"John Dulles" redirects here. For his grandfather, the American Presbyterian minister and author, seeJohn Welsh Dulles. For his son, the American scholar of Brazilian history, seeJohn W. F. Dulles.
John Foster Dulles[a] (February 25, 1888 – May 24, 1959) was an American politician, lawyer, and diplomat who served asUnited States secretary of state under PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower from 1953 until his resignation in 1959. A member of theRepublican Party, he was briefly aU.S. senator from New York in 1949. Dulles was a significant figure in the earlyCold War era, who advocated an aggressive stance againstcommunism throughout the world.
Dulles served as the chief foreign policy advisor toThomas E. Dewey, the Republican nominee for president in both1944 and1948. He also played a significant role in drafting the preamble to theUnited Nations Charter and represented the United States at theUN General Assembly. In 1949, after the resignation ofRobert F. Wagner, Dewey appointed Dulles to the U.S. Senate for New York. However, his tenure lasted only four months before he was defeated ina special election. Despite having supported his political opponents, Dulles became a special advisor to PresidentHarry S. Truman, with a focus on theIndo-Pacific region. In this role from 1950 to 1952, he became the primary architect of theTreaty of San Francisco, and on behalf of the United States and Allied Forces established a peace deal with Japan, formally ending World War II in the Pacific. He then shifted focus on security alliances and by 1952 had established boththe U.S.–Japan Security Treaty and theANZUS security treaty between Australia, New Zealand, and the United States.
Dulles was born inWashington, D.C., eldest of five children ofPresbyterian minister Allen Macy Dulles and his wife, Edith (née Foster). Allen Macy Dulles mixed theological liberalism with sternorthopraxy.[1]
His paternal grandfather,John Welsh Dulles, had been a Presbyterian missionary in India. His maternal grandfather,John W. Foster, had been Secretary of State underBenjamin Harrison, and doted on Dulles and his brother Allen, who would later become the director of theCentral Intelligence Agency. The brothers grew up inWatertown, New York, and spent summers with their maternal grandfather in nearbyHenderson Harbor. The brothers were alsohomeschooled, as their parents distrusted public education, and growing up in a parsonage were made to attend church daily.[2][3][4][5]
Upon passing the bar examination, Dulles joined the New York City law firm ofSullivan & Cromwell, where he specialized ininternational law. After US entry into World War I, Dulles tried to join the Army, but was rejected because of poor eyesight. Instead, Dulles received an army commission as major on the War Trade Board.[8] Dulles later returned to Sullivan & Cromwell and became a partner with an international practice.[9]
In 1917, Dulles’ uncle,Robert Lansing, the then-Secretary of State, recruited him to travel to Central America.[10] Dulles advised Washington to support Costa Rica's dictator,Federico Tinoco, on the grounds that he was anti-German, and also encouraged Nicaragua's dictator,Emiliano Chamorro, to issue a proclamation suspending diplomatic relations with Germany. In Panama, Dulles offered waiver of the tax imposed by the United States on the annual Canal fee, in exchange for a Panamanian declaration of war on Germany.[11]
In 1918, PresidentWoodrow Wilson appointed Dulles as legal counsel to the United States delegation to theVersailles Peace Conference, where he served under his uncle, Secretary of State Robert Lansing. Dulles made an early impression as a junior diplomat. While some recollections indicate he clearly and forcefully argued against imposing crushing reparations on Germany, other recollections indicate he ensured Germany's reparation payments would extend for decades as perceived leverage militating against future German-born hostilities. Afterwards, he served as a member of the War Reparations Committee at Wilson's request. He was also an early member, along withEleanor Roosevelt, of theLeague of Free Nations Association, founded in 1918, and after 1923 known as the Foreign Policy Association, which supported American membership in theLeague of Nations.[12]
As a partner in Sullivan & Cromwell, Dulles expanded upon his late grandfather Foster's expertise, specializing in international finance. He played a major role in designing theDawes Plan, which reduced German reparations payments and temporarily resolved the reparations issue by having American firms lend money to German states and private companies. Under that compromise, the money was invested and the profits sent as reparations to Britain and France, which used the funds to repay their own war loans from the U.S. In the 1920s Dulles was involved in setting up a billion dollars' worth of these loans.[13]
Caricature of Dulles on a 1938 visit to Shanghai
