05 April 2022

Madeleine Albright, a great international diplomat, writer & female mentor

                                       
Madeleine Albright in orange
Foreign Ministers from around the world, Lisbon, 1997

Maria Korbel (1937-2022) was born in Prague. Her father Josef Korbel was a member of the Czech diplomatic service in Belgrade, then Am­bassador to Yugos­l­avia. In 1938, Czech­os­lovakia was at the epi­cen­tre of Europe’s crises, coveted by Ger­many and pro­t­ected by UK and Fran­ce. It ended with the 1938 Mun­ich Ag­reement, meant to calm Hitler by ac­cep­ting his territ­or­ial de­mands. But Nazi Germany chewed up Czech­oslovakia and in Mar 1939 the family fled to UK. In 1941, Jewish Josef and Anna converted to Catholicism, to save the family.

Once the Nazis left Eastern Europe, the Soviets increased their po­wer. The family returned home after WW2, but pro-Soviet commun­ism threatened. By 1948 they’d settled in Col­or­ado, where her fat­­her taught intern­at­ional relat­ions at Denver Uni. In 1948, he wor­k­ed for the U.N in India, until the Com­m­unists over­threw the Czech gov­ernment.

Madeleine took U.S citizenship in 1957 and studied pol­itical science at Wellesley College, grad­uat­ing in 1959. She earned high­er degrees in in­ternat­ional aff­airs from Colum­bia Uni. She married Jos­eph Alb­right from a news­pap­er publish­ing family; the couple liv­ed in Chic­ago and NY, before mov­ing to Wash­ing­ton DC, and having 3 daughters.

In 1976 Albright received a Ph.D from Columbia and was working for another Eastern European im­mig­rant, Col­umbia Uni academic Zbigniew Brzez­inski, Pres Jimmy Carter’s nat­ional security adviser. From 1978-81 she served as a White House staffer on the National Secur­ity Coun­cil.

Her marriage ended in 1982. So she went to Georgetown Uni, as a Prof of Internat­ional Aff­airs (1982-3). Af­ter Pres Carter, she was an adviser to Democratic candidates, incl­uding to presidential cand­id­ates Walter Mondale, Gerald­ine Ferr­aro (1984 race) and Mich­ael Duk­akis (1988 race).

In Ronald Reagan (1981-9) and Geo­rge Bush's (1989–92) Republican terms, Albright worked for non-profits.

When Bill Clint­on sought the presidential nomination in 1992, Al­b­right was his senior cam­p­aign foreign policy ad­vis­or. After Clinton became President, her pol­it­ical career blossomed; Cl­inton named her U.S ambassador to the United Nations in 1993, a rugged time in glob­al politics. The Cold War had just ended, leaving it unclear what prac­tical steps the world’s last superpower should take.

President Clinton nominated Albright
as Sec­retary of State, Dec 1996
  
She immediately became a major force in world politics, America be­ing the UN's larg­est contributor to U.N activities and budget. She was involved in debates over UN peace-keeping activities and American foreign policy.

Madeleine Albright was nominated to be the first woman Sec­ of State by Pres Clinton in Dec 1996 and unanimously confirmed in Jan 1997. Having spent time in the U.N dealing with brutal fight­ing in Bosnia, Albright was conf­ront­ed by more cr­ises in Yugo­s­l­avia, a na­t­ion split by awful eth­nic and rel­ig­ious dif­ferences. The U.S intervened in Kosovo to pro­t­ect the per­sec­ut­ed Alban­ian minor­ity. In fact Kos­ovo’s war became the heart of the debate over what role Am­er­ica should play in the world.

Soon after her confirmation, Albright's cousin told Washington Post reporters that the family had been Czech Jews, not Catholics as she believed, and that 3 of her grandparents had been murdered in German con­cent­ration camps. This disc­overy brought problems for her pers­on­al sense of id­entity, but how did she not know her own family his­t­ory till her middle age?? That year, Albright flew to Prague and was honoured by Czech Pres Vaclav Havel.

 Albright and Havel, Prague, 1997

Albright strongly supported mil­itary interv­ent­ion. In 1999 she push­ed for North At­l­antic Treaty Organisation bombings in Yug­oslavia, to halt the clean­­sing of ethnic Albanians by Yugoslav and Ser­b­ian forc­es. This Kosovo Con­f­l­ict ended after 11 weeks of air strik­es, when Yugoslav­ia agreed to NATO’s terms. Alb­right was also inv­ol­ved in ef­forts to end North Korea’s nuclear program; in 2000 she became the highest-ranking U.S official to visit. But her talks with Kim Jong Il failed to produce a deal.

Albright and Kim Jong Il, 2000

Albright began a Middle Eastern peace mission in 1997, meeting Isr­aeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, then with Palest­in­ian leader Yasir Araf­at, Syrian Pres Hafez al-Assad (d2000), Egypt­ian Pres Hosny Mubarak, King Fahd of Saudi Arabia and King Huss­ein of Jordan (d1999). She condemned terror­ist activities, urged Netanyahu to make some conces­sions to the Palestinians, and then vowed not to re-meet with Isr­aeli and Palest­inian leaders until they cooperated. In July 2000 Albright returned to the Middle East, but talks between the new Israeli P.M Ehud Barak and Arafat ended.

