Former Ambassador Tapped for New Africa Policy Studies Chair

    
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allAfrica.com 

January 13, 2003 
Posted to the web January 13, 2003 

Reed Kramer
Washington, DC 

Princeton Lyman, a former U.S. ambassador to South Africa and Nigeria, has 
been selected by the Council on Foreign Relations as the first holder of the 
Ralph Bunche chair in Africa Policy Studies.

The Council, a non-governmental organization whose membership includes top 
current and former foreign policy officials and prominent private sector 
leaders, currently hosts fellows working on Europe, Asia, Latin America and 
the Middle East, as well as on national security, peace and conflict and 
science and technology.

"I am both delighted that the council has established this position and 
deeply honored to have been selected for it," Lyman said in an interview.

The new post is the first endowed chair in Africa Policy Studies at any 
American think tank or public policy school, the group said. "The new chair 
shows the Council's commitment to addressing African issues and represents a 
clear statement by the Council's Board and members that Africa should be and 
will be a top priority for US foreign policy," said Les Gelb, the Council 
president.

The chair is named for the late Ralph Bunche, who served as under secretary 
general of the United Nations and, in 1950, receive the Nobel Peace Prize, 
the first African American to win the prestigious award. The Council has 
received $3.2 million to date for the endowment from donors including the 
Hurford Foundation, Coca-Cola, the Starr Foundation, ChevronTexaco, and a 
number of private individuals.

Lyman served in Nigeria in the late 1980s and in South Africa from 1992 to 
1995 during the end of apartheid and the country's first non-racial 
elections, which were won by Nelson Mandela and the African National 
Congress. He also held senior positions in the refugee and Africa bureaus at 
the State Department and directed the U.S. Aid Mission in Ethiopia. His last 
position before retirement in 2000 was assistant secretary of State for 
International Organization Affairs.

Since then, he has headed the Global Interdependence Initiative at the Aspen 
Institute in Washington, DC. After he takes up the Council position next 
month, he will continue to direct the Aspen program, a ten-year effort 
intended to promote American public support for U.S. engagement abroad.

Jean Herskovits, research professor of history at the State University of New 
York (Purchase) and a leading Africanist scholar, values Lyman's first-hand 
experience. "The fact that he has lived for some years in two of Africa's 
most important countries makes him an excellent choice," she said.

Lyman recently authored an account of his experience in South Africa, Partner 
to History: The U.S. Role in South Africa's Transition to Democracy. 
Reviewing the book in the current issue of the Council's quarterly, Foreign 
Affairs, historian Gail Gerhart says, "Lyman found ways to help both sides 
mobilize international backing, dissuade spoilers, and marshal resources for 
a successful transitional election in 1994." But she argues that Lyman "does 
himself and history a disservice by puffing the southern Africa policies of 
the Reagan administration as correct, albeit 'misunderstood'." U.S. policies 
during that period, Gerhart says, gave the white government in Pretoria 
"carte blanche to slaughter thousands and impoverish millions" in the region 
in an attempt to defeat the African National Congress.

According to Peggy Dulany, a member of the Council board and the founder of 
Synergos, a non-governmental organization devoted to linking grassroots 
leaders to networks of resources, Lyman demonstrated during his time as 
ambassador "a commitment to ending apartheid and to the new Africa." She said 
she hoped and expected that the Council's decision to establish the 
fellowship "will greatly increase the focus on Africa."

The Council has not had a full-time Africa policy director since the 
departure of Salih Booker three years ago. Gwendolyn Mikell, professor of 
anthropology at Georgetown University and director of Africa Studies Program 
at the School of Foreign Service there, has been a part-time senior fellow. 
Lyman said he sees his new role as "an opportunity to advance issues of 
Africa policy of concern to the United States and to Africa."

Like Lyman, most senior officials at the Council held top foreign policy 
positions in previous administrations. Gelb, who served in the Defense and 
State Departments and was diplomatic correspondent for the New York Times, is 
retiring as the organization's president in June. A search committee is in 
the process of selecting his successor.


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