Dag Hammarskjold, United Nations leader, dies after plane explodes in Zambia

Category
Peace
Place
Global
Date
1961
Reference
Excerpts from Books and Wikipedia
"After Lie’s reluctant resignation in late 1952, his successor, Dag Hammarskjöld, turned out to be the perfect person for this impossible job—firm, politic, a pragmatic idealist, and an innovator. Even in his first few, relatively quiet years, he developed a special place in discreet, behind-the-scenes diplomacy to solve tricky issues. . . . The high point of that performance undoubtedly occurred during the Suez-Hungary double crisis. The story deserves a much fuller telling than is possible here, for Hammarskjöld came close to producing miracles: shuttling among the Permanent Five, three of whom stood accused of violating international law and the Charter itself; moving from emergency General Assembly sessions to emergency Security Council meetings, then back to the Assembly again; crafting language that would advance the peace process and get the Great Powers off the hook; formulating—in less than forty-eight hours—the plan to insert an international peacekeeping mission (UNEF) to deploy between Egyptian and Israeli troops along the Gaza-Israel border; and mollifying everyone’s sensitivities in the most remarkable way." [Kennedy: Parliament of Man, Kindle Edition, Location 1016-38]

This event is linked to the following periods

PeriodMiner
Begin
End
Category
End of War
1753
2020
One Earth