Marie Yovanovitch | |
|---|---|
Official portrait, 2015 | |
| United States Ambassador to Ukraine | |
| In office August 29, 2016 – May 20, 2019 | |
| President | Barack Obama Donald Trump |
| Preceded by | Geoffrey Pyatt |
| Succeeded by | Bridget Brink(2022) |
| 6thUnited States Ambassador to Armenia | |
| In office September 22, 2008 – June 9, 2011 | |
| President | George W. Bush Barack Obama |
| Preceded by | John Evans |
| Succeeded by | John Heffern |
| United States Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan | |
| In office February 4, 2005 – February 4, 2008 | |
| President | George W. Bush |
| Preceded by | Stephen Young |
| Succeeded by | Tatiana Gfoeller |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Marie Louise Yovanovitch (1958-11-11)November 11, 1958 (age 67) |
| Education | Princeton University (BA) National Defense University (MS) |
Marie Louise"Masha" Yovanovitch (born November 11, 1958) is a Canadian-American former diplomat and retiredsenior member of theUnited States Foreign Service.[1][2] She served in multipleState Department posts, including Senior Advisor to theUnder Secretary of State for Political Affairs (2004–2005),U.S. Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan (2005–2008),U.S. Ambassador to Armenia (2008–2011), Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for theBureau of European and Eurasian Affairs (2012–2013), andAmbassador to Ukraine (2016–2019). Yovanovitch is a diplomat in residence at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy atGeorgetown University.[3][4] On January 31, 2020, it was reported that she had retired from the State Department.[5][6]
While ambassador to Ukraine, Yovanovitch was the target of aconspiracy-drivensmear campaign, amplified by PresidentDonald Trump and his allies.[7] In May 2019, Trump abruptly recalled Yovanovitch from her post following claims by Trump surrogates that she was undermining Trump's efforts to pressure Ukraine to investigate his political rival, former vice president and2020 U.S. presidential candidateJoe Biden.[8][9] Yovanovitch's removal preceded a July 2019 phone call by Trump in which he attempted to pressure Ukraine presidentVolodymyr Zelenskyy to investigate Biden.[10] Following awhistleblower complaint about the phone call and attempts to cover it up, animpeachment inquiry against Trump was initiated by theU.S. House of Representatives. Yovanovitch testified in several House committee depositions in the inquiry.[11][12]
Marie Yovanovitch is the daughter of Mikhail Yovanovitch and Nadia (Theokritoff) Yovanovitch,[13] who fled theSoviet Union and later theNazis.[3] She was born inCanada, moved toConnecticut at age three, and became anaturalized American citizen at age eighteen. She grew upspeaking Russian.[3]
Yovanovitch graduated fromKent School in Connecticut in 1976; her parents were longtime foreign language teachers at the school.[14] Yovanovitch earned aBachelor of Arts degree in history and Russian studies fromPrinceton University in 1980.[15] Her senior thesis was titled "The Excommunication ofTolstoy. A Personal and Political Event."[16] She studied at thePushkin Institute in Moscow (1980) and was awarded aMaster of Science degree from theNational Defense University'sNational War College in 2001.[15]
Yovanovitch joined theUnited States Foreign Service in 1986. Her first foreign assignment, inOttawa, was followed by overseas assignments includingMoscow,London, andMogadishu. From May 1998 to May 2000, she served as the deputy director of the Russia Desk in the U.S. Department of State.[15]
From August 2001 to June 2004, as a career member of theSenior Foreign Service, she was theDeputy Chief of Mission of theU.S. Embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine.[17] From August 2004 to May 2005, she was the senior advisor to theUnder Secretary of State for Political Affairs.[18] Yovanovitch also served as International Advisor and Deputy Commandant at theNational Defense University'sDwight D. Eisenhower School for National Security and Resource Strategy and as dean of the School of Language Studies within the U.S. Department of State'sForeign Service Institute.[18]
Yovanovitch is "well known in diplomatic circles for her measured demeanor and diligence in representing both Republican and Democratic administrations."[19] Yovanovitch was appointedU.S. Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan on November 20, 2004; she presented hercredentials on February 4, 2005, and remained in this post until February 4, 2008.[1][20] Her nomination as ambassador to Kyrgyzstan wasconfirmed by theSenate on avoice vote.[21]
Yovanovitch was appointedU.S. Ambassador to Armenia on August 4, 2008; she presented her credentials on September 22, 2008, and remained in this post until June 9, 2011.[20] Her nomination as ambassador to Armenia was again confirmed by the Senate on a voice vote.[22] During confirmation hearings, Yovanovitch acknowledged that Turks had committed mass killings, rapes, and expulsions of Armenians between 1915 and 1923, calling this "one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th century," but, in line with U.S. policy, declined to use the phraseArmenian genocide, saying that theuse of this politically sensitive phrase was a policy decision that could be made only by the highest-ranking U.S. officials, namely PresidentGeorge W. Bush and Secretary of StateCondoleezza Rice.[23]
