词条 | Taylor, Maxwell Davenport |
释义 | Taylor, Maxwell Davenport United States army officer born August 26, 1901, Keytesville, Missouri, U.S. died April 19, 1987, Washington, D.C. ![]() ![]() After the war Taylor was superintendent of West Point (1945–49). As commanding general of the Eighth Army in 1953, Taylor directed United Nations forces in Korea during the closing phases of the Korean War. He then served as army chief of staff (1955–59), in which post he was an early advocate of the strategic doctrine of “flexible response,” which emphasized the maintenance of conventional infantry forces as a prudent wartime alternative to the all-out use of nuclear weapons. He was appointed chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1962 by President John F. Kennedy (Kennedy, John F.), to whom he was a trusted adviser. Two years later he became U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, which at that time was being given increasing military support by the United States. He resigned that post in July 1965 but served as a special consultant (1965–69) to President Lyndon B. Johnson (Johnson, Lyndon B.). Taylor published two volumes on national security: The Uncertain Trumpet (1960) and Precarious Security (1976). Additional Reading Taylor's life and career are the subject of John M. Taylor, General Maxwell Taylor: The Sword and the Pen (1989), written by his son; and Douglas Kinnard, The Certain Trumpet: Maxwell Taylor & the American Experience in Vietnam (1991). |
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