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Charles Yost

Charles Woodruff Yost (November 6, 1907 – May 21, 1981) was a career U.S. Ambassador who was assigned as his country's representative to the United Nations from 1969 to 1971.

Charles Yost
9th United States Ambassador to the United Nations
In office
January 23, 1969 – February 25, 1971
PresidentRichard Nixon
Preceded byJames Russell Wiggins
Succeeded byGeorge H. W. Bush
United States Ambassador to Morocco
In office
August 6, 1958 – March 5, 1961
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byCavendish W. Cannon
Succeeded byPhilip Bonsal
United States Ambassador to Syria
In office
January 16, 1958 – February 22, 1958
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byJames S. Moose Jr.
Succeeded byRaymond A. Hare (United Arab Republic)
United States Ambassador to Laos
In office
November 1, 1954 – April 27, 1956
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byDonald R. Heath
Succeeded byJ. Graham Parsons
United States Ambassador to Thailand
Acting
In office
January 5, 1946 – July 4, 1946
PresidentHarry S. Truman
Preceded byWillys R. Peck
Succeeded byEdwin F. Stanton
Personal details
Born
Charles Woodruff Yost

(1907-11-06)November 6, 1907
Watertown, New York, U.S.
DiedMay 21, 1981(1981-05-21) (aged 73)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
EducationPrinceton University (BA)
Signature

Biography

Yost was born in Watertown, New York. He attended the Hotchkiss School, where he was a member of the class of 1924 that included Roswell Gilpatric, Paul Nitze and Chapman Rose, before graduating from Princeton University in 1928. He did postgraduate studies at the École des Hautes Études International (École pratique des hautes études) in Paris. Over the next year he traveled to Geneva, Berlin, the Soviet Union (with author Croswell Bowen), Poland, Rumania, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Spain, and Vienna.

Yost joined the U.S. Foreign Service in 1930 on the advice of former Secretary of State Robert Lansing, and served in Alexandria, Egypt as a consular officer, followed by an assignment in Poland. In 1933 he left the Foreign Service to pursue a career as a freelance foreign correspondent in Europe and a writer in New York.

After his marriage to Irena Rawicz-Oldakowska, he returned to the U.S. State Department in 1935, becoming assistant chief of the Division of Arms and Munitions Control in 1936. In 1941, he represented the State Department on the Policy Committee of the Board of Economic Warfare. Yost was appointed assistant chief of special research in 1942, and was made assistant chief of the Division of Foreign Activity Correlation in 1943. In February of the next year he became executive secretary of the Department of State Policy Committee. He attended the Dumbarton Oaks Conference from August to October 1944, when he worked on Chapters VI and VII of the United Nations Charter. He then served at the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco in April 1945 as aide to Secretary of State Edward Stettinius. In July of that year he was secretary-general of the Potsdam Conference.

In 1945 Yost was reinstated in the Foreign Service, and later that year he served as political adviser to U.S. Lieutenant General Raymond Albert Wheeler on the staff of Lord Louis Mountbatten in Kandy, Ceylon. He then became chargé d'affaires in Thailand during the short reign of Ananda Mahidol. Throughout the late 1940s and the 1950s, his assignments took him to Czechoslovakia, Austria (twice), and Greece. In 1954, he was named minister to Laos, and he became the first United States ambassador there a year later. In 1957, he was minister counselor in Paris. At the end of the same year he was named ambassador to Syria. Shortly after his appointment, Syria and Egypt formed the United Arab Republic, and the U.S. was asked to close its embassy in Syria. Yost was then sent as ambassador to Morocco in 1958.

In 1961, he began his first assignment at the United Nations as the deputy to Ambassador Adlai Stevenson. After Stevenson's death in 1965, Yost stayed on as deputy to Ambassador Arthur Goldberg. In 1964, Yost was promoted to the rank of Career Ambassador, the highest professional Foreign Service level, in recognition of especially distinguished service over a sustained period.

In 1966 he resigned from the Foreign Service to begin his career as a writer, at the Council on Foreign Relations, and as a teacher, at Columbia University.

In 1969, President Richard Nixon called Yost out of retirement to become the permanent United States representative to the United Nations. He resigned in 1971 and returned to writing, at the Brookings Institution, and teaching at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service.

Yost set forth his views in a syndicated newspaper column, for The Christian Science Monitor, and in four books — The Age of Triumph and Frustration: Modern Dialogues, The Insecurity of Nations, The Conduct and Misconduct of Foreign Relations, and History and Memory.

In 1974, Yost was awarded the Foreign Service Cup by his fellow Foreign Service officers.

In 1979, Yost was co-chairman of Americans for SALT II, a group that lobbied the Senate for passage of the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty. He was a trustee of the American University in Cairo, Egypt, and director of the Aspen Institute for cultural exchanges with Iran. He took part in the unofficial Dartmouth Conferences of United States and Soviet scholars. In 1973, he was named head of the National Committee on United States-China Relations; he visited the People's Republic of China in 1973 and 1977.

Yost died of cancer on May 21, 1981, at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C.[1]

His papers are at Princeton University Library, Mudd Library, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.[2]

Family

Yost's ancestors, who were driven out of the German Palatinate by Louis XIV's armies at the end of the 17th century, settled in the valley of the Mohawk River in New York State. Others were of Scotch-Irish origin and came to this country with the immigration that took place about the middle of the 18th century.

Yost's ancestor, Edward Howell, founded Watermill on Long Island, New York and his ancestor Abraham Cooper founded Oxbow, New York. His ancestor, Brigadier General Nicholas Herkimer, was a Revolutionary War hero.

Yost's father Nicholas, an attorney, judge and bank president was married to his mother Gertrude by Pastor Dulles, the father of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles.

In 1934, Yost married Irena Rawicz-Oldakowska in Poland. Her father was Kazimierz Ołdakowski, the pre-war director of Fabryka Broni. They had two sons, Nicholas and Casimir, and a daughter Felicity.

