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Jack F. Matlock Jr.

Jack Foust Matlock Jr. (born October 1, 1929)[1] is an American former ambassador, career Foreign Service Officer, teacher, historian, and linguist. He was a specialist in Soviet affairs during some of the most tumultuous years of the Cold War, and served as the U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union from 1987 to 1991.

Jack F. Matlock Jr.
United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union
In office
April 6, 1987 – August 11, 1991
PresidentRonald Reagan
George H. W. Bush
Preceded byArthur A. Hartman
Succeeded byRobert S. Strauss
United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia
In office
September 28, 1981 – September 20, 1983
PresidentRonald Reagan
Preceded byFrancis J. Meehan
Succeeded byWilliam H. Luers
Personal details
Born
Jack Foust Matlock Jr.

(1929-10-01) October 1, 1929 (age 94)
Greensboro, North Carolina, U.S.
Spouses
  • (m. 1949; died 2019)
  • Grace Baliunas Austin
    (m. 2020)
Children5
Alma materDuke University
Columbia University
ProfessionDiplomat, educator, historian, linguist

Matlock became interested in Russia as a Duke University undergraduate, and after studies at Columbia University and a stint as a Russian-language instructor at Dartmouth College, entered the Foreign Service in 1956. His 35-year career encompassed much of the Cold War period between the Soviet Union and the United States. His first assignment to Moscow was in 1961, and it was from the embassy there that he experienced the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, helping to translate diplomatic messages between the leaders. The next year he was posted to West Africa, and he later served in East Africa, during the post-colonial period of superpower rivalry.

At the beginning of détente, he was director of Soviet affairs in the State Department, and began to participate in the summit meetings between the leaders, eventually attending all but one of the U.S.–Soviet summits held in the 20-year period 1972–91. Matlock was back in Moscow in 1974, serving in the number two position in the embassy for four years. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in early 1980 ended the period of reduced tensions. Matlock was assigned to Moscow again in 1981 as acting ambassador during the first part of Ronald Reagan's presidency. Reagan appointed him as ambassador to Czechoslovakia and later asked him to return to Washington in 1983 to work at the National Security Council, with the assignment to develop a negotiating strategy to end the arms race. When Mikhail Gorbachev became the leader of the Soviet Union in 1985, arms negotiations and summit meetings resumed. Matlock was appointed ambassador to the Soviet Union in 1987 and saw the last years of the Soviet Union before he retired from the Foreign Service in 1991.

After leaving the Foreign Service, he wrote an account of the end of the Soviet Union titled Autopsy on an Empire,[2] followed by an account of the end of the Cold War titled Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended,[3] establishing his reputation as a historian. He joined the faculty of the Institute for Advanced Study and he went on to teach diplomacy at several New England colleges. In 1998, Matlock was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[4] He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

Biography edit

Born in 1929 in Greensboro, North Carolina, Jack Matlock graduated from Greensboro Senior High School (see Grimsley High School) in 1946, married Rebecca Burrum in 1949, graduated summa cum laude from Duke University in 1950, and later earned an M.A. from Columbia University in 1952. He taught Russian language and literature at Dartmouth College from 1953 to 1956.[5]

He joined the Foreign Service in 1956, and served in Vienna, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Moscow, Accra, Zanzibar, and Dar es Salaam. He was Director of Soviet Affairs in the State Department (1971–74), Diplomat in Residence at Vanderbilt University (1978–79), and deputy director of the Foreign Service Institute (1979–80). He served as U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia[6] (1981–83) and as Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and Senior Director for European and Soviet Affairs[7] on the National Security Council Staff (1983–86). His languages are Czech, French, German, Russian, and Swahili.[6]

Matlock was US President Ronald Reagan's choice for the position of ambassador to the Soviet Union,[8] serving from 1987 to 1991. His previous tours in Moscow were as Vice Consul and Third Secretary (1961–1963), Minister Counsellor and Deputy Chief of Mission (1974–1978), and Chargé d'Affaires ad interim (1981).[5]

After he retired from the Foreign Service in 1991, Matlock reentered the academic world, becoming the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor of the Practice of International Diplomacy at Columbia. After five years in that position he moved to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where he was George F. Kennan Professor from 1996 to 2001. Matlock has held visiting appointments at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, at Hamilton College, at the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs[9] and at Mount Holyoke College.[10] He has been awarded honorary doctorates by Greensboro College, Albright College and Connecticut College.[11] Matlock completed his dissertation and received his Ph.D. from the Columbia University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at their commencement ceremony on May 22, 2013.[12]

Together, Jack and Rebecca Matlock had five children and three grandchildren. In later years they divided their time between a home in Princeton and her family's farm in Booneville, Tennessee.[5] Rebecca passed away in 2019 and Jack subsequently married Grace Baliunas Austin.[13]

Russian captivation edit

By his own account,[14] Matlock became captivated by Russia having read Dostoyevsky as an undergraduate at Duke University. He went on to study Russian language and area studies at the Russian Institute at Columbia University, and became convinced that the principal challenge of American diplomacy in the post World War II period would be dealing with the Soviet Union. After his 1953 appointment to a position as Russian Instructor at Dartmouth College, he supplemented his income by preparing an index[15] to Joseph Stalin's collected works on contract with the State Department. Because in 1956 the Soviet Union was a closed society, he decided his best chance to get to know Russia was to join the Foreign Service and become a diplomat. His ultimate career goal was clear from the beginning:

…when I entered the Foreign Service I shocked a lot of people by what seemed to be overweening ambition when I was asked "What do you want out of the Foreign Service?" I stated frankly, "I want to be the American ambassador to the Soviet Union."[14]

Moscow: as Third Secretary edit

After a tour in Vienna, Austria and Russian language training at the U.S. Army Russian Institute in Oberammergau, Matlock arrived in Moscow for the first time in 1961. Initially a Vice Consul, Matlock met with individuals seeking to visit or emigrate to the United States. His most famous case was Lee Harvey Oswald, who applied for a repatriation loan to return to the United States after having previously moved to the Soviet Union.[16] Indeed, according to the records received by the Warren Commission, in May 1962, Jack Matlock conducted the exit interview which enabled the Oswald family to leave the USSR and return to the USA.

After a year, Matlock was promoted to Third Secretary in the Political Section. American foreign policy with regard to the Soviet Union, known as containment, had been articulated in 1947 by George F. Kennan, who was later to become a good friend of Matlock's.[14] The American policy was basically to contain the spread of Communism, in the expectation that it would eventually collapse of internal contradictions. This did not prevent discussions between the Superpowers. In June 1961, President John F. Kennedy and First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev met in Vienna, and in December the United Nations General Assembly approved a draft joint resolution on principles for negotiating disarmament.[17] This period also saw the beginnings of U.S. - U.S.S.R. cultural exchanges, notably the visit of poet Robert Frost to Moscow.[18]

The containment policy was tested during the October 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. Matlock, along with Richard Davies and Herbert Okun, translated communications between President John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev.[16]

Ghana and Tanzania edit

In late 1963, the Matlocks left Moscow for West Africa, arriving in Accra, Ghana. Kwame Nkrumah had become the first president of newly independent Ghana and post-colonial Africa was to be a venue for competition between the U.S. and Soviet Union for influence.[19]

In 1967, Matlock was sent to East Africa to serve on Zanzibar as consul.[20] It was his first opportunity to be head of a Foreign Service post. His predecessor as consul,[21] Frank Carlucci, was later to become Secretary of Defense,[22] and his successor, Thomas R. Pickering, was later to become Ambassador to the U.N.[23]

Matlock's next assignment was as Deputy Chief of Mission in the capital of Tanzania, Dar es Salaam. Even in Africa, knowledge of Soviet Affairs proved useful. With Leonid Brezhnev in power, Soviet foreign policy as of 1968 was dictated by the Brezhnev Doctrine, which held that, once a country became Communist, it was never to leave the Soviet sphere of influence.[24]

Washington: as Director of Soviet Affairs edit

In 1971 Matlock became Director of Soviet Affairs in the State Department. During Richard Nixon's presidency, a period known as détente, there was a reduction of Cold War tension.[24] Matlock participated in the negotiation of arms control treaties and other bilateral agreements.[25] In fact, he attended every one of the U.S.-Soviet summits for the 20-year period 1972–1991, with the exception of the 1979 Carter - Brezhnev summit.[26]

Summit Meetings 1972–79
Leaders Topic Venue Dates Reference
Nixon - Brezhnev SALT I and ABM Treaties Moscow May 26, 1972 [1]
Nixon - Brezhnev Official Visit Washington June 18–26, 1973 [2]
Nixon - Brezhnev Official Visit Moscow, Simferopol, Minsk June 27-July 3, 1974 [3]
Ford - Brezhnev SALT I Vladivostok November 23, 1974 [4]
Ford - Brezhnev Helsinki Final Act Helsinki August 1, 1975 [5]
Carter - Brezhnev SALT II Treaty Vienna June 16–18, 1979 [6]

Moscow: as Deputy Chief of Mission edit

After four years in Washington, he spent four years as Deputy Chief of Mission (DCM), the number two position, at Embassy Moscow. These years cemented his reputation within the State Department as a Soviet expert. In early 1976, the State Department made public the fact that the Soviet Union had been beaming microwaves at the Moscow Embassy from a nearby building for many years.[27] This caused concern about possible health effects of the low-level microwave radiation. Ironically, it was Soviet research that documented the psychological symptoms of sensitivity to microwave exposure. In the United States, the standards for safe exposure to microwaves were much more lenient than in the Soviet Union.[28]

The August 26, 1977 ABC Evening News covered the story of a major fire at the embassy.[29] Despite the severity of the fire, all personnel were evacuated safely, and the efforts of the embassy staff elicited a commendation from President Jimmy Carter.[30] Former KGB agent Victor Sheymov testified before Congress in 1998 that the fire was deliberately induced by the Soviets in an effort to gain access to sensitive areas by agents posing as firemen.[31]

Stateside edit

Matlock returned to the United States and taught for a year at Vanderbilt University under the 'Diplomats in Residence' program. The following year, he came to Washington DC to take the number two position at the Foreign Service Institute, the State Department's language training school.[9]

In January 1980, in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, President Carter postponed consideration of the SALT-2 Treaty and imposed a trade embargo.[17] Also in 1980, the new embassy under construction in Moscow was found to be so riddled with listening devices that it would be unusable for secure work.[32]

