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Leo Pasvolsky

Leo Pasvolsky (August 22, 1893 – May 5, 1953) was a journalist, economist, state department official and special assistant to Secretary of State Cordell Hull. He was one of the United States government's main planners for the post World War II world and "probably the foremost author of the UN Charter."[1] Thomas Connally said in his memoirs "Certainly he had more to do with writing the framework of the charter than anyone else."[2] His New York Times obituary is subtitled "Wrote Charter of World Organization." A short, rotund, mustachioed pipe smoker with a very large and round head, he joked that he might find it easier to roll than to walk. An aide compared him to the third little pig in the Three Little Pigs, Hull called him "Friar Tuck". A hardworking "one-man think tank" for Hull, he preferred to stay invisible, in the background.[3] In the words of Richard Holbrooke, he "was one of those figures peculiar to Washington – a tenacious bureaucrat who, fixed on a single goal, left behind a huge legacy while virtually disappearing from history."[4]

Leo Pasvolsky (standing right) at the Dumbarton Oaks Conference, August 1944

Early life edit

Pasvolsky was born in Pavlograd in the Russian Empire in 1893. His parents were anti-czarists and the family fled to the United States in 1905. After graduating from the City College of New York in 1916[5] he studied political science at Columbia University and also attended the University of Geneva. He then edited periodicals, the monthly The Russian Review and Amerikansky Viestnik, and the daily newspaper Russkoye Slovo.[6] Engaged in the tempestuous political climate of the emigres in New York, he debated Leon Trotsky during his visit to New York in 1916. He was at first optimistic about the Russian Revolution, and worked as the secretary of Boris Bakhmeteff, the last Ambassador to the US of the Kerensky government,[7] but became embittered and anti-communist after Lenin's October Revolution.

In 1919 he covered the Paris Peace Conference for the New York Tribune, the Brooklyn Eagle and other newspapers, and in 1921 he covered the Washington Arms Conference for the Baltimore Sun. During this period he became a Wilsonian internationalist and softened his stance toward the Soviet Union, arguing for its recognition by the US and its admission into the League of Nations.[3]

Brookings edit

In 1922 he became an economist on the staff of the Brookings Institution, from which he received a Ph.D. in 1936, and which was his institutional base until his death in 1953. In November 1926, he married Clara Christine McCormick of Pittsburgh.[8]

In his writings in the 1920s, he argued that the Soviet Union's 1918–1921 war, communism was an ideologically based attempt to realize Marx's vision of socialism or communism, rather than a short-term wartime expedient with no lasting significance.[9] He also wrote critically about Proletkult, saying that its chief characteristic was pretentious artificiality. With foundation of Kultintern he claimed this would reduce the Proletkult movement "not primarily, but exclusively" to a weapon to promote the Bolshevik view of communism.[10] Pasvolsky's book on Bulgaria and others from this period are still regarded as useful surveys by specialists.[11]

Bureaucrat edit

Early in the first Roosevelt administration, he was hired by Cordell Hull as his personal assistant but returned to Brookings after two years. Later, he worked in the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the Department of Commerce (1934–35) and in the Division of Trade Agreements 1935–36 and later in various capacities in the State Department from 1935 to 1946.[12] During the 1930s and 1940s, frequently with Harold G. Moulton, his closest ally and collaborator since the 1920s at Brookings, he envisioned a stable, open world economy based on international political cooperation involving a successor to the League of Nations, wider than an alliance of democracies, and with international police powers. Earlier Brookings studies of the 1920s and 1930s focused on the importance of worldwide demand to the American economy, but by 1941 Paslovsky and Moulton underscored the ever-growing dependence of the American economy on foreign raw materials binding the US more tightly to the world economy. "Even before America entered the war, Pasvolsky was thinking about the postwar world."[13] He joined the Council on Foreign Relations in 1938.[12][14] Along with Norman Davis, Pasvolsky, nicknamed "Pazzy" by some council members, became the main liaison between the Council and the State Department, and regularly attended the council's Economic and Financial Group meetings in New York.[15]

As Hull's assistant, he was on the same level as the six assistant secretaries of state.[16]

In September 1939, Hull assigned Pasvolsky to planning for the postwar peace, and at Pasvolsky's suggestion, set up the Advisory Committee on Problems of Foreign Relations. After this became moribund, Hull appointed Pasvolsky the first director of the State Department's new Division of Special Research in February 1941. During 1942 diplomat Charles W. Yost served as Assistant Chief. The two would work together at the Dumbarton Oaks conference, drafting the UN Charter. When the division was split in January 1943 into a Division of Political Studies and a Division of Economic Studies, Pasvolsky continued to supervise them. He was executive officer of the secretive Advisory Committee on Postwar Foreign Policy, which superseded the Division, returning to the broadly based Advisory Committee concept.[17]

