The Foreign Service Journal, November 2015

THE FOREIGN SERVICE JOURNAL | NOVEMBER 2015 83 A time of service…a time of need Help for Seniors May Be Just a Phone Call Away— Home Health Care Adult Day Care & Respite Care Prescription Drug Copayments Transportation to Medical Appointments Durable Medical Equipment For more information, please contact the SENIOR LIVING FOUNDATION OF THE AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE 1716 N Street, NW Washington, DC 20036-2902 Phone: (202) 887-8170 Fax: (202) 872-9320 E-Mail: info@SLFoundation.org Web Site: www.SLFoundation.org The Senior Living Foundation may be able to help you or someone you know. Some examples of assistance are: SPONSORED BY THE AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION he was attached to a U.S. Coast Guard unit training the nascent Korean Navy. Mr. Petree married Virginia Hunter, a Boulder, Colo., native, on Christmas Eve 1947. He received a B.A. from the Univer- sity of Colorado in 1948 and anM.A. in Asian studies fromHarvard University in 1950. Mr. Petree joined the State Department in 1950 as an intelligence research analyst on Korea. He transferred to the Foreign Service under the Wriston Program and, in 1957, was posted to Tokyo as an assistant labor attaché. In 1960, he became consul in Fukuoka. He returned toWashington, D.C., as a Japan desk officer in 1963. During the next four years, he was closely involved in negotiations for the reversion of Okinawa to Japan. (Mr. Petree was decorated by the government of Japan in 1996 with the Order of the Sacred Treasure for his contri- butions to the U.S.-Japan relationship.) After attending the National War Col- lege (1967-1968), he was posted to Addis Ababa, where he served as counselor for political affairs (1968-1972) in the waning years of Haile Selassie’s reign. He trans- ferred to Naha, Okinawa, as the first consul general following reversion of the territory to Japan onMay 15, 1972. As political counselor at Embassy Tokyo in 1973, Mr. Petree led negotiations on revisions to the Status of Forces Agree- ment governing the U.S. military presence and rules of engagement in Japan. In 1976, he was appointed alternate representative for special political affairs at the United States Mission to the United Nations and, in 1979, deputy representa- tive of the United States in the Security Council with the rank of ambassador. Amb. Petree retired soon after Presi- dent Reagan’s election in 1980. A 1983 Foreign Affairs article on Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick’s U.N. tenure reported:

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