Nguyen Huu Dong.
Nguyen Huu Dong is an experienced Vietnamese diplomat. Dong, who could speak French even before his mother tongue, studied economics in Switzerland and France. He worked in the information room of the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam, which then became the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam in France.
After the national reunification, Dong was assigned to the Economic Department of the Vietnamese Embassy in France. In 1982, he was introduced to work at the United Nations by Nguyen Co Thach, the Minister of Foreign Affairs at that time.
Proud to be Vietnamese
At the United Nations, he worked in organizing and supervising elections. He also assists in institutional building in underdeveloped or unstable countries. He has been to approximately 40 countries with a passport that says nothing about his nationality, and a few cassettes of Trinh Cong Son's music.
During his mission, Nguyen Huu Dong introduces himself as "Mr. Vietnamese". It was his Vietnamese origin that gave him the opportunity to work at the UN and taught him valuable lessons about war and peace, Dong said.
Dong's most memorable mission was a trip to Kabul in 2023. He was assigned to work with leaders of political parties in Afghanistan. When he entered the meeting room, he saw 15 people, all holding AK47 guns, sitting on round mattresses placed on the ground. As he stepped in, a tall middle-aged man stood up, asking "Where are you from?" Dong replied: "I was sent by the UN. I am Vietnamese." Hearing the answer, the tall man put his gun down, telling Dong: "You are the first Vietnamese I have ever met" and offered him a handshake.
He then told Dong that several months before, he saw a B52 spread bombs on Tora Bora mountain while his team was searching for a target. Terrified by the destructive scene, they told each other that they respected Vietnam for fighting against bombers for years.
In 2005, Dong was sent to Iraq during the country's first election after the war. Due to the chaotic situation, Dong was accompanied by two American bodyguards. When he was about to leave Iraq, one of his bodyguards wanted to take a photo with him.