Career timeline

  • 1931: Vice Consul Alexandria, Egypt
  • 1932: Vice Consul Warsaw, Poland
  • 1933: Resigned from the Foreign Service and became a journalist
  • 1935:
    • 1) Progress Report Specialist at the Resettlement Administration
    • 2) Divisional Assistant, U.S. Department of State, Division of Western European Affairs
    • 3) Assistant Chief, U.S. Department of State, Office of Arms and Munitions Control
  • 1936: Division of Arms and Munitions Control
  • 1939: Assistant Chief, U.S. Department of State, Division of Controls
  • 1941:
    • 1) Assistant Chief, U.S. Department of State, Division of Exports and Defense Aid
    • 2) Assistant to the U.S. High Commissioner to the Commonwealth of the Philippines
  • 1941-42: Designated to act in Liaison between Division of European Affairs of State Department and British Empire Division of the Board of Economic Warfare
  • 1942:
  • 1943:
    • 1) Division of European Affairs
    • 2) Office of Foreign Economic Coordination, U.S. Department of State
  • 1943-44: Assistant Chief, U.S. Department of State, Division of Foreign Activity Correlation
  • 1944:
    • 1) Executive Secretary, Department of State Policy Committee
    • 2) Division of International Security and Organization
    • 3) Executive Secretary, U.S. Department of State, Joint Secretariat of the Executive Staff Committee
    • 4) Assistant to the chairman for the Dumbarton Oaks Conference
  • 1945:
    • 1) Special Assistant to the chairman, Secretary of State Stettinius, U.S. Delegation to the United Nations Conference on International Organizations, San Francisco
    • 2) Secretary-General, U.S. Delegation, Berlin Conference, Potsdam Agreement
    • 3) Assigned as U.S. Political Adviser to General Wheeler, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander to the Southeast Asia Command (SEAC), India & Ceylon
    • 4) Assigned as U.S. Political Adviser to General Thomas Terry, Commander of the American India-Burma Theater
  • 1946:
    • 1) Chargé d'affaires, Bangkok, Thailand
    • 2) U.S. Delegation to UNESCO, United Nations, Lake Success, New York
    • 3) Political Adviser to U.S. Delegation, General Assembly of the United Nations
  • 1947: First Secretary & Counselor, Prague, Czechoslovakia
  • 1947-49: Deputy High Commissioner, and First Secretary & Counselor of Legation, Vienna, Austria
  • 1949:
    • 1) Member of U.S. Delegation; Special Assistant to Ambassador at Large for Sixth Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers Meeting, Paris, France
    • 2) Member of Delegation to Fourth Regular Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations as Special Assistant to Ambassador at Large
    • 3) Director of the Office of Eastern European Affairs, Department of State
  • 1950:
    • 1) Director of the Office of Eastern European Affairs, Department of State
    • 2) Special Assistant to Ambassador at Large, Deputy Policy Adviser to the U.S. Delegation to the United Nations, New York
    • 3) European Affairs Rep., U.S. Department of State, on Policy Comm. on Immigration and Naturalization
    • 4) U.S. Department of State, Policy Planning Staff
  • 1950-53: Counselor with Personal rank of Minister, Athens, Greece
  • 1953: Deputy High Commissioner & Deputy Chief of Mission, Vienna, Austria
  • 1954: Minister, Vientiane, Laos
  • 1955-1956: Ambassador, Laos
  • 1956-57: Minister, Paris, France
  • 1957-58: Ambassador, Damascus, Syria
  • 1958: Foreign Affairs Specialist, U.S. Department of State, Policy Planning Staff
  • 1958-61: Ambassador, Rabat, Morocco
  • 1961-66: U.S. Deputy Representative to the United Nations
  • 1966:
  • 1966-69: Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
  • 1967:
    • 1) Consultant to the State Department, member of the Panel of Advisers on Near East, South Asian and International Organizations
    • 2) American Society of International Law Proceedings, Board of Review and Development: Conflict Control by Non-Violent Means (April)
    • 3) President Johnson's Special Envoy to the Middle East (May–June)
    • 4) Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Bermuda conference on the Vietnam War (December)
  • 1968:
    • 1) Head of the State Department Cyprus Study Group
    • 2) President Johnson's Special Envoy to the Middle East (July)
  • 1969-71: U.S. Representative to the United Nations, New York.[3] President of the Security Council
  • 1970-80: Member of the Dartmouth Conference Delegation
  • 1971: Resigned from the Foreign Service [1]
  • 1971-73:
    • 1) Counselor to UN Association
    • 2) Professor at Columbia University's School of International Affairs
  • 1972: U.S. presidential envoy to Egypt
  • 1973-75: President, National Committee on US-China Relations
  • 1974: Professor at Rockefeller Foundation's Villa Serbelloni Study and Conference Center in Bellagio
  • 1975: Presidential envoy to Egypt
  • 1975-81:
    • 1) Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
    • 2) Professor at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University
    • 3) Chairman, National Committee on US-China Relations
  • 1976-81: Coordinator, Aspen Institute East-West, Iran and China Activities
  • 1977: President Carter's Woodcock MIA delegation to Vietnam and Laos
  • 1978: 1969 Security Council speech on Jerusalem codified in Camp David Accord Annex[4]
  • 1979:

Associations/memberships

  • Trustee of the American University in Cairo
  • Council on Foreign Relations
  • American Academy Political and Social Sciences
  • American Society International Law
  • National Planning Association
  • Princeton Club
  • University Club
  • Century Association
  • The Trilateral Commission
  • Honorary Co-chairman UN Association of U.S. America
  • Chairman Editorial Committee UN Association VISTA magazine
  • Chairman of the Board, International House, New York City
  • American Philosophical Society
  • Visiting Committee of the Center for International Affairs (CFIA)
  • Chairman of the National Advertising Review Board
  • Editorial Board, Foreign Service Journal
  • Editorial Committee, VISTA Magazine
  • Institute for World Order
  • Executive Director of the USUN-NYC Host Country Advisory Committee
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • The Fund for Investigative Journalism
  • Member of the Dartmouth Conferences
  • Fund for Peace
  • New Directions
  • World Federalist Association
  • Co-chair Americans for SALT
  • American Council of Young Political Leaders (Board of Governors)
  • Chairman Atlantic Council Working Group on the United Nations

Honors

  • Hotchkiss Man of the Year
  • 1958: Appointed Career Minister
  • 1961: Lotus Award of Merit
  • 1964: Appointed Career Ambassador
  • 1964: Rockefeller Public Service Award
  • 1967: Order of the Distinguished Diplomatic Service Merit First Class, Republic of Korea
  • 1969: Honorary Degree, LL.D, Princeton University
  • 1971: State Department Distinguished Honor Award
  • 1974: Awarded The Foreign Service Cup
  • Honorary Degree, St. Lawrence University
  • Honorary Doctor of Laws, Hamilton College
  • Honorary Doctor of Social Science, University of Louisville

Testimony before Congress

  • 1958: Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (Historical Series), Vol. X, Eighty-Fifth Congress, Second Session- Statement and questioning of Yost to be Ambassador to Morocco
  • 1961 - February 7: Executive Session, Tuesday- Nomination of Yost to be Deputy U.S. Representative, Security Council, United Nations
  • 1963 - October 29: Amendment to the United Nations Participation Act of 1945
  • 1967 - October: United States Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Submission of the Vietnam Conflict to the United Nations
  • 1969 - January 21: United States Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Nomination of Yost to be U.S. Representative to the UN
  • 1969 - January 21: Security Council Resolution on the Establishment of UN Peacekeeping Force
  • 1970 - March 9: Expansion of UN Headquarters and Privileges and Immunities of UN
  • 1970 - April 24: Senate Foreign Relations ad hoc Special Subcommittee on the Genocide Convention
  • 1970: Policy Toward Africa for the Seventies
  • 1971 - April 23: House Committee - Expansion of United Nations Headquarters
  • 1971 - May 26: Senate Foreign Relations Committee Fulbright Hearings - Statement on Southeast Asia
  • 1972 - May 18: Committee on Foreign Relations-Subcommittee on the Near East
  • 1973 - February 22: Statement to Foreign Affairs Committee-Rhodesian situation
  • 1973 - May 11: Senate Foreign Relations Committee-International Court of Justice
  • 1973, December 5: Foreign Affairs Committee-United Nations Peacekeeping
  • 1975, May 7: Senate Foreign Affairs Committee-U.S. Role in the United Nations
  • 1975 - October 6: Foreign Affairs Committee-Further Consideration of Sinai Agreements
  • 1979: Senate Hearings on International Human Rights Treaties
  • 1979 - September 6: Senate Committee on Foreign Relations-SALT II treaty
  • 1979 - November 14: Human Rights Treaties

