Malcolm Toon Explained

Malcolm Toon
Ambassador From:United States
Country:Czechoslovakia
Term Start:July 31, 1969
Term End:October 11, 1971
Predecessor:Jacob D. Beam
Successor:Albert W. Sherer, Jr.
President:Richard Nixon
Ambassador From2:United States
Country2:Yugoslavia
Term Start2:October 23, 1971
Term End2:March 11, 1975
President2:Richard Nixon
Gerald Ford
Predecessor2:William Leonhart
Successor2:Laurence H. Silberman
Ambassador From3:United States
Country3:Israel
Term Start3:July 10, 1975
Term End3:December 27, 1976
President3:Gerald Ford
Predecessor3:Kenneth B. Keating
Successor3:Samuel W. Lewis
Ambassador From4:United States
Country4:the Soviet Union
Term Start4:January 18, 1977
Term End4:October 16, 1979
President4:Gerald Ford
Jimmy Carter
Predecessor4:Walter John Stoessel Jr.
Successor4:Thomas J. Watson Jr.
Birth Date:4 July 1916
Birth Place:Troy, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Pinehurst, North Carolina, U.S.
Children:3

Malcolm Toon (July 4, 1916 – February 12, 2009)[1] was an American diplomat who served as a Foreign Service Officer in Moscow in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, during the Cold War, ultimately becoming the ambassador to the Soviet Union.

Life

Toon was born July 4, 1916, in Troy, New York, where his father was a stonecutter, shortly after his parents had emigrated from Scotland.[2] [3] The family returned to Scotland when he was 6, before then resettling in Northborough, Massachusetts. Toon received an A. B. Degree from Tufts University in 1937, and an M.A. degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy of Tufts University in 1938.[2] He served in the United States Navy from 1942 to 1946.[4] In the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II, he was a PT boat skipper, and received the Bronze Star Medal for valor.[5]

A resident of Southern Pines, North Carolina, Toon was married to Elizabeth Jane Taylor until her death in 1996. They are interred at Arlington National Cemetery.[2] Toon died at a hospital in Pinehurst, North Carolina on February 12, 2009, aged 92. His death was reported in local media at the time, but was not reported nationally, despite his prominence as a diplomat.[2] The New York Times said it had not received any word of his death in 2009, and Toon's obituary, first prepared in or around 2006, was not published until 2017.[2]

Career

After the war, Toon joined the United States Foreign Service, receiving postings in Poland, Haiti, and Hungary, before being trained in the Russian language at the Embassy of the United States, Moscow in the 1950s.[2]

In 1965, Toon had become the U.S. embassy's third-ranking official when the Russians made accusations that was running a spy ring, which were officially denied, and he was not expelled.[2] He then became the head of the State Department's Soviet Affairs office.[2]

Toon was the ambassador to Czechoslovakia from 1969 to 1971, Yugoslavia from 1971 to 1975, Israel from 1975 to 1976,[6] and the Soviet Union from 1977 to 1979.

He participated in SALT II talks from 1977 to 1979 and the American-Soviet Summit in Vienna in 1979. At the summit, Toon learned that President Jimmy Carter had chosen Thomas Watson Jr., a business executive, as his replacement, leading Toon to publicly criticize making ambassadors out of those without any State Department experience.[2] Secretary of State Cyrus Vance then negotiated SALT II with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin without Toon, causing an upset Toon to publicly question the agreement's verification procedure.[2] President Carter signed the treaty but when Soviet-American relations deteriorated he withdrew it from consideration by the U.S. Senate.[2] [7]

In the 1990s, Toon co-chaired the U.S.–Russia Joint Commission on POW/MIAs with Russian general Dmitri Volkogonov. An article about Toon's briefing of the U.S. press corps in Moscow 1977-79 was published in the Foreign Service Journal in June 2011.[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Toon, Former Ambassador, Dies . . February 20, 2009 . May 2, 2017.
  2. News: Goldstein. Richard. Malcolm Toon Made Waves as a Diplomat, but His Death Went Largely Unreported. May 3, 2017. The New York Times. May 1, 2017. B14. limited.
  3. Book: Nominations of Carl J. Gilbert and Malcolm Toon: Hearing, Ninety-first Congress, First Session. May 5, 1969. 1969. U.S. GovernmentPrint. Office.
  4. Book: Carter, Jimmy. Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Jimmy Carter, 1977. January 1, 1977. Best Books on. 978-1-62376-764-8. 715–.
  5. Book: Congressional Record, V. 147, Pt. 8, June 12, 2001 to June 25 2001. November 2005. Government Printing Office. 978-0-16-075093-9. 10647–.
  6. Web site: 9 June 1989 . The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project AMBASSADOR MALCOLM TOON . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240713221721/https://adst.org/OH%20TOCs/Toon,%20Malcolm.toc.pdf . 13 July 2024 . 5 August 2024 . Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training.
  7. News: New York Times . Corrections: May 3, 2017 . May 3, 2017 . May 3, 2017.
  8. Malcolm Toon and the Moscow Press . Robin . Knight . Foreign Service Journal . June 2011 . July 2, 2011 . 39–43 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110808210234/http://www.afsa.org/fsj/0611/files/assets/downloads/publication.pdf . August 8, 2011 .