John_Alfred_Scali

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-5.00
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    John Alfred Scali (April 27, 1918 – October 9, 1995) was the United States Ambassador to the United Nations from 1973 to 1975. From 1961 he was also a long time correspondent for ABC News.
    As a correspondent for ABC, Scali became an intermediary during the Cuban Missile Crisis and later a part of the Nixon Administration. Scali gained fame after it became known in 1964 that in October 1962, a year after he joined ABC News, he had carried a critical message from KGB Colonel Aleksandr Fomin (the cover name for Alexander Feklisov) to U.S. officials. He left ABC in 1971 to serve as a foreign affairs adviser to President Nixon, becoming U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations in 1973. Scali re-joined ABC in 1975 where he worked until retiring in 1993.
    Scali was contacted by Soviet embassy official (and KGB Station Chief) Fomin about a proposed settlement to the crisis, and subsequently he acted as a contact between Fomin and the Executive Committee. However, it was without government direction that Scali responded to new Soviet conditions with a warning that a U.S. invasion was only hours away, prompting the Soviets to settle the crisis quickly.

    astro_ref_n_a_location
    adb_sbdate_dmy
    27 April 1918
    adb_sbtime
    03:51
    adb_sroddenrating
    AA
    adb_BirthCountry
    Ohio
    adb_place
    Canton
    adb_sctr
    OH (US)
    adb_csex
    m
    adb_sdatasource
    BC/BR in hand
    adb_stimeacc
    Second
    adb_TimeAccuracyCode
    Second
    adb_ccalendar
    g
    adb_pageid
    43364
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