Oral history interviews

  • Adlai Stevenson - September 1966 (John Bartlow Martin)
  • John Foster Dulles Oral History Project – December 1966
  • Meet the Press - 1970
  • International Negotiations Project - Columbia University – May 1974
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower Library – September 1978
  • JFK Library – October 1978
  • Larry King - 1980

Writings

  • The Age of Triumph and Frustration: Modern Dialogues (Speller, 1964)
  • The Insecurity of Nations: International Relations in the Twentieth Century (Praeger, 1968)
  • The Pursuit of World Order (Villanova University Press, 1969)
  • The Conduct and Misconduct of Foreign Affairs (Random House, 1972)
  • History & Memory (Norton, 1980) - nominated for National Book Critics Circle General Non-fiction Award

Articles and papers

  • Carnegie Foundation "Bermuda" paper on Vietnam
  • "The United Nations: Crisis of Confidence and Will," Foreign Affairs Magazine, Oct., 1966
  • "Instability in International Relations," California Institute of Technology, April, 1967
  • "The Arab-Israeli War: How It Began," Foreign Affairs Magazine, Jan., 1968
  • "World Order and American Responsibility," Foreign Affairs Magazine, Oct., 1968
  • "Israel and the Arabs: The Myths that Block Peace – Atlantic Magazine, 1969[5]
  • "Last Chance for Peace in the Mideast" Life Magazine, 1971
  • "A Letter to a Soviet Friend", Life Magazine, September 24, 1971
  • "The Instruments of American Foreign Policy," Foreign Affairs Magazine, Oct., 1971
  • "The United Nations in the 1970s: a strategy for a unique era in the affairs of nations; a report, UNA-USA National Policy Panel on the United Nations in the 1970's, 1971
  • "How to Save the United Nations" Saturday Review, Dec. 14, 1974
  • "Toward Peace in the Middle East: Report of a Study Group, The Brookings Institution, 1975
  • American Foreign Policy in a New Era (Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies, 1976)
  • What future for the UN? An Atlantic Dialogue. The reactions of Western Europeans and others to the report of the Atlantic Council's Working Group on the United Nations, (written with Lincoln Bloomfield), The Atlantic Council, 1977
  • "Observing Close Encounters in the Third World" - International Security, Vol. 3, No. 1 (Summer, 1978)
  • "Contacts with the Opposition: A Symposium" – The Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University, 1979
  • "National Security Revisited," Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, October, 1980[6]
  • BCSIA, Volume 6, Number 3, Winter 1981/82 "Commentary: The Governance of International Affairs"
  • "National and Collective Responsibility: The Governance of International Affairs," Aspen Institute ‘Wye Paper,’ 1981
  • Syndicated columnist for The Washington Post
  • Syndicated columnist for The Christian Science Monitor[7]

Recordings

  • JFK Library: President's Office Files, Presidential Recordings, tape # 49 (Cuban Missile Crisis)
  • Radio Interview with Larry King (Washington, DC, 11/11/80)
  • Interview with Charles W. Yost by Charley Holmes (United Nations, 1964)

Obituaries

  • The New York Times
  • Geyelin, Philip L. (1981). "The Quintessential Professional". Princeton Alumni Weekly. 82.

From Yost biography

  • "Our Man in Morocco" Foreign Service Journal
  • "The Emergence of a Diplomat" American Diplomacy
  • "A Time of 'Great Malaise'" Foreign Service Journal

Dissertations on Yost

  • 2004: Victoria Lynn Penziner, Florida State University

"The Story Behind the Story: Experience and Identity in the Development of Palestinians Nationalism 1917-1967"

  • 2009: Ronald Ranta, University College London

"The Wasted Decade: Israel’s Policies towards the Occupied Territories 1967-1977"

  • 2010: Ronan Nestor, University College Dublin

"The Role of US Ambassador to the UN, Charles Woodruff Yost, in the Formation of the Middle East Policy of the Nixon Administration, 1969-1971"

  • 2019: Patrick Rosenow, Council of the Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Friedrich Schiller University, Jena

"The role of the Permanent Representative of the United States at the United Nations An investigation based on case studies Henry C. Lodge Jr., Charles W. Yost, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick and Madeleine K. Albright" [Die Rolle der Ständigen Vertreter der USA bei den Vereinten Nationen Eine Untersuchung anhand der Fallbeispiele Henry C. Lodge Jr., Charles W. Yost, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick und Madeleine K. Albright] https://www.db-thueringen.de/receive/dbt_mods_00038306

References

  1. ^ 'Charles Woodruff Yost, 73 Dies, Was Chief U.S. Delegate To UN,' New York Times, May 22, 1981, section 1, pg. 21
  2. ^ "Charles W. Yost Papers, 1790-2015 (Mostly 1930-1980) - Finding Aids".
  3. ^ Old Faces and New - TIME
  4. ^ "Camp David Accords". Ibiblio.org. Retrieved 2022-07-19.
  5. ^ 1969: The myths that block peace | From Occupied Palestine
  6. ^ "Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists". October 1980.
  7. ^ The Christian Science Monitor | Daily Online Newspaper

