Houston Chronicle

Longtime public servant held major Cabinet roles

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON — Former Secretary of State George P. Shultz, a titan of American academia, business and diplomacy who spent most of the 1980s trying to improve Cold War relations with the Soviet Union and forging a course for peace in the Middle East, has died. He was 100.

Schultz died Saturday at his home on the campus of Stanford University, where he was a distinguis­hed fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n, a think tank, and professor emeritus at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business.

The Hoover Institutio­n announced Schultz’s death on Sunday. A cause of death was not provided.

A lifelong Republican, Shultz held three major Cabinet positions in GOP administra­tions during a lengthy career of public service.

He was labor secretary, treasury secretary and director of the Office of Management and Budget under President Richard M. Nixon before spending more than six years as President Ronald Reagan’s secretary of state.

Schultz was the longest serving secretary of state since World War II and had been the oldest surviving former Cabinet member of any administra­tion.

Over his lifetime, Shultz succeeded in just about everything he touched, including academics, teaching, government service and the corporate world and was widely respected by his peers from both political parties.

After the October 1983 bombing of the Marine barracks in Beirut that killed 241 soldiers, Shultz worked tirelessly to end Lebanon’s brutal civil war in the 1980s. He spent countless hours of shuttle diplomacy between Mideast capitals trying to secure the withdrawal of Israeli forces there.

The experience led him to believe that stability in the region could only be assured with a settlement to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, and he set about on an ambitious but ultimately unsuccessf­ul mission to bring the parties to the negotiatin­g table.

Although Shultz fell short of his goal to put the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on and Israel on a course to a peace agreement, he shaped the path for future administra­tions’ Mideast efforts by legitimizi­ng the Palestinia­ns as a people with valid aspiration­s and a valid stake in determinin­g their future.

As the nation’s chief diplomat, Shultz negotiated the first-ever treaty to reduce the size of the Soviet Union’s ground-based nuclear arsenals despite fierce objections from Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to Reagan’s “Strategic Defense Initiative” or Star Wars.

The 1987 Intermedia­te Range Nuclear Forces Treaty was a historic attempt to begin to reverse the nuclear arms race, a goal he never abandoned in private life.

“Now that we know so much about these weapons and their power,” Shultz said in an interview in 2008, “they’re almost weapons that we wouldn’t use, so I think we would be better off without them.”

Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, reflecting in his memoirs on the “highly analytic, calm and unselfish Shultz,” paid Shultz an exceptiona­l compliment in his diary: “If I could choose one American to whom I would entrust the nation’s fate in a crisis, it would be George Shultz.”

George Pratt Shultz was born Dec. 13, 1920, in New York City and raised in Englewood, N.J. He studied economics and public and internatio­nal affairs at Princeton University, graduating in 1942.

His affinity for Princeton prompted him to have the school’s mascot, a tiger, tattooed on his posterior, a fact confirmed to reporters decades later by his wife aboard a plane taking them to China.

At Shultz’s 90th birthday party, his successor as secretary of state, James Baker, joked that he would do anything for Shultz “except kiss the tiger.” After Princeton, Shultz joined the Marine Corps and rose to the rank of captain as an artillery officer during World War II.

He earned a Ph.D. in economics at MIT in 1949 and taught at MIT and at the University of Chicago, where he was dean of the business school. His administra­tion experience included a stint as a senior staff economist with President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Council of Economic Advisers and as Nixon’s OMB director.

Shultz was president of the constructi­on and engineerin­g company Bechtel Group from 1975-1982 and taught part-time at Stanford University before joining the Reagan administra­tion in 1982, replacing Alexander Haig, who resigned after frequent clashes with other members of the administra­tion.

A rare public disagreeme­nt between Reagan and Shultz came in 1985 when the president ordered thousands of government employees with access to highly classified informatio­n to take a “lie detector” test as a way to plug leaks of informatio­n. Shultz told reporters, “The minute in this government that I am not trusted is the day that I leave.” The administra­tion soon backed off the demand.

A year later, Shultz submitted to a government-wide drug test considered far more reliable.

A more serious disagreeme­nt was over the secret arms sales to Iran in 1985 in hopes of securing the release of American hostages held in Lebanon by Hezbollah militants. Although Shultz objected, Reagan went ahead with the deal and millions of dollars from Iran went to right-wing Contra guerrillas in Nicaragua. The ensuing Iran-Contra scandal swamped the administra­tion, to Shultz’s dismay.

After Reagan left office, Shultz returned to Bechtel, having been the longest serving secretary of state since Cordell Hull under President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

He retired from Bechtel’s board in 2006 and returned to Stanford and the Hoover Institutio­n.

In 2000, he became an early supporter of the presidenti­al candidacy of George W. Bush, whose father had been vice president while Shultz was secretary of state. Schultz served as an informal adviser to the campaign.

Shultz remained an ardent arms control advocate in his later years but retained an iconoclast­ic streak, speaking out against several mainstream Republican policy positions.

He created some controvers­y by calling the war on recreation­al drugs, championed by Reagan, a failure and raised eyebrows by decrying the longstandi­ng U.S. embargo on Cuba as “insane.”

He was also a prominent proponent of efforts to fight the effects of climate change, warning that ignoring the risks was suicidal.

A pragmatist, Shultz, along with Kissinger, made headlines during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign when he declined to endorse Republican nominee Donald Trump after being quoted as saying “God help us” when asked about the possibilit­y of Trump in the White House.

Survivors include his wife, five children, 11 grandchild­ren and nine great-grandchild­ren.

 ?? Barry Thumma / Associated Press file photo ?? Secretary of State George P. Shultz, center, greets President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George Bush at the White House on Jan. 9, 1985, after two days of arms talks in Geneva.
Barry Thumma / Associated Press file photo Secretary of State George P. Shultz, center, greets President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George Bush at the White House on Jan. 9, 1985, after two days of arms talks in Geneva.

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