Safirka: An American EnvoyPeter S. Bridges's service as an American ambassador to Somalia capped his three decades as a career officer in the American Foreign Service. Safirka, a frank description of his experiences in Somalia and elsewhere, offers pointed assessments of American foreign policy and policymakers. Bridges recounts his service in Panama during a time of turmoil over the Canal; in Moscow during the Cuban missile crisis; in Prague for bleak years after the Soviet invasion; in Rome when Italian terrorists first began to target Americans; and in key positions in three Washington agencies. In Somalia Bridges managed the largest American aid program in sub-Sahara Africa. He dealt with a postcolonial regime, hobbled both by traditional clan rivalries and by a leader who cared far less about Somalia's people and progress than about maintaining his control over that poverty-stricken, strategic - which soon erupted in civil war. |
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I hoped she did not regret having joined me from Rome , where she had been the
secretary to Ambassador Rabb . We made sure no more hunks were about to
come down and asked the Department what they could do to speed up the plans
...
Siads replied that he deeply admired President Reagan ; Somalia was " an allied
country , ” and he hoped for much greater American support . He warned me
about what he called Quislings and traitors . There were a lot of them in any
country ...
I hoped that the cannery would succeed , although it had not when first built . I
hoped that it would not fall prey to greedy Somali officials . But if such enterprises
were to succeed , they would , I had no doubt , have to be run by foreigners for ...
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Contents
The Interesting Possibility i | 1 |
Scholar Soldier Someday Diplomat | 7 |
From Foggy Bottom to the Isthmus | 13 |
Copyright | |
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