Sources

  • On Laos
    • "Some Left on Stretchers, Others on Straightjackets" - Yale Richmond (Foreign Service Journal, May 1988)
    • "Ah! La Vie en Vientiane" - James F. Prosser (CANDOER, January 2001)
    • Meeker, Oden - The Little World of Laos (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1959)
    • Menger, Matt J. - In the Valley of the Mekong: An American in Laos (Paterson, NJ St Anthony Guild Press 1970)
    • Laos: Beyond the Revolution - Edited by Joseph J.Zasloff &Y Leonard Under (St Martin's Press, New York, 1991)
    • Rives, L. Michael - The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project
  • On Thailand
    • "Staying Behind in Bangkok: The OSS and American Intelligence in Postwar Thailand" - E. Bruce Reynolds (The Journal of Intelligence History 2, Winter 2002)
    • McDonald, Alexander – Bangkok Editor (MacMillan, 1949)
    • Thailand's Secret War: OSS, SOE and the Free Thai Underground During World War II - E. Bruce Reynolds
    • "Democracy, Elections and Internal Security: U.S. Policy Toward Laos in the Late 1950s" - Koji Terachi (Rutger's University)
    • Wikipedia: King Ananda Mahidol Ananda Mahidol
  • On Vietnam
    • Hass, Richard (editor), O’Sullivan, Meghan L. (editor) - Honey and Vinegar: Incentives, Sanctions, and Foreign Policy (Brookings Institution Press 2000) Chapter 8-The United States and Vietnam: Road to Normalization - Brown, Frederick Z.
  • On the UN
    • Walton, Richard J. – The Remnants of Power: The Tragic Last Years of Adlai Stevenson (Coward-McCann, Inc., 1968)
    • Beschloss, Michael - Reaching for Glory: Lyndon Johnson’s Secret White House Tapes, 1964-1965 (Touchtone, Simon & Schuster, New York, 2001)
    • Finger, Seymour Maxwell - American Ambassadors at the UN: People, Politics, and Bureaucracy in Making Foreign Policy (UNITAR, 1992)
    • McKeever, Porter – Adlai Stevenson: His Life and Legacy (William Morrow and Company, 1989)
    • Martin, John BartlowAdlai Stevenson and the World (Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1978)
    • Oral history of Charles Easton Rothwell
    • May, Ernest R.& Zelikow, Philip D. Editors –The Kennedy Tapes: Inside the White House During the Cuban Missile Crisis – (The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1997)
    • Ambassador Christopher H. Phillips, Association for Diplomatic Studies, Foreign Affairs Oral History Program, Georgetown University
    • United States Ambassador to the United Nations – William C. Moore (Hotchkiss Alumni News, April, 1969)
    • Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Cold War International History Project. Russian Documents on the Cuban Missile Crisis/14 September-21 October 1962
    • Johnson, Walter Editor – The Papers of Adlai Stevenson: Ambassador to the United Nations, Volume VIII, 1961-1965 (Little, Brown and Company, 1979)
    • May, Ernest R.& Zelikow, Philip D. Editors – The Presidential Recordings: John F. Kennedy, The Great Crisis, Volume Three, October 22–28, 1962 (W.W.Norton & Company, 2001)
    • Foreign Relations, Organization of Foreign Policy; Information Policy; United Nations; Scientific Matters. Kennedy Library, Arthur M. Schlesinger Papers, UN Speeches, 8/2/61-8/11/61, Box WH22. U.S. Strategy in the 16th General Assembly
    • Schlesinger Jr., Arthur – A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House - (Houghton Mifflin, 1965)
    • Urquhart, Brian – Ralph Bunche: An American Odyssey (W.W. Norton & Company, 1993)
    • Harlan Cleveland Oral History, JFK Library
  • On Iran
    • Ganji, Moocher - Defying the Iranian Revolution (Praeger, 2002)
  • On the Middle East
    • "Cold War and Covert Action: The U.S. and Syria, 1945-1958" Middle East Journal, Winter 1990
    • Yaqub, Salim - Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East
    • AlRoy, Gil Carl - The Prospects of War in the Middle East (Commentary/March 1969)
    • Draper, Theordore - Israel and World Politics (Commentary/August 1967)
    • Draper, Theodore - The United States & Israel (Commentary/April 1975)
    • Nef, Donald – Warriors for Jerusalem: The Six Days that Changed the Middle East in 1967 (Amana Books, Brattleboro, Vermont, 1988)
    • Sheehan, Edward R.F. – The Arabs, Israelis, and Kissinger: A Secret History of American Diplomacy in the Middle East (Reader's Digest Press, 1976)
    • Riad, Mahmoud - The Struggle for Peace in the Middle East (Quartet Books, 1983)
    • The United States' position on Jerulsalem as stated by its ambassador January 15, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  • The Dartmouth Conferences
    • Voorhees, James – Dialogue Sustained: The Multilevel Peace Process and the Dartmouth Conference (United States Institute of Peace Press, Washington, D.C.; Kettering Foundation, 2002)
  • On Morocco
    • Nes, David, Association for Diplomatic Studies, Foreign Affairs Oral History Program, Georgetown University
  • On Syria
    • The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project
      • Jane Smiley Hart
      • Parker T. Hart
      • Curtis F. Jones
  • On Greece
    • Markezinis, Spyros - Truman Presidential Museum and Library Interviewer: Theodore A. Wilson - July 22, 1070
    • Goldbloom, Maurice - What Happened in Greece (Commentary/December 1967)
    • The Role of Britain in Greek Politics and Military Operations: 1947-1952 - Eleftheria Delaporta
    • The Economic Dimensions of the Marshall Plan in Greece, 147-1952 - Apostolos Vetsopoulos
    • The Greek Rally (1952-1955) and the Reconstruction of the Greek Capitalism - Adrianos Sagkiotis
    • Who is Afraid of the Americans? - Konstantina E. Botsiou
    • The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project
      • Norbert L. Anschutz
      • Betty Jane Peurifoy
  • On the USSR
    • Laqueur, Walter - America and the World: The Next Four Years (Commentary/March 1977)
    • Laqueur, Walter - Rewriting History (Commentary/March 1973)
  • On Human Rights
    • Laqueur, Walter - The Issue of Human Rights (Commentary/May 1977)
  • On China
    • Borg, Dorothy & Heinrichs, Waldo Editors - Uncertain Years: Chinese Relations. 1947-1950
  • On Potsdam
    • James W. Riddleberger
  • The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project
    • ALfred Leroy Atherton Jr.
    • Lucius D. Battle
    • Robert O. Blake
    • Samuel De Palma
    • Dwight Dickinson
    • C. Douglas Dillon
    • Richard Funkhouser
    • Samuel W. Lewis
    • Cecil B. Lyon
    • Robert B. Oakley
    • Mary Seymour Olmsted
    • Claiborne Pell
    • Frederick H. Sacksteder
  • Misc.
    • "Will the Balance Balance at Home" Stanley Hoffmann (Foreign Policy Magazine, Summer 1972)

Archives

  • United Nations Archives, Private Papers of the Secretary-General: U Thant: Post Retirement 1971–1974, Correspondence with Individuals and Organizations- Misc. - 03/10/1972-28/12/1972 (Series 0893, Box 11, File 5, Acc. DAG 1/5.2.9.2
  • United Nations Archives, Peace-Keeping Operations Files of the Secretary-General: U Thant: Vietnam, Correspondence with Permanent Representatives of the United States of America to the UN and USA - 09/04/1965-08/10/1970 (Series S-0871, Box 1, File 9, DAG 1/5.2.2.3.1
  • United Nations Archives, Peace-Keeping Operations. Files of the Secretary-General: U Thant: Other Countries, Laos - Visit from Harriman and Yost- 19/05/1962-19/05/1962
  • United Nations Archives, Correspondence Files of the Secretary-General: U Thant: With Heads of State, Governments, Permanent Representatives and Observers, USA - Yost, Charles W.- 21/12/1968-13/04/1971 (Series 0882, Box 5, File 1, Acc. DAG 1/5.2.3
  • United Nations Archives, Peace-Keeping Operations. Files of the Secretary-General: U Thant: Middle East, Four-Power Meetings [US, USSR, Great Britain, France] 21/06/1967-25/05/1971 (Series S-0861, Box 1, File 7, Acc. DAG 1/5.2.2.1
  • John Foster Dulles Personal Papers
  • Joseph E. Johnson Oral History

Foreign relations

  • Foreign Relations of the US, Diplomatic Papers, 1941, Vol. IV, General: The Far East
  • Foreign Relations of the US, Diplomatic Papers, 1945, Vol. I, General: The United Nations
  • Foreign Relations of the US, Diplomatic Papers, 1945, Vol. VI, The British Commonwealth, The Far East
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1946, Vol. I, General: The United Nations
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1946, Vol. VIII, The Far East
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1947, Vol. II, Council of Foreign Ministers; Germany and Austria
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1949, Vol. II, United Nations Organization
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1949, Vol. III, Council of Foreign Ministers; Germany and Austria
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1950, Vol. I, Foreign Economic Policy
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1950, Vol. V, The Near East, South Asia, and Africa
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1952–1954, Vol. VII, Germany and Austria (in two parts) Part 2
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1961–1963, Vol. XI, Cuban Missile Crisis & Aftermath. #86, #93, #112, #138-139, #153, #156, #163, #183, #210, #212-213, #220, #223, #233-234, #239, #245, #253, #256, #259
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1961–1963, Vol. XVI, Cyprus; Greece; Turkey, #33, #63, #76, #78, #207, #358, #359, #369
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1961–1963, Vol. XVII, Near East, 1961–1962, #242, #298
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1961–1963, Vol. XVIII, Near East, 1962–1963, #320
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1961–1963, Vol. XXIII, Southeast Asia
  • Foreign Relations of the US 1961–63, Volume XXV, Organization of Foreign Policy; Information Policy; United Nations; Scientific Matters, #35, #162, #165, #168, #177, #187, #207, #284, #287, #299
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1964–1968, Vol. II, Vietnam, January–June 1965: Feb. 11-March 8, #161-162, #164
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1964–1968, Vol. II: Vietnam, July 29-November, 1965, #99, #106[permanent dead link] #114, #203, #207, #278
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1964–1968, Vol. XIX, Arab-Israeli Crisis and War, 1967,#128
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1969–1976, Vol. IV, Foreign Assistance, International Development, Trade Policies, 1969–1972, #26
  • Foreign Relations of the US, 1969–1976, Vol. V, United Nations 1969–1972

