Robert R. Bowie
Robert R. Bowie (born August 24, 1909) is an American diplomat and scholar who served as CIA Deputy Director from 1977-1979.
Robert Bowie graduated from Princeton University in 1931 and received a law degree from Harvard University in 1934 and turned down offers to work as a corporate lawyer with New York's major law firms, returning to Baltimore to work in his father's law firm, Bowie and Burke. He served in the U.S. Army (1942–1946) as a commissioned officer with the Pentagon and in occupied Germany from 1945 until 1946. In 1946 he resigned as a lieutenant-colonel. He taught at Harvard from 1946-1955. The youngest professor of the school, he was a trusted confidant to John J. McCloy the "unofficial chairman of the American establishment". During periods of leave from Harvard between 1950 and 1952 Bowie worked for McCloy as one of his legal advisers in Germany.[1]
He served as Director of Policy Planning from 1953–1957; co-founder of Harvard's Center for International Affairs (1958); Counselor for the State Department from 1966-1968. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission, and the American Academy of Diplomacy.
Sources
Bio from the Eisenhower Memorial Commission
Harvard Weatherhead Center for International Affairs
References
- ↑ [http://ohr.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/26/2/29.pdf Oral History Review 26/2 (Summer/Fall 1999): 29^46 Interviews with Robert Bowie: The Use of Oral Testimony in Writing the Biography of Professor Robert Richardson Bowie, Washington Policy Planner and Harvard University Professor by Andrew McFadzean]