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n
extraordinary man, one who left a lasting imprint on his nation
and all who were fortunate to know him, was summoned by his Maker
on Sunday, February 10. Lieutenant General Vernon A. Walters, 85,
died of a heart attack in Good Samaritan Medical Center in West
Palm Beach, Florida.
The passing
of Dick Walters marks the end of a life of selfless and dedicated
public service and what can only be described as a sensational and
action-packed career. For National Review, the loss is particularly
keenly felt, as General Walters was a close friend to its management
and staff and a stellar performer on NR cruises, the latest
of which took place in late September from Boston to Montreal.
The newspaper
obituaries have recited his many accomplishments, noting especially
his unique linguistic abilities (he spoke at least seven languages,
and could maneuver in several more), his service to eight presidents,
his rise from a private in World War II to general officer by the
time of his retirement in 1976, his skills as deputy director of
the CIA, roving ambassador and ambassador to the United Nations
under President Reagan, and his service as United Nations ambassador
under President George H. W. Bush. His career is all the more remarkable
for a man who did not attend college, and who, by sheer talent and
energy, rose to high station and earned the respect of world leaders.
He retained
a deep and abiding commitment to his God and to his country; unmarried
through life and a daily communicant, Walters would always be found
at the nearest Mass, even when his movements were confined by the
use of a wheelchair. His faith was mirrored in his devotion to the
cause of freedom, and he never tired or reminding others that the
United States was and is the best hope of mankind surviving in conditions
of liberty.
Walters reveled
in his ability to hold the attention of an audience, small or large.
His skills as a raconteur allowed him to weave the lessons of the
past into a prescription for the future; he had in his knapsack
a fabulous insider's story to illustrate every important point.
Never too large a figure to overlook even the simplest question
put by a listener, the general would be patiently attentive, staying
with the interlocutor until he had satisfied the question and imparted
yet another illustrative tale. Lecturers on NR cruises change
tables at dinner every evening, and were always greeted with the
message, "Last night we had the general at our table
.he
is fantastic, and I hope we sit with him again." Yet another
tribute to the way in which he dealt with people, a paradigm of
kindness. In more than 30 years of acquaintance, not once did I
meet a critic of Dick Walters, rare in a city divided into friends
and enemies.
The New
York Times, in its otherwise generous obituary, remarked that
he "may not have made history in his career, but he saw it
firsthand." Those who knew Dick Walters would disagree with
this underestimation. In fact, Walters was a maker of history,
albeit behind the scenes. He had way of making his influence felt,
a manner of accepting an assignment broad in character, then refining
and implementing it in his own skilful way. The emphasis on his
language skills is accurate, and many thought of him as an interpreter.
He was actually the "whole man," in the sense that he
was simultaneously master of substance and equipped with an entire
array of practical skills, not least the ability to communicate.
Put another way, he was a master strategist.
In 1980, Vernon
Walters accepted an invitation to serve on a foreign-policy campaign
advisory board to candidate Ronald Reagan. It happened that campaign
director William J. Casey and I were making a trip to Europe during
a lull in the campaign. In Paris, we had arranged to meet with a
cross-section of French journalists at dinner. Walters happened
to be in Paris. Our job was to outline for skeptical French journalists
Reagan's views on U.S. policy toward Europe, France, the USSR, and
to respond to their questions and their obvious doubts. Scarcely
into the post-dinner discussion, it was obvious that the interpreter
present was out of his depth, and we desperately sought a quick
fix. I leaned over and asked Walters if he would mind stepping off
our team and helping us out; in an instant he was in the middle,
and for more than three hours interpreted flawlessly.
He performed
many sensitive and highly secret diplomatic missions over his great
career, but none was more interesting to him nor did he feel
more deeply about than his secret briefing sessions with
Pope John Paul II. Knowing the Vatican was deeply involved in its
own policy initiatives in Eastern Europe (and especially in Poland),
and that the Reagan initiative to deploy intermediate range and
cruise missiles in Western Europe was highly controversial, Walters
visited the Holy Father several times, and with great delicacy showed
the Pope satellite photographs and other hard evidence of Soviet
SS-20 deployments. He knew not to say more, letting the evidence
speak for itself. Whatever the Pope actually felt, the Vatican did
not criticize the deployments, depriving the European Left of any
meaningful Catholic Church support. If that is not "making
history," one wonders what would qualify.
On the morning
of January 21, 1981, President Reagan's first full day in office,
and without any comment, he placed several items on the credenza
behind his desk pictures of Nancy and the children. In the
front left corner of the desk he placed a small brass sign, facing
out, a message to his visitors. It read: "There is no limit
to what a man can accomplish or how far he can go as long as he
doesn't mind who gets the credit." Some read that sign and
got the message, many more did not. General Vernon A. Walters certainly
did, for he had lived his whole life according to that simple principle.
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