Maynard W. Glitman

Maynard Wayne Glitman ( born December 8, 1933, Chicago, † December 13, 2010 in Shelburne, Vermont ) was an American politician and ambassador.

Life

Maynard Wayne Glitman parents are READA Kutok Klaas and Benjamin Glitman. He married 1956 Christine G. Asmundsen. Glitman attended the University of Illinois, the Fletcher School, and in 1957 was recruited to the United States Army. He joined the Foreign Service of the United States. There he was employed international financial affairs in the department. From 1956 to 1958 Glitman was accredited at the U.S. Mission in Nassau as an economic attaché. He worked from 1959 to 1961 in the monitoring of objects and was accredited in the Department of Commerce in the U.S. Mission in Ottawa. 1961 to 1965 he worked on tasks in the field of trade relations with the U.S. ambassador William Walton Butterworth and let get training at the University of California, Berkeley in Business Administration. In 1965 he was inducted into Washington in the Department of Canada. From 1965 to 1966 he worked as a civil servant in the economics department on the topics of banking and advised the representative of the U.S. government at the United Nations, Arthur Goldberg on economic issues. 1967 to 1968 he worked on the Six Day War and the question of recognition of Taiwan. In the National Security Council, he advised on economics and Western Europe. From 1968 to 1973 was accredited in Paris, at the embassy of Arthur K. Watson, and was involved with Henry Kissinger at the Paris peace talks.

His responsibilities fell tasks of NATO and overflight rights for the Lockheed U -2. From 1973 to 1976 he advised Washington in the foreign trade policy of the U.S. government. He was promoted to Deputy Under Secretary and advised on price developments in the oil market. He joined the Department of Defense of the United States and was Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense and was the 1976 and 1977 Deputy Chief of Mission to NATO Headquarters in Brussels.

From 1977 to 1981 he was with responsibilities in the areas of Red Army, North Atlantic Council, Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and long- term defense strategies, non-proliferation treaty under Ambassador William Tapley Bennett Jr. negotiations with the Soviet Union, in Geneva. From 1981 to 1984 he served as deputy to Paul Nitze in negotiating the INF Treaty.

Glitman was involved in the summer of 1982 at the forest walk - compromise of Nitze and Yuli Kvitsinsky. The trade-off walk in the woods could not be conveyed Richard Perle. Likewise Glitman was involved in arms control experiments with the sounding titles Freeze Now, Short-Range Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces ( SRINF ). 1983 Glitman was in Brussels on the editorial board of the report of the NATO Special Consultative Group (SCG ): Progress report on Intermediate -range Nuclear Forces (INF). During the Korean Airlines Flight 007 Glitman sat in a managerial capacity at NATO Headquarters. Glitman Ground Launched Cruise Missile negotiated system ( land-based cruise missiles ). On June 22, 1988 appointed Ronald Reagan, Glitman to his ambassador to Baudouin I Glitman put his letter of accreditation on 28 September 1988 with the Government of Belgium before and left his post on June 17, 1991 1994 Glitman was a lecturer in political science at the University of Vermont.

Publications

  • U.S. Policy in Bosnia: Rethinking a Flawed Approach
  • The last battle of the Cold War: an inside account of negotiating the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, 2006
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