A
paratrooper with 173rd Airborne Brigade, he led the 1990 gulf war to save the gulf oil rich nation from neighboring oil rich country's occupation. We learned a new term in military dictionary “Powell Doctrine”. A
soldier’s soldier, one of the most popular in US in 1990s he and his wife Alma refused
to become US President and First Lady of US. Instead In 2008, GEN Colin Powell endorsed the 44th
US President Barack Obama for US#1 leadership.
Colin
Powell
UNITED
STATES GENERAL AND STATESMAN
WRITTEN
BY: The Editors of
Encyclopaedia Britannica
LAST
UPDATED: 3-29-2018 See Article History
Alternative Title: Colin Luther Powell
Colin
Powell, in full Colin
Luther Powell, (born April 5, 1937, New
York, New York, U.S.), U.S. general
and statesman. He was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1989–93) and
secretary of state (2001–05), the first African American to hold either position.
The
son of Jamaican immigrants, Powell grew up in the Harlem and South Bronx sections of New York City and
attended the City College of New York (B.S., 1958), serving in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC). He
entered the army upon graduation, served in Vietnam
in 1962–63 and 1968–69, and then studied at George Washington University in
Washington, D.C. In 1972 he took his first political position, as a White House fellow, and soon became an
assistant to Frank Carlucci, then deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). He held
various posts over the next few years, in the Pentagon and elsewhere, and in
1983 became senior military assistant to Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger. In 1987 he joined the staff of the National Security Council as deputy to
Carlucci, then assistant to the president for national security affairs. Late
in 1987 Pres. Ronald Reagan appointed Powell to succeed
Carlucci. Early in 1989 Powell took over the Army Forces Command.
In
April 1989 Powell became a four-star general, and in August
Pres. George Bush nominated him chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As chairman, he played
a leading role in planning the invasion of Panama (1989) and the Desert Shield
and Desert Storm operations of the Persian Gulf crisis and war (August
1990–March 1991; see Persian Gulf War). He retired from the
military in 1993, sparking speculation that he would enter politics. Although
he decided not to run for president in 1996, he joined the Republican Party and spoke out on national
issues.
In
2001 he was appointed secretary of state by Pres. George W. Bush. Powell unsuccessfully sought
broader international support for the Iraq
War. His controversial speech before the United
Nations (February 2003) was later revealed to be based on faulty
intelligence. Considered a political moderate in an administration dominated by
hard-liners, Powell saw his influence in the White House wane, and he announced
his resignation in 2004, shortly after Bush’s reelection; he was succeeded by Condoleezza Rice in 2005. Powell’s books
include the autobiography My American Journey (1995; written with Joseph
E. Persico) and It Worked for Me: In Life and Leadership (2012; written
with Tony Koltz).
No comments:
Post a Comment