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President Harry Truman's Secretary of State Dean Acheson entitled his memoirs of the era, Present at the Creation.
FORBES: Fact and Comment
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Dean Acheson, who was Secretary of State in the Truman Administration, aptly entitled his memoirs, Present at the Creation.
FORBES: The Wilsonian UN--R.I.P
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The Clinton policy was ambiguous about our security perimeter in the region, recalling Dean Acheson's tragic misstep concerning South Korea in 1950.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Chris Cox 1997 Keeper of the Flame remarks
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In a subsequently notorious speech given before the conflict, Secretary of State Dean Acheson conspicuously left out South Korea as an area of our vital interests.
FORBES: Fact And Comment
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Richard came of an age looking up to the men who had helped shape the post-war world -- Dean Acheson, Averill Harriman, Clark Clifford, Dean Rusk.
WHITEHOUSE: Remembering Richard Holbrooke
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When reporters ask him questions designed to discover whether he really has read James Chace's biography of Dean Acheson, he shouldn't answer with some foreign-policy boilerplate from his stump speech.
CNN: He ain't dumb, he's my president
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In an Administration dominated by businessmen and Western conservatives, he was a prominent intellectual a throwback to foreign-policy mandarins like Dean Acheson, McGeorge Bundy, and Walt Rostow, who provided the ideological rationale for the war in Vietnam.
NEWYORKER: The Next Crusade
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On January 12, 1950, then-Secretary of State Dean Acheson made a tragic mistake: When publicly describing those areas of vital interest to the United States, he omitted the Republic of Korea (ROK), suggesting that it was not within the "defensive perimeter" for which the United States would fight.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center for Security Policy | Must History Repeat Itself? Congress Should Not Invite North Korean Aggression
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You can check in a list of authors at the back that the writer was indeed Dean Gooderham Acheson (1893-1971).
ECONOMIST: English language