Word: stoessel
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Walter J. Stoessel. Undersecretary of Stae for Political Affairs, planned to speak at the Kennedy School but now probably won't be able to make it until at least next semester. John Mearsheimer, a research fellow at the Center for International Affairs and an organizer of the seminar, said yesterday...
Next Wednesday, the number-three man in Alexander Haig's State Department will be at the Harvard-Kennedy School of government (HKSG, to avoid confusion) in an appearance jointly sponsored by the CSIA and the Center for International Affairs. Walter J. Stoessel, the undersecretary of state for political affairs and a former aide to Henry Kissinger '50 visits K-School Room 280 at 4 p.m., October...
...never supported a resolution calling for sanctions or a review of arms policies toward Israel; she acknowledged that Haig had called Hammadi, but only after the negotiations had ended. Furthermore, Kirkpatrick claimed she talked at least twice a day with either Haig or Acting Secretary of State Walter Stoessel as well as with National Security Adviser Richard Allen. "I was determined not to be involved in an agreement which, once it was concluded, the President was going to say, 'Oh gee, she shouldn't have done that,' " Kirkpatrick told TIME. "If there had been any more communication...
...defuse what Secretary of State Alexander Haig called a "very, very tense" situation. In Jerusalem, U.S. Ambassador Samuel Lewis told Begin bluntly that the U.S. was terribly worried about the possible escalation. In Washington, a task force was set up to monitor events. Under Secretary of State Walter Stoessel met with Soviet Ambassador Anatoli Dobrynin and urged the So viets to restrain their Syrian ally. Meanwhile, the State Department scrambled to disavow any responsibility for approving the Israeli operation. Said State Department Spokesman Dean Fischer: "I want to make it fully clear that the U.S. has not given a green...
Morale certainly has been helped by Haig's quick start in organizing the department. For the top jobs he has picked mostly moderate conservatives, men with long operating experience but little reputation for broad conceptual thinking. Some of the key names: Walter Stoessel, a senior ambassador in the Foreign Ser vice...