Umberto Vattani
Secretary General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
In office
1 September 1997  24 September 2001
Preceded byBoris Biancheri
Succeeded byGiuseppe Baldocci
In office
1 March 2004  16 July 2005
Preceded byGiuseppe Baldocci
Succeeded byPaolo Pucci di Benisichi
Permanent Representative of Italy to the European Union
In office
2001–2004
Prime MinisterSilvio Berlusconi
Preceded byRoberto Nigido
Succeeded byRocco Cangelosi
Italian Ambassador to Germany
In office
2005–2010
Preceded byMarcello Guidi
Succeeded byEnzo Perlot
Personal details
Born (1938-12-05) 5 December 1938
Skopje, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Alma materUniversity of Copenhagen

Umberto Vattani (born 5 December 1938) is an Italian diplomat. The only official in the history of Italy to have twice held the position of Secretary General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was also the last president of the National Institute for Foreign Trade until his suppression in 2011 .

Education

Born in Skopje (then Kingdom of Yugoslavia), to a family of officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he studied in France, England and Connecticut, at Wesleyan University, on a Fulbright Program. In 1960 he obtained a degree in Law at Sapienza University of Rome and in 1962 a degree in political science.[1]

In 1961, following a public competition, he was hired by the Bank of Italy and assigned to the Research Office. The following year, for subsequent competition, Vattani was hired at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and entered the diplomatic career.[1]

Diplomatic career

His first experiences brought him to New York City to the Italian representation at the United Nations (1963 - 1965) and to Paris , to the Italian representation at the OECD (1966 - 1969). After a short period at the Italian Embassy in London, he returned to Italy as deputy head of cabinet of Foreign Ministers Mariano Rumor and Arnaldo Forlani (1975 - 1978). Later, as head of the Cabinet Minister with responsibility for scientific and technological research (1978- 1980), he promoted the entry of Italy into the European Southern Observatory (ESO).[1]

Between 1980 and 1981, Vattani was head secretary of the Prime Minister Arnaldo Forlani, and later plenipotentiary minister at the Italian Embassy in London (1982 - 1986). [1] In 1986 he returned to Rome to take on the role of diplomatic adviser to the presidents of the Council of Ministers Ciriaco De Mita, Giulio Andreotti and Giuliano Amato (1988 - 1992) and was appointed Sherpa for the G7 summits.[1]

Appointed later ambassador in Bonn, Germany remained for five years (1992- 1996). Back in Rome, he served as head of cabinet of the Minister of Foreign Affairs Lamberto Dini in the Prodi I Cabinet.[1]

In September 1997, Vattani was appointed first secretary general, replacing Boris Biancheri, the most important assignment for a diplomat at the Foreign Ministry (1997- 2001).

With the start of Berlusconi II Cabinet (2001), Vattani was initially indicated as a possible foreign minister.[2] When Berlusconi finally chose Renato Ruggiero, they replaced it with the General Secretariat colleague Giuseppe Baldocci, and sent Vattani to Brussels (2001- 2003) as the Permanent Representative of Italy to the European Union,[3] in the period of Romano Prodi as President of the European Commission.

In 2004, following the retirement of Ambassador Baldocci, Vattani was appointed Secretary General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for the second time, until June 2005.[4]

In 2005 Vattani was nominated president of the National Institute for Foreign Trade by the Council of Ministers and in 2009 he was reconfirmed for a second term until the institution was suppressed in 2011.

He is president of the Japan-Italy Foundation and general manager of the Italy–USA Foundation. He is president of Venice International University, formed on the Italian side by the University of Padua, the Ca' Foscari University of Venice and the Università Iuav di Venezia in Venice . He was president of Sviluppo Italia Sicilia until 2012.

Honours

National honours

Foreign honours

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Ambassador Umberto Vattani". univiu.org. Retrieved 6 April 2020.
  2. Corriere della Sera, 18 February 2001
  3. Vattani a Bruxelles, alla Farnesina si cambia
  4. Consiglio dei Ministri, Comunicato Stampa n. 140 del 9 gennaio 2004
  5. Sito web del Quirinale: dettaglio decorato.
  6. Sito web del Quirinale: dettaglio decorato.
  7. Sito web del Quirinale: dettaglio decorato.
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