Iain Sutherland (diplomat)

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Sir Iain Sutherland
KCMG
British Ambassador to
USSR
In office
1982–1985
Preceded by Sir Curtis Keeble
Succeeded by Sir Bryan Cartledge
British Ambassador to Greece
In office
1978–1982
Preceded by Sir Brooks Richards
Succeeded by Sir Peregrine Rhodes
Personal details
Born 15 June 1925
Edinburgh
Died 1 July 1986 (Aged 61)
Westminster Hospital, London, United Kingdom
Alma mater University of Aberdeen, Balliol College, University of Oxford

Sir Iain Johnstone Sutherland KCMG (15 June 1925 – 1 July 1986) was a British diplomat and Ambassador to the Soviet Union between 1982 and 1985.

Early career

Iain Sutherland's parents were the distinguished Scottish artists David Macbeth Sutherland and Dorothy Johnstone. He was born in Edinburgh in 1925 and was educated at Fettes College, The University of Aberdeen and Balliol College, Oxford. Sutherland served with the Royal Artillery from 1944–47, and entered the Diplomatic Service in 1950. Initially training in Russian, he was posted to Belgrade in 1956, became Head of Chancery in Havana, Cuba in 1959 and was posted to Washington in 1962 immediately after the Cuban Missile Crisis He was appointed Consul-general in Jakarta in 1967 and became head of the Foreign Office's South Asia department from 1969 to 1973 before being appointed as Minister in Moscow in 1974. After a sabbatical and fellowship in International Affairs at Harvard University, Sutherland was appointed British Ambassador to Greece in 1978 until 1982.

Ambassador to Russia

Sutherland's tenure in Moscow from 1982-85 was overshadowed by the Soviet Occupation of Afghanistan and the expulsion of Soviet Spies from the United Kingdom at a time of increased tension often called the Second Cold War. Sutherland retired from his post in 1985.

Death

Sutherland collapsed from a heart attack whilst waiting for a train at Bond Street tube station, London. He was taken to the Westminster Hospital but later tragically died aged 61.[1][2][3] His wife, Jeanne survives him and has written a fascinating account as a Diplomat's wife during the Cold War, From Moscow to Cuba and Beyond: A Diplomatic Memoir of the Cold War[4][5] and also the significant changes during the educational reforms in the last years of the Soviet Union and afterwards in the Russian Federation.[6]

References

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  5. From Moscow to Cuba and Beyond: A Diplomatic Memoir of the Cold War, by Jeanne Sutherland, Radcliffe Press, 2010. ISBN 978-1848854741
  6. Schooling in New Russia: Innovation and Change, 1984-95, by Jeanne Sutherland, Palgrave Macmillan, 1998. ISBN 978-0333736999