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Micro-profile: the state department official who teaches big-money donors how to be ambassadors.


So you raised a bunch of money for the Bush campaign and, for your efforts, you've just been named ambassador to some tropical paradise--but the extent of your previous involvement in international diplomacy consists of watching the Harlem Globetrotters Harlem Globetrotters

African American professional basketball team. The team was organized in 1927 in Chicago by the promoter Abe Saperstein and initially was a competitive team that won a world professional championship in 1940.
 once or twice. Henry James's book The Ambassadors certainly isn't the job training manual that you anticipated. How's a patronage diplomat supposed to learn the ropes?

Meet Prudence Bushnell Prudence Bushnell (born 1946 in Washington, D.C.) is an American diplomat and former United States Ambassador to Kenya and Guatemala. Early Life and Career
Bushnell was born in Washington D.C.
, the petite former ambassador to Guatemala and Kenya and current dean of the Foreign Service Institute's School of Leadership and Management. From her office on the fourth floor of Building E on the Foreign Service Institute's spacious Arlington, Va., campus, Bushnell and her staff are responsible for training those tapped by the president to be ambassadors to various countries. During two weeks of intensive coursework, the ambassadors-to-be learn the finer points of their new job: staff management, media relations, and other diplomatic skills. But the course covers more than the niceties ni·ce·ty  
n. pl. ni·ce·ties
1. The quality of showing or requiring careful, precise treatment: the nicety of a diplomatic exchange.

2.
 of party planning and fork-using. In recent years, security issues have become a primary focus of the training curriculum--and as a woman whose embassy was blown up from under her while she was in Kenya, Bushnell knows the importance of precautionary pre·cau·tion·ar·y   also pre·cau·tion·al
adj.
Of, relating to, or constituting a precaution: taking precautionary measures; gave precautionary advice.

Adj. 1.
 measures. "We're training people to look both ways before they cross the street," she says.

The one trait that matters most, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Bushnell, is leadership--the ability to manage and guide a disparate community of government employees and expatriates while simultaneously promulgating American interests and values through the auspices of the mission. Bushnell trains both career diplomats and political appointees and professes to find little difference between State Department veterans and big-money campaign donors. "Most of the people from outside are leaders anyway," says Bushnell. Of course, it's possible she's only being diplomatic, considering some of Bush's past appointees--like Utah shopping mall developer John Price, best known for being sued for unscrupulous business practices before being named Ambassador to Mauritius, and Nancy Brinker Ambassador Nancy Goodman Brinker (born December 6, 1946, in Peoria, Illinois) is the founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, an organization named after her only sister, Susan, who died from breast cancer in 1980 at age 36. , Ambassador to Sweden and wife of creator of Bennigan's. Still, Bushnell treats all comers all who come, or offer, to take part in a matter, especially in a contest or controversy.
- Bp. Stillingfleet.

See also: Comer
 equally. "It really doesn't matter whether you're career or non-career," says Bushnell. "[The job] is absolutely unique."

Justin Peters is a Washington Monthly editorial fellow.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:10 Miles, Square; Prudence Bushnell
Author:Peters, Justin
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Interview
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:362
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