James Grover McDonald
James Grover McDonald (1886–1964) was a United States diplomat. He served as the first U.S. Ambassador to Israel.
He studied at Harvard University.
Offices
- Chairman of the Board, Foreign Policy Association (1919–1933)
- League of Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Coming from Germany (1933–1935)
- Member, Editorial Staff, The New York Times (1936–1938)
- President of the "President Roosevelt Consultative Committee for Political Refugees"
- Member, U.. Delegation at the Evian Conference (1938)
- President, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences (1938–1942)
- Chairman, President's Advisory Committee on Political Refugees (1938–1945)
- News Analyst, National Broadcasting Company, Blue Network (1942–1944)
- Member, Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry 1946
- United States Special Representative to Israel (1948–1949)
- United States Ambassador to Israel (1949–1951)
- Chairman, Advisory Council, Development Corporation for Israel (1951–1961)
High Commissioner for Refugees Coming from Germany
In 1933, MacDonald was assigned by the League of Nations to run the High Commission for Refugees (Jewish and other) Coming from Germany. German opposition meant that the commission gained neither funding nor administrative support from the League. Moreover, MacDonald encountered fierce resistance from countries when trying to negotiate the resettlement of Jewish refugees. Frustrated with the lack of compassion or cooperation, he resigned his post in 1935.[1]
Ambassador to Israel
McDonald was a member of the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry on Palestine set up 10 December 1945 to examine the possibilities for mass settlement of European Jews in Palestine. Its final report 30 April 1946, called for the immediate admission into Palestine of 100,000 Jewish Displaced Persons.[2]
On 23 July 1948, he was appointed as the Special Representative of the United States to Israel. His appointment was a personal choice by President Truman. It was opposed by Secretary of Defense James Forrestal[3] and resented by Secretary of State George Marshall.[4] He was not a professional diplomat and had a difficult relationship with State Department staff whom he referred to as "technicians".
On his way to take up his appointment, he had a meeting in London with Foreign Secretary Bevin—"I had to tell myself that this was not Hitler seated before me"—at which he provoked Bevin into losing his temper by suggesting that Britain should send a diplomatic representative to Tel Aviv.[5] He arrived in Haifa 12 August 1948. During his first months in the country there were serious concerns for his security.[6] Three months previously Thomas C. Wasson, the U.S. Consul in Jerusalem had been assassinated in West Jerusalem. On 22 August the Chief Code Clerk at the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem was kidnapped by the Stern Gang and held for almost 24 hours.[7] Fears were increased following the killing of Count Bernadotte in September.
He was critical of the Provisional Government's refusal to allow any Arab refugees to return to their homes. He argued that this would cause lasting bitterness.[8] But he persistently lobbied the State Department, as well as President Truman personally, for diplomatic recognition. On 24 August 1948, he telegrammed Truman: "I have reached the conclusion that the Jewish emphasis on peace negotiations is sounder than the present U.S. and UN emphasis on truce and demilitarization [of Jerusalem] and refugees." In September he argued that delay in recognition "only encourages Jews in their aggressive attitude."[9][10] During the election campaign for the first Knesset, December 1948, he repeatedly warned his superiors of the threat of the Soviet Union trying to influence the result. On 25 January 1949, just before election day, he succeeded in getting a U.S.–Israel Export-Import Bank Loan approved.[11]
At the start of the Armistice negotiations, January 1949, McDonald sent the State Department a four-page assessment of Israel's military capacity in which he stated that current Israeli strength was "... 30,000 at present, with an additional 30,000 over-age auxiliaries (including women) who are called up intermittently.... The rumored figure of an 'Israeli Defense Army' of 80,000 fighting men is, in the opinion of the Counselor [himself] an exaggeration." This compares with an assessment made three months later by his own Military Attache for Army Intelligence that, after a 10% demobilization, Israel had a standing army of between 95,000 and 100,000 with some 20,000 to 30,000 reserves.[12]
In early February 1949, his position was upgraded to full Ambassador.
He strongly opposed the U.S. Government's refusal to recognise Israel's occupancy of Jerusalem. His request to the State Department for permission to attend the opening session of the first Knesset in Jerusalem was turned down. He used his position to avoid any highlighting of this policy.[13] On 29 July 1950, he broke the ban on conducting official business in the city when he held a meeting with David Ben-Gurion to discuss the outbreak of the Korean War.[14]
He protested to the State Department when, in June 1949, President Truman criticised Israel and threatened sanctions following announcements that Israel might annex the Gaza Strip.[15] In November 1948 he lobbied the State Department in favour of Israel's membership of the United Nations.[16] He was also active in getting Menachem Begin a visitor's visa to enter the U.S. reversing the ban on members of terror organisations entering the country.[17]
He campaigned for a U.S. loan for the upgrading of Haifa harbour and was involved in the first formal commercial agreement between the two countries—the 1950 Israel–US air treaty.[18]
He held two meetings with Pope Pius XII at which he argued for Papal recognition of Israel which was being withheld due to Israel's refusal to let Christians return to their homes in West Jerusalem following Operation Yevusi.[19]
Following the publication of his book, My mission in Israel. 1948–1951, a complimentary copy was sent to every Rabbi in the United States.[20]
Back in the U.S., he added his name to the list of Zionist groups, 23 October 1953, which issued a statement condemning the threat to cut off aid during the crisis over diverting water from the Jordan River.[21]
Diary
James Grover McDonald was the first U.S. ambassador to Israel, but he was much more than that. He kept a diary which recorded his meetings with some of the history-making personalities of the 1930s, and his activities on behalf of the Jews back in the 1930s when no one would listen.
