Leon B. Poullada | |
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United States Ambassador to Togo | |
In office April 18, 1961 – February 24, 1964 |
|
President | John F. Kennedy |
Preceded by | Leland Barrows |
Succeeded by | William Witman II |
Personal details | |
Died | 1987 St. Paul, Minnesota |
Spouse(s) | Leila Jackson Poullada |
Children | Peter, Philip, Sofia H. Poullada |
Profession | Diplomat |
Leon B. Poullada, is an American diplomat, the son of a Mexican immigrant doctor, and served as an Ambassador to Togo under the Kennedy Administration. He died of cancer in 1987.
Poullada was a career Foreign Service officer who served as the United States Ambassador to Togo during the Kennedy Administration and specialized in Afghan history. He died of cancer at his home in St. Paul, Minnesota at age 74. In his 17-year diplomatic career, Poullada served in Ceylon, Pakistan and Afghanistan before President Kennedy nominated him as Ambassador to the nation of Togo in 1961. In 1963, during Poullada's posting, Togo's President, Sylvanus Olympio, was assassinated at the United States Embassy gates.
After retiring in 1965 from the Foreign Service, Poullada began studies at Princeton University for a doctorate in political science. His dissertation, a study of Afghan history between 1919 and 1927, was published in 1972 by Cornell University Press.
At the end of World War Two, Major Poullada participated as Legal Counsel at the Nuremberg Trials.
Poullada taught political science at the Northern Arizona University at Flagstaff and lectured around the country on Afghanistan and United States diplomacy. After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, he helped organize efforts to aid the Afghan guerrillas.[1]
He married his wife, Leila Jackson Poullada, and had two sons, Peter Poullada of Istanbul, Turkey, and Philip Poullada of Port Washington, New York; as well as a daughter, Sofia Poullada of Saratoga, California, a granddaughter, Roxana Safipour and a grandson Noveed Safipour.