Creagan -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - James Dauris -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - James D. Nealon -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Dunn (diplomat) -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - James E. Akins -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James F. Leonard -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Hennessy -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - James L. Malone (diplomat) -- United States Assistant Secretary of State
Wikipedia - James M. Buchanan (diplomat) -- American politician (1803-1876)
Wikipedia - James Richard Cheek -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Rollins Barker -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - James R. Partridge -- American diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - James Russell Lowell -- American poet, critic, editor, and diplomat
Wikipedia - James Steinberg -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Victor Gbeho -- Ghanaian lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - James Wickes Taylor -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - James Wilson Rawlings -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jamie Bowden -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Jamil Baroody -- Saudi diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Adams (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Janaka Priyantha Bandara -- Sri Lankan Politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Beagle -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Edmund Nyheim -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jane Jimmy Chigiyal -- Micronesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Eliasson -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jane Owen -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Janet Douglas (diplomat) -- British diploma (born 1960)
Wikipedia - Janez LenarM-DM-^MiM-DM-^M -- Slovenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Grauls -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Kohout -- Czech diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Jan Szembek (diplomat) -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Thompson (diplomat) -- British ambassador to the Czwch Republic (b. 1965)
Wikipedia - Jan Tombinski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Janusz Symonides -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Janvier Kanyamashuli -- Rwandan diplomat
Wikipedia - Jan Wessel Hegg -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Japanese army and diplomatic codes -- Ciphers and codes used up to and during World War II
Wikipedia - Jaroslaw Lindenberg -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jaroslaw Suchoples -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jaroslaw Szczepankiewicz -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jassim Mohammed Buallay -- Bahraini diplomat
Wikipedia - Jawed Ludin -- Afghan diplomat and minister
Wikipedia - Jayantha Dhanapala -- Sri Lankan diplomat
Wikipedia - J. Brady Anderson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - J.B.Soedarmanto Kadarisman -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - J. Christopher Stevens -- American career diplomat, lawyer, and U.S. Ambassador to Libya
Wikipedia - Jean-Antoine de Mesmes (diplomat) -- 17th century French diplomat
Wikipedia - Jean Arnault -- French diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Jean-Baptiste Louvet de Couvray -- French writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jean-Bosco Barayagwiza -- Rwandan diplomat and convicted war criminal
Wikipedia - Jean de Ponton d'Amecourt -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Jeane Kirkpatrick -- American diplomat and Presidential advisor
Wikipedia - Jeanette W. Hyde -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jean-Francois Paroz -- Swiss diplomat, ambassador
Wikipedia - Jean Kennedy Smith -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Jean M. Wilkowski -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jean-NoM-CM-+l de Bouillane de Lacoste -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Jean van den Bosch -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jeffrey Ross Gunter -- American physician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jenifer H. Moore -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jennes de Mol -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Jennifer Anderson -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Jennifer Lartey -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jeremy Greenstock -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Jeronimo de Curiel -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jerrold M. North -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jerzy Bahr -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jerzy Baurski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jerzy M-EM-^Aukaszewski -- Polish academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jessica Davis Ba -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - J. Fife Symington Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ji Chaozhu -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Jill Esposito -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jim Weir (diplomat) -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Joachim Joseph Andre Murat -- French politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joachim Schmillen -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Joachim Wedell-Neergaard -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Joan M. Clark -- American retired diplomat
Wikipedia - Joanna Hofman -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Joanne Herring -- American businesswoman, activist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joanne Loundes -- Australian economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Augusto de Araujo Castro -- Brazilian lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Cabral de Melo Neto -- Brazilian poet and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Clemente Baena Soares -- Brazilian diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao de Sande Magalhaes Mexia Ayres de Campos, 2nd Count of Ameal -- Portuguese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Gomes Cravinho -- Portuguese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Guilherme Fischer -- Brazilian diplomat and scientist
Wikipedia - Joao Guimaraes Rosa -- Brazilian novelist, short story writer, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Hall Themido -- Portuguese diplomat
Wikipedia - Joao Uva de Matos Proenca -- Portuguese diplomat
Wikipedia - Joe Borg -- Maltese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joe-Fio Neenyann Meyer -- Ghanaian diplomat and trade unionist
Wikipedia - Joelle Tanguy -- French-American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joel Roberts Poinsett -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Johan Beyen -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Johan BM-CM-$verbrant -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Johann Cothmann -- German jurist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Johan van Reede van Renswouden -- Dutch diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - John A. Baker Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John A. Gronouski -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Aloysius Belton -- Irish diplomat
Wikipedia - John A. McKesson, III -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Arthur Ferch -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - John A. Scali -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Augustus Lloyd -- British diplomat and civil engineer
Wikipedia - John Barrett (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Bartow Prevost -- American attorney, judge, politician, businessman and diplomat (1766-1825)
Wikipedia - John Beaven (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Beyrle -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Birch (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John B. Jackson -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Blaquiere, 1st Baron de Blaquiere -- British soldier, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - John Bogolo Erzuah -- Ghanaian diplomat (b. 1914)
Wikipedia - John Bolton -- 27th United States National Security Advisor, lawyer, and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Boyd (diplomat) -- British ambassador
Wikipedia - John B. Ritch III -- American diplomat (born 1943)
Wikipedia - John B. Stetson Jr. -- American diplomat and businessman (1884-1952)
Wikipedia - John Dalrymple, 2nd Earl of Stair -- 18th-century Scottish soldier and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Dennis (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Desrocher -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Dew (diplomat) -- British diplomat and artist
Wikipedia - John D. Feeley -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Duncan Bligh -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Eaton (politician) -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - John E. Bacon -- American lawyer, politician, diplomat and judge
Wikipedia - John Everard (diplomat) -- British former diplomat
Wikipedia - John F. Hicks -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Francis William, 6th Count de Salis-Soglio -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Freeland -- British diplomat and international lawyer
Wikipedia - John Gilbert Winant -- American Republican politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Goodnow -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Granville (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Gunther Dean -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Hay Whitney -- American diplomat and publisher
Wikipedia - John Hennessey-Niland -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Holmes (British diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Hood (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - John Jacob Seibels -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Jay -- American politician, diplomat, and Founding Father
Wikipedia - John Jenkins (diplomat) -- British diplomat, born 1955
Wikipedia - John J. Sullivan (diplomat) -- 10th United States Ambassador to Russia
Wikipedia - John Kerr, Baron Kerr of Kinlochard -- Scottish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Lambert (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Lloyd Stephens -- American explorer, writer, and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Lyons (Royal Navy officer, born 1787) -- British Royal Navy Admiral and diplomat
Wikipedia - John MacLeod Fraser -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - John Margetson -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Mason (diplomat)
Wikipedia - John M. B. Sill -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John M. Francis -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Negroponte -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Pascoe Grenfell -- Navy officer and diplomat of the Empire of Brazil
Wikipedia - John Peck (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - John Pierce Ferriter -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John R. Bass -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - John R. Davis Jr. -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - John Redcliffe-Maud, Baron Redcliffe-Maud -- British civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - John Robert Dunn -- South African hunter, settler and diplomat (1833/34 - 1895)
Wikipedia - John Roos -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - John S. Badeau -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John Sherman Cooper -- Politician, jurist, and diplomat from the U.S. state of Kentucky
Wikipedia - Johnson Kwaku Appiah -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - John Tilemann -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - John Warlick McDonald -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - John W. Dinkelman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jonas AukM-EM-!tuolis -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jonathan Addleton -- American diplomat and author
Wikipedia - Jonathan Cohen (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jonathan Powell (Labour adviser) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Jonathan Pratt -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jon Atle Gaarder -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jon Gundersen -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Jon Hanssen-Bauer -- Norwegian anthropologist, researcher, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jon Huntsman Jr. -- American politician, businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jon Westborg -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jorge Arguello -- Argentine politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jorge Carrera Andrade -- Ecuadorian poet, historian, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jorge Dezcallar de Mazarredo -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jorge Domecq -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jorge Moragas -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jorge Salvador Lara -- Ecuadorian politician diplomat, columnist, writer, and historian.
Wikipedia - Jose Agripino Barnet -- Cuban politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Agustin de Lecubarri -- British diplomat, naval officer and peer
Wikipedia - Jose Andres Coronado Alvarado -- Costa Rican diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Jose Antonio Arbesu -- Cuban diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Ayala Lasso -- Ecuadorian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Berges -- Paraguayan diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Castellanos Contreras -- Salvadoran diplomat, rescued Jews during Holocaust
Wikipedia - Jose Cutileiro -- Portuguese diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Felix Fernandez Estigarribia -- Paraguayan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Gomez Gordoa -- Mexican lawyer, professor and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Joaquin Chaverri Sievert -- Costa Rican diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Jobim -- Brazilian diplomat (1909-1979)
Wikipedia - Jose Juan Tablada -- Mexican poet, art critic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Manuel Albares -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Manuel Romualdez -- Filipino journalist, business executive and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Maria Gutierrez de Estrada -- Mexican diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Maria Liu -- Taiwanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose M-CM-^Alvarez de Toledo y AcuM-CM-1a -- Spanish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose M-CM-^Angel Gurria -- Mexican economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Octavio Bordon -- Argentine politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph A. Greenwald -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Alexandre Jacques Durant de Mareuil -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Cella -- American diplomat and adviser
Wikipedia - Joseph C. Green -- American diplomat and professor
Wikipedia - Joseph C. Satterthwaite -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph C. Wilson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph de Maistre -- Savoyard philosopher, writer, lawyer, and diplomat (1753-1821)
Wikipedia - Joseph E. Jacobs -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Ghougassian -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Grew -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Josephine Gauld -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Josephine Ojiambo -- Kenyan diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Kingsley Baffour-Senkyire -- Ghanaian academic, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Leo Seko Abbey -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Limprecht -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Luns -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Monroe Segars -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Prueher -- US Navy admiral and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph R. Donovan Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Joseph Sullivan (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Josephus Daniels -- American diplomat and newspaper publisher
Wikipedia - Joseph Zappala -- US businessperson and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jose Semidei Rodriguez -- Puerto rican soldier and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joshua Shidambasi Odanga -- Kenyan diplomat
Wikipedia - Jostein Helge Bernhardsen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Jovan Jovanovic (politician) -- Serbian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Joy Ogwu -- Nigerian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Jozef Retinger -- Polish diplomat and activist
Wikipedia - J. Rives Childs -- American diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Juan Almonte -- Mexican general, diplomat and regent
Wikipedia - Juan Bautista Alberdi -- Argentine political theorist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Juan Pablo Garcia-Berdoy -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Jubilee medal of 100th Anniversary of the Diplomatic Service Bodies of Azerbaijan -- Award of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces
Wikipedia - Judith Farnworth -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Judith G. Garber -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Judith Gough -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Judy Rising Reinke -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jules Jaspar -- Belgian diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Julian King (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Julian Niemczyk -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Julie D. Fisher -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Julie J. Chung -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Juli Minoves -- Andorran diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Julio Dantas -- Portuguese doctor, poet, journalist, politician, diplomat and dramatist
Wikipedia - Julissa Reynoso Pantaleon -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Julius Gareche Lay -- American diplomat to Honduras and Uruguay
Wikipedia - Julius von Zech-Burkersroda -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Jun Yamazaki -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Juozas Gabrys -- Lithuanian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Juraj Chmiel -- Czech diplomat
Wikipedia - Juri Luik -- Estonian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Justina Eze -- Nigerian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Justin Brown (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Justin Sheil -- Irish diplomat and soldier
Wikipedia - Justin Siberell -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - J. William Middendorf -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Jyrki Aimonen -- Finnish diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Kadyr Yusupov -- Uzbekistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Kairat Lama Sharif -- Kazakhstani diplomat
Wikipedia - Kaj Sundberg -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Kamalesh Sharma -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kametaro Iijima -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - K. A. Nizami -- Indian historian and diplomat
Wikipedia - Kant Kishore Bhargava -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kareen Rispal -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Karen Fogg -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Karen Lanyon -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Karen L. Williams -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Karen-Mae Hill -- Diplomat, High Commissioner for Antigua and Barbuda to the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Karen Pierce -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Karl Gruber -- Austrian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Karl Heinrich von Hoym -- German diplomat, statesman and politician
Wikipedia - Karol Bachura -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Karoly Kovacs -- Hungarian jurist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Kassi Manlan -- Ivorian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kassym-Jomart Tokayev -- Kazakhstani politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Kate Marie Byrnes -- American diplomat and Ambassador to North Macedonia
Wikipedia - Katherine Dhanani -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kathleen Martinez -- Dominican archaeologist, diplomat, and lawyer
Wikipedia - Kathleen M. Fitzpatrick -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Katsuji Debuchi -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kazys Lozoraitis -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - K. B. Asante -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kees Klompenhouwer -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Kelly Craft -- American businesswoman and diplomat
Wikipedia - KenichirM-EM-^M Sasae -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kenneth C. Brill -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kenneth Joseph Burbridge -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kenneth L. Brown -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kenneth M. Quinn -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kensuke Horinouchi -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kent Logsdon -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kenzo Oshima -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Ketema Yifru -- Ethiopian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Ketevan Bagration of Mukhrani -- 20th and 21st-century Georgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kevin K. Sullivan -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kevin Whitaker -- United States career diplomat
Wikipedia - Khadija Mohamed -- Somali diplomat
Wikipedia - Khaldoun Talhouni -- Jordanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Khaled Bahah -- Yemeni politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Khalil Khasmammadov -- Azerbaijani politician and diplomat (1873-1947)
Wikipedia - Khalil Makkawi -- Lebanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Khan Sarwar Murshid -- Bangladeshi educationist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Khazar Ibrahim -- Azerbaijani diplomat
Wikipedia - Khemaies Jhinaoui -- Tunisian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kifle Wodajo -- Ethiopian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Kimberly Breier -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kim Darroch -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Kim Hyok-chol -- North Korean diplomat
Wikipedia - Kirsten Hillman -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kiyoshi Asako -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kiyoshi Sumiya -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kjell Colding -- Norwegian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Kjell Eliassen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Klemens von Metternich -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - KM-CM-%re DM-CM-&hlen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Knut Morkved -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Knut Solem -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Koby Arthur Koomson -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kodjo Menan -- Togolese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kofi Esaw -- Togolese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Kofi Frimpong (diplomat) -- Ghanaian diplomat, academic and broadcasting executive
Wikipedia - Komura JutarM-EM-^M -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Koto Matsudaira -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - K. P. Fabian -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Krishna Urs -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kristina Kvien -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Bojko -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Ciebien -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Czapla -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Olendzki -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Strzalka -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Suprowicz -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Szumski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Krzysztof Warszewicki -- Polish noble, diplomat, poet, and writer
Wikipedia - Kuniaki Asomura -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kunzang C. Namgyel -- Bhutanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Kurd von Schlozer -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Kurt M. Campbell -- American diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Kurt Volker -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Kwadwo Afoakwa Sarpong -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kwame Addae -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kwame Asamoah Tenkorang -- Ghanaian diplomat (b. 1951)
Wikipedia - Kwame Bawuah-Edusei -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - L. A. Fabunmi -- Nigerian scholar and diplomat
Wikipedia - Lakhdar Brahimi -- Algerian United Nations diplomat
Wikipedia - Lakshmi Kant Jha -- Indian diplomat and economic administrator
Wikipedia - Lamberto Zannier -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Lamin Kaba Bajo -- Gambian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Lange Schermerhorn -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Larbi Messari -- Moroccan politician, diplomat, historian
Wikipedia - Larry AndrM-CM-) Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Laura Bernal (diplomat) -- Argentine diplomat
Wikipedia - Laura Clarke -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Laura Farnsworth Dogu -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Laurent Stefanini -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Laurie Bristow -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Laurie S. Fulton -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Laurits S. Swenson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lauro Baja -- Filipino diplomat
Wikipedia - Lawrence G. Rossin -- American diplomat (1952-2012)
Wikipedia - Lawrence Middleton -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - La Yifan -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - L. Douglas Heck -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Learie Constantine -- Cricketer, lawyer, politician and diplomat from Trinidad
Wikipedia - Lebanon-Syria relations -- Diplomatic relations between Lebanon and Syria
Wikipedia - Lee Soo-hyuck -- South Korean politician and former diplomat
Wikipedia - Leif Blomqvist -- Finnish diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Leif Holger Larsen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Leonard Appleyard -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Leonard Michael Berry -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Leonard Woodcock -- American labor leader and diplomat
Wikipedia - Leon Gaikis -- Soviet diplomat (b. 1898, d. 1937)
Wikipedia - Leonid Komogorov -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Leopold Heinrich von der Goltz -- Prussian diplomat
Wikipedia - Leo Tuominen -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Lesego Makgothi -- Lesotho diplomat
Wikipedia - Leslie A. Wheeler -- American diplomat (1899-1968)
Wikipedia - Leslie Fielding -- British former diplomat
Wikipedia - Leslie H. Close-Pozzo -- Uruguayan diplomat
Wikipedia - Leslie Tsou -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lester Corrin Strong -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lester Ziffren -- American journalist, screenwriter and diplomat
Wikipedia - Letter of credence -- Letter granting (diplomatic) accreditation
Wikipedia - Levan Choladze -- Georgian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Levant Consular Service -- British diplomatic organization
Wikipedia - Lew Byong-hyun -- South Korean general and diplomat
Wikipedia - Libya-Pakistan relations -- Diplomatic relations between the State of Libya and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
Wikipedia - Li Fang (diplomat) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Li Guobang -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Liisa Talonpoika -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Liliana Ayalde -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lily Zachariah -- Malaysian diplomat
Wikipedia - Linda Duffield -- British former diplomat
Wikipedia - Linda Swartz Taglialatela -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Linda Thomas-Greenfield -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lino Bianco -- Maltese architect, academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Liora Herzl -- Israeli Diplomat