charles, yost, charles, woodruff, yost, november, 1907, 1981, career, ambassador, assigned, country, representative, united, nations, from, 1969, 1971, united, states, ambassador, united, nationsin, office, january, 1969, february, 1971presidentrichard, nixonp. Charles Woodruff Yost November 6 1907 May 21 1981 was a career U S Ambassador who was assigned as his country s representative to the United Nations from 1969 to 1971 Charles Yost9th United States Ambassador to the United NationsIn office January 23 1969 February 25 1971PresidentRichard NixonPreceded byJames Russell WigginsSucceeded byGeorge H W BushUnited States Ambassador to MoroccoIn office August 6 1958 March 5 1961PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byCavendish W CannonSucceeded byPhilip BonsalUnited States Ambassador to SyriaIn office January 16 1958 February 22 1958PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byJames S Moose Jr Succeeded byRaymond A Hare United Arab Republic United States Ambassador to LaosIn office November 1 1954 April 27 1956PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byDonald R HeathSucceeded byJ Graham ParsonsUnited States Ambassador to ThailandActingIn office January 5 1946 July 4 1946PresidentHarry S TrumanPreceded byWillys R PeckSucceeded byEdwin F StantonPersonal detailsBornCharles Woodruff Yost 1907 11 06 November 6 1907Watertown New York U S DiedMay 21 1981 1981 05 21 aged 73 Washington D C U S Political partyDemocraticEducationPrinceton University BA Signature Contents 1 Biography 2 Family 3 Career timeline 4 Associations memberships 5 Honors 6 Testimony before Congress 7 Oral history interviews 8 Writings 9 Articles and papers 10 Recordings 11 Obituaries 12 From Yost biography 13 Dissertations on Yost 14 References 14 1 Sources 14 1 1 Archives 14 1 2 Foreign relationsBiography EditYost was born in Watertown New York He attended the Hotchkiss School where he was a member of the class of 1924 that included Roswell Gilpatric Paul Nitze and Chapman Rose before graduating from Princeton University in 1928 He did postgraduate studies at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes International Ecole pratique des hautes etudes in Paris Over the next year he traveled to Geneva Berlin the Soviet Union with author Croswell Bowen Poland Rumania Hungary Yugoslavia Spain and Vienna Yost joined the U S Foreign Service in 1930 on the advice of former Secretary of State Robert Lansing and served in Alexandria Egypt as a consular officer followed by an assignment in Poland In 1933 he left the Foreign Service to pursue a career as a freelance foreign correspondent in Europe and a writer in New York After his marriage to Irena Rawicz Oldakowska he returned to the U S State Department in 1935 becoming assistant chief of the Division of Arms and Munitions Control in 1936 In 1941 he represented the State Department on the Policy Committee of the Board of Economic Warfare Yost was appointed assistant chief of special research in 1942 and was made assistant chief of the Division of Foreign Activity Correlation in 1943 In February of the next year he became executive secretary of the Department of State Policy Committee He attended the Dumbarton Oaks Conference from August to October 1944 when he worked on Chapters VI and VII of the United Nations Charter He then served at the United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco in April 1945 as aide to Secretary of State Edward Stettinius In July of that year he was secretary general of the Potsdam Conference In 1945 Yost was reinstated in the Foreign Service and later that year he served as political adviser to U S Lieutenant General Raymond Albert Wheeler on the staff of Lord Louis Mountbatten in Kandy Ceylon He then became charge d affaires in Thailand during the short reign of Ananda Mahidol Throughout the late 1940s and the 1950s his assignments took him to Czechoslovakia Austria twice and Greece In 1954 he was named minister to Laos and he became the first United States ambassador there a year later In 1957 he was minister counselor in Paris At the end of the same year he was named ambassador to Syria Shortly after his appointment Syria and Egypt formed the United Arab Republic and the U S was asked to close its embassy in Syria Yost was then sent as ambassador to Morocco in 1958 In 1961 he began his first assignment at the United Nations as the deputy to Ambassador Adlai Stevenson After Stevenson s death in 1965 Yost stayed on as deputy to Ambassador Arthur Goldberg In 1964 Yost was promoted to the rank of Career Ambassador the highest professional Foreign Service level in recognition of especially distinguished service over a sustained period In 1966 he resigned from the Foreign Service to begin his career as a writer at the Council on Foreign Relations and as a teacher at Columbia University In 1969 President Richard Nixon called Yost out of retirement to become the permanent United States representative to the United Nations He resigned in 1971 and returned to writing at the Brookings Institution and teaching at Georgetown University s School of Foreign Service Yost set forth his views in a syndicated newspaper column for The Christian Science Monitor and in four books The Age of Triumph and Frustration Modern Dialogues The Insecurity of Nations The Conduct and Misconduct of Foreign Relations and History and Memory In 1974 Yost was awarded the Foreign Service Cup by his fellow Foreign Service officers In 1979 Yost was co chairman of Americans for SALT II a group that lobbied the Senate for passage of the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty He was a trustee of the American University in Cairo Egypt and director of the Aspen Institute for cultural exchanges with Iran He took part in the unofficial Dartmouth Conferences of United States and Soviet scholars In 1973 he was named head of the National Committee on United States China Relations he visited the People s Republic of China in 1973 and 1977 Yost died of cancer on May 21 1981 at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington D C 1 His papers are at Princeton University Library Mudd Library Department of Rare Books and Special Collections 2 Family EditYost s ancestors who were driven out of the German Palatinate by Louis XIV s armies at the end of the 17th century settled in the valley of the Mohawk River in New York State Others were of Scotch Irish origin and came to this country with the immigration that took place about the middle of the 18th century Yost s ancestor Edward Howell founded Watermill on Long Island New York and his ancestor Abraham Cooper founded Oxbow New York His ancestor Brigadier General Nicholas Herkimer was a Revolutionary War hero Yost s father Nicholas an attorney judge and bank president was married to his mother Gertrude by Pastor Dulles the father of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles In 1934 Yost married Irena Rawicz Oldakowska in Poland Her father was Kazimierz Oldakowski the pre war director of Fabryka Broni They had two sons Nicholas and Casimir and a daughter Felicity Career timeline Edit1931 Vice Consul Alexandria Egypt 1932 Vice Consul Warsaw Poland 1933 Resigned from the Foreign Service and became a journalist 1935 1 Progress Report Specialist at the Resettlement Administration 2 Divisional Assistant U S Department of State Division of Western European Affairs 3 Assistant Chief U S Department of State Office of Arms and Munitions Control 1936 Division of Arms and Munitions Control 1939 Assistant