Johns Hopkins SAIS has nearly 17,000
alumni working around the world in approximately 140 countries. •
Gina Abercrombie-Winstanley – Current Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer for The Department of State, former U.S.Ambassador to The Republic of Malta (2012-2016) •
Thomas Bolling Robertson – former U.S Ambassador to Slovenia, former Dean of the Leadership and Management School of the
Foreign Service Institute of the Department of State •
Thomas Stelzer – Dean and Executive Secretary of the
International Anti-Corruption Academy (IACA) •
Mahamat Ali Adoum – former foreign affairs minister,
Chad's ambassador to the
United Nations •
Ebenezer Akuete – former Ghanaian diplomat •
Madeleine Albright – former
U.S. Secretary of State (attended SAIS, but did not earn degree) •
Peter F. Allgeier – deputy
U.S. Trade Representative (2001–2009) and former acting U.S. Trade Representative •
Mark Andersen – Washington, D.C.–based activist and author. Co-founded punk activist group
Positive Force and senior citizen support and advocacy organization We are Family. •
Cresencio S. Arcos – U.S. Ambassador to Honduras (1989–1993), deputy assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement (1993–95), and Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for International Affairs (2003–2006) •
David Berger – 38th commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps •
Nancy Birdsall – founding president of the
Center for Global Development in Washington, D.C. •
Robert O. Blake, Jr. – U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia (since 2013), former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs (2009–13), former U.S. Ambassador to
Sri Lanka and the
Maldives (2006–2009) •
Wolf Blitzer –
CNN journalist and television news anchor •
Adam Boulton –
Sky News political editor •
Jeremy Bowen –
BBC journalist and presenter •
Gayleatha B. Brown – former U.S. Ambassador to
Benin and current Ambassador designee to
Burkina Faso •
R. Nicholas Burns – current U.S. Ambassador to China, former U.S.
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, former U.S. Ambassador to
NATO and Greece, member of the Board of Directors of
Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs •
James Cason – former U.S. Ambassador to
Paraguay •
Herman Jay Cohen – U.S. diplomat, former ambassador to various countries in
Africa •
Cui Tiankai –
People's Republic of China's ambassador to the United States of America, former vice foreign minister •
Jean-Maurice Dehousse – former
Belgian Minister-President of the
Wallonia region, former mayor of
Liège •
Anne E. Derse – U.S. Ambassador to
Lithuania, SAIS '81 •
John Caspar Dreier – former U.S. Ambassador to the
Organization of American States •
Hermann Eilts – former U.S. Ambassador to
Saudi Arabia and
Egypt, worked with Egyptian president
Anwar el-Sadat throughout the
Camp David Accords •
Jessica Einhorn – former dean of SAIS, member of the board of directors of
Time Warner, former director of the
Council on Foreign Relations, and a former managing director of the
World Bank •
Robert Stephen Ford – former U.S. Ambassador to
Algeria and
Syria •
Dennis Francis –
Trinidad and Tobago ambassador and President of the United Nations General Assembly at its seventy-eighth session •
Jeffrey Garten – former U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, and former dean of the
Yale School of Management •
Timothy F. Geithner – former U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury and president and CEO of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York •
April Glaspie – American diplomat, first woman to be appointed U.S. Ambassador to an Arab country, best known as the U.S. Ambassador to
Iraq in the runup to the 1991
Gulf War •
Gabriel Guerra-Mondragón – U.S. Ambassador to
Chile (1994–1998) •
Geir H. Haarde – former
Prime Minister of Iceland (2006–2009) •
John J. Hamre – president and CEO of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), former
U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense •
John E. Herbst – former U.S. Ambassador to
Ukraine and
Uzbekistan, current Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization as a career member of the Senior Foreign Service •
John J. Hicks – intelligence officer, second director of
National Photographic Interpretation Center •
Melanie Harris Higgins – U.S. Ambassador to
Burundi •
James Howard Holmes – former U.S. Ambassador to
Latvia •
Hans Hoogervorst – Dutch politician and economist,
Minister of Finance (2002–2003),
Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport (2003–2007) •
Tracey Ann Jacobson – former U.S. Ambassador to
Turkmenistan and
Tajikistan •
Colin F. Jackson—former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Central Asia; Chairman of the Strategic and Operational Research Department (SORD) at the
U.S. Naval War College •
Angela Kane –
UN Undersecretary General for Management •
Malcolm H. Kerr –
American University of Beirut President and Academic, assassinated •
Shahal M. Khan – owner of the