Wikipedia - Lisa D. Kenna -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lisa J. Peterson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - List of African diplomatic missions in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of attacks on diplomatic missions -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Brazilian diplomats -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Canadian diplomats -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by number of diplomatic missions -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of country codes on British diplomatic vehicle registration plates -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions during World War II -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Abkhazia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Afghanistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Albania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Algeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Andorra -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Angola -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Antigua and Barbuda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Argentina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Armenia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Australia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Austria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Azerbaijan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Bahrain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Bangladesh -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Barbados -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Belarus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Belgium -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Belize -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Benin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Bhutan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Bolivia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Botswana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Brazil -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Brunei -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Bulgaria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Burkina Faso -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Burundi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Cambodia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Cameroon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Cape Verde -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Chad -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Chennai -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Chile -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in China -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Colombia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Costa Rica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Croatia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Cuba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Cyprus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Denmark -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Djibouti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Dominica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in East Timor -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ecuador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Egypt -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in El Salvador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Equatorial Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Eritrea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Estonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Eswatini -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ethiopia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Fiji -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Finland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in France -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Gabon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Georgia (country) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Germany -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ghana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Greece -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Grenada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Guatemala -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Guinea-Bissau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Guyana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Haiti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Hamburg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Honduras -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Hungary -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Iceland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in India -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Indonesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Iran -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Iraq -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ireland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Israel -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Italy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ivory Coast -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Jamaica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Japan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Jordan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kazakhstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kenya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kiribati -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kosovo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kurdistan Region -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kuwait -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Kyrgyzstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Laos -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Latvia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Lebanon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Lesotho -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Liberia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Libya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Liechtenstein -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Lithuania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Los Angeles -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Luxembourg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Madagascar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Malawi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Malaysia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Mali -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Malta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Mauritania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Mauritius -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Mexico -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Moldova -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Monaco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Mongolia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Montenegro -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Morocco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Mozambique -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Myanmar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Namibia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Nauru -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Nepal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in New Zealand -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Nicaragua -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Nigeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Niger -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Niue -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Northern Ireland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in North Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Norway -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Oman -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ottawa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Pakistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Palau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Palestine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Panama -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Papua New Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Paraguay -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Peru -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Poland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Portugal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Qatar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Romania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Russia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Rwanda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Saint Kitts and Nevis -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Saint Lucia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Samoa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in San Marino -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Sao TomM-CM-) and Principe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Saudi Arabia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Scotland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Senegal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Serbia -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Seychelles -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Sierra Leone -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Singapore -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Slovakia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Slovenia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Solomon Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Somalia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Somaliland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in South Africa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in South Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in South Ossetia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in South Sudan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Sri Lanka -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Sudan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Suriname -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Sweden -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Switzerland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Syria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Taiwan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Tajikistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Tanzania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Thailand -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in The Bahamas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Central African Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Comoros -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Cook Islands -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Czech Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Dominican Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Federated States of Micronesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Gambia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Maldives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Marshall Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Netherlands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Philippines -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the Republic of the Congo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the United Arab Emirates -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Togo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Tonga -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Transnistria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Trinidad and Tobago -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Tunisia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Turkey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Turkmenistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Tuvalu -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Uganda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Ukraine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Uruguay -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Uzbekistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Vanuatu -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Venezuela -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Vietnam -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Wales -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Washington, D.C. -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Yemen -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Zambia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions in Zimbabwe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Abkhazia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Afghanistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Albania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Algeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Andorra -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Angola -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Antigua and Barbuda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Argentina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Armenia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Australia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Austria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Azerbaijan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Bahrain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Bangladesh -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Barbados -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Belarus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Belgium -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Belize -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Benin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Bhutan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Bolivia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Botswana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Brazil -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Brunei -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Bulgaria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Burkina Faso -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Burundi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Cambodia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Cameroon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Cape Verde -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Chad -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Chile -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of China -- List of diplomatic missions administered by the People's Republic of China
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Colombia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Costa Rica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Croatia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Cuba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Cyprus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Denmark -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Djibouti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Dominica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of East Timor -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Ecuador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Egypt -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of El Salvador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Equatorial Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Eritrea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Estonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Eswatini -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Ethiopia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Fiji -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Finland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of France -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Gabon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Georgia (country) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Germany -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Ghana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Greece -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Grenada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Guatemala -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Guinea-Bissau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Guyana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Haiti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Honduras -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Hungary -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Iceland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of India -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Indonesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Iran -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Iraq -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Ireland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Israel -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Italy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Ivory Coast -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Jamaica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Japan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Jordan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kazakhstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kenya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kiribati -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kosovo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kurdistan Region -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kuwait -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Kyrgyzstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Laos -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Latvia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Lebanon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Lesotho -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Liberia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Libya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Liechtenstein -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Lithuania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Luxembourg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Madagascar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Malawi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Malaysia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Mali -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Malta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Mauritania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Mauritius -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Mexico -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Moldova -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Monaco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Mongolia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Montenegro -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Morocco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Mozambique -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Myanmar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Namibia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Nauru -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Nepal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of New Zealand -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Nicaragua -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Nigeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Niger -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Niue -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of North Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of North Macedonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Norway -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Oman -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Pakistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Palau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Panama -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Papua New Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Paraguay -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Peru -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Poland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Portugal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Qatar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Romania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Russia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Rwanda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Saint Kitts and Nevis -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Saint Lucia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Samoa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of San Marino -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Sao TomM-CM-) and Principe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Saudi Arabia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Senegal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Serbia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Seychelles -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Sierra Leone -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Singapore -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Slovakia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Slovenia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Solomon Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Somalia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of South Africa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of South Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of South Ossetia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of South Sudan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Sri Lanka -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Sudan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Suriname -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Sweden -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Switzerland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Syria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Taiwan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Tajikistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Tanzania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Thailand -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Bahamas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Central African Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Comoros -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Czech Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Dominican Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Federated States of Micronesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Gambia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Holy See -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Maldives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Marshall Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Netherlands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Nordic countries -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Philippines -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Republic of the Congo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the State of Palestine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the United Arab Emirates -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of the United States -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Togo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Tonga -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Transnistria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Trinidad and Tobago -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Tunisia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Turkey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Turkmenistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Tuvalu -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Uganda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Ukraine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Uruguay -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Uzbekistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Vanuatu -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Venezuela -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Vietnam -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Yemen -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Zambia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions of Zimbabwe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions to the Holy See -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions to the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic missions to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic training institutions -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to India -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to North Macedonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States: Africa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States: Asia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States: Europe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States: North America and the Caribbean -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States: Oceania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States: South America -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomatic visits to the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats from the United Kingdom to Hawaii -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of France to Hawaii -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of Great Britain to the Republic of Genoa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of Great Britain to the Republic of Venice -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of Japan to Hawaii -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of Norway to China -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of Norway to the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of Norway to the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Bavaria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Germany -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Hanover -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Iran -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Norway -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to other German States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Peru -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Prussia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Qatar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Romania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Sardinia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Saxony -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Elector of Cologne -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Gambia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Hanseatic Cities -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Netherlands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the OSCE -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Ottoman Empire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to the Two Sicilies -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of diplomats of the United Kingdom to Wurttemberg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of heads of state by diplomatic precedence -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of heads of the diplomatic missions of the Holy See -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Japanese diplomats -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Lithuanian diplomats (1918-1940) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Lithuanian diplomats (1940-1990) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of ministers of the United States to Hawaii -- Former diplomatic office
Wikipedia - List of people who took refuge in a diplomatic mission -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Slovenian diplomats
Wikipedia - List of Sri Lankan non-career diplomats -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Turkish diplomats assassinated by Armenian militant organisations -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Turkish diplomats -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of wars extended by diplomatic irregularity -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Washington Diplomats players -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Lists of diplomatic missions -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Ljubomir Nenadovic -- Serbian writer, diplomat
Wikipedia - Llewellyn Thompson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lloyd Thomson -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - LM-CM-)on de Laborde -- French politician, diplomat and archaelogist (1807-1869)
Wikipedia - Lodewijck Huygens -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - LoM-CM-/c Hennekinne -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Loret Miller Ruppe -- American diplomat (1936-1996)
Wikipedia - Louis de Cardevac, marquis d'Havrincourt -- French nobleman, soldier and diplomat
Wikipedia - Louise Blais (Canadian diplomat) -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Louis Francois de La Bourdonnaye -- French diplomat (1700-1777)
Wikipedia - Louis Furnberg -- Czech-German writer, composer, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Louis G. Dreyfus -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Louis Jules Mancini Mazarini -- French diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Louis NapolM-CM-)on Lannes -- French diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Lowell C. Kilday -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Lucy Tamlyn -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Luders affair -- 1897 Haitian diplomatic incident
Wikipedia - Luigi Aldrovandi Marescotti -- Italian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Luigi Piavi -- Italian priest and diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis Almagro -- Uruguayan lawyer, diplomat, and politician
Wikipedia - Luis CdeBaca -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis Curiel -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis de Zulueta -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis Gallegos -- Eguadorian diplomat (born 1946)
Wikipedia - Luis Henrique Ferreira de Aguiar -- Brazilian 19th century diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis J. Lauredo -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis Planas -- Spanish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Luis Subercaseaux -- Chilean diplomat and athlete
Wikipedia - Lu Ping -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Lu Shaye -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Lydia Wanyoto -- Ugandan lawyer, politician and diplomat (born 1971)
Wikipedia - Lynda Worthaisong -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Lynne M. Tracy -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Mabel Murphy Smythe-Haith -- America diplomat
Wikipedia - Maciej Falkowski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Maciej Golubiewski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Maciej Szymanski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Maen Rashid Areikat -- Palestinian diplomat
Wikipedia - Magdalena Sniadecka-Kotarska -- Polish, professor, ethno-political researcher and diplomat
Wikipedia - MagdalM-CM-)na VaM-EM-!aryova -- Slovak actress and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mahamat Saleh Annadif -- Chadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mahmoud Alamir -- Persian diplomat (1863-1936)
Wikipedia - Mahmoud Hammoud (politician) -- Lebanese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mahmud Dhiyab -- Iraqi diplomat
Wikipedia - Mahmud Muhtar Pasha -- Turkish military officer and diplomat (1867-1935)
Wikipedia - Maia Panjikidze -- Georgian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Maj Britt Theorin -- Swedish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Majdi Khaldi -- Palestinian Diplomat and Ambassador
Wikipedia - Ma Jisheng -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Malcolm MacDonald -- British politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Malgorzata Wasilewska -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Malik Zahoor Ahmad -- Pakistani diplomat and Middle East expert
Wikipedia - Mamdudur Rahman Chowdhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Manel Abeysekera -- Sri Lankan diplomat
Wikipedia - Mani Shankar Aiyar -- Indian politician and former civil servant diplomat
Wikipedia - Mansoor Alam -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Manuel Antonio Barrantes Rodriguez -- Costa Rican diplomat
Wikipedia - Manuel Domingos Augusto -- Angolan diplomat, politician, and journalist
Wikipedia - Manuel Hassassian -- Palestinian-Armenian academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Manuel Herrera y Obes -- Uruguayan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Manuel JosM-CM-) Garcia -- Argentine politician, lawyer, economist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Manuel MuM-CM-1oz Borrero -- Righteous Among the Nations, diplomat
Wikipedia - Mara Tekach -- US diplomat
Wikipedia - Marcel Dinu -- Romanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Marcelo Calero -- Brazilian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Marcel Peyrouton -- French diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Marcin Kubiak (diplomat) -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Marco Antonio Garcia Blanco -- Mexican diplomat, current ambassador of Mexico to Nigeria
Wikipedia - Marga Gual Soler -- Spanish science diplomat
Wikipedia - Margaret Amoakohene -- Ghanaian academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Margit Tveiten -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Margus Kolga -- Estonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Maria Brewer -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Maria Francesca Spatolisano -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Maria Isabel Salvador -- Ecuadorian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mariam Yalwaji Katagum -- Nigerian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mariana Betsa -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Maria Neira -- Spanish medical doctor, international civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mariano Montealegre Bustamante -- Costa Rican politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Maria Victoria Morera -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Marie Gervais-Vidricaire -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Marie Isabelle Massip -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Marie Louis Descorches -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Marie-Louise Potter -- Seychellois politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Marie Melchior Joseph ThM-CM-)odore de LagrenM-CM-) -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Mari-Luci Jaramillo -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Marin Ceausescu -- Romanian diplomat and economist
Wikipedia - Mario Neves -- Portuguese journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mariusz Handzlik -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Mariusz WoM-EM-:niak -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Marja-Liisa Kiljunen -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Andrew Capes -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Andrew Green -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Bailey (diplomat) -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Boulware -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark C. Storella -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Fraser (secretary) -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Gitenstein -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Mark Mersiowsky -- German historian and diplomatist
Wikipedia - Mark R. Dybul -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - MaroM-EM-! M-EM- efM-DM-^MoviM-DM-^M -- Slovak politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Marquis of Tabernuiga -- Spanish exile and diplomat
Wikipedia - Marrack Goulding -- British diplomat, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations.
