1394 



TABLE l.-POLITICAL, ECONOMIC. MILITARY. AND SCIENTIFIC PERSONNEL IN U.S. EMBASSIES. 19 SELECTED 



COUNTRIES' 



Selected countries 



Economic and Physical 



Political commercial Military science 



officers officers attaches officers 



Argentina.. 



Australia 



Brazil 



Canada 



France - 



Germany (Bonn) 



India. 



Indonesia - 



Israel 



Italy 



Japan •--. 



Mexico - -. 



Poland - 



South Africa - 



Sweden 



Thailand 



Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 



United Kingdom 



Yugoslavia 



1 Source: Foreign Service list (revised, Nov. 30, 1974), Department of State, publication 7802. The method employed 

 wastocountpolitical, economic, military, and science officers in the selected countries, excluding persons in the executive 

 staffs, administration, consular and subordinate offices, and agricultural (FAS), U.S. AID, and USIA(USIS) contingents. 

 Only professionnl personnel v;ore counted. Countries selected were those 13 which had science officers in the U.S. embassy, 

 plus 6 other major countries. Too much should not be inferred from this table. Its purpose is to show that the manpower 

 allocation to "science" is comparatively modest, even to countries where scientific and technological developments are 

 of particular concern for U.S. foreign policy. 



Table 2. — Science and Technology Counselors and AtlachSs and Fisheries AliachSs 



at U.S. Missions Abroad 



Embassy or Mission and tlieir Principals and Deputies 

 Europe : 



Belgrade — William Mills 



Bucharest — Sidney Smith i 



Bonn— Dr. Clyde L. McClelland 2 



Copenhagen — Salvatore Di Palma ^ 



London — Dr. John Hulm 



Madrid — Dr. Duncan Clement 



Moscow — Dr. Egon Loebner, John K. Ward 



Ottawa — Miller Hudson ^ 



Paris — William Salmon, 2 Edward Malloy, Michael Coogan 



Rome — John Mannielio 



Stockholm — Dr. Ernest Sohns 



U.S. Mission OECD Pari.s — Dr. Arnold Kramish 



Warsaw — Allen Greenberg 



Geneva — Gordon D. Cartwright * 

 Latin America: 



Buenos Aires — Robert Wilcox 2 



Mexico City — Dr. Andre C. Simonpietri,^ George H. Rees ^ 



Rio de Janeiro — Dr. Robert Goeckermann 

 East Asia and Pacific: 



Taipei — Dr. Chester Clark 



Tokyo — Myron Kratzer,^ Douglas McNeal, Keith Brouillard (pending) * 

 Near East and South Asia: 



New Delhi— Dr. William W. Williams,^ Mr. Clifford Metzner 



Tehran — -Dr. Albert Chapman 



Tel Aviv— Dr. Herman (I^hinn 

 Africa: Casablanca — Norman L. Pease' 



' NSF Representative also serves as Science and Technology Attache, 



2 Counselor of Embassy for Scientific and Technological Affairs. 



3 Fisheries Attache. 



< NOAA Representative also serves as Science and Technology Attaehg. 



Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and ScientifiG 

 Affairs, January 24, 1975. 