Moscow: as Chargé d'Affaires edit

Matlock returned to Moscow in 1981 as acting Ambassador, or Chargé d'Affaires. By April 24, President Reagan had cancelled the export embargo, and trade resumed.[17] Matlock signalled the American desire for constructive engagement with the Soviets:

We are seeking an active dialogue on all levels. But a dialogue is useful only if it is candid, and we must learn not to take offense at candor but to use it to help us understand each other.[33] - Jack F. Matlock Jr. (New York Times Quote of the Day for July 5, 1981)

On August 6, 1981, President Reagan ordered the development of a neutron bomb. While contentious, this had the desired effect of bringing the Soviets to the bargaining table, and negotiations on limiting nuclear weapons in Europe started on November 30.[17]

Czechoslovakia: as Ambassador edit

In late 1980 Matlock had been appointed Ambassador to Czechoslovakia by President Jimmy Carter. However, the appointment was not ratified by the Senate before Carter's election loss, and so it was with Ronald Reagan's re-appointment in 1981 that he became Ambassador to Czechoslovakia. During his tenure, he was able to help resolve a major impediment to good relations: the return of 18.4 tons of gold that had been looted by the Nazis in World War II and kept, ever since its recovery by Allied forces, in American and British banks.[34]

On March 23, 1983, President Reagan announced the Strategic Defense Initiative, a ground and space-based weapons system designed to protect from nuclear attack.[17] Matlock continued to advise the President on policy toward the Soviet Union and on September 1, 1983, when the Soviets shot down commercial flight KAL 007, Matlock returned to Washington to work with White House officials.[16]

Washington: National Security Council edit

Reagan appointed Matlock to the position of Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director of European and Soviet Affairs in the National Security Council (NSC) in order to develop a negotiating strategy to end the arms race.[14][35] Earlier in the year, the long-standing containment strategy toward the U.S.S.R. had been modified by Matlock's predecessor Richard Pipes to include bringing internal pressure on the Soviets while conducting negotiations in the mutual interest.[36] In following years, discussions with the Soviets were conducted under Matlock's "Four-Part Agenda" including Human Rights, Regional Issues, Arms Control, and Bilateral Issues.[37]

On November 25, 1983, Soviet leader Yuri Andropov announced the resumption of nuclear missile deployment in the western U.S.S.R., a sign of the increased tension in the relationship.[17] The thaw in relations can be taken to begin with Ronald Reagan's January 16, 1984 speech declaring that the U.S. and U.S.S.R. had "common interests and the foremost among them is to avoid war and reduce the level of arms" in which he added that "I support a zero option for all nuclear arms."[38] While the speech was commonly seen as propaganda, Lawrence S. Wittner, professor of history at the State University of New York - Albany says of it that "a number of officials--including its writer, Jack Matlock Jr.--have contended that it was meant to be taken seriously by Soviet leaders."[39] On June 30, 1984, the Soviets offered to start negotiations on nuclear and space-based weapons.[17]

Gorbachev period edit

Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union on March 11, 1985, and the next day negotiations on nuclear and space-based weapons began in Geneva. A few weeks later, he proposed a moratorium on the development of nuclear and space weapons during the period of negotiations, and in July, he proposed to ban nuclear testing. Reagan rejected the proposals.[17]

Gorbachev began a period of internal economic restructuring, known as perestroika, and agreed to a series of summits with the American president. Matlock was instrumental in preparing Reagan for his first summit with Gorbachev, arranging for specialists within the government to write a "Soviet Union 101" course of 21 papers on Russia for Reagan to study. Matlock also participated in a mock summit, playing the role of Gorbachev, allowing Reagan to practice the encounter in advance.[40]

 
Geneva Summit, with Matlock seated at the far end of the table
Summit Meetings 1985–91
Leaders Topic Venue Dates Reference
Reagan - Gorbachev Geneva Summit[41] Geneva November 19–21, 1985 [7]
Reagan - Gorbachev Iceland Summit Reykjavík October 11–12, 1986 [8]
Reagan - Gorbachev INF Treaty[42] Washington December 7–10, 1987 [9]
Reagan - Gorbachev INF Treaty ratification[43] Moscow June 1, 1988 [10]
Reagan - Gorbachev End of Class Struggle[24] New York December 7, 1988 [11]
Bush - Gorbachev Malta Summit[44] Malta December 2–3, 1989 [12]
Bush - Gorbachev Bilateral Agreements Washington May 30-June 3, 1990 [13]
Bush - Gorbachev Persian Gulf War Helsinki September 8–9, 1990 [14]
Bush - Gorbachev START I Treaty[45] Moscow July 31, 1991 [15]

Speaking at a Chautauqua conference in Jūrmala, Latvia in June 1986,[46] Matlock told the crowd that the United States did not recognize the incorporation of the Baltic States into the Soviet Union. His remarks are credited by Dainis Īvāns, leader of the Popular Front of Latvia, with galvanizing the independence movement in Latvia.[47]

U.S.-Soviet relations took a turn for the worse with the Soviet's arrest of U.S. reporter Nicholas Daniloff, evidently for use as a bargaining chip in response to the August 30, 1986 arrest of suspected KGB agent Gennadiy Zakharov. Since Daniloff was not engaged in espionage, Matlock advised taking a hard line with the Soviets. While charges against Daniloff were dropped, a diplomatic row ensued, leading by the end of October, to the expulsion of 100 Soviets, including 80 suspected intelligence officers. The U.S. lost 10 diplomats from Embassy Moscow, along with all 260 of the Russian support staff.[48]

Moscow: as Ambassador edit

In April 1987 Reagan appointed Matlock as Ambassador to the Soviet Union. Conditions at the Embassy were tense, as Marine Sergeant Clayton Lonetree had been found to have compromised Embassy security. Within a few months of the Lonetree scandal, all U.S. intelligence assets in the Soviet Union had been exposed. The Americans suspected that the security breach had meant that the Embassy code room was no longer secure and worked frantically to determine how.[49] It was not until 1994 that Aldrich Ames, a mole within the CIA, was caught.[50] Another mole, Robert Hanssen, this time within the FBI, was caught only in 2001.[51]

During 1987, relations improved steadily, with U.S. military inspectors present at Soviet military manoeuvres, an agreement to establish centers on Reducing Nuclear Threat, and a first round of negotiations aimed at banning nuclear tests.[17] The thaw in relations was reflected in the cultural sphere. Matlock's invitation to ballerina Maya Plisetskaya to attend a reception at Spaso House provided a way for Matlock to judge Gorbachev's intentions, as earlier Soviet leaders would have considered it a provocation.[52]

A second embassy fire in February 1988 damaged several floors of the chancery.[53]

Improvements in relations continued during the year, with two summit meetings, the first in Moscow and the second on Governor's Island in New York. An earthquake struck Armenia during the second summit, cutting it short. However, a U.S. offer of assistance to the victims was accepted by Gorbachev, and became the first official assistance by the U.S. since World War II.[17]

The Berlin Wall fell on November 9, 1989, and on November 15, the U.S. and U.S.S.R. submitted a joint resolution to the United Nations on the Consolidation of International Peace, Security and Cooperation, the first such joint initiative. A December meeting in Malta brought Gorbachev and George H. W. Bush together for their first summit.[17]

The June 1990 summit in Washington brought several bilateral agreements, covering chemical weapons, trade, aviation, grain, maritime boundaries, peaceful uses of atomic energy, ocean exploration, student exchanges, and customs cooperation. The September meeting in Helsinki provided a venue for discussion of the Persian Gulf War.[17]

A third fire in the embassy occurred in April 1991, and this time the KGB may have managed to send in agents disguised as firefighters.[54]

In June 1991, Matlock, received word of a coup planned against Gorbachev, and warned him. It was to no avail; shortly after his July summit with Bush and 8 days after the end of Matlock's term, Gorbachev was briefly removed from power by the August 1991 coup.[25]

The Soviet Union collapsed by the end of 1991,[55] just a few months after Matlock, having fulfilled his ambition when he joined the Foreign Service, retired from a diplomatic career spanning 35 years.[9]

End of the Soviet Union and the Cold War edit

External videos
  Presentation by Matlock on Autopsy on an Empire, November 21, 1995, C-SPAN
  Booknotes interview with Matlock on Reagan and Gorbachev, September 26, 2004, C-SPAN
  After Words interview with Matlock on Superpower Illusions, April 3, 2010, C-SPAN

After retirement from the Foreign Service, Matlock began work on his magnum opus, Autopsy on an Empire: The American Ambassador's Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union.[2] This 836 page book details the final years of the Soviet Union, and is considered by many to be the definitive insider's guide to the subject.[56]

A subsequent book, Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended[3] describes the relationship of the two men and their efforts to reach agreement on arms reductions between the superpowers. Matlock takes the position that the military build-up by Ronald Reagan in the early-1980s has contributed to the inaccurate characterization of Reagan as a war hawk. The quote atop the first page of Reagan and Gorbachev is by Ronald Reagan, speaking in 1981 during the beginnings of a one trillion dollar defense spending surge, that states "I've always recognized that ultimately there's got to be a settlement, a solution."[57]

Reagan, according to Matlock, never altered from his goals as annunciated at his first press conference as president when he stated that, appearances to the contrary, he was in favor of "an actual reduction in the numbers of nuclear weapons."[58] This would contradict the claims of Reagan-victory-school proponents such as Peter Schweitzer.[59]

His third book, Superpower Illusions: How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray--And How to Return to Reality,[60] published in 2010, provides an analysis of the post Cold War period along with his policy prescriptions.