Wikipedia - Marshall Green -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Martha Ama Akyaa Pobee -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Martin Andjaba -- Namibian diplomat and Politician
Wikipedia - Martin Dahinden -- Swiss diplomat
Wikipedia - Martin Eberts -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Martin Eichtinger -- Austrian diplomat, lawyer and politician
Wikipedia - Martin Erdmann -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Martin Griffiths -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Martin Hagstrom -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Martin Luther (diplomat) -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Mary Ann Glendon -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Mary Catherine Phee -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Mary Chinery-Hesse -- Ghanaian diplomat and international civil servant
Wikipedia - Mary Whelan -- Irish diplomat
Wikipedia - Marzieh Afkham -- Iranian diplomat
Wikipedia - Masood Khan -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Masoud Khalili -- Afghan diplomat
Wikipedia - Massimo Aparo -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Masuma Hasan -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Mate Granic -- Croatian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Mathilde Mukantabana -- Rwandan diplomat, ambassador to the US
Wikipedia - Mattanya Cohen -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Matt Baugh -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Matthew Barzun -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Matthew Hedges (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Matthew H. Tueller -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Matthew J. Matthews -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Matthew Prior -- 17th/18th-century English diplomat and poet
Wikipedia - Maura Connelly -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Maurice Darrow Bean -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Maurice de Bunsen -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Maurice Francis Egan -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Maurice Halperin -- writer, professor, diplomat and accused spy
Wikipedia - Maurice Ingram -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Maurice Joostens -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mauricio Escanero -- Mexican career diplomat
Wikipedia - Maximilian Ulrich von Kaunitz -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Maxim Litvinov -- Soviet diplomat and foreign minister
Wikipedia - Maximo Cajal Lopez -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Max Kampelman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Max Sorensen -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Max van der Stoel -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Maxwell Henry Gluck -- diplomat
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Angeles Moreno Bau -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Angel ViM-CM-1as -- Spanish economist, diplomat
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Eke Backstrom -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - M-CM-^Eke Hammarskjold -- Swedish lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - M-DM-^PorM-DM-^Qe Brankovic (count) -- Serb diplomat
Wikipedia - M-DM-=ubomir Rehak -- Slovak diplomat
Wikipedia - Mehmet Guney -- Turkish diplomat and judge
Wikipedia - Melanie Verwoerd -- South African politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Melanne Verveer -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Melchior Guy Dickens -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Melville Guest -- English cricketer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Menasseh Ben Israel -- Portuguese rabbi, kabbalist, writer, diplomat, printer and publisher
Wikipedia - Merav Zafary-Odiz -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Merwyn Norrish -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Meryl Frank -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Message from Turnberry -- Diplomatic message from the North Atlantic Council
Wikipedia - Mette Kongshem -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - M. Feraud -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael A. Hammer -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Alexander (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael A. McCarthy -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael A. Raynor -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Armacost -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Arnon -- Israeli diplomat and cabinet secretary
Wikipedia - Michael Aron -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael B. Goldman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Brodsky (diplomat) -- Israeli diplomat (born 1972)
Wikipedia - Michael Courtney -- Roman Catholic titular archbishop and papal diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Davenport (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Dodman -- American diplomat, United States Ambassador to Mauritania
Wikipedia - Michael E. Guest -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael G. DeSombre -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Michael Green (diplomat) -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael H. Newlin -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Malinowski -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Moller -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Oren -- Israeli historian, military officer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Pelletier -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Michael Pike -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Retzer -- American politician diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Richard Bell -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Scanlan (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Scott (diplomat) -- British diplomat and colonial administrator
Wikipedia - Michael Shea (diplomat) -- British diplomat and author
Wikipedia - Michael S. Klecheski -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Ussery -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Michael Wilford (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Michal Murkocinski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Michal Zygmunt Tyszkiewicz -- Polish diplomat and songwriter
Wikipedia - MichaM-CM-+l Eytzinger -- Austrian nobleman, diplomat, historian, and publicist
Wikipedia - Michel Ahouanmenou -- Beninese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Michelle Chan (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Migonette Patricia Durrant -- Jamaican diplomat
Wikipedia - Miguel Augustus Francisco Ribeiro -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Miguel JosM-CM-) de Azanza, 1st Duke of Santa Fe -- Spanish politician, diplomat and viceroy
Wikipedia - Miguel M-CM-^Angel Asturias -- Guatemalan writer and poet-diplomat
Wikipedia - Miguel Serrano -- Chilean diplomat, nazi and Holocaust denier
Wikipedia - Miguel Tsao -- Taiwanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Mihail Pherekyde -- Romanian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mihalaki Georgiev -- Bulgarian writer, diplomat, and social figure
Wikipedia - Mihal Prifti -- Albanian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mike Mansfield -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mike Walsh (diplomat) -- New Zealand diplomst
Wikipedia - Mikhail Babich -- Russian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mikhail Bodrov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mikhail Bogdanov (diplomat) -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mila Hernando -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Millicent Aroi -- Nauruan diplomat
Wikipedia - Milos Alcalay -- Venezuelan diplomat
Wikipedia - Minasse Haile -- Ethiopian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Miodrag Koljevic -- Montenegrin diplomat
Wikipedia - Miomir ZuM-EM->ul -- Croatian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Mirko Tepavac -- Yugoslav diplomat
Wikipedia - Miryam Shomrat -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Mitani Takanobu -- Japanese government official and diplomat
Wikipedia - M. Lee McClenny -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Moazzam Malik (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Modupe Irele -- Nigerian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohamed Ali Alhakim -- Iraqi politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohamed Asim -- Maldivian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohamed ElBaradei -- Egyptian law scholar and diplomat, former Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and Nobel Peace Prize recipient
Wikipedia - Mohamed Kamel Amr -- Egyptian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohammad Ali Bogra -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohammad Asghar Afridi -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohammad Faisal -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohammad Yunus (diplomat)
Wikipedia - Mohammad Ziauddin -- Bangladesh diplomat
Wikipedia - Mohiuddin Ahmed (diplomat) -- Bangladeshi diplomat
Wikipedia - Monica Milne -- First woman diplomat in the UK
Wikipedia - Monique van Daalen -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Monteagle Stearns -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Monzer Makhous -- Syrian geologist, politician, diplomat
Wikipedia - Morales Carrion Diplomatic and Foreign Relations School -- School of international relations in Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Morgan Adokwei Brown -- Ghanaian lawyer and diplomat (b. 1959)
Wikipedia - Morris D. Busby -- American career diplomat
Wikipedia - Moses Kwasi Agyeman -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mousa Chegini -- Iranian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Moussa Faki -- Chadian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Muhamed Jusufspahic -- Serbian diplomat and Mufti
Wikipedia - Muhamet Kapllani -- Albanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Muhammad Muzammil Basyuni -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Muhammad Shaaban -- Egyptian diplomat
Wikipedia - Muhib Efendi -- Ottoman diplomat
Wikipedia - Muhittin Akyuz -- Military officer, diplomat
Wikipedia - Mull Katende -- Ugandan diplomat
Wikipedia - Murad Wilfried Hofmann -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Musa Al-Koni -- Libyan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Musa Nuri Esfandiari -- Iranian diplomat
Wikipedia - Mushtaq Leghari -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Mustafa ReM-EM-^_id Pasha -- Ottoman diplomat
Wikipedia - Mustafizur Rahman Siddiqi -- Bangladeshi diplomat
Wikipedia - Mustapha Adib (diplomat) -- Lebanese academic, diplomat, politician
Wikipedia - Nabil Elaraby -- Egyptian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Nabil Fahmi -- Egyptian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Nagendra Nath Jha -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Nahida Sobhan -- Bangladeshi diplomat
Wikipedia - Nancy Bernkopf Tucker -- American diplomatic historian
Wikipedia - Nancy Wyse Power -- Irish celticist, diplomat and nationalist
Wikipedia - Napoleon Abdulai -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Nasser Bourita -- Moroccan diplomat
Wikipedia - Nassif Hitti -- Lebanese diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser -- Qatari diplomat and President of the United Nations General Assembly
Wikipedia - Natale H. Bellocchi -- American industrial engineer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Natalia Aszkenazy -- Polish diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Nathaniel Azarco Welbeck -- Ghanaian politician and a diplomat
Wikipedia - Nathaniel Davis -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Nathaniel Niles Jr. -- American physician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Nathan Quao -- Ghanaian educator and diplomat
Wikipedia - Navdeep Singh Suri -- Indian diplomat (born 1959)
Wikipedia - Nawaf Obaid -- Saudi Arabian author and diplomat
Wikipedia - Nazifa Langaryan -- Afghani diplomat
Wikipedia - NebojM-EM-!a KaluM-DM-^Qerovic -- Montenegrin politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - NebojM-EM-!a Koharovic -- Croatian diplomat
Wikipedia - Necdet Kent -- Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Nehemiah Levanon -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Neil Truscott -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Nestor Forster -- Brazilian diplomat
Wikipedia - Neumi Leweni -- Fijian Army officer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Neven Mimica -- Croatian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Neville Ashenheim -- Jamaican diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Neville Gertze -- Namibian diplomat
Wikipedia - NguyM-CM-*n M-DM-^PM-CM-,nh -- Vietnamese diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicholas Hankey Smith -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicholas Hopton -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicholas Tandi Dammen -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicholas Throckmorton -- 16th-century English diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Nicholas Trist -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicola Brewer -- British diplomat and academic administrator
Wikipedia - Nicolas de Riviere -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicolas M. Salgo -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Nicolas ThM-CM-)venin -- French bishop and Vatican diplomat
Wikipedia - Niel Morgan -- Welsh cricketer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Niels Egelund -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Niermala Badrising -- Surinamese diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Nigel Broomfield -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Nigel Fisher (United Nations) -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Nigel Haywood -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Nigel Trench, 7th Baron Ashtown -- British peer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Niilo Orasmaa -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Nikola Dimitrov -- Macedonian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Nikolai Kostner -- Estonian politician, economist, diplomat and academic
Wikipedia - Nikola Milev -- Bulgarian diplomat and historian
Wikipedia - Nils Bolset -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Nina Ben Ami -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Nina Maria Fite -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Nina Sibal -- Indian diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Nineta Barbulescu -- Romanian diplomat (born 1968)
Wikipedia - NneNne Iwuji-Eme -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Nobutoshi Akao -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Non-official cover -- Plausible alternate purpose for a spy or other intelligence agent without diplomatic protection
Wikipedia - Noor-E-Hasna Lily Chowdhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Norbert Holl -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Norman Makin -- Australian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - North Korea-South Africa relations -- Diplomatic relations between North Korea and South Africa
Wikipedia - North Korea-Spain relations -- Diplomatic relations between North Korea and Spain
Wikipedia - Nureldin Satti -- Sudanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Nurlan Yermekbayev -- Kazakhstani diplomat
Wikipedia - Nurtai Abykayev -- Kazakhstani diplomat
Wikipedia - Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe -- Ghanaian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Nyon Conference -- 1937 diplomatic conference in Switzerland
Wikipedia - Olav Berstad -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Olcott Deming -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Oleg Grinevsky -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ole Peter Kolby -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Oliver Wright -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Oliviu Gherman -- Romanian physicist, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - OlivM-CM-)r Varhelyi -- Hungarian lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Olli Auero -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Olubanke King Akerele -- Liberian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Omar Abdi -- Somali-Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Omar Hilale -- Moroccan diplomat
Wikipedia - Omar Kabbaj -- Moroccan businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ombeni Sefue -- Tanzanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Omer Beriziky -- Malagasy politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ong Keng Yong -- Singaporean diplomat
Wikipedia - Ophir Kariv -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Orison Rudolph Aggrey -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Osama Al-Khaja -- Bahraini poet and diplomat
Wikipedia - Osmo Lares -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Otto von der Gablentz -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Ou Tangliang -- Chinese journalist, politician, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Outerbridge Horsey (diplomat) -- US diplomat (b. 1910, d. 1983)
