Spruille Braden Explained

Spruille Braden
Order:2nd
Office:Assistant Secretary of State for American Republic Affairs
Term Start:October 29, 1945
Term End:June 27, 1947
Predecessor:Nelson Rockefeller
Successor:Edward G. Miller, Jr.
President:Harry S. Truman
Order2:7th
Ambassador From2:United States
Country2:Argentina
Term Start2:May 21, 1945
Term End2:September 23, 1945
Predecessor2:Norman Armour
Successor2:George S. Messersmith
President2:Harry S. Truman
Order3:8th
Ambassador From3:United States
Country3:Cuba
Term Start3:May 19, 1942
Term End3:April 27, 1945
Predecessor3:George S. Messersmith
Successor3:R. Henry Norweb
President3:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Harry S. Truman
Order4:1st
Ambassador From4:United States
Country4:Colombia
Term Start4:February 15, 1939
Term End4:March 12, 1942
Predecessor4:William Dawson
Successor4:Arthur Bliss Lane
President4:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Birth Date:13 March 1894
Birth Place:Elkhorn, Montana, United States
Death Place:Los Angeles, California, United States
Nationality:American
Spouse:Maria Humeres Solar (1915–1962)
Verbena Williams Hebbard (1964–1977)
Children:Maruja Lyons
Laura Iselina Young
William Braden
Patricia Clark
Spruille Braden, Jr.
Alma Mater:Sheffield Scientific School
Profession:Mining Engineer (BMinE, PhD MinE)

Spruille Braden (; March 13, 1894 – January 10, 1978) was an American diplomat, businessman, lobbyist, and member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He served as the ambassador to various Latin American countries, and as Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs. He is notable for his interventionist activities and his prominent role in several coups d'état.

Early life

Born in Elkhorn, Montana, Braden was the son of a leading engineer at Anaconda Copper Company's properties in Chile, William Burford Braden.[1] He attended Montclair Kimberley Academy and Yale, earning a degree in engineering in 1914. He worked as a mining engineer and consultant to governments in Latin America, returning to the US in 1920.

Braden first came to prominence as one of the owners of the Braden Copper Company in Chile and as a shareholder in the United Fruit Company. He also directed the W. Averell Harriman Securities Corporation.[2] As an agent of Standard Oil, he played a role in the Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay[3] and espoused an openly anti-union position.[4]

Braden was a delegate to the Montevideo Convention (Seventh International Conference of American States) in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1933, where he sat with Secretary of State Cordell Hull; former American ambassador to Mexico J. Reuben Clark; American minister to Uruguay J. Butler Wright; and University of Chicago professor Sophonisba Breckinridge.[5]

Latin American diplomatic roles

He held several brief but important ambassadorships in Colombia (1939–1942), Cuba (1942), and Argentina. As ambassador to Argentina for four months in 1945, Braden encouraged the opposition against President Edelmiro Julián Farrell and Juan Perón.[6] Perón exploited his intervention with a slogan, Braden o Perón ("Braden or Perón"), which contributed to Perón's victory in the presidential election the following year.[7]

Braden accused Perón of being pro-Axis and anti-United Nations, and of plotting against Allied interests in South America, including the protection of industrial and commercial Axis assets and massive violations of human rights.[8]

In 1945, Braden served as Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs under Harry Truman. He clashed with George S. Messersmith, former ambassador to Mexico, with whom he had many disagreements about foreign policy in Latin America.[9] The disagreement with Braden would eventually force Messersmith out of the foreign service.

Beginning in 1948, Braden was a paid lobbyist for the United Fruit Company. When the company's interests were threatened in Guatemala by President Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán, Braden helped to conceive and execute the 1954 coup d'état that overthrew him. In his first act as newly-ignaugurated President of Nicaragua on May 1, 1967, Anastasio Somoza Debayle conferred Nicaragua's highest decoration, the Grand Cross of Ruben Dario, on Ambassador Spruille Braden and his wife Verbena for their "unstinting efforts in the cause of freedom in all of Latin America".

Later life

Braden served as president of the Metropolitan Club of New York, founded in 1891 by J. P. Morgan, from 1967 to 1973.

He died in Los Angeles of a heart ailment after unsuccessfully lobbying against the Torrijos - Carter Treaties.

Works

See also

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Charles Caldwell Hawley . A Kennecott Story . The University of Utah Press . 2014 . 106,109–110.
  2. http://watch.pair.com/belmont.html 8. Spruille Braden, The Belmont Brotherhood
  3. Ferrero, Roberto A. (1976), Del fraude a la soberanía popular, Buenos Aires: La Bastilla, p. 318
  4. Schvarzer, Jorge (1996). La industria que supimos conseguir. Una historia político-social de la industria argentina. Buenos Aires: Planeta, pag. 194
  5. U.S. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States: Diplomatic Papers, 1933 (1949–1952), Washington, DC: GPO.
  6. http://www.argentina-rree.com/13/13-004a.htm David Kelly, cited in Escudé, Carlos; Cisneros, Andrés (2000), La campaña del embajador Braden y la consolidación del poder de Perón, «Historia de las Relaciones Exteriores Argentinas», CARI
  7. Crasweller, Robert David. Perón and the Enigmas of Argentina. W. W. Norton and Company. New York, London.
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20090129121752/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,792573,00.html Neighbor Accused
  9. Trask, Roger R. Spruille Braden versus George Messersmith: World War II, the Cold War, and Argentine Policy, 1945–1947 in the Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs, Vol. 26, No. 1 (Feb., 1984), pp. 69–95