Chief U S Department of State Division of Controls 1941 1 Assistant Chief U S Department of State Division of Exports and Defense Aid 2 Assistant to the U S High Commissioner to the Commonwealth of the Philippines 1941 42 Designated to act in Liaison between Division of European Affairs of State Department and British Empire Division of the Board of Economic Warfare 1942 1 Assistant Chief U S Department of State Division of European Affairs Office of Foreign Territories Security Committee 2 Member of the Inter Divisional Country and Area Committees of the Advisory Committee on Problems of Foreign Relations 3 Assistant Chief U S Department of State Division of Special Research 1943 1 Division of European Affairs 2 Office of Foreign Economic Coordination U S Department of State 1943 44 Assistant Chief U S Department of State Division of Foreign Activity Correlation 1944 1 Executive Secretary Department of State Policy Committee 2 Division of International Security and Organization 3 Executive Secretary U S Department of State Joint Secretariat of the Executive Staff Committee 4 Assistant to the chairman for the Dumbarton Oaks Conference 1945 1 Special Assistant to the chairman Secretary of State Stettinius U S Delegation to the United Nations Conference on International Organizations San Francisco 2 Secretary General U S Delegation Berlin Conference Potsdam Agreement 3 Assigned as U S Political Adviser to General Wheeler Deputy Supreme Allied Commander to the Southeast Asia Command SEAC India amp Ceylon 4 Assigned as U S Political Adviser to General Thomas Terry Commander of the American India Burma Theater 1946 1 Charge d affaires Bangkok Thailand 2 U S Delegation to UNESCO United Nations Lake Success New York 3 Political Adviser to U S Delegation General Assembly of the United Nations 1947 First Secretary amp Counselor Prague Czechoslovakia 1947 49 Deputy High Commissioner and First Secretary amp Counselor of Legation Vienna Austria 1949 1 Member of U S Delegation Special Assistant to Ambassador at Large for Sixth Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers Meeting Paris France 2 Member of Delegation to Fourth Regular Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations as Special Assistant to Ambassador at Large 3 Director of the Office of Eastern European Affairs Department of State 1950 1 Director of the Office of Eastern European Affairs Department of State 2 Special Assistant to Ambassador at Large Deputy Policy Adviser to the U S Delegation to the United Nations New York 3 European Affairs Rep U S Department of State on Policy Comm on Immigration and Naturalization 4 U S Department of State Policy Planning Staff 1950 53 Counselor with Personal rank of Minister Athens Greece 1953 Deputy High Commissioner amp Deputy Chief of Mission Vienna Austria 1954 Minister Vientiane Laos 1955 1956 Ambassador Laos 1956 57 Minister Paris France 1957 58 Ambassador Damascus Syria 1958 Foreign Affairs Specialist U S Department of State Policy Planning Staff 1958 61 Ambassador Rabat Morocco 1961 66 U S Deputy Representative to the United Nations 1966 1 Resigned from the Foreign Service 2 Chairman United Nations Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East ECAFE New Delhi 3 Bureau of Near East amp South Asian Affairs State Department 1966 69 Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations 1967 1 Consultant to the State Department member of the Panel of Advisers on Near East South Asian and International Organizations 2 American Society of International Law Proceedings Board of Review and Development Conflict Control by Non Violent Means April 3 President Johnson s Special Envoy to the Middle East May June 4 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Bermuda conference on the Vietnam War December 1968 1 Head of the State Department Cyprus Study Group 2 President Johnson s Special Envoy to the Middle East July 1969 71 U S Representative to the United Nations New York 3 President of the Security Council 1970 80 Member of the Dartmouth Conference Delegation 1971 Resigned from the Foreign Service 1 1971 73 1 Counselor to UN Association 2 Professor at Columbia University s School of International Affairs 1972 U S presidential envoy to Egypt 1973 75 President National Committee on US China Relations 1974 Professor at Rockefeller Foundation s Villa Serbelloni Study and Conference Center in Bellagio 1975 Presidential envoy to Egypt 1975 81 1 Senior Fellow Brookings Institution 2 Professor at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy Georgetown University 3 Chairman National Committee on US China Relations 1976 81 Coordinator Aspen Institute East West Iran and China Activities 1977 President Carter s Woodcock MIA delegation to Vietnam and Laos 1978 1969 Security Council speech on Jerusalem codified in Camp David Accord Annex 4 1979 1 Co chairman Americans for SALT Strategic Arms Limitation Talks 2 Honorary Co chairman United Nations Association of the United StatesAssociations memberships EditTrustee of the American University in Cairo Council on Foreign Relations American Academy Political and Social Sciences American Society International Law National Planning Association Princeton Club University Club Century Association The Trilateral Commission Honorary Co chairman UN Association of U S America Chairman Editorial Committee UN Association VISTA magazine Chairman of the Board International House New York City American Philosophical Society Visiting Committee of the Center for International Affairs CFIA Chairman of the National Advertising Review Board Editorial Board Foreign Service Journal Editorial Committee VISTA Magazine Institute for World Order Executive Director of the USUN NYC Host Country Advisory Committee American Association for the Advancement of Science The Fund for Investigative Journalism Member of the Dartmouth Conferences Fund for Peace New Directions World Federalist Association Co chair Americans for SALT American Council of Young Political Leaders Board of Governors Chairman Atlantic Council Working Group on the United NationsHonors EditHotchkiss Man of the Year 1958 Appointed Career Minister 1961 Lotus Award of Merit 1964 Appointed Career Ambassador 1964 Rockefeller Public Service Award 1967 Order of the Distinguished Diplomatic Service Merit First Class Republic of Korea 1969 Honorary Degree LL D Princeton University 1971 State Department Distinguished Honor Award 1974 Awarded The Foreign Service Cup Honorary Degree St Lawrence University Honorary Doctor of Laws Hamilton College Honorary Doctor of Social Science University of LouisvilleTestimony before Congress Edit1958 Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Historical Series Vol X Eighty Fifth Congress Second Session Statement and questioning of Yost to be Ambassador to Morocco 1961 February 7 Executive Session Tuesday Nomination of Yost to be Deputy U S Representative Security Council United Nations 1963 October 29 Amendment to the United Nations Participation Act of 1945 1967 October United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Submission of the Vietnam Conflict to the United Nations 1969 January 21 United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Nomination of Yost to be U S Representative to the UN 1969 January 21 Security Council Resolution on the Establishment of UN Peacekeeping Force 1970 March 9 Expansion of UN Headquarters and Privileges and Immunities of UN 1970 April 24 Senate Foreign Relations ad hoc Special Subcommittee on the Genocide Convention 1970 Policy