UN planning edit

The work of the Advisory Committee led to the drafting of an outline for a "preliminary UN" by Undersecretary Sumner Welles, based on the design of the League of Nations. Pasvolsky and Hull eventually opposed Welles' draft as being too hastily written. The major split was over whether the organization would have a "regional" nature, perhaps with local councils, in which each great power would have most of the responsibility for its region, or would have more centralized structure. Welles, as well as Winston Churchill (and later, Nelson Rockefeller) favored "regionalism," while Pasvolsky and Hull favored a unitary global body. Roosevelt wavered between the two sides.[17]

Throughout 1942, Welles took the lead on planning for the UN and in January 1943 discussed a new and full draft charter with Roosevelt. It incorporated Roosevelt's four power "global policemen" but gave them less than absolute veto powers on an Executive Council with "regional" members too. Welles continued to work on the draft, but after a period of political infighting with Hull, he was forced to resign in August 1943. Subsequently, Hull took charge of UN planning, and appointed Pasvolsky to put together a draft charter, which he produced in August. It retained the Security Council, General Assembly and Secretariat, which Welles and Pasvolsky had agreed on, but downplayed regionalism. With the absence of Welles or any other figure with comparable influence, interest and expertise Pasvolsky's ideas and phrasing dominated the drafting henceforward. Before Hull departed for the Moscow Conference (1943), Pasvolsky advised him that economic reconstruction, especially in the USSR, should be a prioritized, while Isaiah Bowman insisted on territorial agreements restricting Soviet expansion.[18] By February 3, 1944, Roosevelt had approved Pasvolsky's latest draft. It incorporated two major departures "that modulated at least the naked appearance of Big Four dominance". Unlike the League of Nations, it entrusted security matters exclusively to the Security Council. However, it widened the Security Council into an 11-member entity, reducing the dominance of the four big powers that Roosevelt had long envisioned.[19]

In 1943 Pasvolsky was placed in charge of International Organization and Security Affairs in the State Department with responsibility for drafting the United Nations Charter; he was present at Bretton Woods and Dumbarton Oaks. He became chairman of the Coordination Committee at the San Francisco United Nations Conference on International Organization, where the charter was negotiated and signed. Secretary Hull depended heavily on Pasvolsky to explain the plans and proposals for the UN to President Roosevelt. Craufurd Goodwin writes "It is striking how close a resemblance Pasvolsky's statement of objectives for the new international organization bears to the positions he had taken with Moulton throughout the previous decade."[20]

Another important innovation at Dumbarton Oaks was the Economic and Social Council. Pasvolsky and the new Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr. managed to persuade Roosevelt to drop his idea of adding Brazil as a sixth member of the Security Council. Pasvolsky opposed an absolute veto by permanent members on all Security Council discussions and resolutions as giving these big states too much power, while Hull and the Soviets supported it. His persistence on this issue persuaded Hull and eventually the Soviets to limit the veto to substantive matters only – not allowing it on procedural ones including discussions.[21]

Other postwar planning edit

The British Foreign Research and Press Service, directed by Arnold J. Toynbee, also worked on plans for postwar reconstruction and political and economic arrangements and collaborated closely with the Advisory Committee. Toynbee and Pasvolsky "met on many occasions to discuss in detail ideas about the shape of a world order under Anglo-Saxon leadership."[22]

Pasvolsky, reflecting the thought of the State Department, the British, led by Lord Keynes and even the Soviets, envisioned the "eventual integration of Germany into the world economy." This lenience towards Germany in a 1944 State department memorandum by Pasvolsky inspired Treasury Secretary Morgenthau's opposed Morgenthau plan, but while the Morgenthau plan won tentative approval, the more lenient policies were eventually carried out.[23] Similarly, Pasvolsky, concerned about the strain on occupation forces, favored not insisting on the removal of the Japanese emperor, opposing Dean Acheson and Archibald MacLeish[24]

Return to Brookings and death edit

He resigned from the State Department in March 1946.[25] In 1946–53 he was director of international studies at the Brookings Institution, and at the time of his death, he was working on a study of the origin and history of the United Nations. He died of a heart attack on May 5, 1953, in Washington, DC, survived by his wife Christine McCormick Pasvolsky, two sisters (Elaine Elnett and Clara Pasvolsky) and two brothers (Valentine and Elias).[26][27] His incomplete manuscript on the history of the UN was the basis of his assistant Ruth Russell's 1961 History of the United Nations Charter, the standard work on the subject.[28]