After theWall Street Crash of 1929, Dulles's previous practice brokering and documenting international loans ended. After 1931 Germany stopped making some of its scheduled payments. In 1934 Germany unilaterally stopped payments on private debts of the sort that Dulles was handling. After theNazi Party came to power, Dulles expressed sympathies forAdolf Hitler, requiring his legal staff in Berlin to sign "Heil Hitler!" on all of Sullivan & Cromwell's outgoing mail; fearful of the optics, Sullivan & Cromwell's junior partners forced Dulles to cut all business ties with Germany in 1935. Nonetheless, Dulles and his wife continued to visit Germany until 1939.[14] He was prominent in the religious peace movement and an isolationist, but the junior partners were led by his brother Allen, so he reluctantly acceded to their wishes.[15][16]
Dulles, a deeply religious man, attended numerous international conferences of churchmen during the 1920s and 1930s. In 1924, he was the defense counsel in the church trial ofReverendHarry Emerson Fosdick, who had been charged with heresy by opponents in his denomination. The event sparked the continuingFundamentalist–Modernist Controversy in the international Christian Churches over the literal interpretation of Scripture against the newly developed "Historical-Critical" method including recent scientific and archeological discoveries. The case was settled when Fosdick, a liberal Baptist, resigned his pulpit in the Presbyterian Church congregation, which he had never joined.[17]
During the Second World War, Dulles engaged in Post-War Planning under the auspices of theFederal Council of Churches Commission on a Just and Durable Peace. Appointed in December 1940 at the behest of the theologian Henry P. Van Dusen, Dulles developed a vision of post-war order underpinned by a federal world government, taking inspiration from the ecumenical ideology of liberalMainline Protestantism and the United States' experiences with federalism. In essence, Dulles sought to persuade allied war leaders to work toward reviving a more robust League of Nations. The core elements of this vision were spelled out in March 1943 with the publication of the bookSix Pillars of Peace. Dulles was largely unsuccessful in persuadingFranklin Delano Roosevelt to embrace such a radical platform, as the United States would issue the more moderateMoscow Declaration, but his work helped to build widespread consensus about the need for a United Nations.[18]
Dulles was a prominentRepublican and a close associate ofGovernor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, who became theRepublican presidential nominee in the elections of1944 and1948. During the 1944 and the 1948 campaigns, Dulles served as Dewey's chief foreign policy adviser. In 1944, Dulles took an active role in establishing the Republican plank calling for the establishment of a Jewish commonwealth in The British Mandate for Palestine.[19]
Dulles strongly opposed theAmerican atomic attacks on Japan on largely religious grounds. In the immediate aftermath of the bombings, he drafted a public statement that called for international control of nuclear energy under United Nations auspices. He wrote:[20]
If we, as a professedly Christian nation, feel morally free to use atomic energy in that way, men elsewhere will accept that verdict. Atomic weapons will be looked upon as a normal part of the arsenal of war and the stage will be set for the sudden and final destruction of mankind.
Dulles never lost his anxiety about the destructive power of nuclear weapons, but his views on international control and on employing the threat of atomic attack changed in the face of the Berlin blockade, the Soviet detonation of an atomic bomb, and the advent of the Korean War. They convinced him that the communist bloc was pursuing expansionist policies.[21]
In the late 1940s, as a general conceptual framework for contending with world communism, Dulles developed the policy known asrollback to serve as the Republican Party's alternative to the Democrats'containment model. It proposed taking the offensive to push communism back, rather than to contain it within its areas of control and influence.[22]
Dewey appointed Dulles to the United States Senate to replace theDemocratic incumbent Robert F. Wagner, who had resigned for ill health. Dulles served from July 7 to November 8, 1949. He lost the1949 special election to finish the term to Democratic nomineeHerbert H. Lehman.[23]
In 1950, Dulles publishedWar or Peace, a critical analysis of the American policy ofcontainment, which was favored by the foreign policy elite in Washington, particularly in theDemocraticadministration of Harry S. Truman, whose foreign policy Dulles criticized and instead advocated a policy of "liberation."[24]
Despite being a prominent Republican and having been a close advisor to Truman's opponent Dewey, Dulles became a trusted advisor of Harry Truman, especially on the issue of what to do with Japan, which was still underU.S. military occupation.[25] In his role as an external "consultant" to Truman's State Department, Dulles became the key architect of the 1952San Francisco Peace Treaty which ended the U.S.occupation of Japan, as well as theU.S.-Japan Security Treaty, which ensured that Japan would remain firmly in the U.S. camp in theCold War and allowed the continuing maintenance of U.S. military bases on Japanese soil.[26]
In 1951, Dulles also helped initiate theANZUS Treaty for mutual protection with Australia and New Zealand.
