- Elbridge Durbrow
Elbridge Durbrow (
September 21 ,1903 –May 16 ,1997 ) was an American Foreign Service officer and diplomat who served as the Counselor of Embassy and Deputy Chief of Mission in Moscow in the late 1940s and later the US ambassador toSouth Vietnam from March 1957 to April 1961.Early life
Durbrow was born in San Francisco,
California . Durbrow graduated fromYale University in 1926 with a degree inphilosophy . He then continued his education atStanford University , the University of Dijon in France, theHague Academy of International Law in the Netherlands, theÉcole Libre des Sciences Politiques in Paris and finally theUniversity of Chicago , where he studiedinternational economics andfinance .cite news|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9402E0DD133BF930A15756C0A961958260|title= Elbridge Durbrow, U.S. Diplomat, Dies at 93|last=Saxon|first=Wolfgang|date=1997-05-23|work=The New York Times |accessdate=2008-04-21]Foreign Service career
Durbrow began his career in the
United States Foreign Service by serving asVice Consul at the American embassy in Warsaw,Poland . He rose through the service's ranks over the next decade while serving in the embassies inBucharest ,Naples ,Rome ,Lisbon andMoscow . In 1941, Durbrow became the assistant chief of State Department's Eastern European affairs division.cite news|url=|title= Elbridge Durbrow, 93, Dies; Ambassador to S. Vietnam|last=Pearson|first=Richard|date=1997-05-20|work=The Washington Post |page=B06|accessdate=2008-04-21]In 1944, Durbrow was appointed as the chief of the
Eastern Europe an division of the US State Department inWashington, D.C. . That year, he was also one of the American delegates at theUnited Nations Monetary and Financial Conference , which set up theInternational Bank for Reconstruction and Development , theGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), theInternational Monetary Fund (IMF) and theBretton Woods system of money management. AfterWorld War II , Durbrow was vocal in his opposition for the diplomatic recognition of newly formed governments inHungary ,Romania andBulgaria because of their Communist origins. In 1946, he left this position to succeedGeorge F. Kennan as the Counselor of Embassy and Deputy Chief of Mission in Moscow, under the US ambassador to the Soviet Union and futureCentral Intelligence Agency Director,Walter Bedell Smith . In this role, he warned Smith and others of Sovietexpansionism and efforts to break up theWestern world . From 1948 to 1950, he served as an adviser to theNational War College in Washington, D.C., and then spent the next two years as director of the Foreign Service's personnel division. In 1952, he was sent toItaly where he served as deputy chief of mission to the US Ambassador to Italy,Clare Boothe Luce . Two years later, he was promoted to the diplomatic rank of Career Minister.On
March 14 ,1957 , PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower named Durbrow as theUnited States Ambassador to South Vietnam . [cite web|url=http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/po/com/11341.htm|title= Chiefs of Mission by Country, 1778-2005: Vietnam, South |last=|first=|date=|work=United States State Department|accessdate=2008-04-21] At the time, the US had a minor military and political presence in Vietnam due to government's goal of preventingCommunism from taking over the region. Durbrow had a difficult time in his ambassadorial role. He had to frequently work with the authoritarian regime ofNgo Dinh Diem and the corruption and ineffective policymaking that accompanied it. Vietnamese officers, disgruntled with Diem's government, tried to persuade Durbrow into joining anti-Diem groups. Durbrow, who began to feel uneasy about Diem's authority, had to refuse because the US government was still in support of Diem.In 1960, Diem and his younger brother and chief political adviser
Ngo Dinh Nhu accused Durbrow of supporting a failed coup attempt by paratroopers of theArmy of the Republic of Vietnam . [cite book| title=A Death in November| first=Ellen J.|last=Hammer| year=1987 |publisher=E. P. Dutton |isbn=0-525-24210-4|pages=p. 133] In April 1961, the newly elected American PresidentJohn F. Kennedy formed a committee to assess the political, military and socioeconomic situation in Vietnam, with the hope of determining what it would take to keep Communism out of South Vietnam. OnApril 16 , Kennedy replaced Durbrow withFrederick Nolting , who pursued a policy of appeasement. Afterwards, Durbrow served as a delegate to theNATO council in Paris and later as a government adviser to the National War College and the Air University.Retirement
Durbrow retired from his 38-year diplomatic career in 1968. He spent the next two decades writing and lecturing on
foreign affairs . Through the 1970s, he served as the chairman of the American Foreign Policy Institute and as the director of the Center for International Strategic Studies and the Freedom Studies Center in South Boston,Virginia .Durbrow died at his home in Walnut Creek,
California onMay 16 ,1997 from complications of astroke . He was survived by his second wife, Benice Balcom Durbrow, and two sons from his first marriage, Chandler and Bruce.References
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