Sukarno at
Merdeka Palace during a visit to
Jakarta,
Indonesia March 1965.
Lyndon B. Johnson and
Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford at
Camp David, Maryland April 1968. Bunker first worked in his father's company, National Sugar Refining Company, He retired as an active executive in 1951 and purchased a 600-acre dairy farm in
Putney, Vermont. He remained a member of the board of National Sugar until 1966. He then moved to government during the
Harry S. Truman administration, when Truman appointed him
ambassador to Argentina in April 1951. Next he was
ambassador to Italy in February 1952. From November 1953 until November 1956 he was president of the
American Red Cross. In November 1956 he was appointed
ambassador to India and
Nepal by
Dwight D. Eisenhower, and sworn in December 1956, where he played a crucial role in the covert alliance between the two powers against
China. He was replaced by
John Kenneth Galbraith in 1961. During 1962 he acted as U.S. mediator in the
New York Agreement over
Western New Guinea. After a period back in
Washington, D.C., he was made
U.S. ambassador to the
Organization of American States, 1964–1966. President
Lyndon B. Johnson appointed him U.S. ambassador to
South Vietnam, 1967–1973. Once in
Saigon, he strongly supported the war efforts of Presidents Johnson and
Richard Nixon, and applauded US incursions into
Laos and
Cambodia. Following the conclusion of the
Vietnam War, Bunker headed the US team involved in the drawing up of the 1977
Torrijos-Carter Treaties. He was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction twice—the first time by
John F. Kennedy in 1963 (though the ceremony took place during
Lyndon B Johnson's term) and the second time by
Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967. He is one of only two persons (the other being
Colin Powell) who received the award twice, and the only person to receive it both times with distinction. ==Personal life==