Critics edit

Pasvolsky had his share of enemies at the State Department. Isaiah Bowman, one of the leading advisers of the State Department, took an instant dislike to Pasvolsky. Bowman, Welles and Pasvolsky engaged in a power struggle over the direction of the Advisory Committee in late 1942.[29] Bowman's differences with Pasvolsky erupted at San Francisco, where he wrote that he was "dangerous to American interests" and that it was "a mistake to put one man with his background into a key position." Pasvolsky resented Bowman equally, and wrote him out of subsequent histories of the UN's founding.[30]

I F Stone called Pasvolsky "Kerensky's gift to American foreign policy and political science" and considered that the widely used Brookings publications on US foreign policy prepared under his direction reflected "an ultra-right point of view".[31]

Some considered Pasvolsky's Brookings ideas for the world's economic problems simple-minded. Dean Acheson referred disparagingly to the "Hull-Pasvolsky establishment" and wrote that "Leo Pasvolsky was Mr. Hull's principal speech writer. Or one might say, he wrote Mr. Hull's principal speech: for whatever the occasion or title, the speech was apt to turn into a dissertation on the benefits of unhampered international trade and the true road to it through agreements reducing tariffs."[32] Acheson belittled Pasvolsky's postwar planning:

The whole effort, except for two results, seems to have been a singularly sterile one, uninspired by gifts either of insight or prophecy. One of these results was the foundation work for the United Nations Charter, the other, which laid an even broader foundation, the education of Senator Arthur Vandenberg to understand that beyond the borders of the United States existed a "vast external realm" which could and would affect profoundly our interests and our destiny.[33]

In a 1967 letter, Acheson criticized American moralism in international affairs, which he saw as culminating in "that little rat Leo Pasvolsky's United Nations." [34]

Works edit

  • The Economics of Communism: With Special Reference to Russia's Experiment (pdf), New York: Macmillan, 1921
  • Russia in the Far East (pdf). New York: Macmillan. 1922. ISBN 0-8305-0087-1.
  • Economic Nationalism of the Danubian States, New York: Macmillan, 1928
  • Bulgaria's Economic Position: With Special Reference to the Reparation Problem and the Work of the League of Nations, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1930
  • Current Monetary Issues, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1933
  • Moulton, Harold G.; Pasvolsky, Leo (1924), Russian Debts and Russian Reconstruction: A Study of the Relation of Russia's Foreign Debts to Her Economic Recovery, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, McGraw-Hill
  • Moulton, Harold G.; Pasvolsky, Leo (1926), World War Debt Settlements, New York: The Macmillan Company
  • Moulton, Harold G.; Pasvolsky, Leo (1932), War Debts and World Prosperity, Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Interview with Stephen Schlesinger on CNN's Diplomatic License". December 24, 2004. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  2. ^ Schlesinger, p.44, citing Connally, p.279
  3. ^ a b Schlesinger, pp.33–35
  4. ^ Richard Holbrooke (September 28, 2003). "Last Best Hope". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  5. ^ "206 GET DEGREES AT CITY COLLEGE; Largest Class In the History". The New York Times. 23 June 1916. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  6. ^ "RUSSIAN PAPER IN ENGLISH.; Russkoye Slovo to Print Special Edition in Honor of Mission" (PDF). The New York Times. July 7, 1917.
  7. ^ Drew Pearson (August 28, 1943). "Russian Policy, Peace, Were Hull-Welles Stumbling Blocks". St. Petersburg Times.
  8. ^ "Weddings". The Frederick Post. 11 November 1926. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  9. ^ "History – 'War Communism' Debate – Johnson's Russia List 7-12-02 – Research & Analytical Supplement". Retrieved 2008-04-24., citing Peter J. Boettke, "The Soviet Experiment with Pure Communism," Critical Review: A Journal of Books and Ideas, Vol. 2 No. 4 (Fall 1988), pp. 149–182.
  10. ^ Pasvolsky, Leo (1921). "Proletkult:Its Prentions and Fallacies". North American Review. CCXIII (April 1921): 539–550. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  11. ^ Lampe, John R. (1986). The Bulgarian Economy in the Twentieth Century. London: Croom Helm. p. 75. ISBN 0-7099-1644-2.
  12. ^ a b Domhoff, p. 119
  13. ^ Goodwin, p. 92
  14. ^ Amos A. Tevelow. "From Corporate Liberalism to Neoliberalism: A History of American Think Tanks" (PDF). p. 126n377. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
  15. ^ Shoup & Minter, p. 124
  16. ^ Block, Maxine; Rothe, Anna Herthe; Candee, Marjorie Dent (1971). Current Biography – 1945. p. 447. Retrieved 2008-04-28.
  17. ^ a b Schlesinger, pp.39
  18. ^ Smith, p.387
  19. ^ Hoopes & Brinkley, pp. 114–115
  20. ^ Goodwin, p. 93
  21. ^ Schlesinger, pp.49–55
  22. ^ Ban, p153-54
  23. ^ Van Hook, James C. (2004). Rebuilding Germany: the creation of the social market economy, 1945–1957. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 26–27. ISBN 0-521-83362-0.
  24. ^ Janssens, Rudolf V. A. (1995). "What Future for Japan?": U.S. Wartime Planning for the Postwar Era, 1942–1945. Amsterdam: Rodopi. p. 299. ISBN 90-5183-885-9.
  25. ^ "Russian-Born Byrnes Aide Resigns Post". The Washington Post: 4. March 15, 1946. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
  26. ^ . Time. LXI (20). May 18, 1953. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  27. ^ "DR. LEO PASVOLSKY OF U. N. FAME; Economist, Ex-Aide at State Department Wrote Charter of World Organization". New York Times. May 7, 1953.
  28. ^ Schlesinger, p.281
  29. ^ Smith, p.385
  30. ^ Smith, p.404
  31. ^ Stone pp. 154-156
  32. ^ Acheson pp. 55, 64
  33. ^ Acheson p. 64
  34. ^ Robert L. Beisner (March 17, 2003). "Wrong from the Beginning". The Weekly Standard. 8 (26). Retrieved 2008-03-22.

