United States Under Secretary of State

{{Short description|Position of the United States Department of State}}

Under Secretary of State (U/S) is a title used by senior officials of the United States Department of State who rank above the Assistant Secretaries and below the Deputy Secretary.

From 1919 to 1972, the Under Secretary was the second-ranking official at the Department of State (immediately beneath the United States Secretary of State), serving as the Secretary's principal deputy, chief assistant, and Acting Secretary in the event of the Secretary's absence. Prior second-ranking positions had been the Chief Clerk, the Assistant Secretary of State, and the Counselor. Prior to 1944, a number of offices in the Department reported directly to the Under Secretary. In July 1972, the position of Deputy Secretary superseded that of Under Secretary of State.

The following is a list of current offices bearing the title of "Under Secretary of State":

In addition to the six Under Secretaries, the Counselor of the Department, who advises the Secretary of State, holds a rank equivalent to Under Secretary.

Current Under Secretaries of State

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

!colspan="3" |Under Secretaries of State{{cite web|title=Senior Officials|url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/misc/19232.htm|publisher=United States Department of State|date=January 26, 2017|access-date=January 26, 2017}}

Office

!Incumbent

!data-sort-type="date" |Term began

data-sort-value="Under Secretary for Political Affairs" |75px
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
{{small

|[https://fam.state.gov/FAM/01FAM/01FAM0040.html 1 FAM 041]}}

|data-sort-value="Kenna, Lisa D." align="center" |100px
{{center|Lisa D. Kenna
(Acting)}}

|January 20, 2025

data-sort-value="Under Secretary for Management" |75px
Under Secretary of State for Management
{{small|[https://fam.state.gov/FAM/01FAM/01FAM0040.html 1 FAM 044]}}

|data-sort-value="Cunningham, José" align="center" |100px
{{center|José Cunningham
(Acting)}}

|April 5, 2025

data-sort-value="Under Secretary for Economic Growth" |75px
Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment
{{small|[https://fam.state.gov/FAM/01FAM/01FAM0040.html 1 FAM 042]}}

|data-sort-value="Lertsen, Thomas E. " align="center" |
{{center|Thomas E. Lertsen
(Acting)}}

|January 20, 2025

data-sort-value="Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security" |75px
Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security
{{small|[https://fam.state.gov/FAM/01FAM/01FAM0040.html 1 FAM 043]}}

|data-sort-value="Christensen, Brent T. " align="center" |
{{center|Brent T. Christensen
(Acting)}}

|January 20, 2025

data-sort-value="Under Secretary for Civilian Security" |75px
Under Secretary of State for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights
{{small|[https://fam.state.gov/FAM/01FAM/01FAM0040.html 1 FAM 045]}}

|data-sort-value="Gombis, Albert " align="center" |
{{center|Albert Gombis
(Acting)}}

|January 20, 2025

data-sort-value="Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy" |75px
Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
{{small|[https://fam.state.gov/FAM/01FAM/01FAM0040.html 1 FAM 046]}}

|data-sort-value="Beattie, Darren" align="center" |75px
{{center|Darren Beattie
(Acting)}}

|February 4, 2025

Under Secretaries of State, 1919–1972

class="wikitable"

!Name

!Home state

!Term of office

!President(s) served under

Frank Polk

|New York

|July 1, 1919–June 15, 1920

|Woodrow Wilson

Norman Davis

|New York

|June 15, 1920–March 7, 1921

|Woodrow Wilson and Warren G. Harding

Henry P. Fletcher

|Pennsylvania

|March 8, 1921–March 6, 1922

|Warren G. Harding

William Phillips

|Massachusetts

|April 26, 1922–April 11, 1924

|Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge

Joseph Grew

|New Hampshire

|April 16, 1924–June 30, 1927

|Calvin Coolidge

Robert E. Olds

|Minnesota

|July 1, 1927–June 30, 1928

|Calvin Coolidge

J. Reuben Clark

|Utah

|August 31, 1928–June 19, 1929

|Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover

Joseph P. Cotton

|New York

|June 20, 1929–March 10, 1931

|Herbert Hoover

William R. Castle Jr.

|District of Columbia

|April 2, 1931–March 5, 1933

|Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt

William Phillips

|Massachusetts

|March 6, 1933–August 23, 1936

|Franklin Roosevelt

Sumner Welles

|Maryland

|May 21, 1937–September 30, 1943

|Franklin Roosevelt

Edward Stettinius Jr.

|Virginia

|October 4, 1943–November 30, 1944

|Franklin Roosevelt

Joseph Grew

|New York

|December 20, 1944–August 15, 1945

|Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman

Dean Acheson

|Maryland

|August 16, 1945–June 30, 1947

|Harry Truman

Robert A. Lovett

|New York

|July 1, 1947–January 20, 1949

|Harry Truman

James E. Webb

|North Carolina

|January 28, 1949–February 29, 1952

|Harry Truman

David K. E. Bruce

|Virginia

|April 1, 1952–January 20, 1953

|Harry Truman

Walter Bedell Smith

|District of Columbia

|February 9, 1953–October 1, 1954

|Dwight D. Eisenhower

Herbert Hoover Jr.

|California

|October 4, 1954–February 5, 1957

|Dwight D. Eisenhower

Christian Herter

|Massachusetts

|February 21, 1957–April 22, 1959

|Dwight D. Eisenhower

C. Douglas Dillon

|New Jersey

|June 12, 1959–January 4, 1961

|Dwight D. Eisenhower

Chester Bowles

|Connecticut

|January 25–December 3, 1961

|John F. Kennedy

George Ball

|District of Columbia

|December 4, 1961–September 30, 1966

|John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson

Nicholas Katzenbach

|New Jersey

|October 3, 1966–January 20, 1969

|Lyndon B. Johnson

Elliot Richardson

|Massachusetts

|January 23, 1969–June 23, 1970

|Richard Nixon

John N. Irwin II

|New York

|September 21, 1970–July 12, 1972

|Richard Nixon

See also

References

{{reflist}}