Wikipedia - Owen D. Young -- American industrialist, businessman, lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Oya TuzcuoM-DM-^_lu -- Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pablo de Azcarate -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pablo Neruda -- Nobel Prize winning Chilean poet-diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Paddy Ashdown -- British politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Pakistan-Russia relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and the Russian Federation
Wikipedia - Pakistan-Vietnam relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Wikipedia - Pak Tong-chun -- North Korean diplomat
Wikipedia - Palestine 194 -- Diplomatic campaign
Wikipedia - Palestine-United States relations -- Diplomatic relations between the State of Palestine and the United States of America
Wikipedia - Pamela Hamamoto -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Pamela Harriman -- American diplomat and socialite
Wikipedia - Panagiotis Pipinelis -- Greek politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Panda diplomacy -- China's use of giant pandas as diplomatic tools
Wikipedia - Papal diplomatics
Wikipedia - Parwana Paikan -- Afghani diplomat
Wikipedia - Pasi Rutanen -- Finnish journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Pat Binns -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Patricia Espinosa -- Mexican politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Patricia Flor -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Patricia Holmes (diplomat) -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Patricia Mahoney -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Patricia Roberts Harris -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Patrick Chokala -- Tanzanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Patrick Fairweather -- British retired diplomat
Wikipedia - Patrick Gaspard -- Community activist, American former diplomat
Wikipedia - Patrick Nothomb -- Belgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul Arkwright -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul A. Trivelli -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul Brummell -- British diplomat and travel writer
Wikipedia - Paul-Charles-Amable de Bourgoing -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul C. Lambert -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul Hacker (diplomat) -- Former diplomat and a writer
Wikipedia - Paul H. Alling -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul H. Boeker -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Pauline M. Clerk -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul Matthews Cleveland -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul SchM-CM-$fer (politician) -- German politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Paulus van de Perre -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Paul Wolfowitz -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Pavan Varma -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Pavel Fischer -- Czech politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Pavel Latushko -- Belarusian diplomat
Wikipedia - Pavel Medem -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Pavol HamM-EM->ik -- Slovak diplomat
Wikipedia - Pawel Cieplak -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pawel Czerwinski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pawel Milewski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pedro Brolo -- Guatemalan economist, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Pedro Cevallos -- Spanish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Pedro de la Gasca -- Spanish bishop and diplomat
Wikipedia - Pedro Fernando Mavunza -- Angolan diplomat
Wikipedia - Pedro Nuno Bartol -- Portuguese diplomat
Wikipedia - Peers Carter -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Per Carlsen (diplomat) -- Danish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pere de Queralt -- Spanish noble and diplomat
Wikipedia - Permanent representative -- Head of a diplomatic mission to an international organisation
Wikipedia - Per Martin M-CM-^Xlberg -- Norwegian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Per Preben Prebensen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Barbour -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Barlerin -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Peter Beckingham -- British retired diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Boehm -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Butcher -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Chintala -- Zambian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Curtis (diplomat) -- Australian public servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Dale Scott -- Canadian poet, academic, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter (diplomat)
Wikipedia - Peter Hayes (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter H. Vrooman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Jankowitsch -- Austrian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Peter Paul Rubens -- Flemish artist and diplomat (1577-1640)
Wikipedia - Peter Terpeluk Jr. -- American diplomat and politician (1948-2011)
Wikipedia - Peter van Walsum -- Dutch diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter Wescombe -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Peter William Youens -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Petros Molyviatis -- Greek politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Phakiso Mochochoko -- International diplomat
Wikipedia - Phelekezela Mphoko -- Zimbabwean diplomat
Wikipedia - Phesheya Mbongeni Dlamini -- Swazi diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip Adams -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip Barton -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip C. Wilcox Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip Goldberg -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip Habib -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip McDonagh -- Irish diplomat and poet
Wikipedia - Philip of Novara -- 13th century Italian historian, warrior, musician, diplomat, poet, and lawyer
Wikipedia - Philippe Beaulne -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Philippine Consulate General, San Francisco -- Diplomatic mission of the Philippines in San Francisco, United States
Wikipedia - Philip Sidney -- 16th-century English poet, courtier, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Philip T. Reeker -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Phil Murphy -- American businessman and diplomat, 56th Governor of New Jersey
Wikipedia - Phocion -- Athenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Pierre Belon -- French traveler, naturalist, writer and diplomat (1517-1564)
Wikipedia - Pierre-Louis Gabriel Falaize -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Pierre-Richard Prosper -- American lawyer, diplomat and former prosecutor for the ICTR
Wikipedia - Pinchas Lapide -- Israeli theologian, author and diplomat (1922-1997)
Wikipedia - Pink Map -- Portuguese diplomatic document
Wikipedia - Piotr M-EM-^Aukasiewicz -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Piotr Opalinski (diplomat) -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Piotr Rychlik -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Piotr Wilczek -- Polish historian, literary translator, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Piper Campbell -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - P. K. Banerjee (Indian diplomat) -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - PM-CM-$ivi Hiltunen-Toivio -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - PM-CM-$ivo Tarjanne -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - PM-CM-*ro da Covilha -- Portuguese explorer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Poet-diplomat
Wikipedia - Pol Le Gourrierec -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Porter Cornelius Bliss -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Poul Hartling -- Danish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Prakash Shah -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Prince Gottfried von Hohenlohe-Schillingsfurst -- Hungarian diplomat
Wikipedia - Protectorate -- Territory that is protected diplomatically or militarily by a stronger state
Wikipedia - Prudence Bushnell -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Przemyslaw Bobak -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Przemyslaw CzyM-EM-< -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Pulat Abdullayev -- Russian career diplomat
Wikipedia - Puneet Talwar -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Qatar-United Kingdom relations -- Diplomatic relations
Wikipedia - Rabban Bar Sauma -- 13th-century Turkic Nestorian monk,traveller and diplomat.
Wikipedia - Rachad Bouhlal -- Moroccan diplomat
Wikipedia - Rachel Galloway -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Rachel Mayanja -- Ugandan lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rafael Eldad -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Rafael Tovar y de Teresa -- Mexican diplomat
Wikipedia - Rafal Perl -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Rafal Poborski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Raffaele Cappelli -- Italian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rafik Mansour -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Ragne Birte Lund -- Norwegian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Raimonda MurmokaitM-DM-^W -- Lithuanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ralengnao Khathing -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ralph Bunche -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ramchundur Goburdhun -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ramon Maria Narvaez -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Ran Curiel -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Randy W. Berry -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ran Ichay -- Israeli diplomat and humanitarian
Wikipedia - Raoul Nordling -- Swedish businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Raoul Wallenberg -- 20th-century Swedish architect, businessman, diplomat and humanitarian
Wikipedia - Rashad Hussain -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Rayko Strahilov Raytchev -- Bulgarian diplomat
Wikipedia - Raymond Allen Davis incident -- Diplomatic incident involving Pakistan and the United States
Wikipedia - Raymond Baaklini -- Lebanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Raymond ChrM-CM-)tien -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Raymond L. Garthoff -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Raymond R. Guest -- American businessman, diplomat, and racehorse owner
Wikipedia - Rebekah Grindlay -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Reino Honkaranta -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Rena Bitter -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - RenM-CM-) de Marees van Swinderen -- Dutch diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Rennell Rodd, 1st Baron Rennell -- British diplomat, poet, and politician (1858-1941)
Wikipedia - Ren Shang -- 1st/2nd century Han Dynasty general and diplomat
Wikipedia - Retno Marsudi -- Indonesian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Reuben Brigety -- American diplomat and academic
Wikipedia - Rex Hunt (diplomat) -- British Colonial Governor
Wikipedia - R. H. Bruce Lockhart -- British writer, spy and diplomat (1887-1970)
Wikipedia - Rhodesian mission in Lisbon -- Diplomatic mission (1965-1975)
Wikipedia - Riad Ismat -- Syrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Riaz Khokhar -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Ricardo Diez-Hochleitner Rodriguez (ambassador) -- Spanish diplomat
Wikipedia - Ricardo Lancaster-Jones y Verea -- Mexican diplomat and historian (1905-1983)
Wikipedia - Ricardo Paseyro -- Uruguayan diplomat and poet
Wikipedia - Richard Abusua-Yedom Quarshie -- Ghanaian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Richard Boucher -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Carlton Paschall III -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Dalton (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard E. Morse -- American physician, politician, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Francis Burton -- British explorer, geographer, translator, writer, soldier, orientalist, cartographer, ethnologist, spy, linguist, poet, fencer, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Grenell -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Holbrooke -- American diplomat and author
Wikipedia - Richard Huntington Melton -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard L. Baltimore -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Lyon-Dalberg-Acton, 2nd Baron Acton -- British Peer, diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard M. Fairbanks -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Miles (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard M. Mills Jr. -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Richard Moore (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Morris (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Newton Holwill -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Ralph -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Snowden Andrews -- Confederate Army officer, architect and diplomat (1830-1903)
Wikipedia - Richard Stone (politician) -- American politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard T. Davies -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard von Metternich -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Wayne Bogosian -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Richard Wood Boehm -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ric Throssell -- Australian writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rik Kuethe -- Dutch diplomat, journalist and writer
Wikipedia - Riva Ganguly Das -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert A. Flaten -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Anderson (diplomat) -- American Foreign Service officer
Wikipedia - Roberta S. Jacobson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert A. Stein (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert A. Stevenson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Bowes (diplomat) -- 16th-century English ambassador to Scotland
Wikipedia - Robert Bradford Edmonds -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert C. Good -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Cooper (strategist) -- British diplomat and adviser
Wikipedia - Robert Corbet (died 1583) -- English landowner, diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Robert Crewe-Milnes, 1st Marquess of Crewe -- British diplomat (1858-1945)
Wikipedia - Robert C. Strong -- American diplomat (1915-1999)
Wikipedia - Robert Dewar (diplomat)
Wikipedia - Robert F. Godec -- American career diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert F. Goheen -- American academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert F. Wagner Jr. -- American diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Robert Gore (MP) -- Irish Whig politician, British diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Gunawardena -- Sri Lankan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert K. Scott (diplomat) -- Career Member of the Senior Foreign Service; United States Ambassador to Malawi (2019-present)
Wikipedia - Robert L. Yost -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Macaire (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert M. Witajewski -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Roberto Flores Bermudez -- Honduran diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Robert Paus Platt -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert R. Livingston (chancellor) -- American lawyer, politician, diplomat and [[founding father]](1746-1813)
Wikipedia - Robert S. Beecroft -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert S. Gilchrist -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Shirley -- English soldier, diplomat and adventurer (c.1581-1628)
Wikipedia - Robert Solwin Smith -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert VIII Bertrand de Bricquebec -- French diplomat and soldier
Wikipedia - Robert Whitney Imbrie -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert William Cumberbatch -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert Wilson Shufeldt (naval officer) -- Naval officer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Robert W. Jordan -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Robin Bernstein -- American businesswoman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Robyn McCutcheon -- American diplomat, engineer and historian
Wikipedia - Rockwell A. Schnabel -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Roden Cutler -- Australian Army officer, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rodica Radian-Gordon -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Rodolphe Adada -- Congolese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rodric Braithwaite -- British diplomat and author
Wikipedia - Rogatien Biaou -- Beninese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Roger Anthony Bull -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Roger Casement -- Irish diplomat, activist, nationalist and poet
Wikipedia - Roger Du Boulay -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Roger Hervey -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Roger Lescot -- French orientalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Roger Short -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Roger Tomkys -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Rolf Einar Fife -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Rolf EkM-CM-)us -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Rolf Olaf Berg -- Norwegian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Romain Gary -- French writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Romania-Iran relations -- Diplomatic relations between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Romania