While in Armenia, Yovanovitch oversaw a staff of almost 400 Americans and Armenians in one of the largest embassy compounds in the world.[24] She pushed Armenian authorities to give fair treatment to Armenians arrested inpost-election protests in 2008.[19] Yovanovitch received the Secretary's Diplomacy in Human Rights Award,[18] adepartment award honoring ambassadors who demonstrate "extraordinary commitment to defending human rights."[19] She was also known for her work supporting democratic development and the advancement of women.[25]
After returning to Washington in 2012 and 2013, Yovanovitch served as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs.[4] In that position, Yovanovitch was a key State Department headquarters contact for U.S. diplomats in Europe, working with, among others,U.S. Ambassador to PolandLee Feinstein, regarding issues such asU.S. missile defense in Poland.[19] Yovanovitch received the department's Senior Foreign Service Performance Award six times and theSuperior Honor Award five times.[18] She was promoted to the rank ofCareer Minister in 2016.[26]
Yovanovitch was announced as the nominee for U.S. ambassador to Ukraine on May 18, 2016, to replaceGeoff Pyatt;[27] the nomination was sent to the Senate the next day, and confirmed byvoice vote of the Senate on July 14, 2016.[28] Having been sworn in on August 12, Yovanovitch arrived in Ukraine on August 22[29] andpresented her credentials on August 29, 2016.[1]

Yovanovitch was respected within the national security community for her efforts to encourage Ukraine to tackle corruption[30] and during her tenure sought to strengthen the UkrainianNational Anti-Corruption Bureau, which had been created to bolster efforts to fightcorruption in Ukraine; these efforts earned Yovanovitch some enemies within the country.[31] In a March 2019 speech to theUkraine Crisis Media Center, Yovanovitch said that the Ukrainian government was not making sufficient progress to combat corruption, saying: "It is increasingly clear that Ukraine'sonce-in-a-generation opportunity for change has not yet resulted in the anti-corruption or rule-of-law reforms that Ukrainians expect or deserve."[32] On April 1, 2019, Yovanovitch spoke at an anti-corruption conference where she thanked Ukrainians for their courage and commitment to end corruption.[33]
AsU.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Yovanovitch was the target of aconspiracy-drivensmear campaign.[7][34][35] Allegations against her were then made by Trump's personal attorneyRudolph W. Giuliani, as well as conservative commentatorJohn Solomon ofThe Hill and Ukraine's then-top prosecutor,Yuriy Lutsenko, who accused her of being part of a conspiracy involving anti-corruption probes in Ukraine and efforts by the Trump administration to investigate ties between Ukrainian officials and theHillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign.[3][36][37] Lutsenko, who has been accused by Ukrainian civil society organizations of corruption,[32] claimed that Yovanovitch, anObama administration appointee, had interfered in Ukraine politics, had given him a "do-not-prosecute" list,[38] and was interfering in his ability to combat corruption in Ukraine.[31][36] The U.S. State Department said that Lutsenko's allegations against Yovanovitch were "an outright fabrication"[36] and indicated that they were a "classicdisinformation campaign."[34] Lutsenko subsequently recanted his claims of a "do-not-prosecute" list.[39] Solomon's stories were nonetheless amplified by President Trump, his sonDonald Trump Jr., Giuliani, Solomon, and conservative media outlets.[36][40] Ukrainians who opposed Yovanovitch were also sources for Giuliani, who "was on a months-long search for political dirt in Ukraine to help President Trump."[32] Giuliani confirmed in a November 2019 interview that he believed he "needed Yovanovitch out of the way" because she was going to make his investigations difficult.[41]
On April 24, 2019,[42] after complaints from Giuliani and other Trump allies that Yovanovitch was undermining and obstructing Trump's efforts to persuade Ukraine to investigate former vice president and2020 presidential election candidateJoe Biden, Trump ordered Yovanovitch's recall.[43][44] She returned toWashington, D.C. on April 25,[42] with her recall becoming public knowledge on May 7,[45] and her mission as ambassador being terminated on May 20, 2019.[1][29] In a July 25, 2019 phone call with Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelensky (the contents of which became public on September 25, 2019), Trump pressured the Ukrainian government to investigate Biden and disparaged Yovanovitch to his foreign counterpart, calling her "bad news".[40][46]