Toward Africa for the Seventies 1971 April 23 House Committee Expansion of United Nations Headquarters 1971 May 26 Senate Foreign Relations Committee Fulbright Hearings Statement on Southeast Asia 1972 May 18 Committee on Foreign Relations Subcommittee on the Near East 1973 February 22 Statement to Foreign Affairs Committee Rhodesian situation 1973 May 11 Senate Foreign Relations Committee International Court of Justice 1973 December 5 Foreign Affairs Committee United Nations Peacekeeping 1975 May 7 Senate Foreign Affairs Committee U S Role in the United Nations 1975 October 6 Foreign Affairs Committee Further Consideration of Sinai Agreements 1979 Senate Hearings on International Human Rights Treaties 1979 September 6 Senate Committee on Foreign Relations SALT II treaty 1979 November 14 Human Rights TreatiesOral history interviews EditAdlai Stevenson September 1966 John Bartlow Martin John Foster Dulles Oral History Project December 1966 Meet the Press 1970 International Negotiations Project Columbia University May 1974 Dwight D Eisenhower Library September 1978 JFK Library October 1978 Larry King 1980Writings EditThe Age of Triumph and Frustration Modern Dialogues Speller 1964 The Insecurity of Nations International Relations in the Twentieth Century Praeger 1968 The Pursuit of World Order Villanova University Press 1969 The Conduct and Misconduct of Foreign Affairs Random House 1972 History amp Memory Norton 1980 nominated for National Book Critics Circle General Non fiction AwardArticles and papers EditCarnegie Foundation Bermuda paper on Vietnam The United Nations Crisis of Confidence and Will Foreign Affairs Magazine Oct 1966 Instability in International Relations California Institute of Technology April 1967 The Arab Israeli War How It Began Foreign Affairs Magazine Jan 1968 World Order and American Responsibility Foreign Affairs Magazine Oct 1968 Israel and the Arabs The Myths that Block Peace Atlantic Magazine 1969 5 Last Chance for Peace in the Mideast Life Magazine 1971 A Letter to a Soviet Friend Life Magazine September 24 1971 The Instruments of American Foreign Policy Foreign Affairs Magazine Oct 1971 The United Nations in the 1970s a strategy for a unique era in the affairs of nations a report UNA USA National Policy Panel on the United Nations in the 1970 s 1971 How to Save the United Nations Saturday Review Dec 14 1974 Toward Peace in the Middle East Report of a Study Group The Brookings Institution 1975 American Foreign Policy in a New Era Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies 1976 What future for the UN An Atlantic Dialogue The reactions of Western Europeans and others to the report of the Atlantic Council s Working Group on the United Nations written with Lincoln Bloomfield The Atlantic Council 1977 Observing Close Encounters in the Third World International Security Vol 3 No 1 Summer 1978 Contacts with the Opposition A Symposium The Institute for the Study of Diplomacy Georgetown University 1979 National Security Revisited Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists October 1980 6 BCSIA Volume 6 Number 3 Winter 1981 82 Commentary The Governance of International Affairs National and Collective Responsibility The Governance of International Affairs Aspen Institute Wye Paper 1981 Syndicated columnist for The Washington Post Syndicated columnist for The Christian Science Monitor 7 Recordings EditJFK Library President s Office Files Presidential Recordings tape 49 Cuban Missile Crisis Radio Interview with Larry King Washington DC 11 11 80 Interview with Charles W Yost by Charley Holmes United Nations 1964 Obituaries EditThe New York Times Geyelin Philip L 1981 The Quintessential Professional Princeton Alumni Weekly 82 From Yost biography Edit Our Man in Morocco Foreign Service Journal The Emergence of a Diplomat American Diplomacy A Time of Great Malaise Foreign Service JournalDissertations on Yost Edit2004 Victoria Lynn Penziner Florida State University The Story Behind the Story Experience and Identity in the Development of Palestinians Nationalism 1917 1967 2009 Ronald Ranta University College London The Wasted Decade Israel s Policies towards the Occupied Territories 1967 1977 2010 Ronan Nestor University College Dublin The Role of US Ambassador to the UN Charles Woodruff Yost in the Formation of the Middle East Policy of the Nixon Administration 1969 1971 2019 Patrick Rosenow Council of the Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences Friedrich Schiller University Jena The role of the Permanent Representative of the United States at the United Nations An investigation based on case studies Henry C Lodge Jr Charles W Yost Jeane J Kirkpatrick and Madeleine K Albright Die Rolle der Standigen Vertreter der USA bei den Vereinten Nationen Eine Untersuchung anhand der Fallbeispiele Henry C Lodge Jr Charles W Yost Jeane J Kirkpatrick und Madeleine K Albright https www db thueringen de receive dbt mods 00038306References Edit Charles Woodruff Yost 73 Dies Was Chief U S Delegate To UN New York Times May 22 1981 section 1 pg 21 Charles W Yost Papers 1790 2015 Mostly 1930 1980 Finding Aids Old Faces and New TIME Camp David Accords Ibiblio org Retrieved 2022 07 19 1969 The myths that block peace From Occupied Palestine Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists October 1980 The Christian Science Monitor Daily Online Newspaper Sources Edit On Laos Some Left on Stretchers Others on Straightjackets Yale Richmond Foreign Service Journal May 1988 Ah La Vie en Vientiane James F Prosser CANDOER January 2001 Meeker Oden The Little World of Laos Charles Scribner s Sons New York 1959 Menger Matt J In the Valley of the Mekong An American in Laos Paterson NJ St Anthony Guild Press 1970 Laos Beyond the Revolution Edited by Joseph J Zasloff amp Y Leonard Under St Martin s Press New York 1991 Rives L Michael The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project On Thailand Staying Behind in Bangkok The OSS and American Intelligence in Postwar Thailand E Bruce Reynolds The Journal of Intelligence History 2 Winter 2002 McDonald Alexander Bangkok Editor MacMillan 1949 Thailand s Secret War OSS SOE and the Free Thai Underground During World War II E Bruce Reynolds Democracy Elections and Internal Security U S Policy Toward Laos in the Late 1950s Koji Terachi Rutger s University Wikipedia King Ananda Mahidol Ananda Mahidol On Vietnam Hass Richard editor O Sullivan Meghan L editor Honey and Vinegar Incentives Sanctions and Foreign Policy Brookings Institution Press 2000 Chapter 8 The United States and Vietnam Road to Normalization Brown Frederick Z On the UN Walton Richard J The Remnants of Power The Tragic Last Years of Adlai Stevenson Coward McCann Inc 1968 Beschloss Michael Reaching for Glory Lyndon Johnson s Secret White House Tapes 1964 1965 Touchtone Simon amp Schuster New York 2001 Finger Seymour Maxwell American Ambassadors at the UN People Politics and Bureaucracy in Making Foreign Policy UNITAR 1992 McKeever Porter Adlai Stevenson His Life and Legacy William Morrow and Company 1989 Martin John Bartlow Adlai Stevenson and the World Anchor Press Doubleday 1978 Oral history of Charles Easton Rothwell May Ernest R amp Zelikow Philip D Editors The Kennedy Tapes Inside the White House During the Cuban Missile Crisis The Belknap Press of Harvard University 1997 Ambassador Christopher H Phillips Association for Diplomatic Studies Foreign Affairs Oral History Program Georgetown University United States Ambassador to the United Nations William C Moore Hotchkiss Alumni