Josef Korbel

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Person.png Josef Korbel  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(diplomat, academic, deep state operative)
Josef Korbel.jpg
BornSeptember 20, 1909
DiedJuly 18, 1977 (Age 67)
Denver, Colorado
NationalityUS (Born: Czechoslovak)
Alma materCharles University
Children • Madeleine Albright
• Katherine Korbel
• John Korbel
RelativesAlice P. Albright
Spooky Czechoslovak-US professor in international politics. His daughter Madeleine Albright was US Secretary of State under President Bill Clinton, and he was the mentor of George W. Bush's Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice.

Employment.png Advisor

In office
1940 - 1945
EmployerEdvard Beneš
Member of the exile government

Josef Korbel was a Czech-Jewish-American diplomat and political scientist.[1] He was Czechoslovakia's ambassador to Yugoslavia, the chair of the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan, and then as a professor of international politics at the University of Denver, where he founded the Josef Korbel School of International Studies.

His daughter Madeleine Albright was Secretary of State under President Bill Clinton, and he was the mentor of George W. Bush's Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice. His granddaughter Alice P. Albright is the current CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corporation.

Background and career

Josef was born under the family name Körbel on September 20, 1909 to Czech-Jewish parents Arnost and Olga Körbel, both of whom were killed in the Holocaust.[2] He married Anna Spiegelová on April 20, 1935.[1] They had met in secondary school around 1928.[1][2] Anna was born in 1910 to Alfred Spiegel and Ruzena Spiegelova, assimilated Czech Jews.[1]

At the time of their daughter Madeleine's birth, Josef was working as press-attaché at the Czechoslovak Embassy in Belgrade.[3]

Though he worked as a diplomat in the government of Czechoslovakia, Korbel's politics and Judaism forced him to flee with his wife and baby Madeleine after the Nazi invasion in 1939 and move to London. Korbel worked as an advisor to Edvard Beneš, in the Czech government in exile. He gave speeches for the BBC's daily broadcasts to Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.[4][5] During their time in England the Korbels converted to Catholicism and dropped the umlaut from the family name, resulting in the second syllable of "Korbel" being stressed.[2][6]

Korbel returned to Czechoslovakia after the war, receiving a luxurious Prague apartment expropriated from Karl Nebrich, a Bohemian German industrialist expelled under the Beneš decrees.[7] Korbel was appointed as the Czechoslovak ambassador to Yugoslavia, where he remained until the Communist takeover of Czechoslovakia in February 1948. Around this time, he was named a delegate to the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan to mediate on the Kashmir dispute. He sat as its chair, and subsequently wrote several articles and a book on the Kashmir problem.[3]

Following the Communist Party's rise to power in 1948, in 1949 Korbel applied for political asylum in the United States stating that he would be arrested in Czechoslovakia for his "faithful adherence to the ideals of democracy." He received asylum and also a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation to teach international politics at the University of Denver. In 1964, with the benefaction of Ben Cherrington, Korbel established the Graduate School of International Studies and became its founding Dean.[3][5] One of his students was Condoleezza Rice, the first woman appointed National Security Advisor (2001) and the first African-American woman appointed Secretary of State (2005). Korbel's daughter Madeleine became Secretary of State in 1997. Both of them have testified to his substantial influence on their careers in foreign policy and international relations.[4]

The Graduate School of International Studies at the University of Denver was named the Josef Korbel School of International Studies on May 28, 2008.

Academic work

  • Poland Between East and West: Soviet and German Diplomacy toward Poland, 1919–1933 (Princeton University Press, 1963). ISBN 978-0691624631 online
  • Detente in Europe: Real or Imaginary? (Princeton University Press, 1972). ISBN 978-0691644295.
  • Conflict, Compromise, and Conciliation: West German–Polish Normalization 1966–1976 (with Louis Ortmayer, University of Denver, 1975).
  • The Politics of Soviet Policy Formation: Khrushchev's Innovative Policies in Education and Agriculture (University of Denver, 1976).
  • Twentieth-century Czechoslovakia : the meanings of its history online

Artwork ownership controversy

Philipp Harmer, an Austrian citizen, filed a lawsuit claiming that Josef Korbel's family is in inappropriate possession of artwork belonging to his great-grandfather, the German entrepreneur Karl Nebrich. Like most other ethnic Germans living in Czechoslovakia, Nebrich and his family were expelled from the country under the postwar "Beneš decrees", and left behind artwork and furniture in an apartment subsequently given to Korbel's family, before they also were forced to flee the country.[7][8]


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References

  1. a b c d Blackman, Ann (1998). Seasons of Her Life: A Biography of Madeleine Korbel Albright. Scribner. pp. 1–5. ISBN 978-0684845647.
  2. a b c https://web.archive.org/web/20000816071056/https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/govt/admin/stories/albright020497.htm
  3. a b c About us, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver, retrieved May 15, 2016.
  4. a b Michael Dobbs, Josef Korbel's Enduring Foreign Policy Legacy Washington Post December 28, 2000.
  5. a b https://books.google.com/books?id=Pq04PFuRmQgC&pg=PA159
  6. Albright, Madeleine. Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948. New York: Harper. pp. 191–192.
  7. a b Suzanne Smalley: Germans lost their art, too. Family says Albright's father took paintings – May 17, 2000
  8. Wealthy Austrian Family Claims Albright’s Father Stole Paintings, May 5, 1999
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