Cold Warrior Paul Nitze Passed Away At 97

NATO AIR

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Jun 25, 2004
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one of the great foreign policy figures of the last 50 years has passed away. what a man, what a legacy.

check out his description of dealing with the soviets..

In 1986, reflecting on the Soviet Union, which was to disintegrate five years later, Nitze said negotiating with the Soviets was like working with a defective vending machine.

"You put your quarter in, but you don't get anything out," he said. "You can shake it. You can talk to it. But you know it won't do any good. It just won't talk back to you."

PRICELESS

http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/10/20/nitze.obit.ap/index.html

Cold Warrior Paul Nitze dies at 97
Helped shape U.S. diplomatic, military policies for half-century
Wednesday, October 20, 2004 Posted: 10:51 PM EDT (0251 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Paul H. Nitze, who pursued a hard-line approach toward the Kremlin as he helped shape U.S. diplomatic and military strategy during the Cold War, is dead at 97.

His son, William A. Nitze, said he died Tuesday night at his home in the Georgetown area of Washington. A funeral service will be held Saturday at Washington National Cathedral.

Nitze's long career, which began with success on Wall Street as a young investment banker and included government service under eight presidents, was capped in April in Bath, Maine, as he witnessed the christening of a warship bearing his name.

Seated in a wheelchair, the former Navy secretary smiled broadly as his wife, Leezee Porter, swung a champagne bottle against the destroyer's bow to the cheers of hundreds of onlookers.

A band then broke into "Anchors Aweigh" and red, white and blue streamers and confetti shot into the air.

President Reagan awarded Nitze the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor in the United States, in 1985.

A self-described "hard-nosed pragmatist," Nitze as director of the State Department's policy planning staff in 1950 helped frame the strategy of building up U.S. forces to keep the Soviets contained in Eastern Europe.

He wrote in a 1950 national security paper that the Soviets were "animated by a new, fanatic faith, antithetical to our own, which seeks to impose its absolute authority over the rest of the world."

"I didn't think we should go to war with the Soviets and I don't think they wanted to go to war with us," Nitze said three decades later.

"But how do you conduct things so that the Soviets would be deterred from foreign expansion and be forced to look inward at their own problems?"

Nitze and the late former Secretary of State Christian Herter founded the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington in 1943.

Nitze could not attend the school's annual banquet last week, at which Secretary of State Colin Powell spoke in tribute to his long government service.

Recalling their time working together in the Reagan administration, when Powell was national security adviser, Powell said sitting with Nitze at the same table "was like having Moses at the table."

On Wednesday, Powell issued a statement remembering Nitze as a personal mentor and "a giant of U.S. foreign and defense policy and an inspiration" to State Department employees.

In 1957, Nitze conceived the idea of attaching a "think tank" to the school, which is now called the Johns Hopkins Foreign Policy Institute.

Three years later he helped Johns Hopkins University raise $4.2 million for the SAIS building near Dupont Circle in Washington, which was named for Nitze and his first wife, Phyllis Pratt Nitze, in 1986.

Then, two years later, he offered to match any amount raised by SAIS to expand the school. The goal was reached in 1989, doubling the school's space with another building.

Nitze, a conservative Democrat, was a natural fit for Ronald Reagan's Republican administration that began in 1981 because they both opposed President Jimmy Carter's 1979 Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty with the Soviet Union.

Along with a few other prominent conservative Democrats, organized as the Committee on the Present Danger, they contended the treaty could not be verified and would enable the Soviets to strengthen their nuclear arsenal.

Carter withdrew the SALT II treaty when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979.

The hard-line Democrats, convinced their party had drifted leftward, swung to support Reagan, himself a former Democrat.

Nitze took charge of negotiating reductions in intermediate range missiles with the Soviet Union in 1981 for Reagan, who had changed direction to support arms control accords.

The negotiations were marked by a July 1982 "walk in the woods" near Geneva, Switzerland, with the Soviet negotiator, Yuli Kvitsinsky, that produced a compromise breakthrough, but the treaty was not concluded at the time.

Strobe Talbott, president of the Brookings Institution and author of a 1988 biography of Nitze, called him "an extraordinary and influential figure over a long period of time."

"It was all the more remarkable because he operated at a level below the Cabinet and had a cumulative impact way beyond those who were secretary of state and secretary of defense," Talbott said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Nitze "could be ferocious as an opponent on the outside when he was not in the government," said Talbott, a former deputy secretary of state in the Clinton administration.

Born in Amherst, Massachusetts, the son of William Albert Nitze, a Romance languages scholar, Nitze grew up in Chicago, graduated from Harvard University in 1927 and worked for 12 years as an investment banker at Dillon Read & Co., before taking his first government post in 1940 in the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration.

In 1986, reflecting on the Soviet Union, which was to disintegrate five years later, Nitze said negotiating with the Soviets was like working with a defective vending machine.

"You put your quarter in, but you don't get anything out," he said. "You can shake it. You can talk to it. But you know it won't do any good. It just won't talk back to you."

Nitze is survived by his wife, four children, 11 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
 

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