References edit

  • Acheson, Dean (1987), Present at the Creation: My Years in the State Department, New York: W. W. Norton & Company, ISBN 0-393-30412-4
  • Bán, András (2004), Hungary and Britain 1939–41: The Attempt to Maintain Relations, London: Routledge, ISBN 0-7146-5660-7
  • Brinkley, Douglas; Hoopes, Townsend (1997), FDR and the Creation of the United Nations, New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-08553-2
  • Connally, Thomas; Steinberg, Alfred (1954), My Name Is Thomas Connally, New York: T. Y. Crowell, ISBN 1-162-92216-8
  • Domhoff, G. William (1990), The Power Elite and the State: How Policy is Made in America, New York: Aldine de Gruyter, ISBN 0-202-30373-X
  • Goodwin, Craufurd D. (1998), "Harold Moulton and Leo Paslovsky of the Brookings Institution as Champions of a New World Order", in Rutherford, Malcolm (ed.), The Economic Mind in America: Essays in the History of American Economics, New York: Routledge, pp. 89–95, ISBN 0-415-13355-6
  • Hilderbrand, Robert C. (2001), Dumbarton Oaks: The Origins of the United Nations and the Search for Postwar Security, Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 0-8078-4950-2
  • Schlesinger, Stephen E. (2004), Act of Creation: the Founding of the United Nations: A story of Superpowers, Secret Agents, Wartime Allies and Enemies, and Their Quest for a Peaceful World, Cambridge, MA: Westview, Perseus Books Group, pp. 33–51, ISBN 0-8133-3275-3
  • Shoup, Laurence H.; Minter, William (1977), Imperial Brain Trust: The Council on Foreign Relations and United States Foreign Policy, New York: Monthly Review Press, ISBN 0-85345-393-4
  • Smith, Neil (2004), American Empire: Roosevelt's Geographer and the Prelude to Globalization (California Studies in Critical Human Geography, 9), Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-24338-2, archived from the original on 2012-12-10
  • Stone, I. F. (1968), The Truman Era, 1945-1952, Boston: Little, Brown, ISBN 0-316-81772-4

Inderjeet Parmar, Think Tanks and Power in Foreign Policy: a comparative study of The role and influence of the CFR and RIIA, 1939-1945 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004)

Further reading edit

  • Hull, Cordell (1948), Memoirs of Cordell Hull. Vols 1 and 2, New York: Macmillan
  • O'Sullivan, Christopher D. (2007), Sumner Welles, Postwar Planning, and the Quest for a New World Order, 1937–1943, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-14258-8
  • Russell, Ruth B. (1958), A History of the United Nations Charter: The Role of the United States, 1940–1945, Washington, DC: Brookings Institution
  • Wala, Michael (1994), The Council on Foreign Relations and American Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War, Providence, R.I.: Berghann Books, ISBN 1-57181-003-X
  • Notter, Harley (1993), Postwar Foreign Policy Preparation, 1939–1945, Reprint Services Company, ISBN 0-7812-4920-1

