Robert G. Neumann

From Freepedia

Robert Gerhard Neumann (January 2, 19161999) was a United States politician and ambassador.

Born in Vienna, Austria, Neumann received degrees from the University of Rennes, the Consular Academy of Austria, and the Geneva School of International Studies. While studying in Geneva, Neumann was arrested by the Nazis and spent two years in a concentration camp. Upon his release, he left for America, where in 1940 he received a Master of Arts from Amherst College.

After a brief stint teaching at the State Teachers' College in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, Neumann enlisted and served during World War II. Upon his return, he took up a job teaching political science at the University of Wisconsin. In 1946 he earned his Ph. D. from the University of Minnesota.

The following year he took a post at the University of California at Los Angeles, where he eventually became a tenured professor. In 1966 he was named by President Lyndon B. Johnson as ambassador to Afghanistan. At the time, the position was not necssarily a permanent one, and Neumann was granted a leave of absence from UCLA. However, by 1970, Neumann felt compelled to remain at work at the Embassy, and resigned his professorship at the school.

After serving in Afghanistan, Neumann became the ambassador to Morocco in 1973. Upon his return to Washington, D.C. in 1976, he began teaching again at Georgetown University, while taking the director's helm of the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy.

In 1981, Neumann was once again called into the diplomatic community, this time as Ronald Reagan's ambassador to Saudi Arabia. However, he abruptly resigned in 1983 due to a personal conflict with then-Secretary of State Alexander Haig. He remained a fellow at Georgetown University until his retirement in the early 1990s.

Neumann passed away in 1999 in Bethesda, Maryland at the age of 83.

His son, Ronald E. Neumann, also became an American ambassador and a deputy assistant secretary of state.

Preceded by:
John M. Steeves
United States Ambassador to Afghanistan
19661973
Succeeded by:
Theodore L. Eliot, Jr.
Preceded by:
Stuart W. Rockwell
United States Ambassador to Morocco
19731974
Succeeded by:
Robert Anderson
Preceded by:
John Carl West
United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
1981
Succeeded by:
Richard W. Murphy


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