John Arthur Pilcher

Sir John Arthur Pilcher GCMG (16 May 1912 10 February 1990) was a British diplomat, capping a long career with a posting as Her Majesty's ambassador to Austria (1965-1957) and as ambassador to Japan (1967–1972).

Career

Pilcher's entered the consular service after passing an open examination in 1935.[1]

His career in the Foreign Service was marked by appointment as one of His Majesty's Vice-Consuls in China in 1940.[2]

Pilcher was the British ambassador to the Philippines 1959–63, and to Austria 1965–67[3] when the Queen conferred with the honour of Knight Commander in the Order of St Michael and St George.[4]

Sir John ended his career as Her Majesty's ambassador in Tokyo from 1967[5] through 1972,[6] He was considered by some of his peers as "the last of the scholar-diplomats."[7]

Although Sir John was appropriately diplomatic in his professional duties, he was capable of extraordinary frankness in dispatches sent to Whitehall. While there is no doubt that Sir John was sincere, his seeming inability to recognize an inherent double-standard in his views is revealing about the attitude that many British and European scholars took towards non-Europeans in the early postwar decades.[8] For instance, the substance of a declassified 1972 letter to the Foreign Secretary Sir Alec Douglas-Home was published in the Japan Times in 2003. In that dispatch, Sir John expressed views which are no less controversial today than when he wrote them.[9]

Honours

See also

Notes

References