External links edit

  • Risto Wallin. "The Present Project: Conceptual Foundations of 20th-Century International Relations and World Politics". Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • Frank Weller (13 August 1944). "Mr 5 by 5". The Nebraska State Journal. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  • "The State Department Speaks: Episode 1". 8 January 1944.

pasvolsky, august, 1893, 1953, journalist, economist, state, department, official, special, assistant, secretary, state, cordell, hull, united, states, government, main, planners, post, world, world, probably, foremost, author, charter, thomas, connally, said,. Leo Pasvolsky August 22 1893 May 5 1953 was a journalist economist state department official and special assistant to Secretary of State Cordell Hull He was one of the United States government s main planners for the post World War II world and probably the foremost author of the UN Charter 1 Thomas Connally said in his memoirs Certainly he had more to do with writing the framework of the charter than anyone else 2 His New York Times obituary is subtitled Wrote Charter of World Organization A short rotund mustachioed pipe smoker with a very large and round head he joked that he might find it easier to roll than to walk An aide compared him to the third little pig in the Three Little Pigs Hull called him Friar Tuck A hardworking one man think tank for Hull he preferred to stay invisible in the background 3 In the words of Richard Holbrooke he was one of those figures peculiar to Washington a tenacious bureaucrat who fixed on a single goal left behind a huge legacy while virtually disappearing from history 4 Leo Pasvolsky standing right at the Dumbarton Oaks Conference August 1944 Contents 1 Early life 2 Brookings 3 Bureaucrat 3 1 UN planning 3 2 Other postwar planning 4 Return to Brookings and death 5 Critics 6 Works 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editPasvolsky was born in Pavlograd in the Russian Empire in 1893 His parents were anti czarists and the family fled to the United States in 1905 After graduating from the City College of New York in 1916 5 he studied political science at Columbia University and also attended the University of Geneva He then edited periodicals the monthly The Russian Review and Amerikansky Viestnik and the daily newspaper Russkoye Slovo 6 Engaged in the tempestuous political climate of the emigres in New York he debated Leon Trotsky during his visit to New York in 1916 He was at first optimistic about the Russian Revolution and worked as the secretary of Boris Bakhmeteff the last Ambassador to the US of the Kerensky government 7 but became embittered and anti communist after Lenin s October Revolution In 1919 he covered the Paris Peace Conference for the New York Tribune the Brooklyn Eagle and other newspapers and in 1921 he covered the Washington Arms Conference for the Baltimore Sun During this period he became a Wilsonian internationalist and softened his stance toward the Soviet Union arguing for its recognition by the US and its admission into the League of Nations 3 Brookings editIn 1922 he became an economist on the staff of the Brookings Institution from which he received a Ph D in 1936 and which was his institutional base until his death in 1953 In November 1926 he married Clara Christine McCormick of Pittsburgh 8 In his writings in the 1920s he argued that the Soviet Union s 1918 1921 war communism was an ideologically based attempt to realize Marx s vision of socialism or communism rather than a short term wartime expedient with no lasting significance 9 He also wrote critically about Proletkult saying that its chief characteristic was pretentious artificiality With foundation of Kultintern he claimed this would reduce the Proletkult movement not primarily but exclusively to a weapon to promote the Bolshevik view of communism 10 Pasvolsky s book on Bulgaria and others from this period are still regarded as useful surveys by specialists 11 Bureaucrat editEarly in the first Roosevelt administration he was hired by Cordell Hull as his personal assistant but returned to Brookings after two years Later he worked in the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the Department of Commerce 1934 35 and in the Division of Trade Agreements 1935 36 and later in various capacities in the State Department from 1935 to 1946 12 During the 1930s and 1940s frequently with Harold G Moulton his closest ally and collaborator since the 1920s at Brookings he envisioned a stable open world economy based on international political cooperation involving a successor to the League of Nations wider than an alliance of democracies and with international police powers Earlier Brookings studies of the 1920s and 1930s focused on the importance of worldwide demand to the American economy but by 1941 Paslovsky and Moulton underscored the ever growing dependence of the American