Teaching diplomacy edit

 
Matlock speaking at UCLA in November 2007

Matlock has taught diplomacy at Duke University, Princeton University, Columbia University and Hamilton College. In a 1997 interview, Matlock offers some advice to prospective diplomats: have an optimistic nature, get a liberal education, do not expect to change the world, know the country, know your own country, faithfully represent your government, find the mutual interests, and remember that timing is everything.[14]

Matlock also gives his views on one of the basic distinctions in politics:

I don't see much difference between a communist regime and a fascist regime. In fact, I think one of the greatest intellectual confusions that many have had over these decades is the whole right and left thing -- fascists are on the right, communists are on the left. Nonsense! They come together and overlap, and we're seeing this in Russia today where the allies are the nationalistic chauvinists and the communists. They are natural allies because they are authoritarians by nature. And more than authoritarians, they tend to be totalitarians, which means that they tend to destroy all of the elements of the civil society. To me that's much more important than whether you're philosophically right or left. You know, are you willing to create and live in a civil society, in an open society, or not? That to me is the basic issue.[14]

U.S. policy and politics edit

Since leaving government service, Matlock has occasionally joined with other experts to criticize U.S. foreign policy. On June 26, 1997, he signed an Open Letter to President Bill Clinton criticizing plans for NATO expansion.[61] His reason for opposition, as given in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was his belief that NATO expansion would preclude significant nuclear arms reduction with Russia, and consequently increase the risk of a nuclear attack by terrorists.[62]

Matlock drew the ire of many Republicans during the 2004 presidential election campaign when he signed the Official Statement of Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change, which criticized the policies of President George W. Bush and endorsed Senator John Kerry for president.[63]

On Jan 4, 2007, Matlock joined with George Shultz, William Perry, Henry Kissinger and Sam Nunn to advocate a goal of a world free of nuclear weapons.[64] On 23 September 2008 after a two-day conference at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, he joined several other former ambassadors to issue a joint statement on how Russia and the United States might move forward in their relations.[65] He has endorsed the Global Zero Initiative, a plan to eliminate all nuclear weapons by 2030.[66] Matlock has also signed an open letter of May 13, 2011 asking the implementors of the New START treaty between the U.S. Russia to make public the locations and aggregate numbers of nuclear weapons, in order to promote transparency and reduce mistrust.[67][68]

On Jan 18, 2011 he co-signed an open letter to President Obama urging a United Nations resolution condemning Israeli settlements in the occupied territory.[69]

Russo-Ukrainian War edit

Matlock was surprised by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February, 2022, and thought that it could have been avoided if the United States had not advocated for the admission of Ukraine into NATO.[70] He sees the current policy as an abandonment of a commitment not to expand NATO, which he says was made to Gorbachev.[71][72] In late 2021, he argued that Ukraine is a state but not yet a nation, because of its deep ethnolinguistic divisions, saying it "has not yet found a leader who can unite its citizens in a shared concept of Ukrainian identity. [....] it is not Russian interference that created Ukrainian disunity but rather the haphazard way the country was assembled from parts that were not always mutually compatible [...], not by Ukrainians themselves but by outsiders."[73] This lead the Atlantic Council to describe him as an apologist for Russian imperialism in Ukraine.[74] On Jan 26, 2022 he published an review of Richard Sakwa's article "Whisper it, but Putin has a point in Ukraine" on his personal blog, stating agreement that Russia desires a neutral Ukraine and pushing back against claims that Russia seeks to annex Ukraine.[75] On Feb 15, 2022, he published an op-ed in Antiwar.com, originally written for the American Committee for US-Russia Accord (of which he is one of the directors), suggesting an impending Russian invasion of Ukraine might be a "charade", stating "Maybe I am wrong – tragically wrong – but I cannot dismiss the suspicion that we are witnessing an elaborate charade, grossly magnified by prominent elements of the American media, to serve a domestic political end."[76]

Having witnessed the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 from the inside the American Embassy in Moscow, he was acutely aware of the potential dangers of seeming to threaten the security and even the identity of a nuclear-armed state. He also warned that the war endangers progress on other pressing international issues such as the climate or refugee crisis.[77] He considered the war aims on both sides of the conflict to be unrealistic and urged a cease-fire and diplomatic settlement that would end the loss of Ukrainian and Russian lives and destruction of property in much of Ukraine. He has suggested that the U.S. could encourage negotiations by using its leverage as the largest arms supplier to Ukraine as well as the principal sponsor of sanctions on Russia.[78] Matlock writes:[78]

What all the parties to the conflict in Ukraine seem to have forgotten is that the future of mankind will not be determined by where international borders are drawn — these have never been static in history and doubtless will continue to change from time to time. The future of mankind will be determined by whether nations learn to settle their differences peacefully.

In December 2021, Matlock wrote:[79]

Interference by the United States and its NATO allies in Ukraine’s civil struggle has exacerbated the crisis within Ukraine, undermined the possibility of bringing the two easternmost provinces back under Kyiv’s control, and raised the specter of possible conflict between nuclear-armed powers. Furthermore, in denying that Russia has a "right" to oppose extension of a hostile military alliance to its national borders, the United States ignores its own history of declaring and enforcing for two centuries a sphere of influence in the Western hemisphere.

Published works edit

  1. The function of the "governing organs" of the Union of Soviet writers (1934–1950) OCLC 56176736 Columbia University Masters Thesis (1952)
  2. An index to the collected works of J. V. Stalin External Research Staff, Office of Intelligence Research, Dept. of State, (1955); reprinted by Johnson Reprint Corp ASIN B0006CV1AA (1971); Russian edition by Nendeln, Liechtenstein, Kraus Reprint, OCLC 30135390 (1973)
  3. Soviet strategy and tactics in tropical Africa OCLC 1658097 Oberammergau : U.S. Army Field Detachment "R", Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence Dept. of the Army, the Army's Institute of Advanced Russian Studies (1961)
  4. U.S.-Soviet relations : background and prospects OCLC 15103643 Washington, D.C. : U.S. Dept. of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, Office of Public Communication (1986)
  5. U.S.-Soviet relations : status and prospects OCLC 83571255 Studia diplomatica. - 39(6) 1986 : 635-648
  6. The Czechoslovak National Council of America, Chicago District, proudly presents its thirty-eighth annual ball OCLC 49382326 The Czechoslovak National Council of America (January 21, 1989)
  7. Autopsy on an Empire: The American Ambassador's Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union Random House ISBN 0-679-41376-6 (1995); Russian edition ISBN 5-7380-0214-8 (1995); Chinese edition ISBN 7-5012-0787-9 (1996)
  8. The Chechen Tragedy, The New York Review of Books (February 16, 1995)
  9. Russia: The Power of the Mob, The New York Review of Books (July 13, 1995)
  10. The Go-Between, The New York Review of Books (February 1, 1996)
  11. The Russian Prospect, The New York Review of Books (February 29, 1996)
  12. Testimony before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (March 6, 1996)
  13. Foreign Affairs (May/June 1996)
  14. The Struggle for the Kremlin, The New York Review of Books (August 8, 1996)
  15. 'Struggle for the Kremlin': An Exchange, The New York Review of Books (September 19, 1996)
  16. Gorbachev: Lingering Mysteries, The New York Review of Books (December 19, 1996)
  17. 'The Gorbachev Factor': An Exchange, The New York Review of Books (March 27, 1997)
  18. Gorbachev & the Coup: An Exchange, The New York Review of Books (June 26, 1997)
  19. Success Story, The New York Review of Books (September 25, 1997)
  20. NATO Expansion And the International Coalition in Europe (October 30, 1997)
  21. Russia's Leaking Nukes, The New York Review of Books (February 5, 1998)
  22. It's a Bad Idea; Vote Against It 2012-10-11 at the Wayback Machine The Great NATO Debate, Center for War, Peace, and the News Media of New York University and MSNBC.com (March 3, 1998)
  23. Too Many Arms to Twist New York Times, OpEd Page (March 22, 1998)
  24. Chinese Checkers New York Times, Book Section (September 13, 1998)
  25. The Poor Neighbor New York Times, Book Section (April 11, 1999)
  26. The One Place NATO Could Turn for Help New York Times, OpEd Page (April 20, 1999)
  27. Why Were We in Vietnam? New York Times, Books Section (August 8, 1999)
  28. American Philosophical Society Proceedings vol. 143, 3 (September, 1999)
  29. Foreign Affairs (January/February 2000)
  30. The Nowhere Nation, The New York Review of Books (February 24, 2000)
  31. Russia Votes: Will Democracy Win? New York Times, OpEd Page (March 26, 2000)
  32. Policing the World New York Times, Books Section (March 26, 2000)
  33. 'Ukraine Today', The New York Review of Books (April 13, 2000)
  34. Arms Control Today (October, 2000)
  35. Read Their Lips New York Times, Book Section (August 12, 2001)
  36. American Philosophical Society Proceedings vol. 145, 3 (September, 2001)
  37. Harvard International Review Vol. 23 (3) (Fall 2001)
  38. NTI Research Library (October 15, 2001)
  39. Nadezhda Mandel’shtam on the Russian Language ISSN 0036-0341 OCLC 90621976 Russian Review, 61, no. 4 (2002): 503-504
  40. Deterring the Undeterrable New York Times, Books Section (October 20, 2002)
  41. Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended Random House ISBN 0-679-46323-2 (2004)
  42. It Takes a Global Village New York Times, Books Section (March 21, 2004)
  43. Western Intelligence and the Collapse of the Soviet Union, 1980–1990: Ten Years That Did Not Shake the World (review) Journal of Cold War Studies - Volume 6, Number 2, Spring 2004, pp. 99–101
  44. Putin 'Made a Big Mistake' Interfering in Ukraine Politics[permanent dead link] Council on Foreign Relations, Interview by Bernard Gwertzman (December 6, 2004)
  45. On the Battlefields of the Cold War: A Soviet Ambassador's Confession (review) The Russian Review ISSN 0036-0341, Volume 64, Number 1, (January 2005), 163–164.
  46. Boris Yeltsin, the Early Years New York Times, Opinion Section, (April 24, 2007)
  47. Superpower Illusions: How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray--And How to Return to Reality Yale University Press ISBN 0-300-13761-3 (January 5, 2010)

