[Ed. note - you can ask twice why this article is no longer available on WA Post website and why it is only published by un-reliable "websites" so that people wouldn't believe it ......now I have the printed original version, and also, the main point is that this article is highly damaging to Condoleezza Rice, so it had to naturally bhe taken down.....the main points are that Korbel was at the same time pro-detente of America (his new adopted country) with the USSR, this of course was part of the 1970s deal, while the Red Army invaded his native Czechoslovakia already in 1968 - and also his role in Czechoslovak Foreign Ministry while in 1943 he was one of the people who orchestrated the abominable signing of "friendship and cooperation" with Stalin for 20 years, as we were taught in school during my years in communist Czechoslovakia - and this agreement brought communist tyranny to my native country - and Korbel knew this before, but he has still promoted America's detente with the USSR......]
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2004/04/285931.shtml
Josef Korbel's Enduring Foreign Policy Legacy
Professor Mentored Daughter Albright and Student Rice
By Michael Dobbs, The Washington Post, Thursday, December 28, 2000; Page A05
As a junior at the University of Denver, Condoleezza Rice was all set to pursue
a career in music, helping children appreciate Mozart and Beethoven. Then the
future national security adviser to President-elect Bush took a course in
international politics under a professor named Josef Korbel.
Suddenly, almost overnight, she found her vocation. "It was like love at first
sight," she recalls. Prodded by Korbel, a refugee from communism, she became
fascinated by the Soviet Union, and eventually decided to teach international
relations herself. She describes her old professor as "one of the most central
figures in my life, next to my parents."
There are few better examples of continuity in American foreign policy than the
obscure international relations professor who was at once the mentor of the
incoming national security adviser and the father of the outgoing secretary of
state. Like Rice, Madeleine K. Albright depicts Korbel, who died in 1977, as the
guiding intellectual influence on her life. "A good deal of what I did," she
once told an interviewer, "I did because I wanted to be like my father."
On the surface, it is difficult to imagine two more different women than Rice
and Albright, the first female national security adviser and the first female
secretary of state. Rice is a Republican, Albright a Democrat. Rice is the
granddaughter of an Alabama cotton farmer, Albright the granddaughter of a Czech
Jewish businessman who died in a Nazi concentration camp. Rice was born in
Alabama in 1954, just as the Supreme Court was desegregating American education.
Albright was born in Czechoslovakia in 1937, shortly before the country's
dismemberment by the Nazis.
But although they belong to different generations and different political
parties, Rice and Albright seem to share a similar "Korbelian" view of the
world. Like their mentor, they see America as a moral beacon to the rest of the
world -- "the indispensable country," in Albright's words. At the same time,
their ideology is tempered by pragmatism. In a 1998 interview, Rice described
Korbel as a "moderate conservative" in foreign policy, a description that could
apply to Albright or herself.
Under Korbel's guidance, both Albright and Rice made Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union their principal field of study, almost to the exclusion of other
important regions, such as the Middle East and China. Both wrote books inspired
by, and dedicated to, Korbel. Albright wrote her doctoral dissertation on the
role of the press in Communist-dominated Czechoslovakia; Rice studied the
relationship between the Soviet and Czechoslovak armies.
As both women have testified, Korbel was a remarkable teacher, with a gift for
communicating his enthusiasm to others. But he was also an extraordinarily
complicated personality: a man of great moral principle who felt it necessary to
hide his Jewish background, an exuberant character forever struggling with an
ingrained European pessimism, a naturally gregarious man who could be rude and
high-handed.
Not the least of Korbel's contradictions was his attitude toward women wanting
to make a career in foreign policy. The founder of a graduate school for
international studies at the University of Denver, Korbel initially was
reluctant to accept female students and professors. Over time, however, he
became a champion of women such as Rice, whose father was a member of the
university's faculty.
"He was nothing but supportive and insistent, even pushy, about me going into
this field," said Rice, recalling how Korbel dissuaded her from becoming a
lawyer and insisted she take a course in comparative communism. It was the same
way with Albright, who became a foreign policy aide to Sen. Edmund S. Muskie
(D-Maine) at the time that Rice was studying under her father. "He was as proud
of her, and as aggressive about her prospects, as he was about me," Rice added.
Former associates say that Korbel's attitudes about women reflected the spirit
of the times and his own difficulty in adjusting to American egalitarian ideas.
According to his former graduate school deputy, Arthur Gilbert, Korbel at first
was reluctant to take female graduate students because he thought "the women
would not get jobs and it would not redound to the credit of the school he was
trying to build." By the late '60s, however, Korbel had changed his mind. "It
was like that with everything. He would take stands, and then he adjusted,"
Gilbert said.
A former diplomat forced to flee Czechoslovakia after the 1939 Nazi takeover,
Korbel spent the war years in London, as an adviser to Eduard Benes, the exiled
Czechoslovak president. His early writings suggest that he was sympathetic to
left-wing, socialist ideas but, as he later put it, "I lost my faith" as a
result of the Soviet takeover of Eastern Europe.
When the Czechoslovak Communists staged a coup in 1948, toppling a democratic
government, Korbel was serving as his country's ambassador to Yugoslavia. This
time, he and his family found refuge in America. They ended up in Denver, where
Korbel set about trying to build an international relations school capable of
competing with East Coast institutions such as Columbia, Georgetown and Johns
Hopkins.
Despite his background, Korbel had little time for emigré politics. "He was not
a traditional anti-communist hard-liner," recalled a University of Denver
colleague, Karen Feste. "He was skeptical and hardheaded, but he was also in
favor of the policy of detente [with the Soviet Union]. He was not an
ideologue."
Granted U.S. citizenship in 1957, Korbel was fiercely loyal to his adopted
country and was reluctant to criticize U.S. foreign policy, even when it was
being assailed from all sides. He supported American intervention in Vietnam
until the 1968 Tet offensive, when -- together with his daughter Madeleine -- he
reluctantly concluded that it was time for U.S. troops to leave.
"He really saw America as a bastion of freedom in the world, in an unvarnished,
very patriotic, almost unquestioning way," said Rice. She recalled Korbel's
dismay on seeing television images of delegates to the 1976 Republican National
Convention walking around with elephant headgear. "That kind of thing was a
great embarrassment to him. He thought it beneath the dignity of a great
country."
While Korbel inspired loyalty from students and associates, he also antagonized
some people. One former Denver professor, Vince Davis, described him as a
"control freak." Another, Ron Krieger, thought of Korbel as "very off-putting,
very unctuous."
"He was obsequious to his superiors and authoritarian to his inferiors, of whom
I was certainly one," Krieger said.
Rice, by contrast, has only praise for her former mentor, although she describes
him as "probably more liberal on domestic politics than I was." "He was a
wonderful storyteller and very attentive to his students. It was that
attentiveness, plus his ability to weave larger conceptual issues around very
interesting stories, that made him such a powerful teacher," she said.
Although Korbel never really achieved his ambition of creating a world-class
international relations institute in the American West, his influence lives on
through his two star pupils, who set out to follow in his footsteps. When
Albright arrived at the United Nations as U.S. ambassador, practically the first
thing she did was to take out a framed portrait of her father as a member of a
U.N. mission to Kashmir in 1948 and set it up on her desk.
As for Rice, she said she might never have pursued a career in international
relations had it not been for Korbel. After abandoning her plans to become a
concert pianist and earning a master's degree at Notre Dame, she thought about
law school. But Korbel took her aside and told her, "You are very talented, you
have to become a professor."
"When I think back on that moment, I don't know if it was a subliminal message,"
she said, "but I had such respect and admiration for him that I took the idea
seriously for the first time."