Word: bullitt
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Ever since the fall of France, bald, elegant William Christian Bullitt has moved across the U.S. stage, now out to the spotlight, now back to the wings. After his return from serving as Ambassador to France he was gradually lost to view: rumor said that he had gone into seclusion to write a book. Last winter he suddenly crossed the stage: he was President Roosevelt's special emissary on an eight weeks' tour of the Near East. Back he went into the shadow: rumor said he was thinking about running for Governor of Pennsylvania...
Last week the U.S. got another glimpse of suave Mr. Bullitt. A photograph from an Army operations headquarters "somewhere in England" (see cut) showed him walking with Lieut. General Dwight Eisenhower, Commander of the A.E.F., and Brigadier General Ira Eaker, head of the U.S. bomber command, who this week personally led a force of Flying Fortresses in a raid on occupied France (see p. 26). Then he went to Ireland, conferred for an hour with Prime Minister Eamon de Valera...
This time Bullitt had a new title: special assistant to Navy Secretary Knox. But his job was probably the same: working as eyes & ears of Franklin Roosevelt...
Curtain. What all newsmen in Moscow may have been itching to report was that Churchill and Bullitt actually were in Moscow. If so, the Kremlin shrouded drama of the highest order...
...Churchill who spurred on the unsuccessful Anglo-U.S. military campaign against Red Russia which wound up World War I in 1919. It was Bullitt, a dashing young liberal, who went with the late Lincoln Steffens on a special mission to Moscow for President Wilson later in the same year. It was Bullitt, too, who said after the Paris Peace Conference that he was going to the Riviera "to lie on the sand and watch the world go to hell." The world did not go to hell, and in 1933 Bullitt was back in Russia as the first U.S. Ambassador...