Caroline Millar was born on 1958 and is an Australian diplomat and public servant who is currently Ambassador to Belgium, Luxembourg, the European Union and NATO.
10 Facts About Caroline Millar
Caroline Millar has previously served as the Deputy Secretary for National Security of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, Deputy Head of Mission of the Australian Embassy in Washington, DC, the Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Geneva, and was briefly the acting-Head of Mission of the Australian Permanent Mission to the United Nations in New York.
Caroline Millar's first posting after joining the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade was as Second Secretary to the embassy in Hanoi, Vietnam.
In 1989 Caroline Millar became First Secretary to the Australian embassy in Washington and in 1991 was seconded to the Australian Office of National Assessments as a Senior Americas Analyst.
In 1995, Caroline Millar was sent to New York to be a Counsellor in the Permanent Mission to the United Nations, serving until 1998.
In 2006, Caroline Millar was elected as President of the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention's Seventh Meeting of the States Parties, or Ottawa Treaty.
Ambassador Caroline Millar was only the second woman to lead the treaty.
In 2008 Caroline Millar represented Australia during the Oslo Process that resulted in the 2008 adoption of the Convention on Cluster Munitions.
In January 2014 Caroline Millar was appointed Deputy Head of Mission to Ambassador Kim Beazley in Washington.
In November 2021 Caroline Millar took up her appointment as Ambassador to Belgium, Luxembourg, the European Union and NATO.