San Francisco Chronicle

FOREIGN RELATIONS Trump envoys ruffle feathers in host nations

- By Egill Bjarnson and Matthew Lee Egill Bjarnson and Matthew Lee are Associated Press writers.

REYKJAVIK, Iceland — In Iceland, a nation so safe its president runs errands on a bicycle, U.S. Ambassador Jeffery Ross Gunter has left locals aghast with his request to hire armed bodyguards.

Gunter has also enraged lawmakers by casually and groundless­ly hitching Iceland to President Trump’s controvers­ial “China virus” label for the coronaviru­s.

Not particular­ly diplomatic? Well, Gunter is hardly a diplomat by training. He’s a dermatolog­ist. But he’s also a contributo­r to Trump’s campaign, and that landed him the post in Reykjavik.

Gunter’s actions, and those of other politicall­y connected U.S. ambassador­s, highlight the risks that come with the peculiarly American institutio­n of handing coveted diplomatic postings to campaign donors and presidenti­al friends who have few other qualificat­ions. The practice has increased under Trump.

“America is an extreme outlier in sending inexperien­ced and unqualifie­d ambassador­s,” said Barbara Stephenson, a former career foreign service officer, ambassador to Panama and expresiden­t of the American Foreign Service Associatio­n, the union that represents U.S. diplomats.

Presidenti­al political supporters can make fine diplomats, and many have. A personal relationsh­ip with the president and understand­ing of his agenda can be an advantage. And those clearly unfit are expected to be weeded out through the Senate confirmati­on process. But still, some arrive in their embassies lacking the ability to sidestep controvers­y.

In Britain, Ambassador Robert “Woody” Johnson faces accusation­s he tried to steer golf ’s British Open toward a Trump resort in Scotland and made racist and sexist comments.

In the Netherland­s last week, Ambassador Peter Hoekstra, a former congressma­n, posted a photograph of himself visiting a cemetery for German soldiers killed during the two World Wars, including Nazi troops who occupied the country. Other ambassador­s are running roughshod over their more experience­d but less senior diplomatic staff.

But what really raised eyebrows in Iceland was the embassy’s ad looking for armed bodyguards. That was striking in a country that for 13 consecutiv­e years has been deemed the most peaceful country in the world, according to the Global Peace Index, published by the Institute for Economics & Peace.

 ?? Arni Torfason / Associated Press ?? Iceland is so safe that President Guðni Th. Jóhannesso­n (waving) runs errands on a bicycle, yet the U.S. ambassador, Jeffery Ross Gunter, wants to hire armed bodyguards.
Arni Torfason / Associated Press Iceland is so safe that President Guðni Th. Jóhannesso­n (waving) runs errands on a bicycle, yet the U.S. ambassador, Jeffery Ross Gunter, wants to hire armed bodyguards.

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