Following the 1953 death ofChief JusticeFred M. Vinson,President Eisenhower considered appointing Dulles in his place. In his later life Eisenhower is said to have considered only two men for the job: Dulles and eventual nomineeEarl Warren.[27]The Evening Star in fact initially viewed Dulles as the third most likely candidate after Warren and Thomas E. Dewey,[28] while some Republican insiders at the time of Vinson's death actually thought Dulles was more likely to be chosen for the post than Warren.[29] Dulles was viewed by the press as too favourable to big business,[30] and in Eisenhower's own memoirs as too old to potentially wield significant influence upon the Court.[27] Besides the issue of age, Eisenhower did not want to deprive himself of Dulles's valuable contributions in the field of foreign policy.[27]
WhenDwight Eisenhower succeeded Truman as president in January 1953, Dulles was appointed and confirmed as his Secretary of State. His tenure as Secretary was marked by conflict with communist governments worldwide, especially theSoviet Union; Dulles strongly opposed communism, calling it "Godless terrorism."[31] American religious scholar John Wilsey has called Dulles a "modernistChristian nationalist" who viewed communism as a direct threat to "moral law".[32] Mark Toulouse also stated Dulles's religious views shaped his opposition to communism, calling him a "priest of nationalism".[33] As Secretary of State, Dulles's preferred strategy was containment through military build-up and the formation of alliances (dubbed "pactomania").
Dulles was a pioneer of the strategies ofmassive retaliation andbrinkmanship. In an article written forLife magazine, Dulles defined his policy of brinkmanship: "The ability to get to the verge without getting into the war is the necessary art."[34]
Dulles's hard line alienated many leaders of non-aligned countries when on June 9, 1955, he argued in a speech that "neutrality has increasingly become obsolete and, except under very exceptional circumstances, it is an immoral and shortsighted conception."[35] In a June 1956 speech in Iowa, Dulles declared non-alignment to be "immoral", further castigating theNon-Aligned Movement.[36] Throughout the 1950s, Dulles was in frequent conflict with non-aligned statesmen who he deemed were too sympathetic to communism, including India'sV. K. Krishna Menon.
One of his first major policy shifts towards a more aggressive position against communism occurred in March 1953, when Dulles supported Eisenhower's decision to direct theCentral Intelligence Agency (CIA), then headed by his brother Allen Dulles, to draft plans to overthrow Prime MinisterMohammed Mossadegh of Iran.[37] That led directly to the coup d'état viaOperation Ajax in support ofMohammad Reza Pahlavi, who regained his position as theShah of Iran.
During theFirst Indochina War, Dulles stated that he expected a French victory against the communistViet Minh forces, stating, "I do not expect that there is going to be a communist victory in Indochina".[38] Dulles worked to reduce French influence in Vietnam and asked the United States to attempt to co-operate with the French in the aid of strengthening Diem's army. Over time, Dulles concluded that he had to "ease France out of Vietnam."[39]
In 1954, at the height of theBattle of Dien Bien Phu, Dulles helped plan and promoteOperation Vulture, a proposedB-29 aerial assault on the communistViet Minh siege positions to relieve the beleaguered French Army. President Eisenhower made American participation reliant on British support, but Foreign Secretary SirAnthony Eden was opposed to it and soVulture was canceled over Dulles's objections.[40][41] French Foreign MinisterGeorges Bidault later said that Dulles had offered him the use of atomic bombs to end the siege.[42]
At the1954 Geneva Conference, which concerned the breakup ofFrench Indochina, he forbade any contact with the Chinese delegation and refused to shake hands withZhou Enlai, the lead Chinese negotiator. Dulles also opposed the conference's plan to partition the country ofVietnam and hold elections for a unified government, insisting that the anti-communistState of Vietnam should remain the legitimate Vietnamese government. He subsequently left to avoid direct association with the negotiations; Dulles's exit contributed to the Geneva Conference's failure to resolve the conflict in Vietnam.[43][44]
In 1954, Dulles designed theSoutheast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO), providing for collective action against aggression. The treaty was signed by representatives of Australia, Britain, France, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand, and the United States.
