Allan Phillip Mustard

Last Name: Mustard

First Name: Allan

Middle Name: Phillip
Suffix:

Nickname: Allan

Medals and Honors:

  • Distinguished Honor Award, Superior Honor Award (2), Grand Golden Medal of Merit for Services to the Republic of Austria

ACNSL Offices and Committees:

Rank: Ambassador

Service/Department:
Dept of State/Dept of Agriculture

Last or Significant Assignment:
Ambassador to Turkmenistan (2015-2019)

Areas of Experience:

  • International Relations and Diplomacy
    International Trade and Sanctions
    Russia and Eastern Europe

Articles, Books and Publications:

Ambassador Mustard's first permanent government role, from 1982 to 1986, was as an agricultural economist at the Foreign Agricultural Service of the Department of Agriculture, in Washington DC. From 1986 to 1988 he was an assistant agricultural attaché at the U.S. embassy in Moscow, USSR. During that period, the Soviets withdrew all local staff from the embassy, so Mustard's ability to touch-type in Russian saw him doubling up in a clerical support role. In 1988 he became an agricultural trade officer at the Consulate General in Istanbul, Turkey, serving there until 1990.

He was back at the Foreign Agricultural Service from 1990, first as deputy coordinator for Eastern Europe and the Soviet Secretariat, being promoted to deputy director of the Emerging Democracies Office in 1992.

From 1996 to 2000 he served as agricultural counselor at the U.S. embassy in Vienna, where he had responsibility not only for Austria, but also Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia.

This was followed by another period in Washington, D.C., first as assistant deputy administrator for foreign agricultural affairs at the Foreign Agricultural Service (2000-2002) and then as a Fellow in the Senior Seminar in Foreign Relations at the Department of State (2002-2003).

From 2003 to 2008 he served as Agricultural Minister-Counselor, back at the Moscow embassy, and from 2008 to 2011 in the equivalent position at the U.S. embassy in Mexico City, Mexico. From 2011 he was in an equivalent position in New Delhi, India. At the embassy there he had responsibility for programs in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, including food aid in the latter.

He was sworn in as U.S. Ambassador to Turkmenistan on November 25, 2014. In October 2015 he was joined at a groundbreaking ceremony for a new embassy building in Turkmenistan's capital, Ashgabat, by the city's mayor.

In June 2020 he was one of 612 former diplomats, senior military officers, and other government officials who signed an open letter expressing alarm at calls by President Donald Trump and others for the use of U.S. military personnel to end Black Lives Matter protests on U.S. soil.

During his ambassadorship, Mustard was a proponent of OpenStreetMap, as well as an active volunteer mapper. At the North American Cartographic Information Society's annual banquet in 2019, he gave a keynote address on his mapping in Turkmenistan. He also gave keynote presentations at the OSM annual conference, State of the Map in 2016 and 2020. In December 2019, he was elected chair of the board of the OpenStreetMap Foundation.

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