Robert Strausz-Hupé

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Robert Strausz-Hupé (25 March 1903 - 24 February 2002) was a U.S. (Austrian-born) diplomat and geopolitician.

In 1923 he came to the United States. Serving as an advisor on foreign investment to American financial institutions, he watched the Depression spread political misery across America and Europe. After the Anschluss of Austria in 1938, Strausz-Hupé began writing and lecturing to American audiences on “the coming war.” After one such lecture in Philadelphia, he was invited to give a talk at the University of Pennsylvania, an event which led to his taking a position on the faculty in 1940.

Strausz-Hupé founded the Foreign Policy Research Institute in 1955 and two years later published the first issue of Orbis, the quarterly journal that remains to this day the Institute’s flagship publication.

Strausz-Hupé authored or co-authored several important books on international affairs. His first major work, Geopolitics: The Struggle for Space and Power, published just as the United States entered World War II, became a bestseller in its genre. His later works included Protracted Conflict and The Balance of Tomorrow.

In 1969, he was appointed U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka. He subsequently served as ambassador to Belgium (1972–74), Sweden (1974–76), NATO (1976–77), and Turkey (1981–89). In 1989, upon retirement after eight years as Ambassador to Turkey, Strausz-Hupé rejoined the Foreign Policy Research Institute as Distinguished Diplomat-in-Residence and President Emeritus.

[edit] Quotations

  • "As policy evolves towards several continental systems, and technology accentuates the strategic importance of large, contiguous areas. Thus the era of overseas empires and free world trade closes. If this reasoning is pushed to its absolute conclusion, the national state is also a thing of the past, and the future belongs to the giant state. Many nations will be locked in a few vast compartments. But in each of these one people, controlling a strategic area, will be master of the others."—Geopolitics: The Struggle for Space and Power, 1942

[edit] Sources

Preceded by
Andrew V. Corry
U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka
1970–1971
Also accredited to Maldives
Succeeded by
Christopher Van Hollen
Preceded by
John S. D. Eisenhower
U.S. Ambassador to Belgium
1972–1974
Succeeded by
Leonard Firestone
Preceded by
Arthur J. Olsen
U.S. Ambassador to Sweden
1974–1976
Succeeded by
David S. Smith
Preceded by
David K. E. Bruce
U.S. Ambassador to NATO
1976–1977
Succeeded by
W. Tapley Bennett, Jr.
Preceded by
James W. Spain
U.S. Ambassador to Turkey
1981–1989
Succeeded by
Morton I. Abramowitz
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