Scott, Kyle Randolph, 1957-

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<p>Kyle R. Scott was nominated on Sept. 15, 2015, to be the next U.S. ambassador to Serbia. If he’s confirmed by the Senate, it will be the first such assignment for the expert on Eastern Europe and Russia.</p>

<p>Scott attended Arizona State University, where in 1979 he earned a BA in German language and literature while also minoring in Russian. He then went on to the Thunderbird School of Global Management, studying international business and finance.</p>

<p>Scott’s early State Department postings included Croatia, Israel, and Switzerland. He stepped away from the diplomatic world for a bit in 1994 as a national security fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. When he returned to active duty with the Foreign Service in 1996, it was as a political counselor at the embassy in Moscow. In 1999, Scott was moved to a similar role at the embassy in Budapest, Hungary.</p>

<p>His next post, in 2003, was in Brussels, Belgium, as a political minister/counselor at the U.S. mission to the European Union. Scott continued working with multinational organizations when he was named in 2005 as deputy chief of mission at the Organization for Security in Cooperation in Europe, based in Vienna, Austria.</p>

<p>Scott returned to Washington in 2009 as director of the Office of Russian Affairs. Under his watch, the United States and Russia cooperated on Iranian issues and began to negotiate the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) agreement to reduce nuclear weapon stockpiles, launchers and heavy bombers.</p>

<p>For Scott’s next assignment (2011 to 2014), he was posted in Milan, Italy, as the consul general there. In 2014, he was made the Department of State’s senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund.</p>

<p>Scott is married and has two sons. He speaks Russian, German, Italian, Croatian, Hungarian and French.</p>

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<p>Kyle Randolph Scott (born 1957) is a U.S. diplomat in the Senior Foreign Service and a former U.S. Ambassador to Serbia.</p>

<p>Scott attended Arizona State University, earning a bachelor of arts in German language and literature while also minoring in Russian. He then went on to the Thunderbird School of Global Management, studying international business and finance.</p>

<p>Scott’s early State Department assignments included Croatia, Israel, and Switzerland. In 1994, Scott was a national security fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Scott served as a political counselor at the embassies in Moscow and Budapest in the late 1990s.</p>

<p>In 2003, Scott was a political minister-counselor at the U.S. mission to the European Union. In 2005, he was named deputy chief of mission at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, based in Vienna.</p>

<p>Scott returned to Washington in 2009 as director of the Office of Russian Affairs in the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs. Under his watch, the United States and Russia cooperated on Iranian issues and began to negotiate the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (New START) agreement to reduce nuclear weapon stockpiles, launchers and heavy bombers.</p>

<p>Afterwards, from 2011 to 2014, Scott served as the consul general in Milan, Italy. In 2014, he was made the Department of State’s senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund.</p>

<p>President Barack Obama nominated Scott to be U.S. Ambassador to Serbia on September 15, 2015. Scott testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on December 2, 2015. Scott was confirmed, and presented his credentials to the government of Serbia on February 5, 2016.</p>

<p>Scott is married and has two sons. In addition to English, he has learned Russian, German, Italian, Serbian, Hungarian, French, and Hebrew.</p>

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<p>Kyle R. Scott<br>
European Policy Analyst and Practitioner<br>
Washington, District Of Columbia</p>

<p>U.S. Department of State<br>
European Diplomacy Analyst and Practitioner<br>
Oct 2019 – Present (9 months)<br>
Washington D.C. Metro Area</p>

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