Joseph Luns | |
---|---|
5th Secretary General of NATO | |
In office 1 October 1971 – 25 June 1984 | |
Preceded by | Manlio Brosio |
Succeeded by | The Lord Carrington |
Minister of Foreign Affairs | |
In office 13 October 1956 – 6 July 1971 | |
Prime Minister | See list
|
Preceded by | Johan Beyen |
Succeeded by | Norbert Schmelzer |
Member of the House of Representatives | |
In office 11 May 1971 – 1 October 1971 | |
In office 23 February 1967 – 5 April 1967 | |
In office 3 July 1956 – 3 October 1956 | |
Parliamentary group | Catholic People's Party |
Minister for Foreign Policy | |
In office 2 September 1952 – 13 October 1956 | |
Prime Minister | Willem Drees |
Preceded by | Eelco van Kleffens (1947) |
Succeeded by | Office abolished |
Personal details | |
Born | Joseph Antoine Marie Hubert Luns [Note] 28 August 1911 Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Died | 17 July 2002 90) Brussels, Belgium | (aged
Political party | Catholic People's Party (1945–1972) |
Other political affiliations |
|
Height | 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) |
Spouse |
Baroness Lia van Heemstra
(m. 1939; died 1990) |
Relations |
|
Children | 2 |
Parent |
|
Alma mater | |
Occupation |
|
Signature | |
Military service | |
Branch/service | Royal Netherlands Navy |
Years of service |
|
Rank | Warrant officer |
Unit | Netherlands Coastguard |
Battles/wars | Cold War |
Joseph Marie Antoine Hubert Luns (28 August 1911 – 17 July 2002) was a Dutch politician of the defunct Catholic People's Party (KVP), now merged into the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), diplomat, and jurist. He served as Secretary General of NATO from 1 October 1971 until 25 June 1984.[1]
Luns attended Saint Ignatius Gymnasium in Amsterdam from April 1924 until June 1930. He was conscripted in the Coastguard of the Royal Netherlands Navy serving as a warrant officer from June 1930 until July 1931. He applied at the University of Amsterdam in July 1931 majoring in law before transferring to the Leiden University in November 1932, obtaining a Bachelor of Laws degree in June 1933 and graduating with a Master of Laws degree in July 1937. He applied at the London School of Economics of the University of London in January 1938 for a postgraduate education in economics, obtaining a Bachelor of Economics degree in June 1938. He worked as a civil servant for the Diplomatic service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from October 1938 until September 1952 as an attaché in Bern, Switzerland, from December 1939 until April 1942, as an attaché in Lisbon, Portugal, from April 1942 until November 1943, as an attaché in London, England, from November 1943 until September 1949 and as chargé d'affaires at the United Nations in New York City from September 1949 until September 1952.
After the election of 1952, Luns was appointed as Minister for Foreign Policy in the second Drees cabinet, taking office on 2 September 1952. He was elected as a Member of the House of Representatives after the election of 1956, taking office on 3 July 1956. Following the cabinet formation of 1956 he was appointed as Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Cabinet Drees III, taking office on 13 October 1956. The Cabinet Drees III fell on 11 December 1958 and continued to serve in a demissionary capacity until the cabinet formation of 1958 when it was replaced by the caretaker Cabinet Beel II with Luns remaining as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 22 December 1958. After the 1959 Dutch general election, he was elected again as a Member of the House of Representatives but declined to take office. Following the cabinet formation of 1959, he continued as Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Cabinet De Quay, taking office on 19 May 1959. After election of 1963, he was elected as a Member of the House of Representatives but again declined to take office. Following the cabinet formation of 1963, he remained as Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Cabinet Marijnen, taking office on 24 July 1963. The Cabinet Marijnen fell on 27 February 1965 and continued to serve in a demissionary capacity until the cabinet formation of 1965 when it was replaced by the Cabinet Cals with Luns continuing as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 14 April 1965. The Cabinet Cals fell just one year later on 14 October 1966 and continued to serve in a demissionary capacity until the cabinet formation of 1966 when it was replaced by the caretaker Cabinet Zijlstra with Luns remaining as Minister of Foreign Affairs, taking office on 22 November 1966. After the election of 1967, he returned as a Member of the House of Representatives, taking office on 23 February 1967. Following the cabinet formation of 1967, he continued as Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Cabinet De Jong, taking office on 5 April 1967. After the election of 1971, he again returned as a Member of the House of Representatives, taking office on 11 May 1971. Following the cabinet formation of 1971, per his own request, he asked not to be considered for a cabinet post in the new cabinet. The Cabinet De Jong was replaced by the Cabinet Biesheuvel I on 6 July 1971, in which Luns served as a frontbencher and spokesperson for Foreign Affairs.
