Dirk Stikker Explained

Dirk Stikker
Office:3rd Secretary General of NATO
Term Start:21 April 1961
Term End:1 August 1964
Predecessor:Paul-Henri Spaak
Successor:Manlio Brosio
Office1:Permanent Representative of the
Netherlands to NATO and the OECD
Term Start1:15 June 1958
Term End1:21 April 1961
Predecessor1:Eelco van Kleffens
Successor1:Hugo Scheltema
Office2:Ambassador of the Netherlands
to the United Kingdom
Term Start2:10 September 1952
Term End2:15 June 1958
Predecessor2:Edgar Michiels
van Verduynen
Successor2:Herman van Roijen
Office3:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Term Start3:7 August 1948
Term End3:2 September 1952
Primeminister3:Willem Drees
Predecessor3:Pim van Boetzelaer
van Oosterhout
Successor3:Johan Beyen
Office4:Chairman of the People's Party
for Freedom and Democracy
Term Start4:28 January 1948
Term End4:7 August 1948
Leader4:Pieter Oud
Predecessor4:Office established
Successor4:Pieter Oud
Office5:Leader of the Freedom Party
Term Start5:23 March 1946
Term End5:28 January 1948
Leader5:Himself
Predecessor5:Office established
Successor5:Office discontinued
Office6:Chairman of the Freedom Party
Term Start6:23 March 1946
Term End6:28 January 1948
Leader6:Himself
Predecessor6:Office established
Successor6:Office discontinued
Office7:Member of the Senate
Term Start7:20 November 1945
Term End7:7 August 1948
Parliamentarygroup7:People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy

(1948)
Freedom Party
(1946–1948)
Liberal State Party
(1945–1946)
Birthname:Dirk Uipko Stikker
Birth Date:1897 2, df=y
Birth Place:Winschoten, Netherlands
Death Place:Wassenaar, Netherlands
Nationality:Dutch
Party:People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy

(from 1948)
Otherparty:Freedom Party
(1946–1948)
Liberal State Party
(1945–1946)
Children:Uipko Dirk Stikker (born 1924)
Allerd Stikker (born 1928)
Alma Mater:University of Groningen
(Bachelor of Laws, Master of Laws)
Occupation:Politician · Diplomat · civil servant · Businessman · Banker · Corporate director · Nonprofit director · Trade association executive

Dirk Uipko Stikker (5 February 1897 – 23 December 1979) was a Dutch politician and diplomat of the defunct Liberal State Party (LSP), co-founder of the defunct Freedom Party (PvdV) and of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD), and businessman. Stikker was known for his abilities as a manager and negotiator. Stikker continued to comment on political affairs as a statesman until his death. He holds the distinction as the first Secretary General of NATO from the Netherlands.[1]

Biography

Early life

Born in Winschoten, he studied law at the University of Groningen. After his studies he began a career in the banking sector. In 1935, he became the director of Heineken International, the famous beer company. He held this post until 1948. In 1945, he was among the organizers of the Stichting van de Arbeid (Dutch Labour Foundation), thus helping to lay the foundation for post-war collective bargaining in the Netherlands.

Career

From 1922 until 1926, Stikker worked as an accountant for the Twentsche Bank, and then as Director of a branch of the bank from 1926 until 1928. Then in 1928 until 1935 Stikker worked as a regional manager for the Twentsche Bank. Stikker worked as member of the management board for Heineken N.V. from 1 July 1935 until 1 August 1948 and as chairman of that board from 1940 until 1948. Following the end of World War II, Queen Wilhelmina ordered a Recall of Parliament and Stikker became a Member of the Senate taking the place of the deceased Samuel van den Bergh, on 20 November 1945. On 23 March 1946, the Liberal State Party was renamed as the Freedom Party. Stikker was one of the co-founders and became the Leader of the Freedom Party and Chairman. On 24 January 1948, the Freedom Party (PvdV) and the Committee-Oud merged to form the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD). Stikker was one of the co-founders and became the first Chairman of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy.

