Phee, Mary Catherine, 1963-

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<p>Mary Catherine "Molly" Phee (born 1963) is an American diplomat and a former United States Ambassador to South Sudan. She was nominated by President Barack Obama on September 17, 2014; and confirmed by the Senate June 24, 2015. She was sworn in on July 15, 2015, to replace Susan D. Page, who had resigned.</p>

<p>Phee was recalled to Washington in late 2017 to serve as the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of International Organization Affairs. Most recently, she has been serving as the Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation. In October 2018, it was announced that she would be nominated to be the next United States Ambassador to Qatar. That nomination has, however, expired.</p>

<p>Phee is from Chicago. She was an undergraduate at Indiana University, where she earned a B.A. She pursued graduate studies at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, earning an M.A. in Law and Diplomacy in 1989. As part of her graduate studies, she participated in an internship program with the United Nations Environment Programme that involved travel and study in Kenya.</p>

<p>Following her graduate studies, Phee became a deputy press secretary to Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.</p>

<p>Phee joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1991. Her assignments in the Foreign Service have included ones in Rome, Italy; Kuwait City, Kuwait; Cairo, Egypt; and Amman, Jordan and Washington, DC.</p>

<p>From 2003 to 2004, she served as the Senior Civilian Representative of the Coalition Provisional Authority to Maysan Province, Iraq.</p>

<p>Phee moved to New York in 2005 as counselor for political affairs at the U.S. mission to the United Nations, where on occasion sat in for then Ambassador John R. Bolton.</p>

<p>Phee served as Counselor for Political Affairs and Deputy Security Council Coordinator at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. Then in 2008, Phee then took an assignment in Italy as the regional affairs coordinator at the U.S. Embassy in Rome. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and General David Petraeus invited Phee to join the Joint Strategic Assessment Team established in 2007 to revise the U.S. strategy in Iraq. She then returned to Washington to serve as director for Iraq at the National Security Council. In that role she was responsible for coordinating the U.S. transition from military to civilian operations.</p>

<p>From 2011 to 2014, Phee served as Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. When President Obama nominated her to become Ambassador to South Sudan, she was already serving as Chief of Staff at the Office of the Special Envoy for Sudan and South Sudan.</p>

<p>When the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee did not immediately confirm Phee’s nomination, several NGO’s wrote to the committee urging it to quickly confirm the nomination, given the difficult situation in South Sudan. The organizations included Better World Campaign, The Enough Project, Humanity United, Jewish World Watch, International Rescue Committee, Mercy Corps, Oxfam America, Relief International, Save the Children, United to End Genocide, and Water for South Sudan. The NGO’s protested that the U.S. had been without a confirmed Ambassador to South Sudan since August 2014. They noted that the absence of an ambassador in a country involved in a "deadly, costly and geopolitically destabilizing civil war" had limited the U.S. ability to successfully promote peaceful resolution.</p>

<p>In accepting the role of Ambassador in 2015, Phee was expected to oversee the relief effort of $456 million donated by the U.S. for over a million people displaced by the war, as well as revive the peace talks in Addis Ababa.</p>

<p>In addition to English, Phee speaks Arabic, French and Italian.</p>

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<p>On September 17, 2014, President Barack Obama announced the nomination of Mary Catherine “Molly” Phee to be the next U.S. ambassador to South Sudan. If she’s confirmed, it will be the first ambassadorial post for the career Foreign Service officer.</p>

<p>Phee is from Chicago and went to Indiana University, where she earned a B.A.</p>

<p>Before coming to the State Department, Phee worked for Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan (D-New York) as his assistant press secretary. She played a role in a 1987 incident in which a Buffalo News reporter was barred from a Moynihan press conference because the reporter had written about the senator’s lecture fees and article payments. Phee told an Associated Press reporter about the incident, for which Moynihan later apologized.</p>

<p>Phee attended the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, earning an M.A. in law and diplomacy in 1989. While at Tufts, she went to Kenya on an internship with the United Nations Environment Program there.</p>

<p>Phee joined the Foreign Service in 1991. Some of her early posts were in Kuwait City, Kuwait, Amman, Jordan, and as a desk officer for Iran affairs at the State Department. She served in Cairo from 1996 to 2000, studying Arabic the first year and working as a political officer in the U.S. Embassy for the next three years.</p>

<p>Phee served as a desk officer for United Nations (UN) political affairs in the International Organizations Bureau but took a break to do a tour in al-Amarah, Iraq, as “governate coordinator” (a.k.a. senior civilian representative of the Coalition Provisional Authority) of Maysan Province for several months beginning in November 2003. This position was considered so dangerous that she was supplied with twenty bodyguards.</p>

<p>Phee moved to New York in 2005 as counselor for political affairs at the U.S. mission to the UN, where she sat in for Ambassador John Bolton on occasion.</p>

<p>In 2008, Phee went overseas again, this time to Italy as the regional affairs coordinator at the U.S. Embassy in Rome. She returned to the United States the following year to serve as director for Iraq at the National Security Council.</p>

<p>Phee was back in Africa in 2011 as deputy chief of mission and chargé d' affaires at the embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. In 2014, she was named chief of staff in the Office of the Special Envoy for Sudan and South Sudan.</p>

<p>Phee speaks fluent Arabic.</p>

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