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ALBERT
C. ZAPANTA
Al Zapanta
was born in Los Angeles, Calif., and attended local schools
and college in the Los Angeles area. He received an Associate
of Arts from East Los Angeles College, a Bachelor of Arts
in Industrial Psychology, a Master of Arts in Public Administration
and completed course work for his Ph.D. in International
Political Economics from the University of Southern California.
He graduated from the Harvard Graduate School of Business
and the Inter-American Defense College, the National War
College, in Washington, D.C. He speaks Spanish fluently
and has an elementary knowledge of French.
In the
private sector, he worked as an industrial engineer for
Bethlehem Steel, and as Director of Governmental Affairs
for ARCO until his retirement in 1993 after 18 years of
service as a senior executive. During his time with ARCO,
Al was responsible for negotiations with Petroleos Mexicanos
(PEMEX) on oil and gas matters and the copper mines owned
by Anaconda, an acquisition of ARCO. He was also the company's
representative to local, state and federal governments on
oil and gas legislation, environmental regulation, transportation-related
issues (pipelines, ocean tankers, tanker trucks and rail
tank cars) and public affairs.
Al has
held numerous Presidential appointments, including a White
House fellow in 1973-74 and as Senate-confirmed Assistant
Secretary of the Interior for Management and Administration
from 1976-77. During both of these assignments he participated
as chairman of Infrastructure Studies on Urban Mass Transit,
Rail Transportation, the Airport Airways Study, the Water
Conservation Initiative, the Trans-Alaska Pipeline Fraud
Review, the Teton Dam Disaster Audit, and was the Department's
representative to the National Visitor Center Intermodal
Station in Washington, D.C. Al was also appointed by President
Ronald Reagan to the U.S. State Department Advisory Committee
on International Trade Technology and Development from 1981-1987,
and by President George W. Bush as a private sector delegate
to the U.S. - Mexico Partnership for Prosperity from 2001-Present.
He was
appointed the first U.S. senior officer to lead a Peacekeeping
Mission to the United Nations Referendum on the Western
Sahara to serve with USSR, People's Republic of China, French
and British military officers as the Chief of Staff. General
Zapanta's military record includes the award of the Silver
Star, five Bronze Stars for Valor, the Purple Heart and
thirty other awards during the Vietnam War. He was also
recently awarded the Joint Service Commendation Medal for
Desert Shield/Desert Storm, Restore Hope in Somalia and
Restore Democracy in Haiti. U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald
H. Rumsfield appointed Al Zapanta to serve as Chairman of
the Reserve Forces Policy Board (RFPB) from 2002-2004.
Presently,
Al is the President and CEO of the United States-Mexico
Chamber of Commerce and is responsible for operations in
10 regional offices in the United States and five in Mexico.
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