Albright, who died this week at the age of 84, often said, with her customary humor and spirit, that the PBS NewsHour helped launch her into a storied spot ...
Her interview was, as Robin MacNeil would later note, a fitting finale to a war in which she had become a frequent target of criticism but which had concluded on a far more successful note than most had predicted. As I was reminded by another NewsHour reporter, Jonathan Spalter, Havel wanted a cigarette break before the interview with Jim Lehrer. She walked with him to the somewhat dilapidated park behind the building where he could smoke in peace. As she later acknowledged, she was less successful in having Havel look directly at Jim while answering questions. Just as she was assertive in promoting American interests and democracy and human rights, so she projected on many an evening on the NewsHour a clearly spoken directness to the American and global publics. In August 1991, the first day of what would be an ultimately failed Moscow coup against Gorbachev, Albright was on a concluding panel that assessed where the USSR and U.S. were headed. Another Albright mission was behind the scenes.
As Secretary of State, she foresaw the danger of Putin's rule even as she campaigned for NATO's expansion to Russia's borders.
“My deepest regret from my years in public service is the failure of the United States and the international community to act sooner to halt those crimes,” she wrote in her memoir, “Madam Secretary.” One of my favorite memories of Albright was from her seventy-fifth-birthday party, in 2012, organized by her twin daughters, Anne and Alice. The guest list was entirely female. She wore a giant bug after the Russians were caught tapping her State Department. Her collection of brooches —amassed from dime stores, flea markets, antique dealers, and upscale designers—became so legendary that the Smithsonian exhibited them. One of Albright’s legacies is the square and statue in Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, honoring her role in what came to be known as “Madeleine’s war.” Time magazine described Kosovo as “ground zero in the debate over whether America should play a new role in the world, that of the indispensable nation asserting its morality as well as its interests to assure stability, stop thugs and prevent human atrocities.” In the Clinton Administration, Albright was a dogged supporter of NATO intervention to stop Serbian attacks on Kosovars seeking independence. They did a takeoff on the rivalries in “West Side Story.” Albright played Maria; Primakov was Tony. To the tune of “America,” the two bantered back and forth: After a Cuban pilot bragged about shooting down two civilian planes carrying four exiles, in 1996, she said, “This is not cojones,” the Spanish slang for testicles. “We leave America in 2001 safer,” she told me. “We will continue erasing—without replacing—the line drawn in Europe by Stalin’s bloody boot,” she said, in 1999. As almost a million people were slaughtered in Rwanda, in 1994, she famously shouted on a phone call from the U.N. to colleagues in Washington, “Goddammit, we have to do something!” President Bill Clinton opted out, and it haunted her. In a final Op-Ed for the Times—published a month before she died, of cancer, on Wednesday, at eighty-four—the former Secretary of State recalled her initial impressions of the Russian leader. Her family first fled Adolf Hitler’s Nazis and later Joseph Stalin’s Communists as they expanded deeper into Europe. She landed in Colorado at the age of eleven and became a U.S. citizen at the age of twenty. “Only in America could a refugee from Central Europe become Secretary of State,” she told newly minted U.S. citizens, decades later, at a naturalization ceremony.
Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has died at age 84. But many of the foreign policy concepts she helped bring to the post-Cold War world remain.
The advisability of NATO enlargement will be hotly debated for years to come and Albright’s role in the process should not be spared scrutiny. Now that rival states are more willing to punch back, it is far riskier for U.S. leaders to perform the role of indispensable nation. It is understandable, perhaps, that she wanted to harness this awesome power toward causes such as nurturing freedom and democracy in countries that had struggled for decades to rid themselves of authoritarianism. It would be Albright’s lasting regret that the U.S. failed to intervene in Rwanda in 1994 and stop the slaughter. She saw the alliance as a conduit through which the United States could impart peace, order and good governance upon a fragile European continent. When the Soviet Union disappeared in 1991, so did the primary justification for America’s enormous troop presence abroad and globe-spanning web of military alliances.
Albright was the US representative to the UN and secretary of state under President Bill Clinton.
“Madeline Albright was one of my earliest lessons in the bankruptcy of identity politics. But she argued that the country did not pose an immediate threat to the US and called for keeping focus on defeating al-Qaeda. “It was a stupid statement. We stand tall and we see further than other countries into the future.” “We are heartbroken to announce that Dr. Madeleine K. Albright, the 64th US Secretary of State and the first woman to hold that position, passed away earlier today. She was in the post until 2001.
Albright, who arrived in the U.S. as an 11-year-old refugee, became the first woman to serve as secretary of state. She died on Wednesday at the age of 84.
