PRESIDENT OBAMA APPOINTS A NIGERIAN, ADEWALE ADEYEMO, AS DEPUTY NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER.
President Barack Obama has tapped
Adewale “Wally” Adeyemo, who served in top roles at the Treasury Department, to
succeed Caroline Atkinson as his deputy national security adviser for
international economic affairs. Mr. Adeyemo, 34, joined the White House’s
National Economic Council as deputy director this fall from the Treasury, where
he served most recently as the deputy chief of staff to Secretary Jacob Lew. He
was the Treasury’s lead negotiator on the currency agreement that was part of
the Pacific trade deal. Mr. Adeyemo also worked on Treasury’s response to
crises in Ukraine and Greece and in 2010 was one of the first officials charged
with standing up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
In a statement, Mr.
Obama thanked Ms. Atkinson for her service and said he was grateful that Mr.
Adeyemo would carry on her work. Mr. Adeyemo had been nominated by Mr. Obama to
serve as assistant Treasury secretary for international markets and
development, but a White House official said Mr. Adeyemo had asked the
president to withdraw the nomination given his new role.
Mr. Lew said that Mr.
Adeyemo had “developed a network of international relationships in economic
offices around the world to promote U.S. interests effectively.”
Former
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said Mr. Adeyemo, who joined the administration
in 2009, was a “natural diplomat with a great feel for policy.”
The position
has served as a springboard to even higher profile international finance posts.
Michael Froman, who is currently the U.S. trade representative, held the post
under both Mr. Obama and President Bill Clinton. Federal Reserve governor Lael
Brainard, who previously served as a senior Treasury official in the Obama
administration, held the post in the Clinton administration
No comments:
Post a Comment