The New Zealand Herald

Ship visit a highlight for exiting diplomat

- Audrey Young Trump must rise to moment, A19

Listening to Mark Gilbert’s reflection­s on his time as Barack Obama’s man in Wellington for the past two years sounds more like an extreme-sports challenge than a posting which oversaw the most profound bilateral relationsh­ip-repair in 30 years.

He’s walked the Great Walks including the Routeburn, the Milford Track, the Abel Tasman and the Tongariro Crossing.

He has been to Antarctica, he has skied with the US ski team, swum with the whales, and hung out the back of an aeroplane flying at 30m over the Hauraki Gulf.

Gilbert, 60, has taken close to 4000 selfies and produced a slideshow on social media to the theme of “I’ve been everywhere man”.

His own highlight, however, was more political — the visit of the USS Sampson in November, and the assistance it provided with the HMNZS Canterbury after the Kaikoura earthquake.

Banning ship visits to New Zealand was the last of the US reprisals against New Zealand’s anti-nuclear laws and the Sampson was the first visit in 33 years.

“We had Vice-President Biden here, we had Secretary of State Kerry but I think having the Sampson here really tells everyone where the state of the relationsh­ip is,” he said.

“To have it here, to be able to participat­e in the relief effort down in Kaikoura, to cement the military, the personal relationsh­ip between Kiwis and Americans, the visit puts all of that together.”

It was a long, slow process to get acceptance in the US system for the ship to attend the Royal New Zealand Navy’s 75th birthday celebratio­ns.

“The easiest thing for anyone to say is ‘no’ and sometimes getting to ‘yes’ can be a long and difficult process,” Gilbert said yesterday.

“Once the parties understood . . . how it would be handled and what it meant for the relationsh­ip, we got everybody to ‘yes’. But it took a very long time . . .” Asked if he believed it would be the start of regular visits or just a one-off, Gilbert said: “I don’t think it will be either. There will be other ship visits but not necessaril­y regular.” It was nothing to do with the relationsh­ip but was more about where ships Watch the video interview with Mark Gilbert at nzherald.co.nz would be travelling to. The relationsh­ip was strong enough that no single problem could affect it.

Gilbert, a former profession­al baseball player with the Chicago White Sox, was a major fundraiser for Obama, and is also a friend.

He said it was usual for the team of political appointees of a different party to end their terms on the same date as the President who appointed them — the unusual aspect of the transition was the refusal to have any extension at all.

He didn’t know if concerns about Donald Trump as President were justified.

“The jury is going to be out but hopefully he’ll do a good job. I’m sure the relationsh­ip between New Zealand and the United States will continue to grow and grow in the right direction.”

Gilbert said the appointmen­t of New Zealand businessma­n Chris Liddell as an assistant to Trump in the White House could only help the relationsh­ip with New Zealand.

Gilbert and his wife, Nancy, have had a month of saying goodbye at functions over the country, at which Nancy has been collecting hundreds of Air NZ boarding passes for a special project back home.

She is going to decorate a wall with them in her Florida home — near Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach.

The couple will leave Auckland tonight after hosting a farewell function in Wellington.

Nancy Gilbert says she would remember the Kiwi character as being “kind and fun” as well as “curious”.

“It might be by virtue of the location of New Zealand on the planet that when you are far from others, you develop a spirit of curiosity to see what else is going on out there and the sense of adventure to know that when someone asks you to go for a walk, five hours later you could still be walking.”

A five-hour flight for New Zealanders was absolutely nothing and was a totally different mindset from most places in America.

The highlight of her time here was her own “Wahine Toa” project which recognised emerging Maori women leaders through the country and brought them together for a conference in Auckland in October, with the keynote speaker President Obama’s special assistant on Native American Affairs.

 ?? Picture / Mark Mitchell ?? Mark and Nancy Gilbert leave their post, and New Zealand, today.
Picture / Mark Mitchell Mark and Nancy Gilbert leave their post, and New Zealand, today.

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