Dean Rusk

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Dean Rusk
Dean Rusk

In office
January 20, 1961 – 1969
Under President John F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
Preceded by Christian Herter
Succeeded by William P. Rogers

Born February 9, 1909
Cherokee County, Georgia
Died December 20, 1994 (aged 85)
Profession Professor, Soldier, Politician
Dean Rusk with President Johnson and Robert McNamara
Dean Rusk with President Johnson and Robert McNamara

David Dean Rusk (February 9, 1909December 20, 1994) was the United States Secretary of State from 1961 to 1969 under presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Dean Rusk was born in Cherokee County, Georgia, where his name was given to a local middle school. He was educated in Atlanta, leaving school in 1925 to work for two years for a lawyer. Rusk then went to Davidson College in North Carolina and joined the fraternity KA, graduating in 1931 and then went to St. John's College, Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, he received the Cecil Peace Prize in 1933.

From 1934 to 1940 he taught at Mills College in Oakland, California. He studied law at the University of California, Berkeley, class of 1940. In World War II he joined the infantry as a reserve captain (he had been a ROTC Cadet Lieutenant Colonel), he served in Burma as a staff officer and ended the war as a colonel with the Legion of Merit and Oak Leaf Cluster.

He returned to America to work briefly for the War Department in Washington. He joined the Department of State in February 1945 working for the office of United Nations Affairs. In the same year, he suggested splitting Korea into a sphere of U.S. and one of Soviet influence at the 38th parallel north. He was made Deputy Under Secretary of State in 1949. He was made Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs in 1950 and played an influential part in the US decision to become involved in the Korean War, and also Japan's postwar compensation for victorious countries, such as the Rusk documents. However he was a cautious diplomat and always sought international support.

Rusk was a Rockefeller Foundation trustee from 1950 to 1961. In 1952 he succeeded Chester L. Barnard as president of the Foundation. On December 12, 1960, Rusk was named Secretary of State, assuming his office in January, 1961, where by convention he was forced to resign the Foundation presidency.

As Secretary of State he was consistently hawkish, a believer in the use of military action to combat Communism. During the Cuban missile crisis he initially supported an immediate military strike, but he soon turned towards diplomatic efforts. His public defense of US actions in the Vietnam War made him a frequent target of anti-war protests. Outside of his work against communism, he continued his Rockefeller Foundation ideas of aid to developing nations and also supported low tariffs to encourage world trade. Rusk also drew the ire of supporters of Israel after he let it be known that he believed the USS Liberty incident was a deliberate attack on the ship, rather than an accident.

As he was to recall in his autobiography, As I Saw It, Rusk never had a friendly relationship with Kennedy and repeatedly wanted to resign. Just after the president was assassinated, Rusk told Lyndon B. Johnson that he wanted to resign. However, Johnson told him to stay on and the two became friends. When Johnson died in 1973, he eulogized the former president when he lay in state.

Rusk received both the Sylvanus Thayer Award and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969.

Following his retirement, he taught international law at the University of Georgia School of Law in Athens, Georgia (1970-1984).

He was the second-longest serving Secretary of State, behind Cordell Hull.

He married Virginia Foisie in 1937 and they had three children.

Preceded by
Christian Herter
United States Secretary of State
1961–1969
Succeeded by
William P. Rogers
Preceded by
Bob Hope
Sylvanus Thayer Award recipient
1969
Succeeded by
Ellsworth Bunker


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