Richard Dalton (diplomat)

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Dalton at Chatham House in 2011

Sir Richard John Dalton (born 10 October 1948) is a senior former diplomat who was knighted in the 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours. Dalton retired from HM Diplomatic Service in 2006.

Diplomatic career

Dalton joined HM Diplomatic Service in 1970, went to study Arabic at MECAS in the Lebanon and was posted as Second Secretary to Amman in 1973. His next posting was as Second Secretary, later First Secretary, to UKMIS New York in 1975, and he returned to the FCO four years later. In 1983, Dalton gave notice to Personnel Department that he intended to stand as Conservative candidate for the Richmond, North Yorkshire constituency in the 1983 general election. However, he withdrew his candidacy for the seat before the story broke of his sister-in-law Sara Keays' affair with Trade and Industry Secretary Cecil Parkinson, and was posted as Head of Chancery to Muscat in 1983.[1]

In her 1985 book A Question of Judgement, Sara Keays wrote "You've got to bear in mind that my brother-in-law Richard is a diplomat."[2] anu From 1993 to 1997, Dalton was Consul-General in Jerusalem effectively becoming Ambassador to the Palestinian Authority during the early years of the Middle East peace process. He was appointed Head of Personnel in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in 1998, and was sent as Britain's Ambassador to Libya in 1999, when diplomatic relations were resumed after a 17-year break. Between 2003 and 2006, Dalton was ambassador to Iran.[3]

Post retirement

Following his retirement from the FCO in 2006, Sir Richard Dalton became an associate fellow on the Middle East and North African programme at the international affairs organisation, Chatham House[4] where he heads the Libya Working Group, set up in February 2011. He has written extensively on the Middle East:

On 2 May 2007, Dalton appeared before the Select Committee on Foreign Affairs[9] and lectured at the Iran Society in February 2008.[10]

In May 2009, Sir Richard Dalton commented on the request for the repatriation of the Libyan Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, who was convicted of carrying out the December 1988 Lockerbie bombing and who was in a Scottish jail suffering from terminal cancer: "A decision by the Scottish authorities to keep Megrahi would not seriously derail Britain’s relations with Libya, but there would be consequences. Among them is the possibility that a successful appeal by Megrahi would plunge Britain, the US and Libya once again into the fraught environment of an international investigation to find new Lockerbie suspects," Sir Richard said.[11]

Family

Richard John Dalton married Elizabeth Mary Keays on 1 January 1972.[12] Following the death in 1981 of his father, Major-General John Dalton, he moved with his wife and four children - two sons (1978 and 1982) and two daughters (1973 and 1979) - into the Dalton family home at Hauxwell Hall in lower Wensleydale.[13]

References

  1. The Diplomatic Service List 1989 (page 155), HMSO, ISBN 0-11-591707-1
  2. Sara Keays (1985). A Question of Judgement. Quintessential Press. ISBN 1-85138-000-0. 
  3. "UK names Iran ambassador". BBC News. 2002-09-24. Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  4. "Sir Richard Dalton at Chatham House". Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  5. Sir Richard Dalton. "Iran: Looking for a Thaw". The World Today. 
  6. Sir Richard Dalton (2007-04-05). "Britain Found a Ladder for Iran to Climb Down". London: The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2010-05-22. 
  7. Sir Richard Dalton (2007-02-07). "Why Iran must make the next move". London: The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2010-05-22. 
  8. Sir Richard Dalton. "Regional Diplomacy in the Middle East: Iran is on a Roll". The World Today. 
  9. "Select Committee on Foreign Affairs: Examination of Witnesses". Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  10. Sir Richard Dalton (2008-02-19). "Lecture entitled "Cultural co-operation between Britain and Iran"". The Iran Society. Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  11. John Thorne. "Libya bid to transfer Lockerbie bomber". The National. Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  12. "INDEX FOR THE DALTON GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY JOURNALS". Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
  13. "Knighthood for trouble-spots diplomat with roots in the Dales". The Northern Echo. 2005-07-08. Retrieved 2009-05-16. 
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