Richard Bordeaux Parker

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Richard Bordeaux Parker (born July 3, 1923, in the Philippines) was a career United States diplomat and now is an expert on the Middle East.

Parker was raised in Kansas and attended Kansas State University, graduating in 1943. After college, Parker served as an infantry soldier during World War II, where he was captured by the Nazis at the Battle of the Bulge and briefly imprisoned. After the war, he returned to Kansas State, where he earned a master's degree, before joining the U.S. Foreign Service in 1949.

Parker served as deputy chief of mission in Rabat from 1970 to 1974. He was ambassador to Algeria from 1974 to 1977, to Lebanon in 1977, and finally to Morocco from 1978 to 1979. He retired from the U.S. Foreign Service in 1981 and became the editor of The Middle East Journal. In addition to his diplomatic career, Parker taught at the University of Virginia, Johns Hopkins University, and Lawrence University. He also served as the first president of the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training from 1986-1989.

In 1982, Parker participated in a study group held at the Council on Foreign Relations where he discussed current problems in North Africa. The meeting was chaired by the vice-president of Exxon Corporation, Stephen Stamas. After these meetings Parker spent two years compiling and writing North Africa: Regional Tensions and Strategic Concerns. His book was published in relation with and through the Council on Foreign Relations.

In June 2004, Parker received the American Foreign Service Association's lifetime Contributions to American Diplomacy award.

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Preceded by
John D. Jernegan
(Diplomatic ties severed in 1967)
United States Ambassador to Algeria
January 1975 – February 1977
Succeeded by
Ulric St. Clair Haynes, Jr.
Preceded by
Francis E. Meloy, Jr.
United States Ambassador to Lebanon
February, 1977 – October 1978
Succeeded by
John Gunther Dean
Preceded by
Robert Anderson
United States Ambassador to Morocco
October 1978 – June 1979
Succeeded by
Angier Biddle Duke