Multimedia edit

  1. Jennings, Peter, Jack Matlock, former Ambassador to the Soviet Union, tells reporters about the appointments and decisions which Gorbachev has made in his first day back from his three-day exile by an unsuccessful coup d'etat OCLC: 24821960 (audio) (1991)
  2. Ellison, Herbert J. and Wolf, Daniel, Messengers from Moscow debating the issues OCLC: 35243903 Beverly Hills, CA: Pacem Distribution International (video) (1996)
  3. Kreisler, Harry, The Collapse of the Soviet Union and the End of the Cold War: A Diplomat Looks Back (video) (Feb 13, 1997)
  4. Rose, Charlie, Charlie Rose with Stephen Cohen, Jack Matlock & Steven Solnick; Joyce Maynard on YouTube (video) (Sep 8, 1998)
  5. Lopate, Leonard, National Public Radio (audio) (August 2, 2004)
  6. Matlock, Jack F., World Affairs Councils of America (video) (January 20, 2006)
  7. World Affairs Council, (video) (Feb 26, 2006)
  8. World Affairs Council, Living with Vladimir Putin's Russia (video) (May 1, 2006)
  9. Rose, Charlie, The Death of Alexander Litvinenko (video) (Dec 5, 2006)
  10. Reese, James, (audio) (May 15, 2007)
  11. World Affairs Council of Connecticut, (video) (Oct 10, 2007)
  12. Hoover Institution, (video) (Oct 25, 2007)
  13. UCLA International Institute, (audio) (Nov 19, 2007)
  14. Matlock, Jack, (video) (Dec 5, 2007)
  15. Miller Center of Public Affairs, (video) (Jan 22, 2008)
  16. Council on Foreign Relations, Russia Update (video) (Feb 22, 2008)
  17. Speedie, David C. (video) (July 18, 2008)
  18. Bloomberg. Night Talk: An Interview With Amb. Jack Matlock on YouTube (video) (August 19, 2008)
  19. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. U.S. Russia Relations, The Longer View (video) (Sep 23, 2008)
  20. Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, Adlai Stevenson's Lasting Legacy on YouTube (video) (Sep 24, 2008)
  21. University of California Irvine School of Social Sciences, Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies, Ending the Cold War 20 Years Ago: Lessons for Today (video) (Mar 9, 2010)
  22. University of Edinburgh, The Ukrainian Crisis: Reflections on Power in Today's World (video) (Jun 15, 2015)
  23. CIVILNET, Jack Matlock: The End and the Beginning (video) (May 24, 2017)
  24. TEDxNCSSM, The Nuclear Threat (video) (Jan 31, 2018)
  25. Monterey Initiative in Russian Studies, Jack F. Matlock | Ambassador to the Soviet Union, 1987-1991 (video) (Dec 9, 2020)
  26. Democracy Now!, Ex-U.S. Ambassador to USSR: Ukraine Crisis Stems Directly from Post-Cold War Push to Expand NATO (video) (Feb 17, 2022)
  27. KrasnoUNC, Reflections on Gorbachev (video) (Sep 1, 2022)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hearings, United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs, 1971.
  2. ^ a b Matlock, Jack F. Jr. (1995). Autopsy on an Empire: The American Ambassador's Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union. Random House. ISBN 978-0-679-41376-9.
  3. ^ a b Matlock, Jack F. Jr. (2005). Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-0-8129-7489-8.
  4. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  5. ^ a b c . Columbia University. Archived from the original on June 13, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  6. ^ a b Reagan, Ronald (1981-07-28). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  7. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1983-07-08). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2020-08-09. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  8. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1987-01-30). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2020-08-09. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  9. ^ a b c . Columbia University. Archived from the original on 2007-06-10. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  10. ^ "IntRel 387f: Political Leadership in International Relations". Mount Holyoke College Course Catalog. Mount Holyoke College. Fall 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  11. ^ (Press release). Princeton University. 2002. Archived from the original on 2007-06-10. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  12. ^ May 23, 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-12-11. Retrieved 2013-06-09. Jack F. Matlock Jr., M.A.'52, Ph.D. '13, Slavic Languages, former ambassador to Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union, has completed his dissertation and received his Ph.D. from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at the University Commencement ceremony on May 22, 2013.
  13. ^ "Facebook About Jack Matlock". Facebook. Retrieved 2022-07-17.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Kreisler, Harry (1997-02-13). "Conversation with Jack Matlock - The Collapse of the Soviet Union and the End of the Cold War: A Diplomat Looks Back". University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  15. ^ Matlock, Jack F. (1955). An index to the collected works of J.V. Stalin. External Research Staff, Office of Intelligence Research, Dept. of State.
  16. ^ a b c Squire, Patricia (1990-01-11). "Interview with Rebecca Burrum Matlock". The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Program Foreign Service Spouse Series. Library of Congress. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l . U.S. State Dept. Office of the Historian. 2007-05-11. Archived from the original on September 16, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  18. ^ "Robert Frost Dies at 88; Kennedy Leads in Tribute". The New York Times. 1963-01-30. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  19. ^ Mazov, Sergey. . Wilson Center, Princeton University. Archived from the original (Microsoft Word) on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-10-07. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1987-01-30). . Archived from the original on 2008-07-05. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  21. ^ "Zanzibar". Chiefs of Mission By Country 1778–2005. U.S. Dept of State. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  22. ^ "Frank C. Carlucci". SecDef Histories. U.S. Dept of Defense. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  23. ^ . International Institute for Strategic Studies. Archived from the original on September 11, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  24. ^ a b c Matlock, Jack F. (Fall 2001). . Harvard International Review. 23 (3). Archived from the original on October 24, 2006. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  25. ^ a b . U.S. Dept. of State, Embassy Moscow. Archived from the original on October 6, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  26. ^ (Press release). Institute for Advanced Study. 1999-11-18. Archived from the original on 2008-11-21. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  27. ^ . TIME Magazine. 1976-03-22. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  28. ^ O'Connor, Mary Ellen (1993-01-01). "Psychological studies in nonionizing electromagnetic energy research". Journal of General Psychology. 120 (1): 33–47. doi:10.1080/00221309.1993.9917860. PMID 8340784. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  29. ^ Reasoner, Harry (1977-08-26). "Moscow / United States Embassy Fire". Vanderbilt Television News Archive. ABC Evening News. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  30. ^ Carter, Jimmy (1977-08-27). "American Embassy Fire in Moscow Message to Ambassador Malcolm Toon and Embassy Staff Members". Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  31. ^ Sheymov, Victor (1998-05-20). "The Low Energy Radio Frequency Weapons Threat to Critical Infrastructure". Statement before the Joint Economic Committee. U.S. Congress. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  32. ^ Hyde, Rep. Henry (1990-10-26). . Congressional Record. U.S. Congress. Archived from the original on 2012-11-26. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  33. ^ Matlock, Jack F. (1981-07-05). "Quotation of the Day". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  34. ^ "U.S. Czech Exchange Accord Reached". The New York Times. 1986-04-03. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  35. ^ . Reagan Library Collections. Archived from the original on July 15, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  36. ^ "NSC-NSDD-75 U.S. Relations with the U.S.S.R." National Security Council. 1983-01-17. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  37. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1988-05-25). . Archived from the original on 2008-07-05. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  38. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1991-10-01). An American Life. Pocket Books. pp. 590–91. ISBN 978-0-7434-0025-1.
  39. ^ Wittner, Lawrence S. (April–May 2000). . Boston Review. Boston Critic. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  40. ^ Barnathan, Joyce (2004-08-09). . Business Week. McGraw-Hill. Archived from the original on August 3, 2004. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  41. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1985-11-21). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  42. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1987-12-10). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  43. ^ Reagan, Ronald (1988-06-01). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  44. ^ "Cold War" article in A Dictionary of World History. Oxford University Press. 2000.
  45. ^ Bush, George (1991-07-31). . Cited in: John Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database). Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  46. ^ (Press release). Brookings Institution. 2005-08-03. Archived from the original on 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  47. ^ Cakars, Janis (2004). (PDF). International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 12, 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-07. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  48. ^ Major, David G. (Spring 1995). . Defense Intelligence Journal. Joint Military Intelligence College Foundation. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  49. ^ Peterzell, Jay (1989-07-10). . TIME Magazine. Archived from the original on April 17, 2008. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  50. ^ . Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on 2007-10-07. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  51. ^ . Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on 2007-09-12. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  52. ^ Beichman, Arnold (2005-12-05). "My Oh Maya". The Weekly Standard. News Corporation. Retrieved 2007-09-01. [dead link]
  53. ^ Taubman, Philip (1988-02-18). "Fire Forces Evacuation of U.S. Embassy in Moscow". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  54. ^ Wines, Michael (1991-05-01). "U.S. Asserts K.G.B. Entered Embassy". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  55. ^ von Geldern, James. . Seventeen Moments in Soviet History. Macalester College. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-10-08.
  56. ^ Keller, Bill (December 1995). "Autopsy on an Empire: The American Ambassador's Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union (review)". The Washington Monthly. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  57. ^ Matlock, Jack F. Jr. (2004). Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended. New York: Random House. p. 3. ISBN 9780679463238.
  58. ^ Matlock, Jack F. Jr. (2004). Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended. New York: Random House. p. 4. ISBN 9780679463238.
  59. ^ Schweitzer, Peter. Victory: The Reagan Administration's Secret Strategy That Hastened the Collapse of the Soviet Union. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press. p. 281.
  60. ^ Matlock, Jack F. Jr. (2010). Superpower Illusions: How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray--And How to Return to Reality. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13761-3.
  61. ^ "Opposition to NATO Expansion". Open Letter to President Clinton. 1997-06-26. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  62. ^ Matlock, Jack F. Jr. (1997-10-30). "Testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee". The Eisenhower Institute. Retrieved 2007-10-07. [dead link]
  63. ^ . 2004-06-16. Archived from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  64. ^ "A World Free of Nuclear Weapons". The Wall Street Journal. 2007-01-04. Retrieved 2008-03-02.
  65. ^ "U.S. Russia Relations, The Longer View". 2008-09-23. Retrieved 2008-10-01.
  66. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-07-22.
  67. ^ "New START Open Letter May 13, 2011" (PDF).
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  69. ^ . 2011-01-19. Archived from the original on 2011-01-22. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  70. ^ "I was there: NATO and the origins of the Ukraine crisis". 2022-02-15. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  71. ^ Eckel, Mike (19 May 2021). "Did The West Promise Moscow That NATO Would Not Expand? Well, It's Complicated". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  72. ^ Petti, Matthew (23 March 2022). "When Professors Do Foreign Policy". Reason.com. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  73. ^ Matlock, Jack. "Ukraine: Tragedy of a Nation Divided" (PDF).
  74. ^ Dickinson, Peter (29 December 2021). "Debunking the myth of a divided Ukraine". Atlantic Council. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  75. ^ . 2022-01-26. Archived from the original on 2022-02-14. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
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  77. ^ "60th Anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis: Unpacking Lessons from Peaceful Resolution - YouTube". YouTube. 2022-10-27. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  78. ^ a b "Why the US must press for a ceasefire in Ukraine". 2022-10-17. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  79. ^ "Ukraine: Tragedy of a Nation Divided" (PDF). Krasno Analysis: Weekly Spotlight. 2021-12-14. Retrieved 2023-11-18.