In September 1971 Luns was nominated as the next Secretary General of NATO. He resigned as a Member of the House of Representatives the same day he was installed as secretary general, serving from 1 October 1971 to 25 June 1984. He retired after 31 years in national politics and became active in the public sector, where he was a diplomat and lobbyist for several economic delegations on behalf of the government and as an advocate for United States–European Union relations and European integration.
Luns was known for his abilities as a negotiator and debater. He continued to comment on political affairs as a statesman until his retirement in 1996 after suffering a stroke. He died six years later at the age of 90, and holds the distinction as the longest-serving Secretary General of NATO (12 years, 268 days), the longest-serving Minister of Foreign Affairs (14 years, 266 days), the longest-serving government minister after World War II (18 years, 307 days).
Biography
Early life
Luns was born in a Roman Catholic, Francophile and artistic family. His mother's family originated from Alsace-Lorraine but had moved to Belgium after the annexation of the region by the German Empire in 1871. His father, Huib Luns, was a versatile artist and a gifted educationalist who ended his career as professor of architectural drawing at the Delft University of Technology.[2] Luns received his secondary education in Amsterdam and Brussels. He opted to become a commissioned officer of the Dutch Royal Navy but registered too late to be selected. Therefore, Luns decided to study law at Amsterdam University from 1932 to 1937.[3]
Like his father, Luns demonstrated a preference for conservative and authoritarian political parties and an interest in international politics. As a young student he positioned himself on the political right, favouring a strong authority for the state and being of the opinion that socialism, because of its idealistic ideology, had fostered the rise of fascism and nazism.[4] Luns joined the National Socialist Movement in the Netherlands (NSB) in 1933 and left three years later but when questioned about it in later years, never admitted that it might have been "a youthful misjudgment".[5]
His choice for a diplomatic career was inspired by his father. He joined the Dutch Diplomatic Service in 1938 and, after a two-year assignment at the Private Office of the Foreign Minister, was appointed as attaché in Bern (Switzerland) in 1940. In late 1941, he moved to Lisbon, Portugal. In both countries, he was involved in assistance to Dutch refugees, political espionage and counterintelligence. In 1943, he was transferred to the Dutch embassy in London. Ambassador Edgar Michiels van Verduynen discovered Luns's great affinity for the political element in international affairs and entrusted him with important files on Germany, which Luns handled with great skill.[6]
In 1949, Luns was appointed as deputy Dutch permanent representative to the United Nations. He worked closely with his new chief, Von Balluseck, a political appointee without diplomatic experience. After the Netherlands became a member of the Security Council, he temporarily chaired the Disarmament Commission. Luns was sceptical of the importance of the United Nations for international peace, believing it at times to be more like a forum for propaganda than a centre for solving international conflicts. Still, he thought that it was worthwhile to keep the UN in shape because it was the sole international organisation which offered opportunities for discussions between all states.[7]
Minister of Foreign Affairs (1952–1971)
Because of the tenacity of the Dutch Catholic People's Party to occupy the Foreign Ministry after the 1952 elections, Luns entered Dutch politics as the favourite of its political leader Carl Romme. His co-minister was Johan Beyen, an international banker not affiliated to any political party but the protégé of Queen Juliana. The two ministers had a completely different style of operating and clashed repeatedly on policy even before the end of 1952. However, they accommodated and avoided future conflicts by a very strict division of labour. Luns was responsible for bilateral relations, Benelux and international organisations. After the 1956 elections, Beyen left office and Luns stayed as Foreign Minister until 1971 in both centre-left and centre-right governments. Bilateral relations with Indonesia and the Federal Republic of Germany, security policy and European integration were the most important issues during his tenure. Atlantic co-operation was a fundamental aspect of Luns's foreign policy, and Dutch foreign policy in general. Luns believed that Western Europe could not survive the Cold War without American nuclear security and so he promoted strong and intensified political and military co-operation in NATO. Luns accepted American leadership of NATO as such but expected better co-operation between the United States States and its allies since, he thought that the United States too often acted independently of its allies, particularly in decolonisation issues.[8] Luns could also be critical of US foreign policy, and, in bilateral relations, he defended Dutch national interests strongly and expected American support in the bilateral difficulties with Indonesia.
