John Moors Cabot

John Moors Cabot ( born December 11, 1901 in Boston, Massachusetts, † 24 February 1981) was an American diplomat and served as Ambassador of the United States in several countries.

Life

His father was Godfrey Lowell Cabot of entrepreneurs. He was trained in Buckingham Browne & Nichols at Harvard University and at the University of Oxford. In 1936, he headed the department of Central America for the U.S. State Department. From 1945 to 1946 he was at the U.S. Embassy in Argentina akkrediterit embassy secretary and witnessed the election of Juan Perón. In 1947 he was accredited to the U.S. Embassy in Yugoslavia as Secretary. The Tito government had demanded the extradition of war criminals such as Stjepan Hefer, Mile Starčević and Vjekoslav Vrančić by the Allied authorities in Italy.

Mid-1947, John Cabot telegraphed the American Secretary of State, that between the Holy See and the Argentine government an agreement was reached to bring culprits out of the country. The war criminals have been recycled to the Croatian Liberation Movement later, and John Moors Cabot was informed that this is a U.S. state doctrine in this rat line.

From 1953 to 1954 he served as Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs ( Assistant Secretary of State for Inter- American Affairs ) in the State Department under President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

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