After election of 1948 the Leader of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and Parliamentary leader of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy in the House of Representatives Pieter Oud opted to remain in the House of Representatives instead of accepting a ministerial post in the new Cabinet Drees–Van Schaik and endorsed Stikker who had been serving as the Deputy Leader as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 7 August 1948. The Cabinet Drees–Van Schaik fell on 24 January 1951 and was replaced by the Cabinet Drees I with Stikker continuing as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 15 March 1951. In February 1952 Stikker announced that he would not stand for the election of 1952. The Cabinet Drees I was succeeded by the Cabinet Drees II on 2 September 1952. Stikker remained in active politics, he was appointed as the Ambassador of the Netherlands to the United Kingdom, serving from 10 September 1952 until 15 June 1958 when he was appointed as the Permanent Representative of the Netherlands to NATO and the OECD. In April 1961 Stikker was nominated as the next Secretary General of NATO. He resigned as Permanent Representative on 21 April 1961 the day he was installed as Secretary General, serving from 21 April 1961 until 1 August 1964.

After election of 1948 the Leader of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and Parliamentary leader of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy in the House of Representatives Pieter Oud opted to remain in the House of Representatives instead of accepting a ministerial post in the new Cabinet Drees–Van Schaik and endorsed Stikker who had been serving as the Deputy Leader as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 7 August 1948. The Cabinet Drees–Van Schaik fell on 24 January 1951 and was replaced by the Cabinet Drees I with Stikker continuing as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 15 March 1951. In February 1952 Stikker announced that he would not stand for the election of 1952. The Cabinet Drees I was succeeded by the Cabinet Drees II on 2 September 1952. Stikker remained in active politics, he was appointed as the Ambassador of the Netherlands to the United Kingdom, serving from 10 September 1952 until 15 June 1958 when he was appointed as the Permanent Representative of the Netherlands to NATO and the OECD. In April 1961 Stikker was nominated as the next Secretary General of NATO. He resigned as Permanent Representative on 21 April 1961 the day he was installed as Secretary General, serving from 21 April 1961 until 1 August 1964.

After his retirement, Stikker occupied numerous seats as a corporate director and nonprofit director for supervisory boards in the business and industry world and for supervisory boards for several international non-governmental organizations and research institutes (Unilever, Van Lanschot, Netherlands Atlantic Association, Carnegie Foundation, Trilateral Commission and the DSM Company) and as an advocate and lobbyist for European integration and serving on several commissions for the European Economic Community and state commissions on behalf of the Dutch government. He served as the Secretary General of NATO from 21 April 1961 until 1 August 1964.

Politics

Stikker entered politics in 1945, when he was elected to the Senate of the States General. On 23 March 1946, he co-founded the Partij van de Vrijheid (PvdV, Freedom Party), together with some former members of the pre-war Liberale Staatspartij (LSP, Liberal State Party). On 24 January 1948, the PvdV was absorbed by the Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie (VVD, Peoples Party for Freedom and Democracy), which is the country's most important Liberal party. Stikker was the VVD's first chairman.

Minister of Foreign Affairs

In 1948, Stikker became minister of foreign affairs in the first government led by Willem Drees, holding that position until 1951. After his party adopted a no-confidence motion over the government's colonial policy in New Guinea, Stikker resigned on 23 January 1951, prompting the cabinet's fall. He returned to that position less than two months later. The Netherlands played an important role in the creation of NATO and the European Coal and Steel Community during Stikker's time in office as minister of foreign affairs.

Ambassador

After his ministerial office, Stikker was ambassador to the United Kingdom (1952–1958) and head of the Dutch Permanent Representation to the North Atlantic Council and to the Organization for European Economic Co-operation, the predecessor of the OECD (1958–1961).

Secretary General of NATO

On 21 April 1961 he succeeded Paul-Henri Spaak to become the third Secretary General of NATO. He resigned due to poor health on 1 August 1964.

Personal

In 1964, Stikker was awarded an honorary doctorate by Brown University. He died in Wassenaar in 1979, aged 82.

Further reading

Decorations

Honours
Ribbon bar Honour Country Date Comment
Grand Cross of the Order of the Oak CrownLuxembourg29 April 1949
Grand Cross of the Order of the CrownBelgium15 September 1950
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British EmpireUnited Kingdom30 May 1951
Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian OrderUnited Kingdom24 December 1958
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of MeritItaly9 September 1961
Grand Cross of the Legion of HonourFrance1 June 1962
Grand Cross of the Order of the PhoenixGreece18 November 1962
Grand Cross 1st Class of the Order of MeritGermany23 May 1963
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-NassauNetherlands30 April 1965Elevated from Commander (30 September 1952)
Commander of the Order of the Netherlands LionNetherlands19 February 1972Elevated from Knight (31 August 1946)

External links

Official

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stikker, Dirk Uipko (1897–1979). Huygens ING. 12 November 2013. 21 April 2019. nl.