In 1952 Luns expected to improve relations with Indonesia without transferring the disputed area of West New Guinea to the former colony. By 1956, however, this policy had proved ineffectual, but Luns and the Dutch government were still determined not to transfer West New Guinea to the Republic of Indonesia. When, in 1960, it became obvious that allied support for this policy, particularly from the United States, was waning, Luns tried to find an intermediate solution by transferring the administration of the territory to the United Nations, but that attempt to keep West New Guinea out of Indonesian hands failed as well. After difficult negotiations, the area was finally transferred to the Republic of Indonesia in 1963 after a short interim administration of the UN. Despite his personal anger over this outcome, which was considered a personal defeat by Luns, the foreign minister still worked to restore relations with Indonesia in the aftermath of the West New Guinea problem.
Luns was more successful in the normalisation of the bilateral relations with West Germany. Luns shared Dutch public opinion in demanding that Germany recognise the damage it had caused during the Second World War, and so a mea culpa required. He demanded that before any negotiations on other bilateral disputes could start, the amount of damages to be paid to Dutch war victims had to be agreed upon. During the final stages of the negotiations on bilateral disputes between the two countries, Luns decided to come to an arrangement with his German colleague on his own accord. He made concessions and so the Dutch parliament threatened not to ratify the agreement. With the full support of the government however, Luns was able to overcome the crisis.[9]
European integration was permanently on Luns's political agenda. Beyen had introduced the concept of the European Economic Community. In March 1957, Luns signed the Treaties of Rome establishing the EEC and Euratom. Although he preferred integration of a wider group of European states he accepted the treaty and defended the supranational structure it was based on. The endeavours of French president Charles de Gaulle to subordinate the institutions of the Six to an intergovernmental political structure, could count on strong opposition from Luns: such plans would, in his view, serve only French ambitions of a Europe independent of the United States.
Initially, Luns stood alone and was afraid that Franco-German co-operation would result in anti-Atlantic and anti-American policies that harmed the interests of the West. He made British membership of the European institutions conditional for his political co-operation. Gradually his views on Gaullist foreign policies were shared by the other EEC members and they joined Luns in his objections. Two of De Gaulle's decisions stiffened the opposition: his denial of EEC membership to the United Kingdom in January 1963 and France's retreat from the integrated military structure of NATO in 1966. Luns played a vital role in the negotiations unwinding French participation and continuing its political membership of the Alliance. By then, Luns had internationally established his reputation as an able and reliable negotiator and was seen as an important asset in London and Washington. After the retreat of De Gaulle in 1968, the EEC Summit of The Hague, in December 1969, ended the long crisis of the EEC integration process, opened the way to British membership and agreed on new venues for political co-operation, a common market and monetary union.
Throughout his years as Dutch foreign minister, Luns had gained an international status uncommon for a foreign minister of a small country. He owed this to his personal style in which duress, a high level of information, political leniency and diplomatic skills were combined with wit, gallant conversation and the understanding that diplomacy was a permanent process of negotiations in which a victory should never be celebrated too exuberantly at the cost of the loser.
NATO Secretary-General (1971–1984)
In 1971, Luns was appointed as NATO secretary-general. At the time of his appointment, public protests against American policies in Vietnam were vehement throughout Western Europe and among European politicians the credibility of the American nuclear protection was in doubt. Though there were initial doubts about his skills for the job he soon proved that he was capable of managing the alliance in crisis. He regarded himself as the spokesman of the alliance and he aimed at balancing the security and political interests of the alliance as a whole.
Luns was in favour of negotiating with the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact members on the reduction of armaments if the Western defence was kept in shape during such negotiations. European members of NATO, according to Luns, should understand that the United States carried international responsibilities while the latter should understand that in-depth consultation with the European governments was conditional to forging a united front on the international stage, which could be accepted and endorsed by all members of NATO.
US-Soviet negotiations on mutual troop reductions and the strategic nuclear arsenal caused severe tensions. Luns convinced American leaders that it undermined the credibility in Western Europe of their nuclear strategy by neglecting European fears of a change of strategy which would leave Europe unprotected in case of a Soviet nuclear attack. The modernisation of the tactical nuclear forces by the introduction of the neutron bomb and cruise missiles caused deep divisions. In the end, Luns succeeded in keeping NATO together in the so-called Double-Track Decision of December 1979.[10] The deployment of these new weapon systems was linked to success in American-Soviet arms reduction talks.
