Walter R Roberts was born in
Austria, and was educated at the
University of Vienna and
Cambridge University (M.Litt., Ph.D.). He was a research assistant at The
Harvard Law School (1940–1942) and joined the US Government (Coordinator of Information) in 1942. After eight years of service with the
Voice of America, he was transferred to the Austrian Desk of the Department of State (1950). In 1953, he was appointed Deputy Area Director for Europe in the newly created
U.S. Information Agency (USIA). In 1955, he was a member of the American Delegation to the Austrian Treaty Talks that culminated in a State Treaty, signed in Vienna by the four occupying powers (U.S. Great Britain, France and the Soviet Union) on May 15, 1955. In 1960, he was appointed Counselor for Public Affairs at the American Embassy in
Belgrade,
Yugoslavia. In 1966, he was assigned as Diplomat in Residence at
Brown University in
Providence, R.I. and in 1967 he was transferred to
Geneva,
Switzerland to serve as Counselor for Public Affairs at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. In 1969, he was appointed Deputy Associate Director of USIA and in 1971 was elevated to the associate director position, then the senior career post in USIA. In 1973, his book
Tito, Mihailović and the Allies, 1941–1945 was published, described by Foreign Affairs as "the best book on the subject." In 1974, he received the
Distinguished Honor Award from USIA. He retired from the U.S. Government in 1974 to take the position of Director of Diplomatic Studies at
Georgetown University's
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). His first assignment there was to serve as executive director of a panel on International Information, Educational and Cultural Affairs (also called the Stanton Panel after its chairman, the then President of CBS, Dr.
Frank Stanton). In 1975, he was called back into government to serve as executive director of the Board for International Broadcasting. (BIB, the government agency overseeing
Radio Free Europe and
Radio Liberty. The BIB was dissolved and replaced in 1999 by the
Broadcasting Board of Governors. In 1985, he retired for the second time from the U.S. Government and was appointed diplomat-in-residence at The
George Washington University where he taught a course on "Diplomacy in the Information Age" for ten years. In 1991, President
George H. W. Bush appointed him to be a member of the
U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy and President
Bill Clinton reappointed him in 1994. In 1993, he accepted an appointment as a member of the board of the
Salzburg Global Seminar. In 2001, he co-founded (as a successor to the Public Diplomacy Foundation) The Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication and the Public Diplomacy Council. He was later an advisor to the (renamed)
Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication and was a member emeritus of the board of the Public Diplomacy Council. In 2009, he received the Voice of America "Director's Special Recognition Award". In 2014, his book "Tito, Mihailović and the Allies, 1941 – 1945" was republished in
Serbia. After his personal recollections about
Josip Broz Tito were published by
American Diplomacy, the Serbian newspaper
Politika covered the story on its front page. After his retirement from government, he wrote and spoke widely on foreign affairs subjects. He died in 2014 in
Washington D.C. ==Books==