economy on foreign raw materials binding the US more tightly to the world economy Even before America entered the war Pasvolsky was thinking about the postwar world 13 He joined the Council on Foreign Relations in 1938 12 14 Along with Norman Davis Pasvolsky nicknamed Pazzy by some council members became the main liaison between the Council and the State Department and regularly attended the council s Economic and Financial Group meetings in New York 15 As Hull s assistant he was on the same level as the six assistant secretaries of state 16 In September 1939 Hull assigned Pasvolsky to planning for the postwar peace and at Pasvolsky s suggestion set up the Advisory Committee on Problems of Foreign Relations After this became moribund Hull appointed Pasvolsky the first director of the State Department s new Division of Special Research in February 1941 During 1942 diplomat Charles W Yost served as Assistant Chief The two would work together at the Dumbarton Oaks conference drafting the UN Charter When the division was split in January 1943 into a Division of Political Studies and a Division of Economic Studies Pasvolsky continued to supervise them He was executive officer of the secretive Advisory Committee on Postwar Foreign Policy which superseded the Division returning to the broadly based Advisory Committee concept 17 UN planning edit The work of the Advisory Committee led to the drafting of an outline for a preliminary UN by Undersecretary Sumner Welles based on the design of the League of Nations Pasvolsky and Hull eventually opposed Welles draft as being too hastily written The major split was over whether the organization would have a regional nature perhaps with local councils in which each great power would have most of the responsibility for its region or would have more centralized structure Welles as well as Winston Churchill and later Nelson Rockefeller favored regionalism while Pasvolsky and Hull favored a unitary global body Roosevelt wavered between the two sides 17 Throughout 1942 Welles took the lead on planning for the UN and in January 1943 discussed a new and full draft charter with Roosevelt It incorporated Roosevelt s four power global policemen but gave them less than absolute veto powers on an Executive Council with regional members too Welles continued to work on the draft but after a period of political infighting with Hull he was forced to resign in August 1943 Subsequently Hull took charge of UN planning and appointed Pasvolsky to put together a draft charter which he produced in August It retained the Security Council General Assembly and Secretariat which Welles and Pasvolsky had agreed on but downplayed regionalism With the absence of Welles or any other figure with comparable influence interest and expertise Pasvolsky s ideas and phrasing dominated the drafting henceforward Before Hull departed for the Moscow Conference 1943 Pasvolsky advised him that economic reconstruction especially in the USSR should be a prioritized while Isaiah Bowman insisted on territorial agreements restricting Soviet expansion 18 By February 3 1944 Roosevelt had approved Pasvolsky s latest draft It incorporated two major departures that modulated at least the naked appearance of Big Four dominance Unlike the League of Nations it entrusted security matters exclusively to the Security Council However it widened the Security Council into an 11 member entity reducing the dominance of the four big powers that Roosevelt had long envisioned 19 In 1943 Pasvolsky was placed in charge of International Organization and Security Affairs in the State Department with responsibility for drafting the United Nations Charter he was present at Bretton Woods and Dumbarton Oaks He became chairman of the Coordination Committee at the San Francisco United Nations Conference on International Organization where the charter was negotiated and signed Secretary Hull depended heavily on Pasvolsky to explain the plans and proposals for the UN to President Roosevelt Craufurd Goodwin writes It is striking how close a resemblance Pasvolsky s statement of objectives for the new international organization bears to the positions he had taken with Moulton throughout the previous decade 20 Another important innovation at Dumbarton Oaks was the Economic and Social Council Pasvolsky and the new Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr managed to persuade Roosevelt to drop his idea of adding Brazil as a sixth member of the Security Council Pasvolsky opposed an absolute veto by permanent members on all Security Council discussions and resolutions as giving these big states too much power while Hull and the Soviets supported it His persistence on this issue persuaded Hull and eventually the Soviets to limit the veto to substantive matters only not allowing it on procedural ones including discussions 21 Other postwar planning edit The British Foreign Research