Embassy of the United States, Kyiv
U.S. Embassy in Ukraine | |
---|---|
Location | Kiev |
Address | 4, I. Sikorsky St. 04112 Kyiv, Ukraine |
Ambassador | Marie L. Yovanovitch[1][2] |
The U.S. Embassy in Kiev is the diplomatic mission of the United States of America to Ukraine.
Building
The United States recognized the independence of Ukraine on December 26, 1991 and opened an embassy in its capital, Kiev, on January 22, 1992. This first embassy was located in the former office of the Communist Party of Ukraine for the Shevchenkivskyi District that was confiscated from the Communists soon after the 1991 August putsch in Moscow. That building was erected sometime in the 1950s on territory that previously belonged to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church that was destroyed by the Soviets in 1935.
In 2012, the embassy moved to its current 4.5 hectare location, acquired for $247 million. The embassy is on Igor Sikorsky Street, close to Kiev’s northern outskirts, and 15 minutes walk from Beresteiska station.[3] Previously known as Tankova Street, the street was renamed by the City Council after Ukrainian-born aircraft design engineer Igor Sikorsky due to request from the Embassy.
Picketing
Since 2004 the embassy has been picketed annually on April 8 by group "Institute Republic" of human rights activist Volodymyr Chemerys due to the refusal of the US government to pay compensation for the death of Ukrainian journalist Taras Protsyuk who perished in 2003 during the War in Iraq.
Staff
The U.S. Embassy in Kiev is staffed by approximately 181 Americans and more than 560 Ukrainians.
The current United States Ambassador to Ukraine is Geoffrey Pyatt,[1][2] whose credentials were accepted by Ukraine's then-President Viktor Yanukovych on 15 August 2013.[2]
Key U.S. Embassy Officials include:
- Deputy Chief of Mission
- Political Counselor
- Economic Counselor
- Public Affairs Counselor
- Consul General
- Management Counselor
- Commercial Officer
- USAID Mission Director
- Regional Security Officer
- Department of Energy Director
- Agricultural Attaché
- Defense Attaché
- Peace Corps Director
N | Country | Ukrainian | Ambassadors | Image | date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | United States | Джон Ґундерсен | Jon Gundersen[4] | 1992 Chargé d'Affaires | |
1 | United States | Роман Попадюк | Roman Popadiuk[5] | 1992–1993 | |
2 | United States | Вільям Ґрін Міллер | William Green Miller[6] | 1993–1998 | |
3 | United States | Стівен Карл Пайфер | Steven Karl Pifer[7] | 1998–2000 | |
4 | United States | Карлос Паскуаль | Carlos Pascual[8] | 2000–2003 | |
5 | United States | Джон Едвард Гербст | John E. Herbst[9] | 2003–2006 | |
6 | United States | Вільям Тейлор | William B. Taylor, Jr.[10] | 2006–2009 | |
7 | United States | Джон Теффт | John F. Tefft[11] | 2009-2013 | |
8 | United States | Джеффрі Пайєтт | Geoffrey R. Pyatt | 2013-2016 | |
9 | United States | Марі Йованович | Marie L. Yovanovitch | 2016- |
See also
- List of diplomatic missions in Ukraine
- Ukraine – United States relations
- Embassy of Ukraine in Washington, D.C.
External links
References
- ^ a b Welcome, Mr. Pyatt!, Den (5 August 2013)
- ^ a b c Yanukovych accepts credentials from new US ambassador, discusses with him Ukrainian-US relations, Interfax-Ukraine (15 August 2013)
- ^ The Embassy has moved!
- ^ The "Oslo Syndrome", American Diplomacy, November, 2011. Accessed April 1, 2014.
- ^ Previous Ambassadors
- ^ Embassy of the United State KYIV-UKRAINE. William Green Miller
- ^ Embassy of the United State KYIV-UKRAINE. Steven Karl Pifer
- ^ "Carlos Pascual". United States Department of State. Retrieved 2011-07-30.
- ^ A testing time for democracy
- ^ Ex- US ambassador to Georgia John Tefft to lead diplomatic mission in Ukraine, Interfax-Ukraine (September 30, 2009)
- ^ Yushchenko accepted credentials of US Ambassador and Ambassador of Turkey to Ukraine, UNIAN (December 7, 2009)