It was also the duty of the secretary-general to mediate in cause of conflicts within the alliance. He was successful in the conflict between Great Britain and Iceland, the so-called Second Cod War not by pressuring the Icelandic government to end its aggressive behaviour against British trawlers but by convincing the British government that it had to take the first step by calling back its destroyers to open the way to negotiations. Luns failed however in the conflict between Greece and Turkey over the territorial boundaries and Cyprus. Lack of co-operation on both sides made Luns unable to mediate or advise on procedures to find a way out.
Between 1964 and 1984 he participated in every annual conference of the Bilderberg Group.
Late life
Luns retired as secretary-general in 1984, staying in office for a full 13 years. Because of the changes the 1960s and 1970s had brought to Dutch society and culture, the strongly conservative Luns decided not to return to his home country but instead settled in Brussels to spend his remaining years in retirement.[11] Luns died at 90.
Honours and awards
Luns was awarded many high-ranking awards during his lifetime, among them the Grand Cross of the Légion d'Honneur in 1954, Member of Order of the Companions of Honour by Queen Elizabeth II in 1971 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom by then President Ronald Reagan in 1984.[12] In his home country, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion, the highest civil decoration of the Netherlands, in 1953. In 1986, he was awarded the Atatürk International Peace Prize.[13]
Personal life
Luns married Baroness Lia van Heemstra, who was a niece of Baroness Ella van Heemstra, the mother of actress Audrey Hepburn. The Lunses had two children − a son and a daughter.[5]
He remained a practising Catholic throughout his life and was generally sympathetic to the traditionalist Catholic position but never affiliated himself with dissident groups. Luns visited the Tridentine Mass held by the Assumptionist priest Winand Kotte, who opposed the modernising policies of the Second Vatican Council, in St. Willibrord's Church, Utrecht in August 1971. This seems to have been something of a misunderstanding on Luns' part however, since he had never heard of Kotte's anti-Council movement and did not wish to be affiliated with it.[14]
An avid stamp collector, his favourite reading material included classical literature, history books (Luns was an expert on the history of the Napoleonic era) and detective novels. Because of his interests in international navies, the latest edition of Jane's Fighting Ships was always within his reach in his office.
Decorations
Honours | ||||
Ribbon bar | Honour | Country | Date | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grand Cross of the Order of the Rose | Brazil | 10 January 1953 | ||
Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav | Norway | 25 April 1953 | ||
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit | Italy | 15 September 1953 | ||
Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold | Belgium | 10 January 1954 | ||
Grand Cross of the Order of George I | Greece | 14 February 1954 | ||
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Menelik II | Ethiopia | 1 July 1954 | ||
Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour | France | 12 August 1954 | ||
Grand Cross of the Order of the Oak Crown | Luxembourg | 30 May 1955 | ||
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the White Elephant | Thailand | 5 September 1955 | ||
Commander Grand Cross of the Order of the Polar Star | Sweden | 30 September 1955 | ||
Grand Cross of the Order of Merit | Germany | 10 December 1956 | ||
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau | Netherlands | 5 December 1966 | Elevated from Grand Officer (29 April 1959) | |
Honorary Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour |
United Kingdom | 14 June 1971 | ||
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion | Netherlands | 17 July 1971 | Elevated from Commander (18 October 1956) | |
Presidential Medal of Freedom | United States | 10 June 1984 | ||
Further reading
- Wilsford, David, ed. Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe: a biographical dictionary (Greenwood, 1995) pp. 287–94.
Notes and references
- ↑ "Joseph Luns". NATO. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.26-28
- ↑ "Mr. J.M.A.H. (Joseph) Luns" (in Dutch). Parlement & Politiek. Retrieved 10 February 2018.
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.42-44.
- 1 2 van der Vat, Dan (18 July 2002). "Joseph Luns". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.67-72.
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.83-87.
- ↑ Until 1962, Luns was notorious for his highly critical statements on the US's Indonesian policy, Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.620
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.128-132
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. A political biography. Amsterdam 2010 p.592
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 p.611
- ↑ Presentation of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
- ↑ "Atatürk Uluslararası Barış Ödülü – AYK". www.ayk.gov.tr. 3 July 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
- ↑ Kersten, A.E., Luns. Een politieke biografie. Amsterdam 2010 pp.448-449
- In 1929 he legally changed his name from Joseph Antoine Marie Hubert Luns to Joseph Marie Antoine Hubert Luns
External links
- Official
- (in Dutch) Mr.Dr. J.M.A.H. (Joseph) Luns Parlement & Politiek
- NATO Declassified – Joseph Luns (biography)
- Biography on NATO