Plaza Hotel •
Bert Koenders – Dutch politician and diplomat,
Minister for Development Cooperation (2007–2010),
Minister of Foreign Affairs (2014–2017) •
Andrew Kuchins – former President of
American University of Central Asia,
Bishkek,
Kyrgyzstan,
Central Asia and
Russia expert •
Anthony Kuhn – NPR correspondent in Beijing, China,
Hopkins-Nanjing Center Certificate '92 •
Lousewies van der Laan – Dutch politician and jurist •
Alan Larson (born 1949), diplomat and U.S. Ambassador •
Frank Lavin – U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, former U.S. Ambassador to
Singapore •
Jim Leach – chairman of
National Endowment for the Humanities, former U.S. Representative from Iowa, former chair of U.S. House of Representatives
Committee on Financial Services, former faculty and trustee at
Princeton University •
Lee Tae-sik – former
Republic of Korea's ambassador to the United States •
Samuel W. Lewis – former U.S. Ambassador to
Israel and U.S. Ambassador at the
Camp David Accord talks in 1978 •
Dennis P. Lockhart – president and CEO of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta •
Gabriel Silva Luján – Colombia's twice ambassador to the United States, and Minister of Defence •
Edward Luttwak – political scientist and military historian, author of ''
Coup d'État: A Practical Handbook'' •
Peter Magowan – former owner of the
San Francisco Giants and former CEO of
Safeway (attended SAIS, but did not earn degree) •
Sir David Manning –
British Ambassador to Israel (1995–1998), Foreign Policy Adviser to former British prime minister
Tony Blair (2001–2003),
British Ambassador to the United States (2003–2007) •
John E. McLaughlin – former Deputy
Director of Central Intelligence •
Christopher Meyer – British ambassador to the United States during the Second Gulf War •
Ana Belen Montes – spy for
Cuba working at the
Defense Intelligence Agency and arrested in 2001 •
Thant Myint-U – Burmese historian, writer, grandson of former
Secretary-General of the United Nations U Thant •
Loretta Napoleoni – bestselling author of
Terror Incorporated and
Insurgent Iraq. She is an expert on financing of terrorism and advises several governments on counter-terrorism •
Pat O'Brien – television personality •
John E. Osborn – former commissioner, U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy; affiliate faculty in law and international studies,
University of Washington; senior executive with life sciences companies
Cephalon and
Onyx Pharmaceuticals •
Ted Osius – former U.S. Ambassador to
Vietnam (2014–2017) •
Suyoi Osman – Bruneian health minister •
Ronald D. Palmer – former U.S. Ambassador to
Malaysia •
Gerhard Pfanzelter – secretary general of the
CEI, former permanent representative of
Austria to the UN, Ambassador of Austria to
Syria,
Senegal,
Gambia,
Cape Verde,
Guinea-Bissau,
Mali and
Mauritania •
Nicholas Platt – former U.S. Ambassador to
Pakistan,
Philippines, and
Zambia; former president of the
Asia Society •
Danielle Pletka – senior vice president of the
American Enterprise Institute for Foreign and Defense Studies and former member of
Senate Foreign Relations Committee •
Slater Rhea – singer and TV personality in China,
Hopkins-Nanjing Center MAIS '17 •
Charles P. Ries – U.S. Minister for Economic Affairs and Coordinator for Economic Transition in Iraq (2007–2008), U.S. Ambassador to Greece (2004–07) •
Marcie Berman Ries – former U.S. Ambassador to Albania, former U.S. Ambassador to Bulgaria •
Jauhar Saleem –
Pakistani diplomat •
Arturo Sarukhán –
Mexico's ambassador to the United States •
David Shear – former U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam (2011–2014) •
Kevin Sieff – Africa bureau chief at
The Washington Post, former Afghanistan bureau chief (2012–2014) •
Bandar bin Sultan –
Saudi Arabia's former ambassador to the United States •
Levi Tillemann – advisor to the Department of Energy, author •
Michael G. Vickers – Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence,
Department of Defense •
Joris Voorhoeve – Dutch politician, diplomat and political scientist,
Minister of Defence (1994–1998) •
Jacob Walles – U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia (2012–2015), U.S. Consul General in Jerusalem (2005–2009) •
Wang Guangya –
People's Republic of China's Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the
United Nations •
Juleanna Glover Weiss – political consultant and lobbyist •
Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. – former
U.S. Deputy Secretary of State •
Jody Williams –
Nobel Peace Prize recipient for her leadership of the
International Campaign to Ban Landmines •
Lois Wolk – member of the
California State Senate •
Cara Elizabeth Yar Khan – disability advocate, public speaker and United Nations humanitarian •
Bo Bo Nge – Burmese economist, vice governor of the
Central Bank of Myanmar, and political prisoner • Bill Grueskin – former Academic Dean at
Columbia Journalism School, former Managing Editor of WSJ.com (
The Wall Street Journal) == Past and present faculty ==