By Jan 2001, Alb­right's impres­sive career as the highest-ranking fem­ale in the U.S government ended, having sh­owed a combination of scholarly resear­ch and political activity. Then she became chair­man of the board for the National Democ­ra­tic Inst­itute. The Wash­ing­ton Sp­eakers Bureau used this famous pub­lic speak­er to share insight about her career. In 2001 Albright returned to academe.

Meanwhile she was a frequent columnist on foreign affairs issues, and wrote books like The Mighty and the Almigh­ty: Reflect­ions on Am­erica, God, and World Affairs (2006), Memo to the Presid­ent El­ect (2008) and Fascism: A Warning (2018), Madam Secret­ary (2003), Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance & War, 1937–48 (2012) and Hell and Other Destinations (2020).

 
Madeleine Albright died at 84 in 2022.

Conclusion
As the world reordered post-Cold War, Albright was a maj­or fig­ure in inter­national diplomacy. Her vision for U.S policy and the role it played in the world can be described as:

Successes in American dip­lomacy:
1]pro­moting NATO’s expansion into former Soviet nations and the non-prolifer­ation of nuclear weapons from the USSR to rogue nations;
2] using mil­itary intervention under NATO in the 1999 Kosovo crisis;
3]support­ing the expansion of free-markets;
4]wanting to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on Glob­al Climate Change;
5]normalis­ing relations with Vietnam; and
6]improving relations with China and former Soviet nat­ions.

Her failures:
7] not succeeding with a lasting Israeli-Pales­t­inian peace and
8] not developing an ongoing U.S out­reach to North Korea 

Her political views were very sympathetic to me, but her appr­oach to dip­lomacy accepted the not­ion of us­ing military might to support Amer­ican st­rategic inter­ests. In her view, a U.S policy sh­ould have been suf­f­icient, by itself, to ach­­ieve the support of oth­er nat­ions!

Thank you to Office of the Historian, New Yorker, New York Times and BBC.




14 comments:

Joe said...

Czechs are the best linguists, best educated, most family oriented and most peace-focused people on earth. No wonder Madeleine was so successful.

Sue Bursztynski said...

Sounds like quite a life! I really didn’t know much except what was on the news over the years.

bazza said...

Some people's life stories leave me feeling inadequate! Madeleine Albright was one of those people. She was a wonderful diplomat but it's her back-story that is most fascinating for me. Do you know anything about her religious practice after she discovered that she was Jewish?
CLICK HERE for Bazza’s ambitiously ambidextrous unthinkable Blog ‘To Discover Ice’

Hels said...

Joe

Australia is HUGE and doesn't border even a single country. The old Czechoslovakia was tiny,
and shared a border with Poland, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Ukraine etc etc. If the country wasn't highly educated, multi lingual and skilled in international diplomacy, it would have suffered even more harshly than it did. Albright's father Josef recognised this exactly, as did his daughter.

Hels said...

Sue

I also took very little notice, at least until the Cold War was over. I was so angry about the murder of President Kennedy and the immoral Vietnam War, it reduced my interested in American politics for decades. Then I woke up and starting reading as much as I could.

Hels said...

bazza

at first the normal response would have been "what do you mean that 3 of the grandparents plus aunts, uncles and first cousins died in concentration camps? Didn't you ask why?" But perhaps Madeleine's parents were very wise in converting quietly when the children were young and never telling them anything.

When she first heard her family history at 59, she was confused and very uncertain about her identity. I know she kept one night Passover seder and the next day celebrated Easter in church, and I know that some of the grandsons had bar mitzvahs.

Anonymous said...

It is hard to believe Albright left our tv screens in 2001. She was a reassuring figure who spoke common and realistic sense.

She certainly had an interesting background and was a typical US immigrant who made good by education and subsequently had a very good nous. You don't get to where she got without some very good political skills.

Hels said...

Andrew

Albright had a great family background with her father in the Czech diplomatic service at a very tricky time in world history; she had the most amazing undergrad and postgrad education in all of the USA; and she had a long history as a skilled university professor and an author. Finally she was respected and guided in the White House by leaders who admired her political skills.

I wish I had her energy. I was exhausted just writing out her achievements in a blog post.

Anonymous said...

Certainly a problomatic figure, but on the whole a force for evil.

hels said...

Anonymous

who was a force for evil? Even if you did not always like Albright's politics, you have to admit that she gave her heart and soul to a better and more democratic world.

mem said...

Maybe her parents were wise as you say to quietly get on with their lives and not burden their children with all that tragedy .After all it wouldn't have changed anything would it ? Maybe it was because she had such wise parents and a great brain , that she was bale to achieve so much in her life .

Hels said...

mem

it was such a fraught situation. In my year at school, 90% of the children were born in Poland or surrounds, in 1947-8. Most of the parents were the sole survivors of the Holocaust, married another sole survivor, had a baby and moved to Australia as soon as they got a visa. Most of the parents I knew were loving but deeply disturbed, so the children thankfully were given support at school.

Albright's parents fled central Europe in 1939, converted in 1941 and stayed alive. Therefore, we might say, there was no reason to make Madeleine and her two younger siblings miserable all THEIR lives. Fortunately for Madeleine, whose career was built on confidence and scholarship.

Luiz Gomes said...

Boa tarde minha querida amiga. Obrigado pela excelente matéria de qualidade. Parabéns pelo seu excelente trabalho.

Hels said...

Luiz

I think it was such a difficult time in world politics, Albright was in the right place at the right time to use her endless diplomatic skills.