"So I went up to him and I said, 'Can you believe that a refugee is secretary of state?' " "She turned to me as a counselor and said, 'Could you organize the State Department to talk about Islam?' " Sherman said. "It was an indication of her ability to be political." "But it had nothing to do with her getting the job." "She was happy to wield it in her own way." "Madeleine said to him, 'When your government names a woman to head the delegation, I will spend considerable time with her as well.' " Albright, at 4 feet 10 inches tall, stood out in her cherry suit and pearls in the all-male group. Albright had a long and storied career in foreign policy, serving as U. S. ambassador to the United Nations from 1993-97 before reaching the pinnacle of diplomacy: secretary of state. "This all started when ... Saddam Hussein called me a serpent," Albright told NPR in 2009. "As difficult as it might seem, I want every stage of my life to be more exciting than the last." It would never have happened, but I would have felt better about my own role in this." "She said, 'Where's Wonder Woman?' So they did a Wonder Woman comic book as well.
The former U.S. secretary of state recalled the first time she met Russian President Vladimir Putin back in 1999 during the Clinton administration.
"I think he is somebody that is very competent in his capabilities generally. "But Russia is alone. Albright spoke with NPR last June ahead of a meeting in Geneva between Russian and U.S. leaders. "But my impression in the second two meetings were that he very much liked the background of being in the Kremlin with all its history, that he was smart, that he was prepared and that he had a view about how things were going to go," Albright added. The former secretary of state recalled the first time she met Putin, in 1999, and emphasized that his agenda was clear from the beginning. When Madeleine Albright met Russian leader Vladimir Putin more than 20 years ago as the U.S. secretary of state, she said he was trying to ingratiate himself to then-President Bill Clinton — but Putin also "had a view of how things were going to go."
WASHINGTON — Madeleine Albright was the quintessential late 20th-century Jewish diplomat, haunted by the Holocaust and determined to use what tools her adopted ...
“The epitome of mensch in the best and broadest sense of the word.” That led to difficult questions: If Albright knew she was Jewish in 1993 or 1994, why did she not reveal it until 1997, when a newspaper was about to go public? “Maybe she was afraid that her stature would be diminished before her international colleagues if they knew of her Jewish roots. Maybe she felt her aspirations to become secretary of state would be jeopardized if her family history was confirmed.” Her optimism may have blinded her to how deeply embedded in Iran’s political culture was its resistance to compromise. Netanyahu planned a dramatic signal that he was ready to leave the talks. Albright, an early backer of Bill Clinton when he was a relatively unknown Arkansas governor, was his first U. N. ambassador, repayment in part for the money she helped raise for his campaign. She was behind Clinton’s decision to confront the Serbian military in 1999 as it bore down on Kosovo. Yugoslav strongman Slobodan Milosevic once told her, “Madam Secretary, you are not well informed.” Albright, whose father Josef Korbel, had served as a diplomat in Belgrade, countered, “Don’t tell me I’m uninformed — I lived here.” In 1998, at U. S.-mediated talks with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at Wye River, Maryland, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was resisting concessions as Bill Clinton sought to advance the Oslo Accords Netanyahu had reviled. She lobbied for airstrikes against Serbian targets, once telling Colin Powell, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, “What’s the point of having this superb military you’re always talking about if we can’t use it?” Powell, famous for his Vietnam-era-founded reluctance for military intervention, said the question nearly caused him an “aneurysm.” “This is cowardice.” She called State Department bureaucrats, whom she never fully trusted, “The White Boys.” Albright was adept at outmaneuvering statesmen — always men — who thought they knew much better than she did.
Today, as Ukraine defends itself against military forces from Russia, Albright's journey is especially important.
And you have to do it in a strong voice." And you have to do it in a strong voice," she wrote in 2015. It was a doomed mission, but it also was a testament to the human spirit to stand up against oppression, even when it will likely mean your death. It wasn't to be. And to so many, Albright was a feminist icon. To others, Albright's decades of public service proved a model for a person choosing to serve their country.
Tributes are paid to the Czech immigrant who was the first woman to become the top US diplomat.
In the modern era, great countries accept that, and so must Mr Putin," she wrote. "Ukraine is entitled to its sovereignty, no matter who its neighbours happen to be. for believing it was essential for us not to stand by and watch what Milosevic was planning to do," she said at the time. "Few leaders have been so perfectly suited for the times in which they served," the Clintons said. She became a US citizen in 1957. "I take full responsibility...
President Clinton chose Albright as America's top diplomat in 1996, and she served in that capacity for four years.
At the time, she was the highest-ranking woman in the history of US government. Albright remained outspoken through the years. She was not in the line of succession for the presidency, however, because she was a native of Czechoslovakia. She was a native of Prague.