External links edit

  • JackMatlock.com website and blog

jack, matlock, jack, foust, matlock, born, october, 1929, american, former, ambassador, career, foreign, service, officer, teacher, historian, linguist, specialist, soviet, affairs, during, some, most, tumultuous, years, cold, served, ambassador, soviet, union. Jack Foust Matlock Jr born October 1 1929 1 is an American former ambassador career Foreign Service Officer teacher historian and linguist He was a specialist in Soviet affairs during some of the most tumultuous years of the Cold War and served as the U S Ambassador to the Soviet Union from 1987 to 1991 Jack F Matlock Jr United States Ambassador to the Soviet UnionIn office April 6 1987 August 11 1991PresidentRonald Reagan George H W BushPreceded byArthur A HartmanSucceeded byRobert S StraussUnited States Ambassador to CzechoslovakiaIn office September 28 1981 September 20 1983PresidentRonald ReaganPreceded byFrancis J MeehanSucceeded byWilliam H LuersPersonal detailsBornJack Foust Matlock Jr 1929 10 01 October 1 1929 age 94 Greensboro North Carolina U S SpousesRebecca Matlock m 1949 died 2019 wbr Grace Baliunas Austin m 2020 wbr Children5Alma materDuke UniversityColumbia UniversityProfessionDiplomat educator historian linguistMatlock became interested in Russia as a Duke University undergraduate and after studies at Columbia University and a stint as a Russian language instructor at Dartmouth College entered the Foreign Service in 1956 His 35 year career encompassed much of the Cold War period between the Soviet Union and the United States His first assignment to Moscow was in 1961 and it was from the embassy there that he experienced the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis helping to translate diplomatic messages between the leaders The next year he was posted to West Africa and he later served in East Africa during the post colonial period of superpower rivalry At the beginning of detente he was director of Soviet affairs in the State Department and began to participate in the summit meetings between the leaders eventually attending all but one of the U S Soviet summits held in the 20 year period 1972 91 Matlock was back in Moscow in 1974 serving in the number two position in the embassy for four years The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in early 1980 ended the period of reduced tensions Matlock was assigned to Moscow again in 1981 as acting ambassador during the first part of Ronald Reagan s presidency Reagan appointed him as ambassador to Czechoslovakia and later asked him to return to Washington in 1983 to work at the National Security Council with the assignment to develop a negotiating strategy to end the arms race When Mikhail Gorbachev became the leader of the Soviet Union in 1985 arms negotiations and summit meetings resumed Matlock was appointed ambassador to the Soviet Union in 1987 and saw the last years of the Soviet Union before he retired from the Foreign Service in 1991 After leaving the Foreign Service he wrote an account of the end of the Soviet Union titled Autopsy on an Empire 2 followed by an account of the end of the Cold War titled Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended 3 establishing his reputation as a historian He joined the faculty of the Institute for Advanced Study and he went on to teach diplomacy at several New England colleges In 1998 Matlock was elected to the American Philosophical Society 4 He lives in Princeton New Jersey Contents 1 Biography 2 Russian captivation 3 Moscow as Third Secretary 4 Ghana and Tanzania 5 Washington as Director of Soviet Affairs 6 Moscow as Deputy Chief of Mission 7 Stateside 8 Moscow as Charge d Affaires 9 Czechoslovakia as Ambassador 10 Washington National Security Council 11 Gorbachev period 12 Moscow as Ambassador 13 End of the Soviet Union and the Cold War 14 Teaching diplomacy 15 U S policy and politics 16 Russo Ukrainian War 17 Published works 18 Multimedia 19 Notes 20 External linksBiography editBorn in 1929 in Greensboro North Carolina Jack Matlock graduated from Greensboro Senior High School see Grimsley High School in 1946 married Rebecca Burrum in 1949 graduated summa cum laude from Duke University in 1950 and later earned an M A from Columbia University in 1952 He taught Russian language and literature at Dartmouth College from 1953 to 1956 5 He joined the Foreign Service in 1956 and served in Vienna Garmisch Partenkirchen Moscow Accra Zanzibar and Dar es Salaam He was Director of Soviet Affairs in the State Department 1971 74 Diplomat in Residence at Vanderbilt University 1978 79 and deputy director of the Foreign Service Institute 1979 80 He served as U S Ambassador to Czechoslovakia 6 1981 83 and as Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and Senior Director for European and Soviet Affairs 7 on the National Security Council Staff 1983 86 His languages are Czech French German Russian and Swahili 6 Matlock was US President Ronald Reagan s choice for the position of ambassador to the Soviet Union 8 serving from 1987 to 1991 His previous tours in Moscow were as Vice Consul and Third Secretary 1961 1963 Minister Counsellor and Deputy Chief of Mission 1974 1978 and Charge d Affaires ad interim 1981 5 After he retired from the Foreign Service in 1991 Matlock reentered the academic world becoming the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor of the Practice of International Diplomacy at Columbia After five years in that position he moved to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey where he was George F Kennan Professor from 1996 to 2001 Matlock has held visiting appointments at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University at Hamilton College at the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs 9 and at Mount Holyoke College 10 He has been awarded honorary doctorates by Greensboro College Albright College and Connecticut College 11 Matlock completed his dissertation and received his Ph D from the Columbia University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at their commencement ceremony on May 22 2013 12 Together Jack and Rebecca Matlock had five children and three grandchildren In later years they divided their time between a home in Princeton and her family s farm in Booneville Tennessee 5 Rebecca passed away in 2019 and Jack subsequently married Grace Baliunas Austin 13 Russian captivation editBy his own account 14 Matlock became captivated by Russia having read Dostoyevsky as an undergraduate at Duke University He went on to study Russian language and area studies at the Russian Institute at Columbia University and became convinced that the principal challenge of American diplomacy in the post World War II period would be dealing with the Soviet Union After his 1953 appointment to a position as Russian Instructor at Dartmouth College he supplemented his income by preparing an index 15 to Joseph Stalin s collected works on contract with the State Department Because in 1956 the Soviet Union was a closed society he decided his best chance to get to know Russia was to join the Foreign Service and become a diplomat His ultimate career goal was clear from the beginning when I entered the Foreign Service I shocked a lot of people by what seemed to be overweening ambition when I was asked What do you want out of the Foreign Service I stated frankly I want to be the American ambassador to the Soviet Union 14 Moscow as Third Secretary editAfter a tour in Vienna Austria and Russian language training at the U S Army Russian Institute in Oberammergau Matlock arrived in Moscow for the first time in 1961 Initially a Vice Consul Matlock met with individuals seeking to visit or emigrate to the United States His most famous case was Lee Harvey Oswald who applied for a repatriation loan to return to the United States after having previously moved to the Soviet Union 16 Indeed according to the records received by the Warren Commission in May 1962 Jack Matlock conducted the exit interview which enabled the Oswald family to leave the USSR and return to the USA After a year Matlock was promoted to Third Secretary in the Political Section American foreign policy with regard to the Soviet Union known as containment had been articulated in 1947 by George F Kennan who was later to become a good friend of Matlock s 14 The American policy was basically to contain the spread of Communism in the expectation that it would eventually collapse of internal contradictions This did not prevent discussions between the Superpowers In June 1961 President John F Kennedy and First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev met in Vienna and in December the United Nations General Assembly approved a draft joint resolution on principles for negotiating disarmament 17 This period also saw the beginnings of U S U S S R cultural exchanges notably the visit of poet Robert Frost to Moscow 18 The containment policy was tested during the October 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis Matlock along with Richard Davies and Herbert Okun translated communications between President John F Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev 16 Ghana and Tanzania editIn late 1963 the Matlocks left Moscow for West Africa arriving in Accra Ghana Kwame Nkrumah had become the first president of newly independent Ghana and post colonial Africa was to be a venue for competition between the U S and Soviet Union for influence 19 In 1967 Matlock was sent to East Africa to serve on Zanzibar as consul 20 It was his first opportunity to be head of a Foreign Service post His predecessor as consul 21 Frank Carlucci was later to become Secretary of Defense 22 and his successor Thomas R Pickering was later to become Ambassador to the U N 23 Matlock s next assignment was as Deputy Chief of Mission in the capital of Tanzania Dar es Salaam Even in Africa knowledge of Soviet Affairs proved useful With Leonid Brezhnev in power Soviet foreign policy as of 1968 was dictated by the Brezhnev Doctrine which held that once a country became Communist it was never to leave the Soviet sphere of influence 24 Washington as Director of Soviet Affairs editIn 1971 Matlock became Director of Soviet Affairs in the State Department During Richard Nixon s presidency a period known as detente there was a reduction of Cold War tension 24 Matlock participated in the negotiation of arms control treaties and other bilateral agreements 25 In fact he attended every one of the U S Soviet summits for the 20 year period 1972 1991 with the exception of the 1979 Carter Brezhnev summit 26 Summit Meetings 1972 79 Leaders Topic Venue Dates ReferenceNixon Brezhnev SALT I and ABM Treaties Moscow May 26 1972 1 Nixon Brezhnev Official Visit Washington June 18 26 1973 2 Nixon Brezhnev Official Visit Moscow Simferopol Minsk June 27 July 3 1974 3 Ford Brezhnev SALT I Vladivostok November 23 1974 4 Ford Brezhnev Helsinki Final Act Helsinki August 1 1975 5 Carter Brezhnev SALT II Treaty Vienna June 16 18 1979 6 Moscow as Deputy Chief of Mission editAfter four years in Washington he spent four years as Deputy Chief of Mission DCM the number two position at Embassy Moscow These years cemented his reputation within the State Department as a Soviet expert In early 1976 the State Department made public the fact that the Soviet Union had been beaming microwaves at the Moscow Embassy from a nearby building for many years 27 This caused concern about possible health effects of the low level microwave radiation Ironically it was Soviet research that documented the psychological symptoms of sensitivity to microwave exposure In the United States the standards for safe exposure to microwaves were much more lenient than in the Soviet Union 28 The August 26 1977 ABC Evening News covered the story of a major fire at the embassy 29 Despite the severity of the fire all personnel were evacuated safely and the efforts of the embassy staff elicited a commendation from President Jimmy Carter 30 Former KGB agent Victor Sheymov testified before Congress in 1998 that the fire was deliberately induced by the Soviets in an effort to gain access to sensitive areas by agents posing as firemen 31 Stateside editMatlock returned to the United States and taught for a year at Vanderbilt University under the Diplomats in Residence program The following year he came to Washington DC to take the number two position at the Foreign Service Institute the State Department s language training school 9 In January 1980 