Wikipedia - Roman Kirn -- Slovenian diplomat
Wikipedia - Roman Knoll (politician) -- Polish politician, diplomat, and Freemason
Wikipedia - Romulo Escobar Bethancourt -- Panamanian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ronald D. Johnson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Ronald Weiser -- American businessman, philanthropist, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rosemary Banks -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Rosemary Thomas (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Ross Ardern -- New Zealand police officer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Ross Denny -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Ross Wilson (ambassador) -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Roxanne Cabral -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Roya Rahmani -- Afghan diplomat
Wikipedia - Royce Frith -- Canadian diplomat, public servant and politician
Wikipedia - Rudolf Holsti -- Finnish politician, journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Rudolf KirchschlM-CM-$ger -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Rufus King -- American lawyer, politician and diplomat (1755-1827)
Wikipedia - Rune Resaland -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Ruslan Abashidze -- Georgian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Ruslan Demchenko -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Russia-United States relations -- Diplomatic relations between Russia and the United States of America
Wikipedia - Ryan Crocker -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Rychaldus -- 13th century Mongol diplomat, clerk and translator
Wikipedia - Ryukyuan missions to Edo -- historical diplomatic missions in present-day Japan
Wikipedia - Sabine Anne Sparwasser -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - SaburM-EM-^M Kurusu -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Sada Cumber -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Sadako Ogata -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Sadao Iguchi -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Saeb Erekat -- Palestinian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Safak Pavey -- Turkish diplomat, columnist and politician
Wikipedia - Sagi Karni -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Sahabzada Yaqub Khan -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Said Djinnit -- Algerian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sakari Tuomioja -- Finnish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Sakugen ShM-EM-+ryM-EM-^M -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Saleh Adibi -- Iranian academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Saleh Al-Aulaqi -- Yemeni politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Salem Yahya Alkharejah -- Yemeni diplomat
Wikipedia - Saliou Akadiri -- Beninese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Salman Bashir -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Samantha Power -- Irish-American academic, author and diplomat
Wikipedia - Samuel Assefa -- Ethiopian academic and diplomat
Wikipedia - Samuel Ernest Quarm -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Samuel Zbogar -- Slovenian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Sandra E. Clark -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Sanjay Bhattacharya -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sarah Cowley (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Sarah Hulton -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Sargent Shriver -- American diplomat, politician and activist
Wikipedia - Sarwar Jan Chowdhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Satya Nandan -- Fijian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sayed Makhdoom Raheen -- Afghan diplomat
Wikipedia - Saywan Barzani -- Iraqi diplomat
Wikipedia - Sayyid Badr bin Hamad bin Hamood Al Busaidi -- Omani diplomat
Wikipedia - Schleswig-Holstein Question -- 19th-century legal and diplomatic issue
Wikipedia - Scot Marciel -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Sean Hoy -- Irish diplomat (b. 1964)
Wikipedia - Secretariat of State (Holy See) -- Branch of the Holy See that handles political and diplomatic functions
Wikipedia - Secretary General of NATO -- International diplomat, the chief civil servant of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Wikipedia - Sergei Kirpichenko -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sergey Kislyak -- Russian diplomat and senator
Wikipedia - Sergey Lavrov -- Russian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Sergio Balanzino -- Italian diplomat
Wikipedia - Serif Pasha -- Kurdish Ottoman diplomat
Wikipedia - Seyoum Mesfin -- Ethiopian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Shahid Karimullah -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Shah Rafiqul Bari Chowdhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Shahryar Khan -- Pakistan diplomat
Wikipedia - Shaista Suhrawardy Ikramullah -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Shalom Cohen (diplomat) -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Shamma Jain -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Shani Cooper -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Shankar Prasad Sharma -- Nepalese diplomat
Wikipedia - Sharon Campbell -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Sharrina Abdullah -- Malaysian diplomat
Wikipedia - Shashi Tharoor -- Indian politician, diplomat, author
Wikipedia - Shaun Byneveldt -- South African diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Shazelina Zainul Abidin -- Malaysian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sheel Kant Sharma -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sheikha Najla Al Qasimi -- United Arab Emirates diplomat
Wikipedia - Sheikh T. B. Damba -- Ghanaian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Sheldon B. Vance -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Sheldon T. Mills -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Shimon Avimor -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Shin Ebihara -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Shirley Abbott (ambassador) -- American businessman, rancher, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Shirley Temple -- American actress and diplomat
Wikipedia - Shlomo Argov -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Shlomo Cohen -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - ShM-EM-^MzM-EM-^M Murata -- Japanese businessman, politician, diplomat
Wikipedia - Shmoel Elyashiv -- Lithuanian diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Shombi Sharp -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Sidney Poitier -- American-born Bahamian actor, film director, author, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Sidonius Apollinaris -- Gallic poet, diplomat, and bishop
Wikipedia - Sigrid Kaag -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Simeon Bouro -- Solomon Islands politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Simmu Tiik -- Estonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon Butt -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon Collis -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon Dawbarn (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon Gass -- British Civil servant, former British diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon Harcourt, 1st Earl Harcourt -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon McDonald (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Simon Thuo Kairo -- Kenyan diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Sinibaldo de Mas -- Spanish diplomat (1809 - 1868)
Wikipedia - Sinikka Antila -- Finnish lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Sir Alexander Malet, 2nd Baronet -- English diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Sir Brooke Boothby, 10th Baronet -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Sir George Downing, 1st Baronet -- Anglo-Irish preacher, soldier, statesman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Sir Horace Rumbold, 8th Baronet -- British diplomat (1829-1913)
Wikipedia - Sir Horace Rumbold, 9th Baronet -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Sir James Wright, 1st Baronet -- English diplomat and art collector
Wikipedia - Sir John Graham, 4th Baronet -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Sir John Ralph Milbanke Huskisson, 8th Baronet -- English diplomat, 1800-1868
Wikipedia - Sir Richard Fanshawe, 1st Baronet -- 17th-century English diplomat, politician, poet, and translator
Wikipedia - Sissel Birgitte Breie -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sitki UM-DM-^_ur Ziyal -- Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Slavko Grujic -- Serbian politician and Diplomat
Wikipedia - Sofiane Mimouni -- Algerian diplomat
Wikipedia - Solomon Porter Hood -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Sovereign Military Order of Malta-European Union relations -- Diplomatic relations between Malta and the European Union
Wikipedia - Spiridion Lusi -- Greek scholar and Prussian diplomat
Wikipedia - Spying on United Nations leaders by United States diplomats
Wikipedia - Sri Preston Kulkarni -- Former diplomat and American political candidate
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Pawlak -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Stanislaw Smolen -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Stanoje Simic -- Yugoslav diplomat
Wikipedia - Stasys Antanas BaM-DM-^Mkis -- Lithuanian diplomat (1906-1999)
Wikipedia - Stasys Lozoraitis (junior) -- Lithuanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Stasys Lozoraitis -- Lithuanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Status of Jerusalem -- Legal and diplomatic status
Wikipedia - Stefan Eriksson (diplomat) -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Barrett (diplomat) -- British retired diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Bradley (diplomat) -- British former diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Brady -- Australian diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Ledogar -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Mahamudu Yakubu -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Schwartz (diplomat) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Stephen Weir -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Steven Fisher (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Steven Koutsis -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Stientje van Veldhoven -- Dutch politician, diplomat and civil servant
Wikipedia - Stig Traavik -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Stuart Comberbach -- Zimbabwean diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Stuart E. Eizenstat -- American diplomat and attorney
Wikipedia - Subrahmanyam Jaishankar -- External Affairs Minister of India, Former Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sue Bremner -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Suela Janina -- Albanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sultanuddin Ahmad -- Bengali politician and diplomat and Governor of East Pakistan (1902-1977)
Wikipedia - Sunanta Kangvalkulkij -- Thai diplomat
Wikipedia - Sun Heping (diplomat) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Sun Rongmin -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Susanna Moorehead -- British diplomat. Ambassador to Ethiopia 2016
Wikipedia - Suzanne Borel -- Early French female diplomat
Wikipedia - Sven Alkalaj -- Bosnian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sven Erik Svedman -- Norwegian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Sven Jurgenson -- Estonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Svenskt Diplomatarium
Wikipedia - Sverre Stub -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sydney David Pierce -- Canadian hurdler and diplomat
Wikipedia - Sydney Giffard -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Syed Abrar Hussain (diplomat) -- Pakistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Syed Muazzem Ali -- Bangladeshi diplomat
Wikipedia - Sylvester Jude Kpakpo Parker-Allotey -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sylvie Bedard -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Sylvie Bermann -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Syria-European Union relations -- Diplomatic relations between the European Union and the Syrian Arab Republic
Wikipedia - Tadamichi Yamamoto -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Tahir Taghizadeh -- Azerbaijani diplomat
Wikipedia - Tajul Islam Choudhury -- Bangladeshi diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Takahira KogorM-EM-^M -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Talleyrand partition plan for Belgium -- diplomatic proposal
Wikipedia - Talyn Rahman-Figueroa -- British diplomatic consultant
Wikipedia - Tamar Beruchashvili -- Georgian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Tampico Affair -- Diplomatic and military crisis between Mexico and the US (1914)
Wikipedia - Tanaka ShM-EM-^Msuke -- Japanese trader and diplomat
Wikipedia - Tansu Okandan -- Turkish diplomat
Wikipedia - Tapani Brotherus -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Tarald Brautaset -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Taranjit Singh Sandhu -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Tarcisio Bertone -- Italian prelate and a Vatican diplomat
Wikipedia - Tarik Ahsan -- A Bangladeshi diplomat
Wikipedia - Tasneem Aslam -- Pakistani career diplomat
Wikipedia - Tawfeeq Ahmed Almansoor -- Bahraini diplomat
Wikipedia - Teekoa Iuta -- Kiribatese diplomat, ambassador
Wikipedia - Teketel Forsido -- Ethiopian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - T. E. Lawrence -- |British archaeologist, military officer, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Telegram Crisis -- Diplomatic crisis between Denmark and Germany in 1942
Wikipedia - Teodolinda Rosa Rodrigues Coelho -- Angolan diplomat
Wikipedia - Teodor Laco -- Albanian writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Terence Charles Bacon -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - Terence Clark -- British retired diplomat and writer
Wikipedia - Tero Varjoranta -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Tessa Temata -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Teuku Mohammad Hamzah Thayeb -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - The Apprentice Diplomat -- 1919 film
Wikipedia - The Boudoir Diplomat -- 1930 film
Wikipedia - The Diplomatic Pouch -- 1927 film
Wikipedia - The Diplomats (film) -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - The Diplomats -- American hip-hop group
Wikipedia - The Diplomat
Wikipedia - The Gay Diplomat -- 1931 film
Wikipedia - The Great Game -- Political and diplomatic confrontation between the United Kingdom and Russian Empire over the Central Asia region from 1830 to 1895
Wikipedia - The Ladies Diplomat -- 1932 film
Wikipedia - The Little Diplomat -- 1917 silent film
Wikipedia - Theobald Piscatory -- French diplomat
Wikipedia - Theo Bot -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Theodore H. Kattouf -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Theodore Rodenburgh -- 17th-century Dutch diplomat and playwright
Wikipedia - The Yellow Diplomat -- 1920 film
Wikipedia - Thilmeeza Hussain -- Maldivian diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas A. Shannon Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Bodley -- English diplomat and scholar
Wikipedia - Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin -- Scottish nobleman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Duggin -- British former diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Edward Rowcroft -- British diplomat and merchant
Wikipedia - Thomas F. Bayard -- American lawyer, politician and diplomat (1828-1898)
Wikipedia - Thomas Fletcher (diplomat)
Wikipedia - Thomas Francis Wade -- 19th-century British linguist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas H. Goldberger -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Hohler -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Hushek -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas J. Watson Jr. -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Klestil -- Austrian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Thomas K. Mooney -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Kwesi Quartey -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Nelson Page -- American author and diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Parry (ambassador) -- English politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Pinckney -- American statesman, diplomat and general (1750-1828)
Wikipedia - Thomas P. Kelly III -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Prinz -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Vajda -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford (1672-1739) -- British peer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Thomas W. Simons Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Tibor P. Nagy -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Tiina Intelmann -- Estonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Tim Barrow -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Tim Cole (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Timeline of United States diplomatic history -- Diplomatic historical timeline of the U.S.