and Press Service directed by Arnold J Toynbee also worked on plans for postwar reconstruction and political and economic arrangements and collaborated closely with the Advisory Committee Toynbee and Pasvolsky met on many occasions to discuss in detail ideas about the shape of a world order under Anglo Saxon leadership 22 Pasvolsky reflecting the thought of the State Department the British led by Lord Keynes and even the Soviets envisioned the eventual integration of Germany into the world economy This lenience towards Germany in a 1944 State department memorandum by Pasvolsky inspired Treasury Secretary Morgenthau s opposed Morgenthau plan but while the Morgenthau plan won tentative approval the more lenient policies were eventually carried out 23 Similarly Pasvolsky concerned about the strain on occupation forces favored not insisting on the removal of the Japanese emperor opposing Dean Acheson and Archibald MacLeish 24 Return to Brookings and death editHe resigned from the State Department in March 1946 25 In 1946 53 he was director of international studies at the Brookings Institution and at the time of his death he was working on a study of the origin and history of the United Nations He died of a heart attack on May 5 1953 in Washington DC survived by his wife Christine McCormick Pasvolsky two sisters Elaine Elnett and Clara Pasvolsky and two brothers Valentine and Elias 26 27 His incomplete manuscript on the history of the UN was the basis of his assistant Ruth Russell s 1961 History of the United Nations Charter the standard work on the subject 28 Critics editPasvolsky had his share of enemies at the State Department Isaiah Bowman one of the leading advisers of the State Department took an instant dislike to Pasvolsky Bowman Welles and Pasvolsky engaged in a power struggle over the direction of the Advisory Committee in late 1942 29 Bowman s differences with Pasvolsky erupted at San Francisco where he wrote that he was dangerous to American interests and that it was a mistake to put one man with his background into a key position Pasvolsky resented Bowman equally and wrote him out of subsequent histories of the UN s founding 30 I F Stone called Pasvolsky Kerensky s gift to American foreign policy and political science and considered that the widely used Brookings publications on US foreign policy prepared under his direction reflected an ultra right point of view 31 Some considered Pasvolsky s Brookings ideas for the world s economic problems simple minded Dean Acheson referred disparagingly to the Hull Pasvolsky establishment and wrote that Leo Pasvolsky was Mr Hull s principal speech writer Or one might say he wrote Mr Hull s principal speech for whatever the occasion or title the speech was apt to turn into a dissertation on the benefits of unhampered international trade and the true road to it through agreements reducing tariffs 32 Acheson belittled Pasvolsky s postwar planning The whole effort except for two results seems to have been a singularly sterile one uninspired by gifts either of insight or prophecy One of these results was the foundation work for the United Nations Charter the other which laid an even broader foundation the education of Senator Arthur Vandenberg to understand that beyond the borders of the United States existed a vast external realm which could and would affect profoundly our interests and our destiny 33 In a 1967 letter Acheson criticized American moralism in international affairs which he saw as culminating in that little rat Leo Pasvolsky s United Nations 34 Works editThe Economics of Communism With Special Reference to Russia s Experiment pdf New York Macmillan 1921 Russia in the Far East pdf New York Macmillan 1922 ISBN 0 8305 0087 1 Economic Nationalism of the Danubian States New York Macmillan 1928 Bulgaria s Economic Position With Special Reference to the Reparation Problem and the Work of the League of Nations Washington DC The Brookings Institution 1930 Current Monetary Issues Washington DC The Brookings Institution 1933 Moulton Harold G Pasvolsky Leo 1924 Russian Debts and Russian Reconstruction A Study of the Relation of Russia s Foreign Debts to Her Economic Recovery Washington DC The Brookings Institution McGraw Hill Moulton Harold G Pasvolsky Leo 1926 World War Debt Settlements New York The Macmillan Company Moulton Harold G Pasvolsky Leo 1932 War Debts and World Prosperity Washington DC The Brookings InstitutionNotes edit Interview with Stephen Schlesinger on CNN s Diplomatic License December 24 2004 Retrieved 2008 03 22 Schlesinger p 44 citing Connally p 279 a b Schlesinger pp 33 35 Richard Holbrooke September 28 2003 Last Best Hope The New York Times Retrieved 2008 03 22 206 GET DEGREES AT CITY COLLEGE Largest Class In the History The New York Times 23 June 1916 Retrieved 2008 07 02 RUSSIAN PAPER IN ENGLISH Russkoye Slovo to Print Special Edition in Honor of Mission PDF The New York