in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan President Carter postponed consideration of the SALT 2 Treaty and imposed a trade embargo 17 Also in 1980 the new embassy under construction in Moscow was found to be so riddled with listening devices that it would be unusable for secure work 32 Moscow as Charge d Affaires editMatlock returned to Moscow in 1981 as acting Ambassador or Charge d Affaires By April 24 President Reagan had cancelled the export embargo and trade resumed 17 Matlock signalled the American desire for constructive engagement with the Soviets We are seeking an active dialogue on all levels But a dialogue is useful only if it is candid and we must learn not to take offense at candor but to use it to help us understand each other 33 Jack F Matlock Jr New York Times Quote of the Day for July 5 1981 On August 6 1981 President Reagan ordered the development of a neutron bomb While contentious this had the desired effect of bringing the Soviets to the bargaining table and negotiations on limiting nuclear weapons in Europe started on November 30 17 Czechoslovakia as Ambassador editIn late 1980 Matlock had been appointed Ambassador to Czechoslovakia by President Jimmy Carter However the appointment was not ratified by the Senate before Carter s election loss and so it was with Ronald Reagan s re appointment in 1981 that he became Ambassador to Czechoslovakia During his tenure he was able to help resolve a major impediment to good relations the return of 18 4 tons of gold that had been looted by the Nazis in World War II and kept ever since its recovery by Allied forces in American and British banks 34 On March 23 1983 President Reagan announced the Strategic Defense Initiative a ground and space based weapons system designed to protect from nuclear attack 17 Matlock continued to advise the President on policy toward the Soviet Union and on September 1 1983 when the Soviets shot down commercial flight KAL 007 Matlock returned to Washington to work with White House officials 16 Washington National Security Council editReagan appointed Matlock to the position of Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director of European and Soviet Affairs in the National Security Council NSC in order to develop a negotiating strategy to end the arms race 14 35 Earlier in the year the long standing containment strategy toward the U S S R had been modified by Matlock s predecessor Richard Pipes to include bringing internal pressure on the Soviets while conducting negotiations in the mutual interest 36 In following years discussions with the Soviets were conducted under Matlock s Four Part Agenda including Human Rights Regional Issues Arms Control and Bilateral Issues 37 On November 25 1983 Soviet leader Yuri Andropov announced the resumption of nuclear missile deployment in the western U S S R a sign of the increased tension in the relationship 17 The thaw in relations can be taken to begin with Ronald Reagan s January 16 1984 speech declaring that the U S and U S S R had common interests and the foremost among them is to avoid war and reduce the level of arms in which he added that I support a zero option for all nuclear arms 38 While the speech was commonly seen as propaganda Lawrence S Wittner professor of history at the State University of New York Albany says of it that a number of officials including its writer Jack Matlock Jr have contended that it was meant to be taken seriously by Soviet leaders 39 On June 30 1984 the Soviets offered to start negotiations on nuclear and space based weapons 17 Gorbachev period editMikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union on March 11 1985 and the next day negotiations on nuclear and space based weapons began in Geneva A few weeks later he proposed a moratorium on the development of nuclear and space weapons during the period of negotiations and in July he proposed to ban nuclear testing Reagan rejected the proposals 17 Gorbachev began a period of internal economic restructuring known as perestroika and agreed to a series of summits with the American president Matlock was instrumental in preparing Reagan for his first summit with Gorbachev arranging for specialists within the government to write a Soviet Union 101 course of 21 papers on Russia for Reagan to study Matlock also participated in a mock summit playing the role of Gorbachev allowing Reagan to practice the encounter in advance 40 nbsp Geneva Summit with Matlock seated at the far end of the tableSummit Meetings 1985 91 Leaders Topic Venue Dates ReferenceReagan Gorbachev Geneva Summit 41 Geneva November 19 21 1985 7 Reagan Gorbachev Iceland Summit Reykjavik October 11 12 1986 8 Reagan Gorbachev INF Treaty 42 Washington December 7 10 1987 9 Reagan Gorbachev INF Treaty ratification 43 Moscow June 1 1988 10 Reagan Gorbachev End of Class Struggle 24 New York December 7 1988 11 Bush Gorbachev Malta Summit 44 Malta December 2 3 1989 12 Bush Gorbachev Bilateral Agreements Washington May 30 June 3 1990 13 Bush Gorbachev Persian Gulf War Helsinki September 8 9 1990 14 Bush Gorbachev START I Treaty 45 Moscow July 31 1991 15 Speaking at a Chautauqua conference in Jurmala Latvia in June 1986 46 Matlock told the crowd that the United States did not recognize the incorporation of the Baltic States into the Soviet Union His remarks are credited by Dainis ivans leader of the Popular Front of Latvia with galvanizing the independence movement in Latvia 47 U S Soviet relations took a turn for the worse with the Soviet s arrest of U S reporter Nicholas Daniloff evidently for use as a bargaining chip in response to the August 30 1986 arrest of suspected KGB agent Gennadiy Zakharov Since Daniloff was not engaged in espionage Matlock advised taking a hard line with the Soviets While charges against Daniloff were dropped a diplomatic row ensued leading by the end of October to the expulsion of 100 Soviets including 80 suspected intelligence officers The U S lost 10 diplomats from Embassy Moscow along with all 260 of the Russian support staff 48 Moscow as Ambassador editIn April 1987 Reagan appointed Matlock as Ambassador to the Soviet Union Conditions at the Embassy were tense as Marine Sergeant Clayton Lonetree had been found to have compromised Embassy security Within a few months of the Lonetree scandal all U S intelligence assets in the Soviet Union had been exposed The Americans suspected that the security breach had meant that the Embassy code room was no longer secure and worked frantically to determine how 49 It was not until 1994 that Aldrich Ames a mole within the CIA was caught 50 Another mole Robert Hanssen this time within the FBI was caught only in 2001 51 During 1987 relations improved steadily with U S military inspectors present at Soviet military manoeuvres an agreement to establish centers on Reducing Nuclear Threat and a first round of negotiations aimed at banning nuclear tests 17 The thaw in relations was reflected in the cultural sphere Matlock s invitation to ballerina Maya Plisetskaya to attend a reception at Spaso House provided a way for Matlock to judge Gorbachev s intentions as earlier Soviet leaders would have considered it a provocation 52 A second embassy fire in February 1988 damaged several floors of the chancery 53 Improvements in relations continued during the year with two summit meetings the first in Moscow and the second on Governor s Island in New York An earthquake struck Armenia during the second summit cutting it short However a U S offer of assistance to the victims was accepted by Gorbachev and became the first official assistance by the U S since World War II 17 The Berlin Wall fell on November 9 1989 and on November 15 the U S and U S S R submitted a joint resolution to the United Nations on the Consolidation of International Peace Security and Cooperation the first such joint initiative A December meeting in Malta brought Gorbachev and George H W Bush together for their first summit 17 The June 1990 summit in Washington brought several bilateral agreements covering chemical weapons trade aviation grain maritime boundaries peaceful uses of atomic energy ocean exploration student exchanges and customs cooperation The September meeting in Helsinki provided a venue for discussion of the Persian Gulf War 17 A third fire in the embassy occurred in April 1991 and this time the KGB may have managed to send in agents disguised as firefighters 54 In June 1991 Matlock received word of a coup planned against Gorbachev and warned him It was to no avail shortly after his July summit with Bush and 8 days after the end of Matlock s term Gorbachev was briefly removed from power by the August 1991 coup 25 The Soviet Union collapsed by the end of 1991 55 just a few months after Matlock having fulfilled his ambition when he joined the Foreign Service retired from a diplomatic career spanning 35 years 9 End of the Soviet Union and the Cold War editExternal videos nbsp Presentation by Matlock on Autopsy on an Empire November 21 1995 C SPAN nbsp Booknotes interview with Matlock on Reagan and Gorbachev September 26 2004 C SPAN nbsp After Words interview with Matlock on Superpower Illusions April 3 2010 C SPANAfter retirement from the Foreign Service Matlock began work on his magnum opus Autopsy on an Empire The American Ambassador s Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union 2 This 836 page book details the final years of the Soviet Union and is considered by many to be the definitive insider s guide to the subject 56 A subsequent book Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended 3 describes the relationship of the two men and their efforts to reach agreement on arms reductions between the superpowers Matlock takes the position that the military build up by Ronald Reagan in the early 1980s has contributed to the inaccurate characterization of Reagan as a war hawk The quote atop the first page of Reagan and Gorbachev is by Ronald Reagan speaking in 1981 during the beginnings of a one trillion dollar defense spending surge that states I ve always recognized that ultimately there s got to be a settlement a solution 57 Reagan according to Matlock never altered from his goals as annunciated at his first press conference as president when he stated that appearances to the contrary he was in favor of an actual reduction in the numbers of nuclear weapons 58 This would contradict the claims of Reagan victory school proponents such as Peter Schweitzer 59 His third book Superpower Illusions How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray And How to Return to Reality 60 published in 2010 provides an analysis of the post Cold War period along with his policy prescriptions Teaching diplomacy edit nbsp Matlock speaking at UCLA in November 2007Matlock has taught diplomacy at Duke University Princeton University Columbia University and Hamilton College In a 1997 interview Matlock offers some advice to prospective diplomats have an optimistic nature get a liberal education do not expect to change the world know the country know your own country faithfully represent your government find the mutual interests and remember that timing is everything 14 Matlock also gives his views on one of the basic distinctions in politics I don t see much difference between a communist regime and a fascist regime In fact I think one of the greatest intellectual confusions that many have had over these decades is the whole right and left thing fascists are on the right communists are on the left Nonsense They come together and overlap and we re seeing this in Russia today where the allies are the nationalistic chauvinists and the communists They are natural allies because they are authoritarians by nature And more than authoritarians they tend to be totalitarians which means that they tend to destroy all of the elements of the civil society To me that s much more important than whether you re philosophically right or left You know are you willing to create and live in a civil society in an open society or not That to me is the basic issue 14 U S policy and politics editThis biography of a living person relies too much on references to primary sources Please help by adding secondary or tertiary sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately especially if potentially libelous or harmful Find sources Jack F Matlock Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Since leaving government service Matlock has occasionally joined with other experts to criticize U S foreign policy On