Documents to theHouse Intelligence Committee provided byLev Parnas, a former associate of Giuliani, outlined text exchanges in which Lutsenko pushed for the ouster of Yovanovitch and in return offered to provide damaging information onJoe Biden.[9][47][48] InRussian-language messages, Lutsenko told Parnas that Yovanovitch (referred to as "madam") should be ousted before he would make helpful public statements; for example, in a March 22, 2019WhatsApp message to Parnas, Lutsenko wrote, "It's just that if you don’t make a decision about Madam—you are calling into question all my declarations. Including about B."[9] It is thought that Lutsenko targeted Yovanovitch due to her anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine.[49] One week before an April 1, 2019 conference on anti-corruption, Parnas exchanged encryptedWhatsApp text messages withRobert F. Hyde that indicated the ambassador was under surveillance and that her security was at risk.[50][51] Hyde claimed he had merely forwarded messages received from a Belgian citizen named Anthony de Caluwe.[51] After the House Intelligence Committee released the text messages, de Caluwe initially denied any involvement, but then reversed himself, saying that he had in fact sent the messages to Hyde but that the messages were a joke and "just a part of a ridiculous banter."[51]
An audio tape from April 2018, recorded at a private dinner between Trump and top donors and made public by ABC News in January 2020, captures Trump demanding Yovanovitch's removal, saying: "Get rid of her! Get her out tomorrow. I don't care. Get her out tomorrow. Take her out. Okay? Do it."[9][52][53] The recording appeared to corroborate Parnas' account that he had told Trump that night that Yovanovitch was working against Trump.[9]
Yovanovitch's abrupt ousting shocked and outraged career State Department diplomats.[31][54][55] Acting Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian AffairsPhilip Reeker, the chief diplomat for U.S. policy for Europe, testified that he had urged top State Department officialsDavid Hale andT. Ulrich Brechbuhl to issue a statement expressing strong support for Yovanovitch, but that top State Department leadership rejected this proposal.[34] Former senior U.S. diplomatsPhilip H. Gordon andDaniel Fried, who served as assistant secretaries of state for European and Eurasian Affairs and asNational Security Council staffers under presidents of both parties, praised Yovanovitch and condemned Trump's "egregious mistreatment of one of the country's most distinguished ambassadors," writing that this had demoralized the U.S. diplomatic corps and undermined U.S. foreign policy.[56] TheAmerican Foreign Service Association andAmerican Academy of Diplomacy, representing members of the U.S. diplomatic corps, expressed alarm at Trump's disparagement of Yovanovitch in his call with Zelensky.[57]Michael McKinley, a career foreign service officer who served as ambassador to four countries and had been chief adviser to Secretary of StateMike Pompeo, resigned in October 2019 in protest of Trump's attacks against Yovanovitch and "the State Department's unwillingness to protect career diplomats from politically motivated pressure."[58][59] Yovanovitch's ouster became one of the issues explored in theHouse of Representativesimpeachment inquiry against Trump;[43] her recall was termed "a political hit job" by Democratic members of Congress.[46][36] Trump subsequently said she was "no angel" and falsely claimed that Yovanovitch had refused to hang his portrait.[60][61][62]
In a January 2020 interview, Parnas apologized to Yovanovitch for his role in the smear campaign against her.[9][63]
On October 11, 2019, Yovanovitch gave closed-doordeposition testimony before the HouseOversight and Reform,Foreign Affairs andIntelligence committees.[64][31][65] A transcript of Yovanovitch's full testimony was released to the public on November 5, 2019.[65]
The State Department sought to stop Yovanovitch from testifying before Congress, in line with Trump's policy of refusing to cooperate with the impeachment inquiry.[31] TheHouse Intelligence Committee issued a subpoena, stating that "the illegitimate order from the Trump Administration not to cooperate has no force"—and Yovanovitch proceeded to give testimony.[31]
In her testimony, Yovanovitch testified that Trump had pressured the State Department to remove her, and that she was "incredulous" to be removed based on "unfounded and false claims by people with clearly questionable motives."[31] Yovanovitch stated that after her removal,Deputy Secretary of StateJohn Sullivan had told her that she had done nothing wrong but that the State Department had been under political pressure from Trump to remove her since summer 2018.[31] Sullivan, in his own testimony to Congress, corroborated Yovanovitch's testimony, confirmed that Yovanovitch was the target of a smear campaign, and publicly affirmed that Yovanovitch had served "admirably and capably" as ambassador.[7]
