- Malcolm Toon
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Malcolm Toon United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia In office
1969–1971United States Ambassador to Yugoslavia In office
1971–1975United States Ambassador to Israel In office
1975–1976Preceded by Kenneth B. Keating Succeeded by Samuel W. Lewis United States Ambassador to the Soviet Union In office
1976–1979Preceded by Walter John Stoessel, Jr. Succeeded by Thomas J. Watson, Jr. Personal details Born July 4, 1916
Troy, New YorkDied February 12, 2009 (aged 92)
Pinehurst, NCMalcolm Toon (July 4, 1916 – February 12, 2009[1]) was an American diplomat. He graduated from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy of Tufts University in 1938, and served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Toon was the ambassador to Czechoslovakia from 1969–1971, Yugoslavia from 1971–1975, Israel from 1975–1976, and the Soviet Union from 1976-1979. He participated in SALT II talks from 1977–1979 and the American-Soviet Summit in Vienna in 1979. In the 1990s, Toon co-chaired the U.S.-Russian Joint Commission on POW/MIAs with Russian general Dmitri Volkogonov. An article about Toon's briefing of the US press corps in Moscow 1977-79 was published in the US State Department's Foreign Service Journal in June 2011 and may be read at http://www.afsa.org/FSJ/0611/files/assets/downloads/publication.pdf .
External links
- U.S. State Department Archives (People)
- Malcolm Toon has been interviewed as part of Frontline Diplomacy: The Foreign Affairs Oral History Collection of the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training, a site at the Library of Congress.
References
United States Ambassadors to Israel McDonald (1949–50) · Davis (1951–53) · Lawson (1954–59) · Reid (1959–61) · Barbour (1961–73) · Keating (1973–75) · Toon (1975–76) · Lewis (1977–85) · Pickering (1985–88) · Brown (1988–92) · Harrop (1992–93) · Djerejian (1994) · Indyk (1995–97) · Walker (1997–00) · Indyk (2000–01) · Kurtzer (2001–05) · Jones (2005–08) · Cunningham (2008–11) · Shapiro (2011–)Categories:- 1916 births
- 2009 deaths
- Ambassadors of the United States
- United States ambassadors to Israel
- United States ambassadors to the Soviet Union
- United States ambassadors to Yugoslavia
- American politician stubs
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