June 26 1997 he signed an Open Letter to President Bill Clinton criticizing plans for NATO expansion 61 His reason for opposition as given in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was his belief that NATO expansion would preclude significant nuclear arms reduction with Russia and consequently increase the risk of a nuclear attack by terrorists 62 Matlock drew the ire of many Republicans during the 2004 presidential election campaign when he signed the Official Statement of Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change which criticized the policies of President George W Bush and endorsed Senator John Kerry for president 63 On Jan 4 2007 Matlock joined with George Shultz William Perry Henry Kissinger and Sam Nunn to advocate a goal of a world free of nuclear weapons 64 On 23 September 2008 after a two day conference at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace he joined several other former ambassadors to issue a joint statement on how Russia and the United States might move forward in their relations 65 He has endorsed the Global Zero Initiative a plan to eliminate all nuclear weapons by 2030 66 Matlock has also signed an open letter of May 13 2011 asking the implementors of the New START treaty between the U S Russia to make public the locations and aggregate numbers of nuclear weapons in order to promote transparency and reduce mistrust 67 68 On Jan 18 2011 he co signed an open letter to President Obama urging a United Nations resolution condemning Israeli settlements in the occupied territory 69 Russo Ukrainian War editMatlock was surprised by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and thought that it could have been avoided if the United States had not advocated for the admission of Ukraine into NATO 70 He sees the current policy as an abandonment of a commitment not to expand NATO which he says was made to Gorbachev 71 72 In late 2021 he argued that Ukraine is a state but not yet a nation because of its deep ethnolinguistic divisions saying it has not yet found a leader who can unite its citizens in a shared concept of Ukrainian identity it is not Russian interference that created Ukrainian disunity but rather the haphazard way the country was assembled from parts that were not always mutually compatible not by Ukrainians themselves but by outsiders 73 This lead the Atlantic Council to describe him as an apologist for Russian imperialism in Ukraine 74 On Jan 26 2022 he published an review of Richard Sakwa s article Whisper it but Putin has a point in Ukraine on his personal blog stating agreement that Russia desires a neutral Ukraine and pushing back against claims that Russia seeks to annex Ukraine 75 On Feb 15 2022 he published an op ed in Antiwar com originally written for the American Committee for US Russia Accord of which he is one of the directors suggesting an impending Russian invasion of Ukraine might be a charade stating Maybe I am wrong tragically wrong but I cannot dismiss the suspicion that we are witnessing an elaborate charade grossly magnified by prominent elements of the American media to serve a domestic political end 76 Having witnessed the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 from the inside the American Embassy in Moscow he was acutely aware of the potential dangers of seeming to threaten the security and even the identity of a nuclear armed state He also warned that the war endangers progress on other pressing international issues such as the climate or refugee crisis 77 He considered the war aims on both sides of the conflict to be unrealistic and urged a cease fire and diplomatic settlement that would end the loss of Ukrainian and Russian lives and destruction of property in much of Ukraine He has suggested that the U S could encourage negotiations by using its leverage as the largest arms supplier to Ukraine as well as the principal sponsor of sanctions on Russia 78 Matlock writes 78 What all the parties to the conflict in Ukraine seem to have forgotten is that the future of mankind will not be determined by where international borders are drawn these have never been static in history and doubtless will continue to change from time to time The future of mankind will be determined by whether nations learn to settle their differences peacefully In December 2021 Matlock wrote 79 Interference by the United States and its NATO allies in Ukraine s civil struggle has exacerbated the crisis within Ukraine undermined the possibility of bringing the two easternmost provinces back under Kyiv s control and raised the specter of possible conflict between nuclear armed powers Furthermore in denying that Russia has a right to oppose extension of a hostile military alliance to its national borders the United States ignores its own history of declaring and enforcing for two centuries a sphere of influence in the Western hemisphere Published works editThe function of the governing organs of the Union of Soviet writers 1934 1950 OCLC 56176736 Columbia University Masters Thesis 1952 An index to the collected works of J V Stalin External Research Staff Office of Intelligence Research Dept of State 1955 reprinted by Johnson Reprint Corp ASIN B0006CV1AA 1971 Russian edition by Nendeln Liechtenstein Kraus Reprint OCLC 30135390 1973 Soviet strategy and tactics in tropical Africa OCLC 1658097 Oberammergau U S Army Field Detachment R Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff Intelligence Dept of the Army the Army s Institute of Advanced Russian Studies 1961 U S Soviet relations background and prospects OCLC 15103643 Washington D C U S Dept of State Bureau of Public Affairs Office of Public Communication 1986 U S Soviet relations status and prospects OCLC 83571255 Studia diplomatica 39 6 1986 635 648 The Czechoslovak National Council of America Chicago District proudly presents its thirty eighth annual ball OCLC 49382326 The Czechoslovak National Council of America January 21 1989 Autopsy on an Empire The American Ambassador s Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union Random House ISBN 0 679 41376 6 1995 Russian edition ISBN 5 7380 0214 8 1995 Chinese edition ISBN 7 5012 0787 9 1996 The Chechen Tragedy The New York Review of Books February 16 1995 Russia The Power of the Mob The New York Review of Books July 13 1995 The Go Between The New York Review of Books February 1 1996 The Russian Prospect The New York Review of Books February 29 1996 The Chechen Conflict and Russian Democratic Development Testimony before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe March 6 1996 Dealing with a Russia in Turmoil The Future of Partnership Foreign Affairs May June 1996 The Struggle for the Kremlin The New York Review of Books August 8 1996 Struggle for the Kremlin An Exchange The New York Review of Books September 19 1996 Gorbachev Lingering Mysteries The New York Review of Books December 19 1996 The Gorbachev Factor An Exchange The New York Review of Books March 27 1997 Gorbachev amp the Coup An Exchange The New York Review of Books June 26 1997 Success Story The New York Review of Books September 25 1997 Testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee NATO Expansion And the International Coalition in Europe October 30 1997 Russia s Leaking Nukes The New York Review of Books February 5 1998 It s a Bad Idea Vote Against It Archived 2012 10 11 at the Wayback Machine The Great NATO Debate Center for War Peace and the News Media of New York University and MSNBC com March 3 1998 Too Many Arms to Twist New York Times OpEd Page March 22 1998 Chinese Checkers New York Times Book Section September 13 1998 The Poor Neighbor New York Times Book Section April 11 1999 The One Place NATO Could Turn for Help New York Times OpEd Page April 20 1999 Why Were We in Vietnam New York Times Books Section August 8 1999 Can Civilizations Clash American Philosophical Society Proceedings vol 143 3 September 1999 The Dreamer The World According to Gorbachev Foreign Affairs January February 2000 The Nowhere Nation The New York Review of Books February 24 2000 Russia Votes Will Democracy Win New York Times OpEd Page March 26 2000 Policing the World New York Times Books Section March 26 2000 Ukraine Today The New York Review of Books April 13 2000 Security The Bottom Line Arms Control Today October 2000 Read Their Lips New York Times Book Section August 12 2001 Dmitri Sergeyevich Likhachev American Philosophical Society Proceedings vol 145 3 September 2001 The End of the Cold War Rethinking the Origin and Conclusion of the US Soviet Conflict Harvard International Review Vol 23 3 Fall 2001 The War We Face Reflections NTI Research Library October 15 2001 Nadezhda Mandel shtam on the Russian Language ISSN 0036 0341 OCLC 90621976 Russian Review 61 no 4 2002 503 504 Deterring the Undeterrable New York Times Books Section October 20 2002 Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended Random House ISBN 0 679 46323 2 2004 It Takes a Global Village New York Times Books Section March 21 2004 Western Intelligence and the Collapse of the Soviet Union 1980 1990 Ten Years That Did Not Shake the World review Journal of Cold War Studies Volume 6 Number 2 Spring 2004 pp 99 101 Putin Made a Big Mistake Interfering in Ukraine Politics permanent dead link Council on Foreign Relations Interview by Bernard Gwertzman December 6 2004 On the Battlefields of the Cold War A Soviet Ambassador s Confession review The Russian Review ISSN 0036 0341 Volume 64 Number 1 January 2005 163 164 Boris Yeltsin the Early Years New York Times Opinion Section April 24 2007 Superpower Illusions How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray And How to Return to Reality Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 13761 3 January 5 2010 Multimedia editJennings Peter Jack Matlock former Ambassador to the Soviet Union tells reporters about the appointments and decisions which Gorbachev has made in his first day back from his three day exile by an unsuccessful coup d etat OCLC 24821960 audio 1991 Ellison Herbert J and Wolf Daniel Messengers from Moscow debating the issues OCLC 35243903 Beverly Hills CA Pacem Distribution International video 1996 Kreisler Harry The Collapse of the Soviet Union and the End of the Cold War A Diplomat Looks Back video Feb 13 1997 Rose Charlie Charlie Rose with Stephen Cohen Jack Matlock amp Steven Solnick Joyce Maynard on YouTube video Sep 8 1998 Lopate Leonard Jack F Matlock discusses his new book Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended National Public Radio audio August 2 2004 Matlock Jack F Where is Putin s Russia Going World Affairs Councils of America video January 20 2006 World Affairs Council Amb Jack Matlock at WACA 2006 video Feb 26 2006 World Affairs Council Living with Vladimir Putin s Russia video May 1 2006 Rose Charlie The Death of Alexander Litvinenko video Dec 5 2006 Reese James Columbia University Forum Where Is Russia Headed audio May 15 2007 World Affairs Council of Connecticut Russia and the United States video Oct 10 2007 Hoover Institution Regional Confrontations and Nuclear Proliferation video Oct 25 2007 UCLA International Institute Living With Russia audio Nov 19 2007 Matlock Jack Living with Vladimir Putin s Russia video Dec 5 2007 Miller Center of Public Affairs Ambassador William C Battle Symposium on American Diplomacy 200 Years of Russian American Diplomatic Relations video Jan 22 2008 Council on Foreign Relations Russia Update video Feb 22 2008 Speedie David C David Speedie Interviews Jack Matlock video July 18 2008 Bloomberg Night Talk An Interview With Amb Jack Matlock on YouTube video August 19 2008 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace U S Russia Relations The Longer View video Sep 23 2008 Woodrow Wilson School Princeton University Adlai Stevenson s Lasting Legacy on YouTube video Sep 24 2008 University of California Irvine School of Social Sciences Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies Ending the Cold War 20 Years Ago Lessons for Today video Mar 9 2010 University of Edinburgh The Ukrainian Crisis Reflections on Power in Today s World video Jun 15 2015 CIVILNET Jack Matlock The End and the Beginning video May 24 2017 TEDxNCSSM The Nuclear Threat video Jan 31 2018 Monterey Initiative in Russian Studies Jack F Matlock Ambassador to the Soviet Union 1987 1991 video Dec 9 2020 Democracy Now Ex U S Ambassador to USSR Ukraine Crisis Stems Directly from Post Cold War Push to Expand NATO video Feb 17 2022 KrasnoUNC Reflections on Gorbachev