News April 1969 Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Cold War International History Project Russian Documents on the Cuban Missile Crisis 14 September 21 October 1962 Johnson Walter Editor The Papers of Adlai Stevenson Ambassador to the United Nations Volume VIII 1961 1965 Little Brown and Company 1979 May Ernest R amp Zelikow Philip D Editors The Presidential Recordings John F Kennedy The Great Crisis Volume Three October 22 28 1962 W W Norton amp Company 2001 Foreign Relations Organization of Foreign Policy Information Policy United Nations Scientific Matters Kennedy Library Arthur M Schlesinger Papers UN Speeches 8 2 61 8 11 61 Box WH22 U S Strategy in the 16th General Assembly Schlesinger Jr Arthur A Thousand Days John F Kennedy in the White House Houghton Mifflin 1965 Urquhart Brian Ralph Bunche An American Odyssey W W Norton amp Company 1993 Joseph Johnson UN interview 1985 Harlan Cleveland Oral History JFK Library On Iran Ganji Moocher Defying the Iranian Revolution Praeger 2002 On the Middle East Cold War and Covert Action The U S and Syria 1945 1958 Middle East Journal Winter 1990 Yaqub Salim Containing Arab Nationalism The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East AlRoy Gil Carl The Prospects of War in the Middle East Commentary March 1969 Draper Theordore Israel and World Politics Commentary August 1967 Draper Theodore The United States amp Israel Commentary April 1975 Nef Donald Warriors for Jerusalem The Six Days that Changed the Middle East in 1967 Amana Books Brattleboro Vermont 1988 Sheehan Edward R F The Arabs Israelis and Kissinger A Secret History of American Diplomacy in the Middle East Reader s Digest Press 1976 Riad Mahmoud The Struggle for Peace in the Middle East Quartet Books 1983 The United States position on Jerulsalem as stated by its ambassador Archived January 15 2005 at the Wayback Machine The Dartmouth Conferences Voorhees James Dialogue Sustained The Multilevel Peace Process and the Dartmouth Conference United States Institute of Peace Press Washington D C Kettering Foundation 2002 On Morocco Nes David Association for Diplomatic Studies Foreign Affairs Oral History Program Georgetown University On Syria The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project Jane Smiley Hart Parker T Hart Curtis F Jones On Greece Markezinis Spyros Truman Presidential Museum and Library Interviewer Theodore A Wilson July 22 1070 Goldbloom Maurice What Happened in Greece Commentary December 1967 The Role of Britain in Greek Politics and Military Operations 1947 1952 Eleftheria Delaporta The Economic Dimensions of the Marshall Plan in Greece 147 1952 Apostolos Vetsopoulos The Greek Rally 1952 1955 and the Reconstruction of the Greek Capitalism Adrianos Sagkiotis Who is Afraid of the Americans Konstantina E Botsiou The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project Norbert L Anschutz Betty Jane Peurifoy On the USSR Laqueur Walter America and the World The Next Four Years Commentary March 1977 Laqueur Walter Rewriting History Commentary March 1973 On Human Rights Laqueur Walter The Issue of Human Rights Commentary May 1977 On China Borg Dorothy amp Heinrichs Waldo Editors Uncertain Years Chinese Relations 1947 1950 On Potsdam James W Riddleberger The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project ALfred Leroy Atherton Jr Lucius D Battle Robert O Blake Samuel De Palma Dwight Dickinson C Douglas Dillon Richard Funkhouser Samuel W Lewis Cecil B Lyon Robert B Oakley Mary Seymour Olmsted Claiborne Pell Frederick H Sacksteder Misc Will the Balance Balance at Home Stanley Hoffmann Foreign Policy Magazine Summer 1972 Archives Edit United Nations Archives Private Papers of the Secretary General U Thant Post Retirement 1971 1974 Correspondence with Individuals and Organizations Misc 03 10 1972 28 12 1972 Series 0893 Box 11 File 5 Acc DAG 1 5 2 9 2 United Nations Archives Peace Keeping Operations Files of the Secretary General U Thant Vietnam Correspondence with Permanent Representatives of the United States of America to the UN and USA 09 04 1965 08 10 1970 Series S 0871 Box 1 File 9 DAG 1 5 2 2 3 1 United Nations Archives Peace Keeping Operations Files of the Secretary General U Thant Other Countries Laos Visit from Harriman and Yost 19 05 1962 19 05 1962 United Nations Archives Correspondence Files of the Secretary General U Thant With Heads of State Governments Permanent Representatives and Observers USA Yost Charles W 21 12 1968 13 04 1971 Series 0882 Box 5 File 1 Acc DAG 1 5 2 3 United Nations Archives Peace Keeping Operations Files of the Secretary General U Thant Middle East Four Power Meetings US USSR Great Britain France 21 06 1967 25 05 1971 Series S 0861 Box 1 File 7 Acc DAG 1 5 2 2 1 John Foster Dulles Personal Papers Joseph E Johnson Oral HistoryForeign relations Edit Foreign Relations of the US Diplomatic Papers 1941 Vol IV General The Far East Foreign Relations of the US Diplomatic Papers 1945 Vol I General The United Nations Foreign Relations of the US Diplomatic Papers 1945 Vol VI The British Commonwealth The Far East Foreign Relations of the US 1946 Vol I General The United Nations Foreign Relations of the US 1946 Vol VIII The Far East Foreign Relations of the US 1947 Vol II Council of Foreign Ministers Germany and Austria Foreign Relations of the US 1949 Vol II United Nations Organization Foreign Relations of the US 1949 Vol III Council of Foreign Ministers Germany and Austria Foreign Relations of the US 1950 Vol I Foreign Economic Policy Foreign Relations of the US 1950 Vol V The Near East South Asia and Africa Foreign Relations of the US 1952 1954 Vol VII Germany and Austria in two parts Part 2 Foreign Relations of the US 1961 1963 Vol XI Cuban Missile Crisis amp Aftermath 86 93 112 138 139 153 156 163 183 210 212 213 220 223 233 234 239 245 253 256 259 Foreign Relations of the US 1961 1963 Vol XVI Cyprus Greece Turkey 33 63 76 78 207 358 359 369 Foreign Relations of the US 1961 1963 Vol XVII Near East 1961 1962 242 298 Foreign Relations of the US 1961 1963 Vol XVIII Near East 1962 1963 320 Foreign Relations of the US 1961 1963 Vol XXIII Southeast Asia Foreign Relations of the US 1961 63 Volume XXV Organization of Foreign Policy Information Policy United Nations Scientific Matters 35 162 165 168 177 187 207 284 287 299 Foreign Relations of the US 1964 1968 Vol II Vietnam January June 1965 Feb 11 March 8 161 162 164 Foreign Relations of the US 1964 1968 Vol II Vietnam July 29 November 1965 99 106 permanent dead link 114 203 207 278 Foreign Relations of the US 1964 1968 Vol XIX Arab Israeli Crisis and War 1967 128 Foreign Relations of the US 1969 1976 Vol IV Foreign Assistance International Development Trade Policies 1969 1972 26 Foreign Relations of the US 1969 1976 Vol V United Nations 1969 1972Diplomatic postsPreceded byWillys R Peck United States Ambassador to ThailandActing1946 Succeeded byEdwin F StantonPreceded byDonald R Heath United States Ambassador to Laos1954 1956 Succeeded byJ Graham ParsonsPreceded byJames S Moose Jr United States Ambassador to Syria1958 Succeeded byRaymond A Hareas United States Ambassador to the United Arab RepublicPreceded byCavendish W Cannon United States Ambassador to Morocco1958 1961 Succeeded byPhilip BonsalPreceded byJames Russell Wiggins United States Ambassador to the United Nations1969 1971 Succeeded byGeorge H W Bush Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Yost amp oldid 1135607113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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