His diary, which was never intended for publication, was dictated to his secretary at the end of each day, as he considered himself a better speaker than a writer. In a number of key diplomatic posts, he had access to the highest levels of government in Europe and the United States. The diaries, which began in 1922, record events up to 1936. In his capacity as the League of Nations high commissioner for refugees from 1933 to 1935, he saw firsthand what the Nazis were plotting and believed, long before many German Jews had internalized the threat, that Hitler would destroy European Jewry.
He was born in Coldwater, Ohio, in 1886, and as his mother was German, he spoke the language fluently. He studied at Harvard and became friendly with visiting German students who later became prominent Nazis and in his work as chairman of the Foreign Policy Association, a job he held from 1919 to 1933, he regularly visited Germany. The Nazi officials, charmed by his fluent German and aquiline features, spoke openly about their plans for the Jews. On April 4, 1933, he records his meeting with two Nazi officials. "I looked forward to an informing analysis of the Nazi economic program. Instead, after we discussed it for 10 or 15 minutes, both Daitz and Ludecke drifted back to the subject of the Jews, which seems to be an obsession with so many of the Nazis.... The casual expressions used by both men in speaking of the Jews were such as to make one cringe, because one would not speak so of even a most degenerate people.
"When I indicated my disbelief in their racial theories, they said what other Nazis had said: 'But surely you, a perfect type of Aryan, could not be unsympathetic to our views'.... I had the impression that they really do set unbelievable store by such physical characteristics as long heads and light hair."
So convinced was he that the Jews were marked for destruction in Germany that he appealed to the international community to help settle them outside the Reich but had very little success. As Deborah Lipstadt wrote in her review of the diaries, now published as a book, Advocate for the Doomed, "McDonald, unlike many of his contemporaries, tried to make a difference in what would become a unique story of doom and destruction." In December 1935, he resigned in protest at the lack of support for his work. Later, he played a role in the creation of Israel acting as an intermediary between the Truman administration and its founding fathers.
Today, all his private diaries are in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In May 2003, the museum's library director received a letter from the daughter of the man who was going to write McDonald's biography, saying her father had died prematurely and she possessed about 500 pages of the diaries. She delivered the writings to the museum and the archivist realized immediately that not only was the collection of huge historical importance but that they represented only a fraction of his total writings.
Carrying out painstaking investigations, he discovered that the rest of the material was held by McDonald's daughter, Barbara McDonald Stewart, also a historian. She agreed to donate the 10,000 typed pages of diary entries to the museum and agreed to co-edit them for publication. The first volume, covering the years 1932–1935, appeared in 2007.
After he retired as ambassador to Israel, McDonald—who had been on conversational terms with Hitler, Roosevelt, Cardinal Pacelli (the future Pius XII) and Chaim Weizmann—continued as a passionate Zionist and helped to sell Israel Bonds until his death in 1964.
References
- ↑ Burgess, Greg (2002). The Human Rights Dilemma in Anti-Nazi Protest: The Bernheim Petition, Minorities Protection, and the 1933 Sessions of the League of Nations. CERC Working Papers Series 2.
- ↑ Lilienthal, Alfred M. (1953) What Price Israel? . Henry Regnery Co. Reprinted Institute for Palestine Studies, Reprint series no. 4, Beriut 1969. pp. 31, 32.
- ↑ Green, Stephen (1984) Taking Sides—America's secret relations with militant Israel 1948/1967. Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-13271-5. p. 23.
- ↑ Lilienthal. p. 100.
- ↑ McDonald, James G. (1951) My mission in Israel. 1948–1951. Victor Gollancz, London. pp. 22, 23.
- ↑ McDonald. p. 55.
- ↑ Green. p. 37
- ↑ Pappe, Ilan (1994) The making of the Arab-Israeli conflict. 1947–1951. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 1-85043-819-6. p. 157. Though the reference appears to be to a cable dated June 1948 which was before his appointment was made.
- ↑ Lilienthal. p. 100.
- ↑ Green. p. 38.
- ↑ Green. p. 23.
- ↑ Green. p. 72.
- ↑ McDonald. pp. 128, 146.
- ↑ McDonald. p. 206.
- ↑ Pappe. p. 218.
- ↑ McDonald. p. 100.
- ↑ McDonald. p. 34.
- ↑ McDonald. pp. 170, 197.
- ↑ McDonald. pp. 173, 188.
- ↑ Lilienthal. p. 255.
- ↑ Green. p. 91.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Grover McDonald. |
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (Papers of James McDonald)
- Columbia University (Papers of James McDonald)
- U.S. State Department List of Ambassador's to Israel
- U.S. State Department Archives (People)
- The New Synagogue of Netanya (McDonald's)
- A film clip "Longines Chronoscope with James G. McDonald (May 12, 1952)" is available for free download at the Internet Archive [more]
Diplomatic posts | ||
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Preceded by - |
U.S. Ambassador to Israel 1949–1950 |
Succeeded by Monnett Bain Davis |
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