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David Manker Abshire

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David Manker Abshire Veteran

Birth
Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, USA
Death
31 Oct 2014 (aged 88)
Alexandria City, Virginia, USA
Burial
Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 1, Site 898-B
Memorial ID
View Source
DAVID M. ABSHIRE

On October 31, 2014. Beloved husband of Carolyn S. