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Attachés

An attaché is a person assigned to the staff of a diplomatic mission or government ministry to provide expertise in a specific field. The term derives from French attaché, meaning "attached" or "assigned." Attachés are typically professionals—military officers, economists, cultural specialists, scientists, or civil servants—who support the mission by offering specialized knowledge and handling liaison with host-country authorities.

Within an embassy or consulate, an attaché serves under the authority of the ambassador or head of

Common types include military attachés (and defense attachés in some countries), economic or commercial attachés, cultural

Historically, attachés emerged as states expanded their bureaucracies and sought specialized expertise at foreign posts. Today

mission.
Their
duties
include
monitoring
developments
in
their
area
of
specialization,
preparing
analytical
reports,
advising
senior
officials,
facilitating
cooperation
with
host
institutions,
and
assisting
with
protocol
and
representative
duties.
They
may
also
help
promote
bilateral
programs
in
areas
such
as
culture,
education,
trade,
or
science.
attachés,
scientific
or
technical
attachés,
and
consular
attachés.
Attachés
may
be
military
or
civilian
staff
and
often
hold
diplomatic
status
under
the
Vienna
Convention
on
Diplomatic
Relations.
the
exact
role
and
degree
of
authority
of
an
attaché
vary
by
country
and
mission,
but
the
core
function
remains:
to
bring
domain-specific
knowledge
to
the
diplomatic
relationship
and
to
facilitate
contact
and
cooperation
with
the
host
nation
in
that
field.