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Anthony Lake |
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Anthony Lakeand Leon Panetta at the White House in 1994.Anthony Lake (born 1939) was the National Security Advisor under US President Bill Clinton from 1993 to 1997. Lake is credited with developing the policy that led to the resolution of the Bosnia War. Lake was born in New York City and graduated from Harvard in 1961. Lake joined the State Department in 1962 as an assistant to Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge during the Vietnam War. His State Department career included assignments as consul in Saigon (1963), vice consul in Hue (1964-65) and special assistant to the assistant to the president for National Security Affairs (1969-1970) in the Nixon administration. After working for Maine Senator's Edmund Muskie's presidential campaign and a stint at the Carnegie Endowment and International Voluntary Services, Mr. Lake returned to the State Department in 1977 to serve as director of policy planning for President Carter, a position he held until 1981. When Ronald Reagan came into office in 1981, Lake withdrew into academia, becoming a professor at Amherst College in Massachusetts. In 1984, he moved to Mount Holyoke College, where he has taught courses on the Vietnam War, Third World revolutions, and American foreign policy. During the 1992 presidential campaign, he was one of candidate Clinton's chief foreign policy advisers. (Clinton and Lake had worked together in the 1972 External link
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