Envoy appointment underscores US bid to strengthen strategic engagement in Middle East

WASHINGTON: Tom Barrack, the US ambassador to Türkiye, would also serve as special presidential envoy to both Syria and Iraq, US President Donald Trump said on Sunday.
Trump said Washington deepens its strategic engagement with Syria and Iraq. “Our relationship with them continues to grow,” he wrote on his social media platform Truth Social.
“Tom will remain Ambassador to Türkiye, and operate with the full backing of the United States Department of State,” Trump said, praising Barrack’s performance and expressing appreciation for his “continued willingness” to serve.
Barrack was confirmed as ambassador to Türkiye in 2025.
Thomas Joseph Barrack Jr. (born April 28, 1947) is an American diplomat, private equity real estate investor and the founder and retired chairman of Colony Capital, a publicly traded real estate investment trust.
Following his US Senate confirmation, Barrack has served as United States Ambassador to Turkey since May 2025.
Barrack has for decades been a close friend of and fundraiser for U.S. President Donald Trump, representing him in television news appearances.
He was senior advisor to Trump's 2016 presidential campaign and served as the chairman of his Inaugural Committee.
In Trump's second administration, Barrack serves as the United States Ambassador to Turkey, United States Special Envoy for Syria and the United States Special Envoy for Iraq.
Barrack's grandparents were Lebanese Christians who immigrated in 1900 to the United States from Zahlé.[10][11] Barrack was raised in Culver City, California, where his father was a grocer and his mother was a secretary.
In 1969, Barrack earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Southern California (USC), where he participated on their varsity rugby team. He then attended the USC Gould School of Law, where he was an editor of the Southern California Law Review, before receiving a Juris Doctor from the University of San Diego School of Law in 1972.
Barrack's first job was at the law firm of Herbert W. Kalmbach, President Richard Nixon's personal lawyer.
In 1972, the firm sent him to Saudi Arabia. He then worked in the kingdom for the Fluor Corporation, and worked for Saudi princes.
Shortly after, he helped open diplomatic relations between Saudi Arabia and Haiti, then ruled by Jean-Claude Duvalier, at the request of investor Lonnie Dunn.
In 1982, Barrack served as deputy undersecretary of the United States Department of the Interior under James G. Watt in the Reagan administration.
The Secret Service would board its horses at Barrack's ranch when President Ronald Reagan was at his nearby Rancho del Cielo.
Watt made his resignation announcement at Barrack's ranch.
In 1985, Barrack first dealt with Donald Trump when he sold Trump a one-fifth stake in the Alexander's department stores.
In 1987, Barrack was later a principal with the Robert M. Bass Group.
In 1988, Trump agreed to pay Barrack $410 million for total ownership of the Plaza Hotel.
He later lost both properties in bankruptcy.
In 1990, Barrack founded Colony Capital, with initial investments by Bass and GE Capital, and later Eli Broad, Merrill Lynch, and Koo Chen-fu.
Barrack achieved 50% profits in his first two years by focusing on distressed properties, including the federal Resolution Trust Corporation.
He has invested some $200 million in Middle East real estate, $534 million in non-performing German real estate loans, and made a $24 million loan to photographer Annie Leibovitz.
He also owned Neverland Ranch which was once the home of mega superstar Michael Jackson.
Through Colony Capital, he runs a $25 billion portfolio of assets, from the Fairmont Raffles Hotels International hotel chain in Asia, the Aga Khan's former resort in Sardinia, Resorts International Holdings, One&Only Resorts, Atlantis, etc.
Colony American Homes was criticized for treating tenants poorly during the Great Recession, raising rents, evicting people in large numbers and failing to maintain properties.
In 2010, Barrack bought $70 million of Jared Kushner's debt on 666 Fifth Avenue.
Kushner later avoided bankruptcy when Barrack agreed to reduce his obligations after a request by Trump.
As of September 2011, Barrack was the 833rd richest person in the world, and the 375th richest in the United States, with an estimated wealth of $1.1. billion. However, he was no longer a billionaire in 2014.
In 2012, Barrack sold the Paris Saint-Germain F.C. to the Qatar Investment Authority.
In 2010, Barrack partnered with the Qatar Investment authority to purchase the film production company Miramax for $660 million.
In 2016, Barrack sold Miramax to the Qatari beIN Media Group at a fourfold profit.
In October 2017, Barrack's Colony Capital agreed to invest in The Weinstein Company to keep it afloat in light of the sexual misconduct allegations against the company's co-founder, Harvey Weinstein.
The New York Times reported that the preliminary agreement with Weinstein fell apart and the acquisition broke down, in part because Colony Capital required the deal would not enrich Weinstein.
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