Yovanovitch testified that her removal was the result of "significant tension between those who seek to transform the country and those who wish to continue profiting from the old ways," and that false narratives were pushed from an "unfortunate alliance between Ukrainians who continue to operate within a corrupt system, and Americans who either did not understand that corrupt system, or who may have chosen, for their own purposes, to ignore it."[66] Yovanovitch described the State Department under Trump as "attacked and hollowed out from within," and warned that Russia and other U.S. rivals would benefit "when bad actors in countries beyond Ukraine see how easy it is to use fiction and innuendo to manipulate our system."[31] Yovanovitch testified that when she sought advice fromU.S. Ambassador to the European UnionGordon Sondland on how to respond to the smear campaign, Sondland recommended that shetweet praise for Trump.[42][67]
Yovanovitch also detailed attempts by Giuliani to interfere in the State Department's consular decisions, by attempting to override a U.S. visa denial for former Ukrainian officialViktor Shokin, who had been declared ineligible for travel in the United States based on his "known corrupt activities."[68][42] Yovanovitch also said that she was "shocked" and felt threatened by Trump's statement, in a phone call with Zelensky, that "she's going to go through some things," testifying that she was very concerned "that the President would speak about me or any ambassador in that way to a foreign counterpart."[42]
Yovanovitch testified to Congress “My parents fled Communist and Nazi regimes. Having seen, firsthand, the war and poverty and displacement common to totalitarian regimes, they valued the freedom and democracy the U.S. offers and that the United States represents. And they raised me to cherish those values.”[69]
| External videos | |
|---|---|

On November 15, 2019, Yovanovitch testified during thepublic impeachment hearings.[70] In her testimony, Yovanovitch detailed how Giuliani and his associatesLev Parnas and Igor Fruman worked with a corrupt Ukrainian prosecutor to orchestrate a smear campaign against her, oust her from her post as ambassador, and "circumvent official channels" of Ukraine policy.[55] Yovanovitch also testified, "Perhaps it was not surprising that when our anti-corruption efforts got in the way of the desire for profit or power, Ukrainians who preferred to play by the old, corrupt rules sought to remove me. What continues to amaze me is that they found Americans willing to partner with them and, working together, they apparently succeeded in orchestrating the removal of a U.S. ambassador. How could our system fail like this? How is it that foreign corrupt interests could manipulate our government?"[55] While Yovanovitch was testifying, Trump denigrated heron Twitter.[71] When read what the president had written about her, Yovanovitch testified: "It's very intimidating. I can't speak to what the president is trying to do, but the effect is to be intimidating."[71]House Intelligence Committee ChairmanAdam B. Schiff and other Democrats called Trump's conductwitness intimidation; Democratic RepresentativeJim Himes, a member of the Intelligence Committee, stated: "The president chose to respond to a patriotic and superb public servant with lies and intimidation. ...Her boss disparaged and intimidated her not after, but during her testimony."[71] During questioning, the committee's Republicans avoided making personal attacks against Yovanovitch or seeking to undermine her credibility, but argued that Yovanovitch's removal and the events leading to it were not relevant to whether Trump had committed impeachable offenses and emphasized that Yovanovitch's removal occurred "before the main events under scrutiny took place."[72]
After being ousted as U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Yovanovitch became a Senior State Department Fellow atGeorgetown University's Institute for the Study of Diplomacy.[4] On January 31, 2020, it was reported that she had retired from the Department of State.[5][6][73] She is a senior fellow in the Russia and Eurasia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.[74][75]
| External videos | |
|---|---|
I arrived in Ukraine on August 22, 2016 and left Ukraine permanently on May 20, 2019.
Career diplomats have expressed outrage at the unceremonious removal of Ambassador Marie L. Yovanovitch from Ukraine after she came under attack by Mr. Giuliani, Donald Trump Jr. and two associates who have since been arrested on charges of campaign violations.
| Diplomatic posts | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | United States Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan 2005–2008 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | United States Ambassador to Armenia 2008–2011 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | United States Ambassador to Ukraine 2016–2019 | Succeeded by Kristina Kvien Acting |