Dr. Stanton served for 34 years as a U.S. diplomat, serving as consular and political officer at Embassy Beirut (1979–81), watch officer in the
Department of State Operations Center (1981–82), staff assistant for the
Assistant Secretary for Near East and South Asian Affairs (1982–83), Country Officer for
Lebanon (1983–85), political officer in
Embassy Beijing (1987–90), chief of internal political reporting (1989–90), political-military affairs officer in
Embassy Islamabad (1991–93), Special Assistant for East Asia and Pacific Affairs for the
Under Secretary for Political Affairs (1993–4), Deputy Director for the Office of Chinese and Mongolian Affairs (1994–95), Minister Counselor for Political Affairs at the Embassy Beijing (1995–98), Director of the Office of UN Political Affairs (1999-01), Director of the Office of
Egyptian and
North African Affairs (2001–03). While stationing at the
Embassy Canberra, Australia, he served as the
Deputy Chief of Mission (2003–05) and
Chargé d'affaires ad interim (2005–06), then he was assigned to
Embassy Seoul, Korea to take his post as DCM. His final posting was as Director of the
American Institute in Taiwan (2009–2012). During his tenure, AIT achieved significant progress on a number of key bilateral issues, including Taiwan's entry into the U.S. Visa Waiver Program, two major security assistance agreements, increased high-level visits by U.S. Government officials, and resolution of trade disputes, including the re-introduction of U.S. beef into Taiwan. For his contributions to U.S. exports to Taiwan, Dr. Stanton won the 2011 Charles E. Cobb Award for Initiative and Success in Trade Development. For his overall contributions to U.S.-Taiwan relations, Taiwan awarded Dr. Stanton the Order of the Brilliant Star with Grand Cordon. Dr. Stanton's State Department awards included the Secretary's Career Achievement Award, three Superior Honor Awards, one Superior Group Award, and several performance awards. For his contributions to the U.S. Forces Korea Command from 2006 to 2009, the U.S. Department of the Army awarded Dr. Stanton the Outstanding Civilian Service Medal. Following his retirement in August 2012, he was granted a Taiwan Resident Certificate for his efforts in promoting US-Taiwan ties. ==After diplomacy==