video Sep 1 2022 Notes edit Hearings United States House Committee on Foreign Affairs 1971 a b Matlock Jack F Jr 1995 Autopsy on an Empire The American Ambassador s Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union Random House ISBN 978 0 679 41376 9 a b Matlock Jack F Jr 2005 Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended New York Random House ISBN 978 0 8129 7489 8 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2021 12 03 a b c Matlock Biography World Leaders Forum Columbia University Archived from the original on June 13 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 a b Reagan Ronald 1981 07 28 Nomination of Jack F Matlock To Be United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project online Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1983 07 08 Appointment of Two Special Assistants to the President for National Security Affairs Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project online Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2020 08 09 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1987 01 30 Nomination of Jack F Matlock Jr To Be United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project online Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2020 08 09 Retrieved 2007 10 07 a b c Jack F Matlock Jr Faculty Webpage Columbia University Archived from the original on 2007 06 10 Retrieved 2007 10 07 IntRel 387f Political Leadership in International Relations Mount Holyoke College Course Catalog Mount Holyoke College Fall 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Matlock to Present Annual John L Weinberg Goldman Sachs amp Co Lecture Press release Princeton University 2002 Archived from the original on 2007 06 10 Retrieved 2007 10 07 After 60 Years of Public Service Diplomat Earns His Ph D May 23 2013 Archived from the original on 2013 12 11 Retrieved 2013 06 09 Jack F Matlock Jr M A 52 Ph D 13 Slavic Languages former ambassador to Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union has completed his dissertation and received his Ph D from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at the University Commencement ceremony on May 22 2013 Facebook About Jack Matlock Facebook Retrieved 2022 07 17 a b c d e f Kreisler Harry 1997 02 13 Conversation with Jack Matlock The Collapse of the Soviet Union and the End of the Cold War A Diplomat Looks Back University of California Berkeley Retrieved 2007 10 07 Matlock Jack F 1955 An index to the collected works of J V Stalin External Research Staff Office of Intelligence Research Dept of State a b c Squire Patricia 1990 01 11 Interview with Rebecca Burrum Matlock The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Program Foreign Service Spouse Series Library of Congress Retrieved 2007 10 07 a b c d e f g h i j k l Highlights in the History of U S Relations With Russia 1780 June 2006 U S State Dept Office of the Historian 2007 05 11 Archived from the original on September 16 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Robert Frost Dies at 88 Kennedy Leads in Tribute The New York Times 1963 01 30 Retrieved 2007 10 08 Mazov Sergey Soviet Policy in West Africa 1956 1964 as an episode of the Cold War Wilson Center Princeton University Archived from the original Microsoft Word on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 10 07 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Reagan Ronald 1987 01 30 Nomination of Jack F Matlock Jr To Be United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union Archived from the original on 2008 07 05 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Zanzibar Chiefs of Mission By Country 1778 2005 U S Dept of State Retrieved 2007 10 08 Frank C Carlucci SecDef Histories U S Dept of Defense Retrieved 2007 10 08 Ambassador Thomas Pickering International Institute for Strategic Studies Archived from the original on September 11 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 08 a b c Matlock Jack F Fall 2001 The End of the Cold War Rethinking the Origin and Conclusion of the US Soviet Conflict Harvard International Review 23 3 Archived from the original on October 24 2006 Retrieved 2007 10 07 a b U S Ministers and Ambassadors to Russia U S Dept of State Embassy Moscow Archived from the original on October 6 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Preparing for the 21st Century World Politics Today Topic of Institute Talk by Jack F Matlock Jr Press release Institute for Advanced Study 1999 11 18 Archived from the original on 2008 11 21 Retrieved 2007 10 07 The Microwave Furor TIME Magazine 1976 03 22 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 O Connor Mary Ellen 1993 01 01 Psychological studies in nonionizing electromagnetic energy research Journal of General Psychology 120 1 33 47 doi 10 1080 00221309 1993 9917860 PMID 8340784 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reasoner Harry 1977 08 26 Moscow United States Embassy Fire Vanderbilt Television News Archive ABC Evening News Retrieved 2007 10 07 Carter Jimmy 1977 08 27 American Embassy Fire in Moscow Message to Ambassador Malcolm Toon and Embassy Staff Members Retrieved 2007 10 07 Sheymov Victor 1998 05 20 The Low Energy Radio Frequency Weapons Threat to Critical Infrastructure Statement before the Joint Economic Committee U S Congress Retrieved 2007 10 07 Hyde Rep Henry 1990 10 26 Embassy Moscow Paying the Bill Congressional Record U S Congress Archived from the original on 2012 11 26 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Matlock Jack F 1981 07 05 Quotation of the Day The New York Times Retrieved 2007 10 07 U S Czech Exchange Accord Reached The New York Times 1986 04 03 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Matlock Jack F Jr Files 1983 1986 Reagan Library Collections Archived from the original on July 15 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 NSC NSDD 75 U S Relations with the U S S R National Security Council 1983 01 17 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1988 05 25 Remarks on Departure for the Soviet United States Summit in Moscow Archived from the original on 2008 07 05 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1991 10 01 An American Life Pocket Books pp 590 91 ISBN 978 0 7434 0025 1 Wittner Lawrence S April May 2000 Reagan and Nuclear Disarmament Boston Review Boston Critic Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Barnathan Joyce 2004 08 09 Inside the Great Thaw Business Week McGraw Hill Archived from the original on August 3 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1985 11 21 Joint Soviet United States Statement on the Summit Meeting in Geneva November 21st 1985 Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1987 12 10 Joint Statement on the Soviet United States Summit Meeting December 10th 1987 Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Reagan Ronald 1988 06 01 Joint Statement Following the Soviet United States Summit Meeting in Moscow June 1st 1988 Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Cold War article in A Dictionary of World History Oxford University Press 2000 Bush George 1991 07 31 Remarks to Soviet and United States Businessmen in Moscow July 31st 1991 Cited in John Woolley and Gerhard Peters The American Presidency Project Santa Barbara CA University of California hosted Gerhard Peters database Archived from the original on 2011 05 22 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Chautauqua Institution and the Brookings Institution Plan Joint Program Press release Brookings Institution 2005 08 03 Archived from the original on 2007 07 11 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Cakars Janis 2004 The Liberation of Latvia Media and Nonviolence PDF International Research amp Exchanges Board IREX Archived from the original PDF on October 12 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 07 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Major David G Spring 1995 Operation Famish The Integration of Counterintelligence into the National Strategic Decisionmaking Process Defense Intelligence Journal Joint Military Intelligence College Foundation Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Peterzell Jay 1989 07 10 The Moscow Bug Hunt TIME Magazine Archived from the original on April 17 2008 Retrieved 2007 10 07 FBI History Famous Cases Aldrich Hazen Ames Federal Bureau of Investigation Archived from the original on 2007 10 07 Retrieved 2007 10 08 FBI History Famous Cases Robert Philip Hanssen Espionage Case Federal Bureau of Investigation Archived from the original on 2007 09 12 Retrieved 2007 10 08 Beichman Arnold 2005 12 05 My Oh Maya The Weekly Standard News Corporation Retrieved 2007 09 01 dead link Taubman Philip 1988 02 18 Fire Forces Evacuation of U S Embassy in Moscow The New York Times Retrieved 2007 10 07 Wines Michael 1991 05 01 U S Asserts K G B Entered Embassy The New York Times Retrieved 2007 10 07 von Geldern James End of the Soviet Union Seventeen Moments in Soviet History Macalester College Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2007 10 08 Keller Bill December 1995 Autopsy on an Empire The American Ambassador s Account of the Collapse of the Soviet Union review The Washington Monthly Retrieved 2007 10 07 Matlock Jack F Jr 2004 Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended New York Random House p 3 ISBN 9780679463238 Matlock Jack F Jr 2004 Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended New York Random House p 4 ISBN 9780679463238 Schweitzer Peter Victory The Reagan Administration s Secret Strategy That Hastened the Collapse of the Soviet Union New York Atlantic Monthly Press p 281 Matlock Jack F Jr 2010 Superpower Illusions How Myths and False Ideologies Led America Astray And How to Return to Reality Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 13761 3 Opposition to NATO Expansion Open Letter to President Clinton 1997 06 26 Retrieved 2007 10 07 Matlock Jack F Jr 1997 10 30 Testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee The Eisenhower Institute Retrieved 2007 10 07 dead link Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change Official Statement 2004 06 16 Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2007 10 07 A World Free of Nuclear Weapons The Wall Street Journal 2007 01 04 Retrieved 2008 03 02 U S Russia Relations The Longer View 2008 09 23 Retrieved 2008 10 01 Full List of Signatories Archived from the original on 2009 07 22 New START Open Letter May 13 2011 PDF Former Officials Call for U S Russian Nuclear Transparency Archived from the original on 2011 06 09 Retrieved 2011 05 21 Pickering Hills Sullivan Beinart Dobbins More Ask Obama Administration to Support UN Resolution Condemning Illegal Israeli Settlements 2011 01 19 Archived from the original on 2011 01 22 Retrieved 2011 01 21 I was there NATO and the origins of the Ukraine crisis 2022 02 15 Retrieved 2023 03 14 Eckel Mike 19 May 2021 Did The West Promise Moscow That NATO Would Not Expand Well It s Complicated RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 5 December 2022 Petti Matthew 23 March 2022 When Professors Do Foreign Policy Reason com Retrieved 5 December 2022 Matlock Jack Ukraine Tragedy of a Nation Divided PDF Dickinson Peter 29 December 2021 Debunking the myth of a divided Ukraine Atlantic Council Retrieved 5 December 2022 Putin s Aims in Ukraine 2022 01 26 Archived from the original on 2022 02 14 Retrieved 2022 02 15 Today s Crisis Over Ukraine Was Predictable and Avoidable 2022 02 15 Archived from the original on 2022 02 15 Retrieved 2022 02 15 60th Anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis Unpacking Lessons from Peaceful Resolution YouTube YouTube 2022 10 27 Retrieved 2023 03 14 a b Why the US must press for a ceasefire in Ukraine 2022 10 17 Retrieved 2023 03 14 Ukraine Tragedy of a Nation Divided PDF Krasno Analysis Weekly Spotlight 2021 12 14 Retrieved 2023 11 18 External links editJackMatlock com website and blog nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Jack F Matlock Jr Appearances on C SPANDiplomatic postsPreceded byFrancis J Meehan United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia1981 1983 Succeeded byWilliam H LuersPreceded byArthur A Hartman United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union1987 1991 Succeeded byRobert S Strauss Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jack F Matlock Jr amp oldid 1215107409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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