Philip C. Wilcox
Philip C. Wilcox, Jr. is President
of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, a Washington D.C.-based
foundation devoted to fostering peace between Israelis and Palestinians.
Wilcox retired from the U.S. Foreign Service in September 1997
after 31 years of service.
Born in Denver, Colorado on February
1, 1937, Wilcox attended public schools, graduated from Williams
College with a BA in History in 1958, and obtained an LL.B. from
the Stanford Law School in 1961.
After law school, Wilcox taught
school in Sierra Leone, West Africa, and practiced law for three
years in Denver with the firm of Holme, Roberts & Owen.
Wilcox entered the Foreign Service
in 1966 and has served abroad at U.S. Embassies as Press Attache
in Vientiane, Laos, Political and Economic/Commercial Officer
in Jakarta, Indonesia, and as Chief of the Economic/Commercial
Section in Dhaka, Bangladesh. His last overseas assignment was
as Chief of Mission and U.S. Consul General, Jerusalem.
In the Department of State, Wilcox
has served as Special Assistant to the Undersecretary for Management,
Deputy Director for UN Political Affairs in the Bureau of International
Organization Affairs, and in the Bureau for Middle Eastern and
South Asian Affairs as Director for Regional Affairs, Director
for Israeli and Arab-Israeli Affairs and as Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for Middle Eastern Affairs. He also served
as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence
and Research and as Ambassador at Large and Coordinator for Counter
Terrorism.
After his retirement, Wilcox
was appointed by the Secretary of State to serve as a member
of an Accountability Review Board, chaired by Admiral William
Crowe (ret.) to examine and make recommendations concerning the
terrorist bombing of the American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya on
August 7, 1998.
Wilcox speaks French and Indonesian.
He is a graduate of the National War College, and has been awarded
the Department of State's Meritorious, Superior, and Presidential
Honor Awards. He is a board member of the Middle East Institute
and Americans for Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA) and a member
of The Washington Institute for Foreign Affairs and Dacor-Bacon
House. He and his wife Cynda live in Bethesda, Maryland.
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