By PHK
Brandon Grove’s “Behind Embassy Walls: the Life and Times of an American Diplomat” is an autobiography that intertwines the professional, the personal and the instructional. This book is special not only because it includes all three elements, but also because of the uniqueness of Grove’s diplomatic career. A warning: Grove’s experience in no way resembles the career patterns of today’s, or even yesterday’s aspiring American Foreign Service Officers. Not only are those years and times long gone, but also the Foreign Service – its rules, regulations and attitudes towards its employees as well as their attitudes towards it - are sadly different from what they once were.
Grove writes of his experiences in the service of his country at home and abroad over a 35 year span that took place, for the most part, during the Cold War. He entered the career service in the mid-1950s – in the shadow of McCarthyism which had torn the service apart. He left in 1994 soon after the Cold War ended and shortly before the career Foreign Service was hammered again - this time through a series of budget-directed cut-backs as a result of an un-traveled and foreign affairs ignorant Republican Congress dominated by the isolationist Jesse Helms as chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a Clinton White House with other priorities. Grove is lucky. He never had to experience a 28 percent budget cut and a 25 percent reduction of personnel in a single year. He left just in time.
Grove’s era is, of course, past. But the lessons learned and general observations about the Foreign Service and the State Department that he shares with readers - for the most part – remain valid.
East Germany and Jerusalem
His chapters on East Germany and Jerusalem compel me most. As the Israeli army continues its Lebanon onslaught and Hezbollah returns fire, Grove’s experiences as Consul General in Jerusalem in 1982 when an Israeli-designed peace that threw the PLO out of southern Lebanon and opened the gates to the creation of the far more radical Hamas and Hezbollah remain significant history our current policy makers and the Israelis should take to heart. Right now. Grove’s is a balanced, nuanced view, written through the eyes and pragmatic experience of a professional diplomat not through those of the political protagonists who mangle American foreign policy today and keep the Middle East in flames.
His chapter on East Germany is a far different story from the one on Jerusalem because the former now represents a by-gone era, a non-existent state, and a problem for today’s Germans to resolve - not one that can turn the world upside down. Grove’s relationship with Germany – one that began when he was a schoolboy in Hamburg in the 1930s and covers assignments in the West as well as the East – is core to his being. In the broader context, of course, the U.S.-German relationship during the Cold War anchored American foreign policy in Europe. He describes both.
The story Grove tells about East Germans returning books to the America Haus library in Berlin after a 50 year hiatus due to the erection of the wall in between remains etched in my brain. I will never forget that story originally described even more eloquently in a letter from the USIS officer in charge of the center at the time.
Oh, the people you meet and the places you go
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