The Diplomat was originally an Australian bi-monthly print magazine, founded by Minh Bui Jones, David Llewellyn-Smith and Sung Lee in 2001. The first edition was published in April 2002, with Bui Jones as the founding editor and Llewellyn-Smith the founding publisher. The magazine was acquired by
James Pach through his company
Trans-Asia Inc. in December 2007. Pach assumed the role of executive publisher and hired former
Penthouse editor
Ian Gerrard to update its presentation. Nonetheless, the print edition suffered continued losses, and
The Diplomat eventually went completely online in August 2009. Its
Sydney office was closed and its headquarters were moved to Tokyo; Jason Miks was appointed editor in September 2009 and Ulara Nakagawa was appointed associate editor. Miks was succeeded as editor by Harry Kazianis before publisher James Pach took over. Shannon Tiezzi is editor-in-chief, with Catherine Putz as managing editor. Sebastian Strangio is Southeast Asia editor and Sudha Ramachandran is South Asia editor. Ankit Panda is editor-at-large and podcast host.
The Diplomat has published interviews with many public figures, including
Ali Allawi,
Anwar Ibrahim,
Ian Macfarlane,
Brent Scowcroft,
Mike Moore,
Jason Yuan,
Kim Beazley,
Wegger Christian Strømmen,
Shankar Prasad Sharma, and
Jaliya Wickramasuriya. Prior to 2004,
The Diplomat used to run advertisements emphasizing the magazine's Australian perspective by presenting the national flags of the United States, the UK, and Australia and logos of
Time and
The Economist with a headline "To which view do you subscribe?"
Time magazine forced the cancellation of such advertisements. ==References==