Frederick Vreeland Explained

Frederick Vreeland
Office:United States Ambassador to Morocco
Predecessor:Michael Ussery
President:George H. W. Bush
Bill Clinton
Successor:Marc Ginsberg
Termend:March 1, 1993
Termstart:May 7, 1992
Office1:Vice President of John Cabot University
Termend1:1991
Termstart1:1989
Birth Date:24 June 1927
Birth Place:Danbury, Connecticut, United States
Children:Nicholas Vreeland
Parents:Thomas Reed Vreeland
Diana Vreeland
Alma Mater:Yale University (BA)
Party:Democrat
Allegiance: United States
Branch: (Reserve)
Serviceyears:1945–1947

Frederick Dalziel Vreeland (born June 24, 1927) is an American career diplomat and writer whose final appointment was as United States Ambassador to Morocco.

Early life

The son of fashion editor Diana Vreeland (1903–1989) and the banker Thomas Reed Vreeland (1899–1966), Vreeland served in the United States Navy Reserve from 1945 to 1947, then was educated at Yale.[1]

Career

In 1951 Vreeland became an Operations Officer with the Central Intelligence Agency and served until 1985. During that time, his foreign service diplomatic assignments were: Economic Officer, US Mission to the UN European Office (1952–1957); Economic Officer, US Mission to West Berlin (1957–1960); Political Officer, US Embassy Bonn, West Germany (1960–1963); Member, National Security Council, at the White House (1963); Economic Officer, US Embassy Rabat, Morocco (1963–1967); Political Officer, United States Mission to the United Nations (1967–1971); Political Officer, Embassy of the United States, Paris (1971–1978); Political Officer, Embassy of the United States, Rome (1978–1985).In the Summer of 1963 he served temporarily as a member of the National Security Agency in Washington, DC., in order to brief President John F. Kennedy in preparation for the latter's visit to Berlin in June 1963. At Kennedy's request, during one of the last of these briefings, he invented the phrase "Ich bin ein Berliner" and carefully taught the president how to pronounce those German words. This is confirmed by the Kennedy Memorial Library.

Vreeland was Vice President of John Cabot University from 1989 to 1991. In 1990, he was nominated by President George H. W. Bush as United States Ambassador to Burma, but his nomination was not acted upon by the United States Senate and he instead served as ambassador to Morocco, taking up the appointment in 1991.[2]

While in Rome, Vreeland had the peculiar experience of being asked to be part of a team of acting & public-speaking coaches assembled to prepare the very inexperienced Sofia Coppola for a difficult scene in her father Francis's .[3] In 2005, while living in retirement in Rome, Vreeland urged senators not to confirm John Bolton as US ambassador to the United Nations, saying he had no diplomatic bone in his body and was unworthy of their trust.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biographic Register. 1974.
  2. http://www.americanambassadors.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=Members.view&memberid=233 "Council of American Ambassadors Membership Frederick Vreeland" retrieved April 17, 2012
  3. Syme . Rachel . Sofia Coppola's Path to Filming Gilded Adolescence . TheNewYorker,com . 22 January 2024 . Conde Nast . 31 January 2024.
  4. Sonni Efron, Ex-Diplomat Calls U.N. Nominee ‘Unworthy’, Los Angeles Times, April 26, 2005, accessed June 14, 2021