and other advisors in preparation for the
Potsdam Conference and
Harry Truman at the Potsdam Conference Bohlen joined the
US Department of State in 1929. His first diplomatic post was in
Prague. In 1931, he was transferred to
Paris, where he studied
Russian and became a Soviet specialist. In 1934, at 30, he joined the staff of the first US embassy to the Soviet Union in
Moscow. The secret protocol contained an understanding between
Adolf Hitler and
Joseph Stalin to divide
Central Europe, the
Baltic States, and
Finland between Germany and the Soviet Union.
US President Franklin Roosevelt was urgently informed, but the US did not share the information with any of the governments concerned. A week later, the plan was realized by the
German and Soviet invasions of Poland, and World War II started. In 1940 and 1941, he worked in the American embassy in
Tokyo, where he was interned for six months before his release by the Japanese in mid-1942. In 1943, Bohlen became head of the East European Division, the first of the six specialists who started the Russian-language program in the late 1920s to become the head of a division of the State Department. He then worked on Soviet issues in the State Department during the war, accompanying
Harry Hopkins on missions to Stalin in Moscow. He worked closely with Roosevelt and was his interpreter at the
Tehran Conference in 1943 and the
Yalta Conference in 1945. He also served as interpreter for US President
Harry Truman at the
Potsdam Conference in 1945. Bohlen later lamented that the Potsdam Conference was the beginning of the Cold War: "After Potsdam, there was little that could be done to induce the Soviet Union to become a reasonable and cooperative member of the world community. Discrepancies between the systems were too great, the hostility of the Soviet Union toward
capitalist countries too great." In 1946, Bohlen disagreed with his friend and mentor, Ambassador
George F. Kennan, on how to deal with the Soviets. Kennan proposed a strategy of
containment of Soviet expansion, but Bohlen was more cautious and recommended accommodation by allowing Stalin to have a
sphere of influence in
Eastern Europe without it being disturbed by the US. Bohlen, criticized by some of the
hawks in the
US Congress, paid close attention to public opinion as he considered domestic influence in a democracy to be inevitable. When
George C. Marshall became Secretary of State in 1947, Bohlen became a key adviser to Truman. Bohlen, at Marshall's request and guidance, wrote Marshall's June 5, 1947
speech that led to the
Marshall Plan. Bohlen was US minister to France from 1949 to 1951. Kennan, declared
persona non grata for some criticism of the Soviet Union in
Berlin in September 1952, would not be allowed to return there. Oversight of the embassy was then awarded to Chargé d'Affaires
Jacob Beam. On January 20, 1953,
Dwight Eisenhower became US president. When Stalin died in March 1953, the post of ambassador was still vacant, and the embassy was still being led by Beam. In April 1953, Eisenhower named Bohlen as ambassador to the Soviet Union. The
confirmation hearings were difficult as despite a recommendation from the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Bohlen's presence at Yalta was held against him by Democratic and Republican members of the
Conservative coalition which controlled the Senate at the time. He was particularly criticized by Senator
Joseph McCarthy, who claimed that Bohlen was both sympathetic to Communism and that he was
homosexual. McCarthy also criticized Bohlen's brother-in-law,
Charles W. Thayer, claiming that Thayer had a history of homosexuality as well. Both the Republican leader
Robert Taft and the Democrat leader
Lyndon Johnson, both associated with the coalition, supported him and Eisenhower's support was unstinting. After Thayer resigned, Bohlen was confirmed 74–13. Bohlen oversaw several key events during his time as ambassador to the Soviet Union, including the rise of
Georgy Malenkov to the premiership, the arrest and execution of
Lavrentiy Beria, the ascendency of
Nikita Khrushchev, the
Hungarian Revolution and the
Suez Crisis. Bohlen served as ambassador to France from 1962 to 1968 under Presidents
John F. Kennedy and
Lyndon Johnson. According to the Kennedy advisor
Theodore Sorensen, Bohlen participated in early discussions surrounding the
Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962. During an ExComm meeting on October 18, 1962,
Dean Rusk read a letter he wrote the previous night during deliberations in which he advocated for dealing with Khrushchev through firm diplomatic action, followed by a declaration of war if his response was unsatisfactory. To everyone's surprise, Bohlen kept reservations aboard an ocean liner that would take him to his Paris post as ambassador, rather than waiting until after the crisis had been resolved. He was thus absent for most of what was arguably the most important confrontation between the two superpowers of the Cold War. He was a consultant in 1968 and 1969 to the transition at the State Department from Secretary of State
Dean Rusk to President
Richard Nixon's first
Secretary of State,
William P. Rogers. Bohlen served as Acting
Secretary of State in January 1969. Bohlen retired in January 1969. == Death ==