In 1958, Dulles authorized the Secretary of the Air Force to state publicly that the United States was prepared to use nuclear weapons in a conflict with China over the islands of Quemoy and Matsu.[47]
After having resisted revision for many years, from 1957 to 1959, Dulles oversaw the renegotiation of a revised version of theU.S.–Japan Security Treaty, which was eventually ratified in 1960, after his death.[48]
The same year, Dulles participated in the instigation of amilitary coup by the Guatemalan army through the CIA by claiming that the democratically elected Guatemalan PresidentJacobo Árbenz's government and theGuatemalan Revolution were veering toward communism. Dulles had previously represented theUnited Fruit Company as a lawyer.[49] Thomas Dudley Cabot, former CEO of United Fruit, held the position of Director of International Security Affairs in the State Department. John Moore Cabot, a brother of Thomas Dudley Cabot, was secretary of Inter-American Affairs during much of the coup planning in 1953 and 1954.[50]
In November 1956, Dulles strongly opposed the Anglo-French invasion of theSuez Canal zone in response toEgypt's nationalization of the canal. During the most crucial days, Dulles was hospitalized after surgery and did not participate in the U.S. administration's decision making. By 1958, he had become an outspoken opponent of Egyptian PresidentGamal Abdel Nasser and prevented Nasser's government from receiving arms from the United States. That policy allowed theSoviet Union to gain influence in Egypt.[51]
On June 26, 1912, Dulles married Janet Pomeroy Avery (1891–1969), granddaughter ofTheodore M. Pomeroy, a former United States Congressman and Speaker of the House of Representatives.[52] They had two sons and a daughter. Their older sonJohn W. F. Dulles (1913–2008) was a professor of history and specialist inBrazil at theUniversity of Texas at Austin.[53] Their daughter Lillias Dulles Hinshaw (1914–1987) became a Presbyterian minister. Their sonAvery Dulles (1918–2008) converted toRoman Catholicism, entered theJesuit order, and became the first American theologian to be appointed aCardinal.
Dulles developedcolon cancer, for which he was first operated on in November 1956 when it had caused abowel perforation.[54] He experienced abdominal pain at the end of 1958 and was hospitalized with a diagnosis ofdiverticulitis. In January 1959, Dulles returned to work, but with more pain and declining health underwent abdominal surgery in February atWalter Reed Army Medical Center when the cancer's recurrence became evident. After recuperating in Florida, Dulles returned to Washington for work and radiation therapy. With further declining health and evidence ofbone metastasis, he resigned from office on April 15, 1959.[54]
TheDulles International Airport inDulles, Virginia andJohn Foster Dulles High, Middle, and Elementary Schools inSugar Land, Texas (including the street (Dulles Avenue) where the school campuses are located), were named in his honor, as is John Foster Dulles Elementary School inCincinnati, Ohio, and a school in Chicago, Illinois.[57] New York named the Dulles State Office Building inWatertown, New York in his honor. In 1960 the U.S. Post Office Department issued acommemorative stamp honoring Dulles. At Princeton University, Dulles's alma mater, a section ofFirestone Library is dedicated to Dulles, named the John Foster Dulles Library of Diplomatic History, which houses, among many American diplomatic documents and books, the personal documents of John Foster Dulles. The library was built in 1962.[58]
This quote is sometimes misattributed to Dulles: "The United States of America does not have friends; it has interests." The words were spoken by PresidentCharles de Gaulle of France, and the misquotation may be attributed to Dulles's visit to Mexico in 1958, where anti-American protesters carried signs bearing de Gaulle's quote.[59]
EntertainerCarol Burnett rose to prominence in 1957 singing a novelty song, "I Made a Fool of Myself Over John Foster Dulles".[61] When asked about the song onMeet the Press, Dulles responded with good humor: "I never discuss matters of the heart in public."[62]
^Peter Grose,Gentleman Spy, The Life of Allen Dulles (1994), pp. 91–93, 119–22
^Ronald W. Pruessen,John Foster Dulles: The Road to Power (1982), pp. 115, 123
^Harold H. Vences, "The Controversy Surrounding the Ministry of Harry Emerson Fosdick in the First Presbyterian Church of New York City, 1922–1925." (1972) Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects. 741.online.
