The Trump administration has tapped a Minnesota native to lead the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan at a critical time as the U.S. negotiates a peace agreement.
Ross Wilson, who spent nearly four decades in the U.S. Foreign Service before retiring near the Twin Cities, accepted U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's request this month to lead the U.S. Embassy in Kabul until the Senate confirms a permanent ambassador.
"Afghanistan is an extraordinarily challenging, but also very consequential, assignment and I am honored by the trust and confidence that Secretary of State Pompeo and the Department of State have placed in me," Wilson said in a statement he issued from Washington, D.C., before heading overseas.
It's the third time the veteran diplomat has been called out of retirement to help lead U.S. embassies — most recently, in 2018, when the Trump administration asked Wilson to fill in as the chargé d'affaires in the Asian nation of Georgia. Now, Wilson, who was sworn back into the U.S. Foreign Service last week, replaces John Bass, who spent two years as ambassador in the Afghan capital until Jan. 6.
A State Department spokesperson said in a statement that Wilson will arrive in Kabul soon, taking over "one of the world's most challenging diplomatic postings."
"Ambassador Wilson's policy and leadership expertise will ensure we continue to advance U.S. interests in Afghanistan, including moving forward with the Afghan peace process and supporting women, civil society, democratic governance, and rule of law as Afghans define how they will govern themselves," the statement said.
A State Department official told the New York Times that Bass wasn't being removed from the role because of any disagreement with the administration and that it's typical for ambassadors to serve only two years because of the high-stress nature of the job.
"This is not just any post; it's Afghanistan — our longest war," added Tom Hanson, chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations Minnesota and a diplomat-in-residence at the Alworth Institute for International Studies at the University of Minnesota Duluth.