John O. Bell Explained

John O. Bell
Office:US Ambassador to Guatemala
Predecessor:John J. Muccio
Successor:John Gordon Mein
Term Start:January 30, 1962
Term End:August 26, 1965
President:John F. Kennedy
Education:George Washington University
Birth Date:October 4, 1912
Death Date:December 31, 2000 (aged 88)

John Oscar Bell (October 4, 1912  - December 31, 2000) was an American diplomat and the US Ambassador to Guatemala from 1962-1965.[1] [2] After his time as ambassador, Bell worked as a Foreign Policy Advisor at the United States Strike Command (STRICOM) in Florida.[3]

Early life and family

Bell was born October 4, 1912 in Manila, Philippines. Bell's career in the State Department began at 19 years old, working as a clerk. He graduated from George Washington University (GWU) in 1934 with a bachelor's degree in chemistry. Afterwards, Bell became a lawyer, graduating with his JD from GWU in 1939. Bell was married twice: first to Jeannette S. Bell and later to Ann Bell.[4] He had three children and two stepdaughters.

Foreign Service career

He officially joined the Foreign Service in 1952. His first position as a Foreign Service Officer (FSO) was as Deputy Chief of the ECA Mission and an Economic Officer at the US Embassy in Copenhagen. In 1956, Bell became the chargé d'affaires when Ambassador Eugenie Anderson decided to step down from her position. He also took on the Mission Director position in Copenhagen.

From 1955-1957, Bell was the Chief of U.S. Operations Mission of International Cooperation Administration (ICA) in Karachi, Pakistan.[5] In this position he worked to organize large-scale US economic aid for Pakistan with Economic Officer David Bell. While working in Pakistan, Bell hosted Prime Minister Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy at his home. After only two years, Bell was asked to become the Assistant Administrator for Near East and South Asia in ICA. This position had him managing the administration of economic aid to sixteen countries. Just 15 months later, he was promoted to Deputy for Foreign Aid Coordination which worked directly under the President and not the Secretary of State. On March 25, 1963, Bell was awarded the Distinguished Service Award by the Department of State for his "outstanding contributions to the conduct of United States foreign policy" in this position.[6]

In 1961 President John F. Kennedy abolished the ICA and transferred all of its functions to the newly created United States Agency for International Development (USAID).[7] Bell worked as a Deputy Chief of a task force until he was made the Ambassador to Guatemala in 1962.[8]

Ambassador to Guatemala

With the upcoming election in 1963 and the general discontent with the pro-American president, Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes, Guatemalan statesman and previous president Juan José Arévalo planned to return to Guatemala from exile in Mexico to run for president again.[9] Bell was largely against Arévalo. In a letter to the Department of State, he called Arévalo "passionately and pathologically antagonistic to the United States and all its works." As with anything anti-American during this period, Arévalo was labelled a communist by both the US Government and Bell. Thus, the Kennedy administration supported a Guatemalan military coup in 1963 to overthrow Ydígoras and prevent the election of Arévalo, an action which Bell insisted upon.[10] [11] Enrique Peralta Azurdia, the general who replaced Ydígoras after the coup, immediately repressed opposition to his regime, voided the constitution, and shut down congress. Bell remained optimistic, however, and believed Peralta intended to make a one-party system modeled after the Mexican government.[12]

The situation in Guatemala worsened and anti-American sentiment grew. By 1965, officials in Washington were increasingly fearful of guerillas in Guatemala due to the Marxist guerilla movement in Cuba led by Che Guevara.[13] They advised the embassy to protect US citizens against these guerilla threats. In response, Bell wrote

I must express my dismay and irritation at Dept’s reaction every time raw report is received suggesting terrorist action. Dept appears either [to] have little confidence in my judgment or . . . are writing for record should something eventually happen. If first is true, Department should replace me now. If second case, this [is] not helpful and I suggest desist.
He was replaced shortly after with John G. Mein.

Retirement

Bell retired from the Foreign Service in 1969. He took up teaching at the University of South Florida where he taught for 14 years. In 1988, Bell was interviewed by Arthur L. Lowrie for the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training about his career in the Foreign Service. He died in Temple Terrace, Florida at the age of 88.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John Oscar Bell (1912–2000) . 12 June 2024 . The Office of the Historian.
  2. News: 2001-01-04 . Obituary for John BELL Oscar, 1912-2000 . 2024-06-13 . The Tampa Tribune . 18.
  3. Book: Lowrie, Arthur L. . Interview with John O. Bell . 17 June 1988 . The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project.
  4. Web site: 1950 Census Record . 2024-06-13 . www.familysearch.org.
  5. Book: Country Reader on Pakistan . Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training . https://web.archive.org/web/20240713231555/https://www.adst.org/Readers/Pakistan.pdf . 13 July 2024.
  6. 1 March 1963 . 109 Employees, 22 Units Receive Awards For Outstanding Service to Department . State Department Newsletter . 12 . Hathitrust.
  7. Web site: USAID History . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111009131110/http://www.usaid.gov/about_usaid/usaidhist.html . 9 October 2011 . U.S. Agency for International Development.
  8. Web site: 17 June 1988 . The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project AMBASSADOR JOHN O. BELL . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240726165149/https://adst.org/OH%20TOCs/Bell,%20John%20O.toc.pdf . 26 July 2024 . 16 July 2024 . Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training.
  9. Friedman . Max Paul . Ferreira . Roberto García . 2022 . Making Peaceful Revolution Impossible: Kennedy, Arévalo, the 1963 Coup in Guatemala, and the Alliance against Progress in Latin America's Cold War . Journal of Cold War Studies . 24 . 1 . 155–187 . 10.1162/jcws_a_01058 . 1531-3298.
  10. Bedan . John . 10 October 2013 . No Second Chances: US-Guatemalan Relations in the 1960s . UMI Dissertation Publishing . en-US . ProQuest.
  11. Gordon . Max . 1971 . A Case History of U. S. Subversion: Guatemala, 1954 . Science & Society . 35 . 2 . 129–155 . 40401561 . 0036-8237.
  12. Book: Batz, Giovanni . Beyond the Eagle's Shadow: New Histories of Latin America's Cold War . University of New Mexico Press . 2013 . 978-0826353689 . Garrard-Burnett . Virginia . 51–75 . Military Factionalism and the Consolidation of Power in 1960s Guatemala . Atwood Lawrence . Mark . Moreno . Julio E..
  13. Book: Chasteen, John Charles . Born in blood & fire: a concise history of Latin America . 2016 . W.W. Norton & Company . 978-0-393-28305-1 . 4th . New York.