^Andrew Preston,Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith (2012), pp. 384–409
^Isaac Alteras,Eisenhower and Israel: U.S.-Israeli Relations, 1953–1960 (University Press of Florida, 1993),ISBN0-8130-1205-8, pp. 53–55
^Neal Rosendorf, "John Foster Dulles' Nuclear Schizophrenia," in John Lewis Gaddis et al.,Cold War Statesmen Confront the Bomb: Nuclear Diplomacy since 1945 (Oxford University Press, 1999), pp. 64–69
^Detlef Junker, Philipp Gassert, and Wilfried Mausbach, eds.,The United States and Germany in the Era of the Cold War, 1945–1968: A Handbook, Vol. 1: 1945–1968 (Cambridge University Press, 2004)[page needed]
^Brandt, Raymond P. (September 27, 1953). "A New Chief Justice: Eisenhower Must Make Historic Decision – Will President Appoint the Best Man Available or Will He Listen to Partisan Politicians".St. Louis Post-Dispatch.St. Louis,Missouri. p. 1C.
^Gary B. Nash, et al.,The American People, Concise Edition Creating a Nation and a Society, Combined Volume (6th Edition). New York: Longman, 2007, p. 829
^Immerman, Richard H. John Foster Dulles Piety, Pragmatism, and Power in U.S. Foreign Policy (Biographies in American Foreign Policy). New York: SR Books, 1998. p. 37
Anderson, David L. "J. Lawton Collins, John Foster Dulles, and the Eisenhower Administration's "Point of No Return" in Vietnam."Diplomatic History 12.2 (1988): 127–147.
Challener, Richard D. "The Moralist as Pragmatist: John Foster Dulles as Cold War Strategist." inThe Diplomats, 1939–1979 (Princeton University Press, 2019) pp. 135–166.online
Dingman, Roger. "John Foster Dulles and the Creation of the South-East Asia Treaty Organization in 1954."International History Review 11.3 (1989): 457–477.
Gerson, Louis L.John Foster Dulles (1967), a major scholarly studyonline
Goold-Adams, Richard.John Foster Dulles; a reappraisal (1962)online
Greene, Daniel P. O'C. "John Foster Dulles and the End of the Franco-American Entente in Indochina."Diplomatic History 16.4 (1992): 551–572.
Guhin, Michael A.John Foster Dulles: a statesman and his times (Columbia University Press, 1972)online
Hoopes Townsend,Devil and John Foster Dulles (1973)ISBN0-316-37235-8. a scholarly biographyonline
Inboden III, William Charles. "The soul of American diplomacy: Religion and foreign policy, 1945–1960" (PhD diss. Yale University, 2003)online.
Immerman, Richard H.John Foster Dulles: Piety, Pragmatism, and Power in U.S. Foreign Policy (1998)ISBN0-8420-2601-0online
Immerman, Richard H. "John Foster Dulles."Dictionary of American Biography (1980)online
Marks, Frederick.Power and Peace: The Diplomacy of John Foster Dulles (1995).ISBN0-275952320.online
Mosley, Leonard.Dulles : a biography of Eleanor, Allen and John Foster Dulles and their family network (1978)online
Mulder, John M. "The Moral World of John Foster Dulles: A Presbyterian Layman and International Affairs."Journal of Presbyterian History 49.2 (1971): 157–182.online
Nelson, Anna Kasten. "John Foster Dulles and the Bipartisan Congress."Political Science Quarterly 102.1 (1987): 43–64.online
Ruane, Kevin. "Agonizing Reappraisals: Anthony Eden, John Foster Dulles and the Crisis of European Defence, 1953–54."Diplomacy and Statecraft 13.4 (2002): 151–185.
Snyder, William P. "Dean Rusk to John Foster Dulles, May–June 1953: The Office, the First 100 Days, and Red China."Diplomatic History 7.1 (1983): 79–86.
Toulouse, Mark G.The Transformation of John Foster Dulles: From Prophet of Realism to Priest of Nationalism.Mercer University Press (1985).
Toulouse, Mark G. "The Development of a Cold Warrior: John Foster Dulles and the Soviet Union, 1945–1952."American Presbyterians, vol. 63, no. 3 (1985), pp. 309–322.JSTOR23330558.