Ellsworth Bunker

Ellsworth Bunker (born May 11, 1894 in Yonkers, New York, deceased September 30, 1984) was an American diplomat. Trained as a lawyer, Bunker first worked in the private sector before becoming an academic. He then moved to government during the Eisenhower administration. In 1956 he was appointed ambassador to India where he played a crucial role in the covert alliance between the two powers against China. He was replaced by John Kenneth Galbraith in 1961. After a period back in Washington he was made U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, 1967-73. Once in Saigon, he strongly supported the war efforts of Presidents Johnson and Nixon, going so far as to applaud US incursions into Laos and Cambodia. Following the conclusion of the Vietnam War, Bunker headed the US team involved in the drawing up of the 1977 Torrijos-Carter Treaties. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom twice - the first time in 1963 and the second time in 1967. Bunker, Ellsworth Bunker, Ellsworth Bunker, Ellsworth

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
stephen, count of blois
le duan
dactyl
tran van tra
le duc tho
daimon
damocles
vandana shiva
dactyl (asteroid)
pham van dong
riot act
ethnomusicology
daphnis
nomia
dardania
dardanus
batea
duong van minh
ngo dinh nhu
nguyen khanh
deimos (mythology)
nguyen van thieu
phobos (mythology)
dean acheson
lovegrass
coldplay
kim mitchell
sibylline rock
william calley
phaedriades
pythian games
castalian spring
a. peter dewey
the virgin suicides
john foster dulles
juno award
daniel ellsberg
felix yusupov
3 juno
sybil
rutgers university
alexander haig
pedro alcazar
list of mathematicians