Times July 7 1917 Drew Pearson August 28 1943 Russian Policy Peace Were Hull Welles Stumbling Blocks St Petersburg Times Weddings The Frederick Post 11 November 1926 Retrieved 2008 07 02 History War Communism Debate Johnson s Russia List 7 12 02 Research amp Analytical Supplement Retrieved 2008 04 24 citing Peter J Boettke The Soviet Experiment with Pure Communism Critical Review A Journal of Books and Ideas Vol 2 No 4 Fall 1988 pp 149 182 Pasvolsky Leo 1921 Proletkult Its Prentions and Fallacies North American Review CCXIII April 1921 539 550 Retrieved 9 April 2017 Lampe John R 1986 The Bulgarian Economy in the Twentieth Century London Croom Helm p 75 ISBN 0 7099 1644 2 a b Domhoff p 119 Goodwin p 92 Amos A Tevelow From Corporate Liberalism to Neoliberalism A History of American Think Tanks PDF p 126n377 Retrieved 2008 03 27 Shoup amp Minter p 124 Block Maxine Rothe Anna Herthe Candee Marjorie Dent 1971 Current Biography 1945 p 447 Retrieved 2008 04 28 a b Schlesinger pp 39 Smith p 387 Hoopes amp Brinkley pp 114 115 Goodwin p 93 Schlesinger pp 49 55 Ban p153 54 Van Hook James C 2004 Rebuilding Germany the creation of the social market economy 1945 1957 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 26 27 ISBN 0 521 83362 0 Janssens Rudolf V A 1995 What Future for Japan U S Wartime Planning for the Postwar Era 1942 1945 Amsterdam Rodopi p 299 ISBN 90 5183 885 9 Russian Born Byrnes Aide Resigns Post The Washington Post 4 March 15 1946 Retrieved 2008 06 25 Milestones Time LXI 20 May 18 1953 Archived from the original on December 22 2008 Retrieved 2008 03 22 DR LEO PASVOLSKY OF U N FAME Economist Ex Aide at State Department Wrote Charter of World Organization New York Times May 7 1953 Schlesinger p 281 Smith p 385 Smith p 404 Stone pp 154 156 Acheson pp 55 64 Acheson p 64 Robert L Beisner March 17 2003 Wrong from the Beginning The Weekly Standard 8 26 Retrieved 2008 03 22 References editAcheson Dean 1987 Present at the Creation My Years in the State Department New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 30412 4 Ban Andras 2004 Hungary and Britain 1939 41 The Attempt to Maintain Relations London Routledge ISBN 0 7146 5660 7 Brinkley Douglas Hoopes Townsend 1997 FDR and the Creation of the United Nations New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08553 2 Connally Thomas Steinberg Alfred 1954 My Name Is Thomas Connally New York T Y Crowell ISBN 1 162 92216 8 Domhoff G William 1990 The Power Elite and the State How Policy is Made in America New York Aldine de Gruyter ISBN 0 202 30373 X Goodwin Craufurd D 1998 Harold Moulton and Leo Paslovsky of the Brookings Institution as Champions of a New World Order in Rutherford Malcolm ed The Economic Mind in America Essays in the History of American Economics New York Routledge pp 89 95 ISBN 0 415 13355 6 Hilderbrand Robert C 2001 Dumbarton Oaks The Origins of the United Nations and the Search for Postwar Security Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4950 2 Schlesinger Stephen E 2004 Act of Creation the Founding of the United Nations A story of Superpowers Secret Agents Wartime Allies and Enemies and Their Quest for a Peaceful World Cambridge MA Westview Perseus Books Group pp 33 51 ISBN 0 8133 3275 3 Shoup Laurence H Minter William 1977 Imperial Brain Trust The Council on Foreign Relations and United States Foreign Policy New York Monthly Review Press ISBN 0 85345 393 4 Smith Neil 2004 American Empire Roosevelt s Geographer and the Prelude to Globalization California Studies in Critical Human Geography 9 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 24338 2 archived from the original on 2012 12 10 Stone I F 1968 The Truman Era 1945 1952 Boston Little Brown ISBN 0 316 81772 4 Inderjeet Parmar Think Tanks and Power in Foreign Policy a comparative study of The role and influence of the CFR and RIIA 1939 1945 Palgrave Macmillan 2004 Further reading editHull Cordell 1948 Memoirs of Cordell Hull Vols 1 and 2 New York Macmillan O Sullivan Christopher D 2007 Sumner Welles Postwar Planning and the Quest for a New World Order 1937 1943 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 14258 8 Russell Ruth B 1958 A History of the United Nations Charter The Role of the United States 1940 1945 Washington DC Brookings Institution Wala Michael 1994 The Council on Foreign Relations and American Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War Providence R I Berghann Books ISBN 1 57181 003 X Notter Harley 1993 Postwar Foreign Policy Preparation 1939 1945 Reprint Services Company ISBN 0 7812 4920 1External links edit nbsp Biography portal Risto Wallin The Present Project Conceptual Foundations of 20th Century International Relations and World Politics Retrieved 2008 04 24 Frank Weller 13 August 1944 Mr 5 by 5 The Nebraska State Journal Retrieved 2008 07 02 The State Department Speaks Episode 1 8 January 1944 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