Gentry O. Smith

Gentry O. Smith (born 1959) is an American foreign service officer. From June 2015 to January 2017, he was director of the Office of Foreign Missions.[1]

Gentry O. Smith
Director of the Office of Foreign Missions
In office
June 2015  January 26 2017
PresidentBarack Obama
Donald Trump
Personal details
Born1959 (age 6061)
Alma materNorth Carolina State University

Life and career

Smith was born to two schoolteachers in Halifax County, North Carolina. He attended Weldon High School in Weldon, North Carolina. He ran track and field and played wide receiver and defensive end on the school's American football team. He graduated from North Carolina State University, and served as a police officer in the Raleigh Police Department for four years, through 1987, when he went to work for the United States Department of State.[2] In 2000, he was deputy regional security officer in Cairo. In 2004, he was regional security officer in Tokyo. He was director of the Office of Physical Security Programs. In 2009, he was as Deputy Assistant Secretary, and Assistant Director for Countermeasures.[3][4] In 2014, President Barack Obama nominated Smith as Director of the Office of Foreign Missions.[5]

On January 26, 2017, when Rex Tillerson, Donald Trump's nominee for United States Secretary of State, visited the United States State Department, Smith, Patrick F. Kennedy, Joyce Anne Barr, and Michele Bond were all simultaneously asked to resign.[6][7]

Smith is married and has four children.[2]

gollark: If that happens we must destroy the Earth. It's the only way to be sure.
gollark: This probably works only because nobody has done or is likely to do anything which would particularly benefit from legally "owning" space things yet.
gollark: It's not as if original-me would *suffer* at all if they were instantly disintegrated, so I don't particularly care.
gollark: I think that as long as teleportation was shown to be safe the ethical/philosophical issues would be outweighed by practicality pretty fast. I personally don't care about the continuity thing, however that's meant to work.
gollark: Not really the philosophy side, more "you can duplicate people" and "you can duplicate *things*".

References

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