Wikipedia - Tim Guldimann -- Swiss former diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Timothy Lathrop Towell -- American diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Tina Redshaw -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Tobias Thyberg -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Todd C. Chapman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Todd Philip Haskell -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Toma Karayovov -- Bulgarian diplomat and publicist
Wikipedia - Tomasz Czyszek -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Tom Cooney -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Tom Malinowski -- American diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Tommy Koh -- Singaporean diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Tony Brenton -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Tony Small -- New Zealand diplomat
Wikipedia - Tor Berntin NM-CM-&ss -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea -- 1965 treaty establishing basic diplomatic relations between Japan and South Korea
Wikipedia - Trinidad JimM-CM-)nez -- Spanish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Tsuneo Tanaka -- Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Tsushima incident -- Diplomatic incident
Wikipedia - Tudor Ulianovschi -- Moldovan politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Tuula YrjolM-CM-$ -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Tuvako Manongi -- Tanzanian diplomat
Wikipedia - Tymon Tytus Chmielecki -- Polish prelate of the Catholic Church and Holy See diplomat
Wikipedia - Type B Cipher Machine -- Japanese diplomatic code named Purple by the US
Wikipedia - Tzipi Hotovely -- Israeli politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - U Kyin -- Burmese diplomat
Wikipedia - Ulf-Erik Slotte -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Ulick de Burgh, 1st Marquess of Clanricarde -- British politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Uma Shankar Bajpai -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Union mark of Norway and Sweden -- 1844-1905 symbol and diplomatic flag of the union between Sweden and Norway
Wikipedia - United States bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade -- 1999 bombing of a diplomatic mission
Wikipedia - United States Foreign Service -- Primary personnel system used by the diplomatic service of the United States federal government
Wikipedia - Unto Tanskanen -- Finnish diplomat and lawyer
Wikipedia - Urban Rusnak -- Slovak diplomat and academic
Wikipedia - Ursula Plassnik -- Austrian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Valentin Bogomazov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Valentin Inzko -- Austrian diplomat
Wikipedia - Valerian Dovgalevsky -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Valerie Caton -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Valerie Raymond -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Valeriu Turea -- Moldovan diplomat
Wikipedia - Valeriy Chaly (diplomat) -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Valeriy Chechelashvili -- Georgian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Valery Tsepkalo -- Belarusian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vane Ivanovic -- Yugoslav athlete and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vanessa Shih -- Taiwanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Vasile Andonovski -- Macedonian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vasily Sidorov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vassilis Vassilikos -- Greek writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vasyl Durdynets -- Ukrainian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vasyl Paneiko -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vatslav Vorovsky -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Vedastus Kyalakishaija Kyaruzi -- Tanzanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Vegard Ellefsen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Venu Rajamony -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Viacheslav Yatsiuk -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vibeke Knudsen -- Norwegian diplomat
Wikipedia - Victor Cavendish-Bentinck, 9th Duke of Portland -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Victor Dolidze (politician) -- Georgian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Victoria Guardia Alvarado -- Costa Rican politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Victor Kravchenko (defector) -- Defector Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Victor Neggo -- Estonian politician, diplomat, educator
Wikipedia - Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit -- Indian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Vijay Keshav Gokhale -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Viktor Avilov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vilma Kathleen McNish -- Jamaican diplomat
Wikipedia - Vinay Mohan Kwatra -- Indian diplomat
Wikipedia - Virendra Dayal -- Indian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Virginia Hesse -- Ghanaian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vitaly Fen -- Uzbekistani diplomat
Wikipedia - Vivianne Fock Tave -- Seychellois diplomat
Wikipedia - V. John Krehbiel -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir BoM-EM->ovic (diplomat) -- Ambassador of the Republic of Serbia to Montenegro
Wikipedia - Vladimir Drobnjak -- Croatian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir Fabry -- American lawyer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir Ivanovich Yerofeyev -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir Malygin -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir Petrovic (ambassador) -- Serbian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir Polyakov (diplomat) -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Vladimir Safronkov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - VM-CM-)ronique Ahoyo -- Beninese politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - V. M. M. Nair -- Indian civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Vygaudas UM-EM-!ackas -- Lithuanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Waclaw Babinski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Walid Khazen -- Lebanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Walid Muallem -- Syrian poltician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Wallenberg family -- Swedish bankers, industrialists, politicians and diplomats
Wikipedia - Walter Carrington -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Walter Curley -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Walter Eytan -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Walter Hely-Hutchinson -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - Walter Hines Page -- American journalist, publisher, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Walter Loridan -- Belgian diplomat and academic
Wikipedia - Walter Thurnherr -- Swiss civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - Walther Hewel -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Walton Alfonso Webson -- Antiguan diplomat
Wikipedia - Wang Dong (diplomat) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Wang Guangya -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Warren W. Tichenor -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Washington Irving -- American writer, historian and diplomat
Wikipedia - W. Averell Harriman -- American businessman, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Wayne Bush -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Welles Declaration -- US diplomatic statement of July 23, 1940
Wikipedia - Wellington Koo -- Republic of China diplomat
Wikipedia - Wendy Chamberlin -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Wendy Sherman -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Werner Daum -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Western Contact Group -- Joint diplomatic group
Wikipedia - Widar Bagge -- Swedish diplomat
Wikipedia - Wiktor Weintraub -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Wilbur J. Carr -- American diplomat and reformer
Wikipedia - Wilfrid Marcel Agnes -- Canadian diplomat
Wikipedia - Wilfried Emvula -- Namibian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Wilhelm von Humboldt -- German (Prussian) philosopher, government functionary, diplomat, and founder of the University of Berlin (1767-1835)
Wikipedia - Willard Dickerman Straight -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William A. Crawford -- American diplomat and ambassador (1915-2001)
Wikipedia - William A. Eaton -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Bayard Cutting Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William B. Buffum -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Brownfield -- American diplomat, and Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
Wikipedia - William B. Taylor Jr. -- American diplomat, United States Ambassador to Ukraine
Wikipedia - William Cameron Forbes -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Caxton -- 15th-century English merchant, diplomat, writer and printer
Wikipedia - William Christian Bullitt Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Dale Montgomery -- United States diplomat
Wikipedia - William D. Brewer -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Eacho -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland -- British diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - William Edward Bauer -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - William Edwin Ryerson -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William E. Todd -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Eustis -- Massachusetts-born physician, politician, and diplomat
Wikipedia - William Frederick Bull -- Canadian former diplomat
Wikipedia - William Fullerton (diplomat) -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - William Garrow Lettsom -- British diplomat
Wikipedia - William G. Bradford -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William George Mensah Brandful -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - William Hamilton (diplomat)
Wikipedia - William Harbord (politician) -- British politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - William Harrison (poet) -- English poet and diplomat
Wikipedia - William Hussey (English diplomat) -- English ambassador to the Ottoman Empire
Wikipedia - William Joseph Burns -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Kanyirigi -- Ghanaian career diplomat
Wikipedia - William L. Eagleton -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Ludwig Jacobsen -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William M. Bellamy -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William McCormick Blair Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Miller Collier -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William O'Dwyer -- American general, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - William R. Crawford Jr. -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William Rosecrans -- Diplomat, politician, and U.S. Army officer
Wikipedia - William Sumter Murphy -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - William W. Popp -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Willibald Pahr -- Austrian politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Wilson C. Flake -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Winnie Byanyima -- 20th and 21st-century Ugandan aeronautical engineer, politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Wipert von Blucher -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - W. Nathaniel Howell -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Wojciech Tycinski -- Polish diplomat
Wikipedia - Wolf warrior diplomacy -- 21st century Chinese diplomatic strategy
Wikipedia - Women Are Better Diplomats -- 1941 film
Wikipedia - Wongsa Dhiraj Snid -- Thai diplomat
Wikipedia - Woody Johnson -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - W. Paatii Ofosu-Amaah -- Ghanaian lawyer, international civil servant and diplomat
Wikipedia - W. Patrick Murphy -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - W. True Davis, Jr. -- American businessman and diplomat
Wikipedia - Wu Chaoshu -- Republic of China diplomat (1887-1934)
Wikipedia - Wu Xiuquan -- Chinese military officer and diplomat (1908-1997)
Wikipedia - X Article -- 1947 anti-communist article by American diplomat George F. Kennan
Wikipedia - Xi yu fan guo zhi -- Report by a diplomatic envoy
Wikipedia - Xu Jianguo -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - XYZ Affair -- Diplomatic episode between the U.S. and France
Wikipedia - Yacov Hadas-Handelsman -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Yang Bozhen -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Yaroslav Brisiuck -- A Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yehor Bozhok -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yehuda Zvi Blum -- Israeli professor of law and diplomat
Wikipedia - Yerlan Alimbayev -- Kazahk diplomat
Wikipedia - Yevgheniy Yenin -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yitzhak Eldan -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Yoga Soegomo -- Indonesian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yoram Ben-Zeev -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Yosef Govrin -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Yosef Levi-Sfari -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Yossi Avni-Levy -- Israeli writer and diplomat
Wikipedia - Youssoufou Bamba -- Ivorian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yrjo VM-CM-$M-CM-$nM-CM-$nen -- Finnish diplomat
Wikipedia - Yukiya Amano -- 20th and 21st-century Japanese diplomat
Wikipedia - Yulian Bachynsky -- Ukrainian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yung Wing -- Chinese-American diplomat and businessman
Wikipedia - Yuri Gryadunov -- Soviet and Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Yuri Kim (ambassador) -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Yuri Kuplyakov -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Yusuf Ziya Pasha -- Ottoman politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Yuval Fuchs -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Yvonne van Rooy -- Dutch politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Zahir Tanin -- Afghan diplomat
Wikipedia - Zamir Kabulov -- Russian diplomat
Wikipedia - Zbigniew Brzezinski -- Polish-American diplomat and political scientist (1928-2017)
Wikipedia - Zbigniew Rau -- Polish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Zdzislaw Raczynski -- Polish diplomat and journalist
Wikipedia - Zeynep Sibel Algan -- Turkish female diplomat
Wikipedia - Zhang Jun (ambassador) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Zheng He -- Chinese mariner and diplomat
Wikipedia - Zheng Qingdian -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Zheng Zeguang -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Zhou Jian (diplomat) -- Chinese diplomat
Wikipedia - Zihni Abaz Kanina -- Albanian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Zohrab Mnatsakanyan -- Armenian diplomat and politician
Wikipedia - Zurab Beridze (diplomat) -- Georgian diplomat
Wikipedia - Zvi Magen -- Israeli diplomat
Wikipedia - Zygimantas Pavilionis -- Lithuanian diplomat and politician
Harold Nicolson ::: Born: November 21, 1886; Died: May 1, 1968; Occupation: Diplomat;
Nizar Qabbani ::: Born: March 21, 1923; Died: April 30, 1998; Occupation: Diplomat;
U Thant ::: Born: January 22, 1909; Died: November 25, 1974; Occupation: Diplomat;
Nicholas Murray Butler ::: Born: April 2, 1862; Died: December 7, 1947; Occupation: Diplomat;
Ban Ki-moon ::: Born: June 13, 1944; Occupation: Diplomat;
Javier Perez de Cuellar ::: Born: January 19, 1920; Occupation: Diplomat;
Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit ::: Born: August 18, 1900; Died: December 1, 1990; Occupation: Diplomat;
Koichiro Matsuura ::: Born: September 29, 1937; Occupation: Diplomat;
Ralph Bunche ::: Born: August 7, 1903; Died: December 9, 1971; Occupation: Diplomat;
Anwarul Karim Chowdhury ::: Born: February 5, 1943; Occupation: Diplomat;
Wayne Smith ::: Born: 1932; Died: February 17, 2014; Occupation: Diplomat;
Andrew Dickson White ::: Born: November 7, 1832; Died: November 4, 1918; Occupation: Diplomat;
Sha Zukang ::: Born: September 24, 1947; Occupation: Diplomat;
Richard N. Haass ::: Born: July 28, 1951; Occupation: Diplomat;
Kenneth Adelman ::: Born: June 9, 1946; Occupation: Diplomat;
Zhou Enlai ::: Born: March 5, 1898; Died: January 8, 1976; Occupation: Diplomat;
Paul Bremer ::: Born: September 30, 1941; Occupation: Diplomat;
Christiana Figueres ::: Born: August 7, 1956; Occupation: Diplomat;
John Hookham Frere ::: Born: May 21, 1769; Died: January 7, 1846; Occupation: Diplomat;
Caleb Cushing ::: Born: January 17, 1800; Died: January 2, 1879; Occupation: Diplomat;
J. Christopher Stevens ::: Born: April 18, 1960; Died: September 12, 2012; Occupation: Diplomat;
Richard Holbrooke ::: Born: April 24, 1941; Died: December 13, 2010; Occupation: Diplomat;
Mohammad Javad Zarif ::: Born: January 7, 1960; Occupation: Diplomat;
Staffan de Mistura ::: Born: January 25, 1947; Occupation: Diplomat;
Alfonso Garcia Robles ::: Born: March 20, 1911; Died: September 2, 1991; Occupation: Diplomat;
Marty Natalegawa ::: Born: March 22, 1963; Occupation: Diplomat;
Abba Eban ::: Born: February 2, 1915; Died: November 17, 2002; Occupation: Diplomat;
Mohamed ElBaradei ::: Born: June 17, 1942; Occupation: Diplomat;
Yukiya Amano ::: Born: May 9, 1947; Occupation: Diplomat;
Chiune Sugihara ::: Born: January 1, 1900; Died: July 31, 1986; Occupation: Diplomat;
Kofi Annan ::: Born: April 8, 1938; Occupation: Diplomat;
Jan Eliasson ::: Born: September 17, 1940; Occupation: Diplomat;
Mitchell Reiss ::: Born: 1957; Occupation: Diplomat;
Harlan Cleveland ::: Born: January 19, 1918; Died: May 30, 2008; Occupation: Diplomat;
Karlfried Graf Durckheim ::: Born: October 24, 1896; Died: December 28, 1988; Occupation: Diplomat;
Sergey Lavrov ::: Born: March 21, 1950; Occupation: Diplomat;
Romain Gary ::: Born: May 21, 1914; Died: December 2, 1980; Occupation: Diplomat;
Dag Hammarskjold ::: Born: July 29, 1905; Died: September 18, 1961; Occupation: Diplomat;
Baldassare Castiglione ::: Born: December 6, 1478; Died: February 2, 1529; Occupation: Diplomat;
Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf ::: Born: 1940; Occupation: Diplomat;
George F. Kennan ::: Born: February 16, 1904; Died: March 17, 2005; Occupation: Diplomat;
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https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/29903900-the-deadly-diplomat
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30309477.The_Naked_Diplomat_Understanding_Power_and_Politics_in_the_Digital_Age
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30325240-the-adviser-and-the-diplomat
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/32620359-the-diplomat-s-daughter
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33154630-the-diplomat-s-daughter
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/42971456-diplomatic-relations
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/43737729-the-diplomat-and-desperado-stories
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6800107-the-diplomatic-retreat-of-france-and-public-opinion-on-the-eve-of-the-fr
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/728756.Quiet_Diplomat
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/859958.The_Diplomat_s_Dictionary
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/899073.The_Poet_and_the_Diplomat
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/9574888-german-diplomatic-relations-1871-1945
https://familypedia.wikia.org/wiki/Category:19th-century_American_diplomats
https://familypedia.wikia.org/wiki/Category:Diplomatic_sites
https://military.wikia.org/wiki/Diplomatic_history_of_World_War_II
https://military.wikia.org/wiki/Diplomatic_history_of_World_War_II#Germany
selforum - scholars as gnostic diplomats
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Fanfic/TheDetectiveAndTheDiplomat
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/DiplomaticImmunity
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/DiplomaticImpunity
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HumansAreDiplomats
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Series/DiplomaticImmunity
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Series/DiplomatKurodaKousaku
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Diplomats
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Diplomats_by_country
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Category:Diplomats_of_the_United_States
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Charles_Eliot_(diplomat)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Diplomat
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_Ball_(diplomat)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Jacques_Roy_(diplomat)
Pocahontas II: Journey To A New World(1998) - When news of John Smith's death reaches America, Pocahontas is devastated. She sets off to London with John Rolfe, to meet with the King of England on a diplomatic mission: to create peace and respect between the two great lands. However, Governor Ratcliffe is still around; he wants to return to Jam...
