Difference between revisions of "Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service"
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==Former Deans== | ==Former Deans== | ||
*[[Keogh]] – was a "former" CIA operative who transformed the SFS in to a prime recruiting ground for the CIA and similar organizations. | *[[Keogh]] – was a "former" CIA operative who transformed the SFS in to a prime recruiting ground for the CIA and similar organizations. | ||
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+ | ==Affiliations== | ||
+ | *[[Georgetown University]] – SFS is one department within this university | ||
+ | *[[CSIS]] – a think tank where many SFS reside | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Revision as of 14:50, 26 June 2008
The Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service (known at the university as SFS) is a school within Georgetown University which specialises in international affairs. It was founded in 1919 by a the dean, a Catholic priest and fanatical anti-communist called Edmund Walsh, who whilst at Georgetown had worked at the US War Department on a programme “designed to mobilise higher education’s resources for the war effort".[1] Walsh is described by his biographer as a "proponent of American exceptionalism" who "viewed the [American] nation as a beacon of liberty and equality for the world.”[2] During the 1930s Walsh publicly opposed Roosevelt’s New Deal measures and during the cold war he endorsed a nuclear first strike on the basis that the Soviet were inherently immoral.[3] Expressing an ideological zeal common amongst neo-conservatives today, Walsh advocated what he called “the argument of strength justly and righteously employed.[4]
Former Deans
- Keogh – was a "former" CIA operative who transformed the SFS in to a prime recruiting ground for the CIA and similar organizations.
Affiliations
- Georgetown University – SFS is one department within this university
- CSIS – a think tank where many SFS reside