CRESENCIO ARCOS
CSP Senior Associate, Homeland Security Projects
Former Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary for International Affairs
Cresencio (Cris) Arcos was appointed Director, International Affairs at U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2003 and Assistant Secretary in 2005. He came from the AT&T Corporation after seven years as its Vice President and Managing Director for International Public Affairs for Latin America and Canada, where he was responsible for engaging foreign governments and the U.S. government on issues such as market access, regulatory framework, business development and fair competition. He served (1999-2003) as a Member of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board at the White House.
Cris retired with the rank of Ambassador from the U.S. Department of State (USIA) after a 25-year career. His last position was Senior Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, 1993-1995. He served as U.S. Ambassador to Honduras, 1989-93. Prior to this posting, he was Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, 1988-89. In 1993, he also served on the Department of State's North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Task Force.
From 1986-1988, Cris served as The White House Coordinator for Public Diplomacy on Central America and was the Deputy Coordinator in the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America at the Department of State. From 1985-1986, he served as the State Department's Deputy Director of the Nicaraguan Humanitarian Assistance Office. His Foreign Service postings abroad included: Belgium, Portugal, Brazil, Soviet Union (Russia) and Honduras.
He is a member of: the Council on Foreign Relations, New York; Director, Council of the Americas, New York (1995-2002); U.S. Member, U.N. Drug Control Program Advisory Board, Vienna (1994-1997); Board of the Hispanic Council on International Relations, Washington; Advisory Commission, Florida International University's Latin America-Caribbean Center (1996-2002); Diplomatic and Retired Consular Officers Association (DACOR); American Foreign Service Association; Board, United Negro College Fund's Institute of International Public Policy; Board of Visitors, Pan American (Zamorano) Agriculture School, Honduras; Board, Save the Children, Latin America (1997-2000); Board, Foster Care Review, Florida (1998-2002); Pacific Council on International Policy, Los Angeles; Board, Pan American Development Foundation, Washington (2000-2003); Member, The Inter-American Dialogue, Washington (1998-2003); Member, ex officio, Department of Defense Reserved Forces Policy Board (2003-2005).
Published works include: "Reasonable and Proportional Security Measures on International Academic Exchange Programs" in Engaging the Arab & Islamic Worlds through Public Diplomacy, ed. W. Rugh, 2004; "Pushing Diplomacy's Limits" (1997) and "Managing Change" (1991) in Foreign Service Journal; "Central America: New Opportunities, Old Risks" in Journal of International Law and Practice; "Hey Mister Tallymon: Europe and Bananas" in Hemisphere Magazine (1992); "Warriors in Peacetime" in Journal of Small Wars & Insurgencies, Vol. 4. #3, (Winter 1993, London); New Directions for U.S. Policy: Military & Democracy in Latin America, ed. G. Marcella, 1994; "Out of the Vortex," Foreign Service Journal, July 1993; "Telecom," Journal of Commerce, June 10, 1996; "Managing Change in Central America" in Foreign Service Reader: 77 Years of Selected Articles, 1997; "Post-Cold War Foreign Service Blues," Foreign Service Journal, Dec. 1999.
Honors and Awards: State Department Superior Honor Award 1990; Superior Honor Award 1981; Meritorious Honor Award 1977, U.S. Information Agency; the Honduran Government's highest award, the Order of Morazan; University of California (Irvine) Regents' Fellow (1998-'99).
Cris is listed in Who's Who in the World, America, the South, the Southwest and Among Hispanics. He speaks Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, French and Russian. He was born in San Antonio, Texas. From 1968-1970, he served in the U.S. Army as a combat engineer. He is married to Patricia Cordova and has two children.