Lethal Weapon 2(1989) - In many ways superior to its predecessor Lethal Weapon, Lethal Weapon 2 reteams Mel Gibson and Danny Glover as, respectively, "loose cannon" LA detective Martin Riggs and Riggs' cautious family-man partner Roger Murtaugh. The villain this time is a South African diplomat (Joss Ackland) who doubles a...
The Comedians(1967) - A cynical Welsh hotel owner secretly romances a diplomat's wife in Haiti under the violent reign of the despot "Papa Doc" Duvalier.
Water(1985) - A British diplomat to a West Indian island nation finds his idyllic existence thrown into chaos when a large American drilling company finds a huge source of natural mineral water there.
Argo(2012) - In 1980 a joint CIA and Canadian joint operation extracted six fugitive American diplomats out of Iran in the midst of revolution; this is their story. Winner of 3 Academy Awards including Best Picture. Directed and starring Ben Affleck; also starring Bryan Cranston, Alan Arkin, and John Goodman.
The Inspector General(1949) - In this farcical Technicolor musical, snake oil salesman Georgi (Danny Kaye) is too honest for his own good. After his partner (Walter Slezak) fires him, the simple-minded Georgi wanders into a corrupt town where he is mistaken for a diplomat. As Georgi unknowingly enjoys his false identity, the tow...
Savage Justice(1988) - The daughter of an American diplomat is caught up in a revolution in a foreign country.
A United Kingdom (2016) ::: 6.9/10 -- PG-13 | 1h 51min | Biography, Drama, History | 10 February 2017 (USA) -- The story of King Seretse Khama of Botswana and how his loving but controversial marriage to a British white woman, Ruth Williams, put his kingdom into political and diplomatic turmoil. Director: Amma Asante Writers:
Beirut (2018) ::: 6.4/10 -- R | 1h 49min | Action, Crime, Drama | 11 April 2018 (USA) -- Caught in the crossfires of civil war, CIA operatives must send a former U.S. diplomat to negotiate for the life of a friend he left behind. Director: Brad Anderson Writer:
Foolish Wives (1922) ::: 7.0/10 -- Not Rated | 1h 57min | Drama, Thriller | 11 January 1922 (USA) -- A con artist masquerades a Russian nobility and attempts to seduce the wife of an American diplomat. Director: Erich von Stroheim (as Erich Von Stroheim) Writers: Erich von Stroheim (story and scenario) (as Erich Von Stroheim), Marian Ainslee (titles) | 1 more credit Stars:
Four Days in September (1997) ::: 7.4/10 -- O Que Isso, Companheiro? (original title) -- Four Days in September Poster -- Brazillian urban guerrilla fighters kidnap the American Ambassador. Now, the diplomat's life hangs in the balance - helplessly caught between a government unwilling to cooperate - and his fear of the captors themselves. Director: Bruno Barreto
Lethal Weapon 2 (1989) ::: 7.2/10 -- R | 1h 54min | Action, Crime, Thriller | 7 July 1989 (USA) -- Riggs and Murtaugh are on the trail of South African diplomats who are using their immunity to engage in criminal activities. Director: Richard Donner Writers: Jeffrey Boam (screenplay), Shane Black (story) | 2 more credits
Lost Horizon (1937) ::: 7.7/10 -- Approved | 2h 12min | Adventure, Drama, Fantasy | 1 September 1937 -- Lost Horizon Poster -- When a wise diplomat's plane crashes in the snows of Tibet, he and the other survivors are guided to Shangri-La, where they wrestle with the invitation to stay. Director: Frank Capra Writers:
M. Butterfly (1993) ::: 6.8/10 -- R | 1h 41min | Drama, Romance | 1 October 1993 (USA) -- In 1960s China, French diplomat Rene Gallimard falls in love with an opera singer, Song Liling - but Song is not at all who Gallimard thinks. Director: David Cronenberg Writers: David Henry Hwang (play), David Henry Hwang (screenplay) Stars:
The 13th Warrior (1999) ::: 6.6/10 -- R | 1h 42min | Action, Adventure, History | 27 August 1999 (USA) -- A man, having fallen in love with the wrong woman, is sent by the sultan himself on a diplomatic mission to a distant land as an ambassador. Stopping at a Viking village port to restock on supplies, he finds himself unwittingly embroiled in a quest to banish a mysterious threat in a distant Viking land. Directors: John McTiernan, Michael Crichton (uncredited)
The White Countess (2005) ::: 6.6/10 -- PG-13 | 2h 15min | Drama, History, Romance | 31 March 2006 (UK) -- Set in 1930s Shanghai, where a blind American diplomat develops a curious relationship with a young Russian refugee who works odd -- and sometimes illicit -- jobs to support members of her dead husband's aristocratic family. Director: James Ivory Writer:
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964) ::: 6.4/10 -- Approved | 2h 2min | Comedy, Drama, Romance | 13 May 1965 (USA) -- Anthology movie about three owners of a yellow Rolls-Royce. A British diplomat buys the car for his French wife. A mobster's girlfriend has an affair in Italy. An American woman drives a Yugoslavian partisan to Ljubljana on the eve of the Nazi invasion. Director: Anthony Asquith Writer:
https://ancardia.fandom.com/wiki/Chaos_diplomat
https://civilization.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Capital_(CivBE)
https://elderscrolls.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomat
https://elderscrolls.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Immunity
https://elderscrolls.fandom.com/wiki/Thalmor_Diplomatic_Corps
https://elderscrolls.fandom.com/wiki/Thalmor_Diplomatic_Corps_Notice
https://fanfiction.fandom.com/wiki/A_Diplomatic_Mission_(Star_Trek)
https://guildopedia.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Immunity
https://kenshi.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Status
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/18th_Kree_Diplomatic_Gestalt
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/18th_Kree_Diplomatic_Gestalt_(Earth-200080)
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/18th_Kree_Diplomatic_Gestalt_(Earth-200080)/Gallery
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/18th_Kree_Diplomatic_Gestalt_(Earth-TRN285)
https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/18th_Kree_Diplomatic_Gestalt_(Earth-TRN285)/Gallery
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomat
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_corps
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_frequency
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_function
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_immunity
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Implausibility
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_pressure
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_soir
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_team
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_vessel
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Federation_Diplomatic_Corps
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Scientific_diplomat
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Starfleet_Diplomatic_Corps
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Terrelian_diplomat_001
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/United_Earth_Diplomatic_Corps
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomat
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Implausibility
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_officer
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Orders
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_protection_group
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Federation_Diplomatic_Corps
https://sincity.fandom.com/wiki/Dodge_Diplomat
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Alderaanian_diplomatic_cruiser
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomat
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Service
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_Summit_at_Sullust
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/J-type_diplomatic_barge
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/J-type_diplomatic_barge/Legends
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Unidentified_Aybarian_diplomat
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Unidentified_New_Republic_Gungan_diplomat
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Unidentified_Republic_diplomat
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Unidentified_Sith_diplomat
https://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/Diplomatic_TARDIS
https://tardis.fandom.com/wiki/The_Diplomat's_Story_(short_story)
Captain SHerlock -- -- Toei Animation -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Drama Sci-Fi Space -- Captain SHerlock Captain SHerlock -- After conquering the galaxy, mankind has reached its apex and is now on a steady decline. The resources of the universe are diminishing, and around 500 billion humans begin to return home to Earth. Thus begins a war between the various factions of humans for control of the planet. Eventually, an authoritarian government known as the Gaia Sanction prevents the re-population of Earth. -- -- Captain Herlock was one of the Elite Wing who was tasked by the Gaia Sanction to defend the Earth. His fleet of ships was unstoppable under his command. However, the Gaia Sanction allows a diplomatic elite to immigrate to Earth, which angers Herlock. He goes rogue and fires upon the diplomats and the rest of his fleet. He decides to unleash dark matter on the planet to make it uninhabitable, but also becomes engulfed in it which immortalizes him. -- -- One hundred years have passed, and the legendary Captain Herlock is still at large, with only the Arcadia under his control. The Gaia Sanction continues with their plans for control over the Earth, while hiding its true state. But Captain Herlock is preparing for one final showdown with them, which will determine the fate of the world! -- -- Licensor: -- Ketchup Entertainment -- Movie - Sep 7, 2013 -- 46,682 7.37
Gintama: The Semi-Final -- -- - -- 2 eps -- Manga -- Action Comedy Historical Parody Samurai Shounen -- Gintama: The Semi-Final Gintama: The Semi-Final -- As the war temporarily calms down and Edo rebuilds, Gintoki finds Shinpachi—who is still unaware of his return—on a bridge. However, as a fight quickly breaks out between the Yorozuya and the Tenshouin Naraku, suspicion grows, forcing Gintoki to use what is nearest—a loincloth—to mask his identity. Saved for the time being, Gintoki enters the Yorozuya office, but unbeknownst to him, someone else is already waiting there... -- -- Meanwhile, Kondou departs Earth to marry Princess Bubbles in an attempt to improve diplomatic relations. After boarding the Gorilla Amanto mother ship, he realizes that he doesn't speak their language. Confused, Kondou tries conversing with them, only to inadvertently gain their support. However, someone associated with the princess crashes the ongoing ceremony. Will the wedding continue, or has Kondou just been saved from becoming the next Gorilla Prince? -- -- Special - Jan 15, 2021 -- 26,460 8.52
Hoozuki no Reitetsu -- -- Wit Studio -- 13 eps -- Manga -- Comedy Demons Supernatural Fantasy Seinen -- Hoozuki no Reitetsu Hoozuki no Reitetsu -- Hell is a bureaucracy, and business is running smoother than ever thanks to the demonic efficiency of Hoozuki, chief deputy to Lord Enma, the King of Hell. Whether offering counsel to the Momotarou of Japanese folklore or receiving diplomatic missions from the Judeo-Christian Hell, the demon who runs the show from behind the king's imposing shadow is ready to beat down any challenges coming his way into a bloody pulp. Metaphorically, of course... -- -- The poster boy for micromanagement and armed with negotiation skills worthy of Wall Street, Hoozuki no Reitetsu follows the sadistic and level-headed Hoozuki as he spends his days troubleshooting hell. With an abundance of familiar faces from popular Japanese legends and East Asian mythology working middle management positions, this referential and anachronistic dark comedy brings new meaning to the phrase "employer liability." Just how hard could it be to manage employees from hell, anyway? -- -- 107,557 7.79
Hoozuki no Reitetsu -- -- Wit Studio -- 13 eps -- Manga -- Comedy Demons Supernatural Fantasy Seinen -- Hoozuki no Reitetsu Hoozuki no Reitetsu -- Hell is a bureaucracy, and business is running smoother than ever thanks to the demonic efficiency of Hoozuki, chief deputy to Lord Enma, the King of Hell. Whether offering counsel to the Momotarou of Japanese folklore or receiving diplomatic missions from the Judeo-Christian Hell, the demon who runs the show from behind the king's imposing shadow is ready to beat down any challenges coming his way into a bloody pulp. Metaphorically, of course... -- -- The poster boy for micromanagement and armed with negotiation skills worthy of Wall Street, Hoozuki no Reitetsu follows the sadistic and level-headed Hoozuki as he spends his days troubleshooting hell. With an abundance of familiar faces from popular Japanese legends and East Asian mythology working middle management positions, this referential and anachronistic dark comedy brings new meaning to the phrase "employer liability." Just how hard could it be to manage employees from hell, anyway? -- -- -- Licensor: -- Sentai Filmworks -- 107,557 7.79
