Mario Barros van Buren explained

Mario Barros van Buren
Birth Date:28 October 1928
Birth Place:Santiago, Chile
Death Place:Chile
Party:Legión Nacional Funcionalista (1950–1952)
Movimiento Revolucionario Nacional Sindicalista

Mario Barros van Buren (1928–2004)[1] was a Chilean historian, lawyer and diplomat.

Biography

He studied at the, to begin his law studies at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, from which he graduated in 1952 with a memoir on the theory of just war. That same year he began working at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which sent him the following year to continue his studies at the University of Virginia.

In 1979 he received the "Hispanic Culture" award from the Spanish State.

In 1984, during the Ronald Reagan administration, he was rejected as Chilean ambassador to the United States for having been editor of a magazine considered anti-Semitic from 1948 to 1952.[2] [3] The claim was disputed by the subsecretary of the ministry, Humberto Julio, claiming that it was "absolutely false" that the U.S. government had made such a rejection while abstaining at the same time from answering whether such a nomination had actually taken place. The next day, Foreign Minister recognised that such a rejection did in fact take place, saying that what Julio had said was true, in the sense that Barros had not been "rejected either tacitly or explicitly."[4]

Selected works

Barros is known for his numerous works on the history of Chile. Among them:

Notes and References

  1. El Mercurio, 24 April 2004 edition.
  2. News: Rechazo de embajador chileno . 1984-04-21 . El País.
  3. Book: Muñoz, Heraldo . Las relaciones exteriores del gobierno militar chileno . PROSPEL-CERC . 1986 . 113 . es .
  4. Book: Foro internacional . El Colegio de México . 1985 . 247 . es . 26.