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The President of the United States: Appointer: The President with Senate advice and consent: Inaugural holder: Joseph Palmer II as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary: Formation: September 23, 1960: Website: U.S. Embassy - Abuja
United States: Consulate 1994 [28] Kano Poland: Consulate 1988 [29] United Kingdom: Liaison Office 2014 Lagos Australia: Embassy branch office 2009 Austria: Consulate 2013 Belgium: Embassy branch office 2004 Chile: Embassy 1983 [30] Egypt: Consulate-General 2015 [31] Ethiopia: Consulate-General 2021 [32] Japan: Embassy branch office 2007 [33 ...
Djibouti City (E) All of Djibouti Equatorial Guinea Malabo (E) Bioko; some ACS on the continent may be provided by either Douala or Yaoundé, Cameroon. Eritrea Asmara (E) Consular Section closed June 2012 Ethiopia Addis Ababa (E) All of Ethiopia and ACS and visa services for Eritrea Eswatini Mbabane (E) All of Eswatini Gabon Libreville (E)
U.S. Department of State Facilities and Areas of Jurisdictions. The United States has the second largest number of active diplomatic posts of any country in the world after the People's Republic of China, [1] including 271 bilateral posts (embassies and consulates) in 173 countries, as well as 11 permanent missions to international organizations and seven other posts (as of November 2023 [2]).
This is a list of diplomatic missions in the United States.At present, 175 nations maintain diplomatic missions to the United States in the capital, Washington, D.C. Being the seat of the Organization of American States, the city also hosts missions of its member-states, separate from their respective embassies to the United States.
The U.S. maintains an embassy in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, and a consulate general in Lagos. At the end of March 2022, construction began on a new consulate general campus in Lagos, which is expected to be completed in 2027 and will be the largest U.S. consulate in the world. [ 173 ]
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FitzGibbon also served at the U.S. Embassy in Chad and had an earlier posting in Nigeria. FitzGibbon also worked in the Office to Combat and Monitor Trafficking in Persons in the State Department. Before joining the State Department, she was a lecturer at Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia. [1]