Lime-iro Senkitan -- -- Studio Hibari -- 13 eps -- Visual novel -- Drama Ecchi Harem Historical Mecha Supernatural -- Lime-iro Senkitan Lime-iro Senkitan -- Around the the 37th year of the Meiji Era (1904), in the midst of the Russo-Japanese war, the small Japanese army, in need of assistance, uses its special flying (thanks to a benevolent demon) ship, the Amanohara, to attack Russia's major base at Port Arthur (Lushun). -- -- Umakai Shintaro, a Russian diplomat originally from Japan, defects and goes to Sapporo to teach at a girls academy. However, that girls academy is not typical—it is on board the Amanohara, and the five girls Shintaro teaches are known as the Raimu Unit—girls with the ability to summon powerful beings to fight for them. Shintaro eventually becomes their teacher and general in battle, and so the six embark on a weird and excessively erotic journey, as Shintaro helps the girls overcome their weaknesses, become stronger for the final stand at Lushun, and also understand the motives of the "Russian Spiritual Corps" that assist the opponent, which, unfortunately, has one member whom Shintaro knew well... -- -- (Source: ANN) -- TV - Jan 4, 2003 -- 9,174 5.96
Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny -- -- Sunrise -- 50 eps -- Original -- Action Drama Mecha Military Romance Sci-Fi Space -- Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny -- In the year Cosmic Era 0071, a wartime brawl between two mobile suits results in the destruction of a neutral country. Shinn Asuka finds his entire family killed as casualties of the violence, and swears his life toward a vengeful pursuit of the Earth's Natural forces, under the impression they were the ones responsible for his family's death. Shinn works his way up through the ZAFT military forces, eventually gaining access to the cockpit of the prototype Impulse mobile suit. -- -- Athrun Zala, a veteran of the recent war employed in the service of diplomat Cagalli Yula Athha, finds himself drawn into a new conflict between the Naturals and the Coordinators: human beings artificially enhanced before birth and hated by the Naturals for their biological advantages. -- -- As the new war rears its head and violence becomes inevitable, Athrun finds himself as a mentor to the bitter Shinn. Athrun must steer the young pilot towards a mindset of mercy before his rage and desire for vengeance consumes him. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Bandai Entertainment, NYAV Post -- TV - Oct 9, 2004 -- 91,488 7.21
Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny -- -- Sunrise -- 50 eps -- Original -- Action Drama Mecha Military Romance Sci-Fi Space -- Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny -- In the year Cosmic Era 0071, a wartime brawl between two mobile suits results in the destruction of a neutral country. Shinn Asuka finds his entire family killed as casualties of the violence, and swears his life toward a vengeful pursuit of the Earth's Natural forces, under the impression they were the ones responsible for his family's death. Shinn works his way up through the ZAFT military forces, eventually gaining access to the cockpit of the prototype Impulse mobile suit. -- -- Athrun Zala, a veteran of the recent war employed in the service of diplomat Cagalli Yula Athha, finds himself drawn into a new conflict between the Naturals and the Coordinators: human beings artificially enhanced before birth and hated by the Naturals for their biological advantages. -- -- As the new war rears its head and violence becomes inevitable, Athrun finds himself as a mentor to the bitter Shinn. Athrun must steer the young pilot towards a mindset of mercy before his rage and desire for vengeance consumes him. -- -- TV - Oct 9, 2004 -- 91,488 7.21
Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz -- -- Sunrise -- 3 eps -- Original -- Action Drama Mecha Military Sci-Fi Space -- Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz Mobile Suit Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz -- In the year After Colony 196, one year after the conclusion of the intergalactic civil war, a state of stasis prevails over the Earth and its colonies. Seeing no further use for their Gundam mobile suits, war heroes Duo Maxwell, Heero Yuy, Trowa Barton, and Quatre Raberba Winner decide to destroy these weapons by launching them into the sun's surface. -- -- Before the Gundam reach their destination, the universal peace is shattered by the emergence of Mariemaia Khushrenada—the only child of the former tyrannical aristocrat Treize. Mariemaia abducts diplomat Relena Peacecraft and announces plans to launch "Operation Meteor," with the intention of posthumously fulfilling Treize's world domination plot. -- -- With the help of former enemy Zechs Marquise and his mobile suit Tallgeese, the heroic pilots must reacquire their mobile suits to wage one final battle against the Khushrenada dynasty, including fighting against their former ally Wufei Chang, now aligning himself with Mariemaia's ambitions. -- -- -- Licensor: -- Bandai Entertainment -- OVA - Jan 25, 1997 -- 41,721 7.76
Naruto: Shippuuden Movie 5 - Blood Prison -- -- Studio Pierrot -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Adventure Martial Arts Mystery Shounen Super Power -- Naruto: Shippuuden Movie 5 - Blood Prison Naruto: Shippuuden Movie 5 - Blood Prison -- During their discussion of a sensitive investigation A, the Fourth Raikage, and his subordinates are ambushed by a cloaked intruder. As the Kumogakure leader repels the assault, he is shocked to discover that the culprit is Naruto Uzumaki! -- -- However, the assassination attempt is not the only crime attributed to the young ninja, who vigorously denies the accusations. To avoid a diplomatic conflict, Tsunade forcibly sends him to Kusagakure's Houzuki Castle—a maximum-security penitentiary dedicated to ninja criminals—until the situation is resolved. -- -- Despite his powers being immediately suppressed by Mui, the prison's warden who possesses the ability to seal chakra, Naruto recklessly engages in futile escape attempts. But with the help of two fellow inmates, he realizes that there is more to this legendary detention facility than meets the eye. Uncovering a terrible secret, the trio embarks on a dangerous operation that may be Naruto's only chance to break free and prove his innocence. -- -- -- Licensor: -- VIZ Media -- Movie - Jul 30, 2011 -- 169,645 7.45
Naruto: Shippuuden Movie 5 - Blood Prison -- -- Studio Pierrot -- 1 ep -- Manga -- Action Adventure Martial Arts Mystery Shounen Super Power -- Naruto: Shippuuden Movie 5 - Blood Prison Naruto: Shippuuden Movie 5 - Blood Prison -- During their discussion of a sensitive investigation A, the Fourth Raikage, and his subordinates are ambushed by a cloaked intruder. As the Kumogakure leader repels the assault, he is shocked to discover that the culprit is Naruto Uzumaki! -- -- However, the assassination attempt is not the only crime attributed to the young ninja, who vigorously denies the accusations. To avoid a diplomatic conflict, Tsunade forcibly sends him to Kusagakure's Houzuki Castle—a maximum-security penitentiary dedicated to ninja criminals—until the situation is resolved. -- -- Despite his powers being immediately suppressed by Mui, the prison's warden who possesses the ability to seal chakra, Naruto recklessly engages in futile escape attempts. But with the help of two fellow inmates, he realizes that there is more to this legendary detention facility than meets the eye. Uncovering a terrible secret, the trio embarks on a dangerous operation that may be Naruto's only chance to break free and prove his innocence. -- -- Movie - Jul 30, 2011 -- 169,645 7.45
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Diplomatic_corps
1982 kidnapping of Iranian diplomats
1998 killing of Iranian diplomats in Afghanistan
2005 MexicoVenezuela diplomatic crisis
2006 SlovakHungarian diplomatic affairs
2007 MoroccoSpain diplomatic conflict
2008 Andean diplomatic crisis
2008 Russo-Georgian diplomatic crisis
2009 Singapore Romanian diplomat incident
2010 ColombiaVenezuela diplomatic crisis
2012 attacks on Israeli diplomats
2013 Dominican RepublicHaiti diplomatic crisis
2013 Iranian diplomat kidnapping
2014 Malaysian diplomat indecent assault case
2016 attack on the Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran
2017 DutchTurkish diplomatic incident
2018 KuwaitPhilippine diplomatic crisis
2018 PanamaVenezuela diplomatic crisis
20192020 MexicoBolivia diplomatic crisis
Abduction of Russian diplomats in Iraq
Abdul Sattar (diplomat)
Acadmie Diplomatique Internationale
Adam Thomson (diplomat)
A Diplomatic Wife
Ajay Singh (diplomat)
Alan Campbell (diplomat)
Alan Collins (diplomat)
Alan Gemmell (diplomat)
Alberto Fernandez (diplomat)
Aleksandr Panov (diplomat)
Alexander von Benckendorff (diplomat)
Alexander Watson (diplomat)
Alexander Yakovlev (diplomat)
Allan Eastman (diplomat)
Andrew Fulton (diplomat)
Andrew George (diplomat)
Andrew Palmer (diplomat)
Andrew Ryan (diplomat)
Andrew Wood (diplomat)
Anne Anderson (diplomat)
Anthony Butler (diplomat)
Anthony Williams (diplomat)
Archiv fr Diplomatik
Arthur Lee (diplomat)
Arthur Paget (diplomat)
Arthur Wyatt (diplomat)
Aryeh Levin (diplomat)
Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training
Attacks on U.S. diplomatic facilities
Badruddin Tyabji (diplomat)
Bandaranaike International Diplomatic Training Institute
Barry Hall (diplomat)
Benjamin Bathurst (diplomat)
Bill Forsyth (diplomat)
Boris Yeltsin circling over Shannon diplomatic incident
Brian Bennett (diplomat)
Brian Donnelly (British diplomat)
Brian Hill (diplomat)
Brian Stewart (diplomat)
Bureau of Diplomatic Security
Bureau of Diplomatic Security bibliography
Carlo Rossetti (diplomat)
Carlos Gutirrez (diplomat)
Carlos Pascual (diplomat)
Carl Roberts (diplomat)
Caroline Wilson (diplomat)
Category:Russian diplomats
Centre d'Etudes Diplomatiques et Stratgiques
Charles Cornwallis (diplomat)
Charles Crawford (diplomat)
Charles de Chassiron (British diplomat)
Charles Eliot (diplomat)
Charles Kennedy (diplomat)
Charles Mackenzie (diplomat)
Charles Murray (author and diplomat)
Charles Petrie (diplomat)
Charles Ritchie (diplomat)
Charles Stewart (diplomat)
Chen Jian (diplomat)
Chris Campbell (diplomat)
Chris O'Connor (diplomat)
Christopher Steel (diplomat)
Christopher Van Hollen (diplomat)
Christoph Mller (diplomat)
Chris Wood (diplomat)
Codex diplomaticus Caietanus
Codex diplomaticus cavensis
Colin Beck (diplomat)
Colin Roberts (diplomat)
Colin Robertson (diplomat)
Colville Barclay (diplomat)
Con O'Neill (diplomat)
Daniel Bernard (diplomat)
Daniel Harvey (diplomat)
Daniel Lascelles (diplomat)
Daphne and the Diplomat
Dates of establishment of diplomatic relations with Francoist Spain
Dates of establishment of diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China
Dates of establishment of diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union
David Andrews (diplomat)
David Crawford (diplomat)
David Goodall (diplomat)
David Gray (diplomat)
David Hale (diplomat)
David Hay (diplomat)
David Hunt (diplomat)
David Jacobson (diplomat)
David Johansson (diplomat)
David Kelly (diplomat)
David McNicol (diplomat)
David Morley (diplomat)
David Moss (diplomat)
David Roberts (diplomat)
David Thorne (diplomat)
David Warren (diplomat)
David Welch (diplomat)
David Wright (British diplomat)
Dennis Richardson (diplomat)
DeSoto Diplomat
Detention of U.S. and UK diplomats in Zimbabwe
Didrik Tnseth (diplomat)
Dilip Sinha (diplomat)
Diplomat
Diplomat (disambiguation)
Diplomatic Academy (Czech Republic)
Diplomatic Academy of London
Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation
Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam
Diplomatic Academy (United Kingdom)
Diplomatic and humanitarian efforts in the Somali Civil War
Diplomatic approaches between the courts of John III Sobieski and Emperor Kangxi
Diplomatic Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan
Diplomatic Area, Bahrain
Diplomatic bag
Diplomatic Bluebook of Japan
Diplomatic cable
Diplomatic career of Muhammad
Diplomatic corps
Diplomatic correspondence
Diplomatic Enclave, Islamabad
Diplomatic gift
Diplomatic history
Diplomatic History (journal)
Diplomatic history of Australia
Diplomatic history of World War I
Diplomatic history of World War II
Diplomatic immunity
Diplomatic Immunity (1991 American film)
Diplomatic Immunity (1991 Canadian film)
Diplomatic Immunity (Canadian TV series)
Diplomatic Immunity (Client Liaison album)
Diplomatic immunity (disambiguation)
Diplomatic Immunity (New Zealand TV series)
Diplomatic Immunity (The Diplomats album)
Diplomatic law
Diplomatic mission
Diplomatic missions of Korea
Diplomatic missions of the European Union
Diplomatic Passport
Diplomatic Passport (film)
Diplomatic protection
Diplomatic Protection Service
Diplomatic rank
Diplomatic Reception Room
Diplomatic recognition
Diplomatic Revolution
Diplomatics
Diplomatic Security Service
Diplomatic service
Diplomatic Telecommunications Service
Diplomatic uniform
Diplomatic vehicle registration plate
Diplomatic Wireless Service
Diplomatie (play)
Diplomat Pharmacy
Diplomat Resort & Spa Hollywood
Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change
Diplomats (film)
Diplomat (train)
Dominique Girard (diplomat)
Draft:Diplomatic Studies at Oxford
Duncan Taylor (diplomat)
Du Wei (diplomat)
Edward Barton (diplomat)
Edward Finch (diplomat)
Edward Grimston (diplomat)
Edward Henderson (diplomat)
Edward Peck (American diplomat)
Edward Peck (British diplomat)
Edward Stafford (diplomat)
Edward Wortley Montagu (diplomat)
Eric Nelson (diplomat)
Estonian Diplomatic Service (194091)
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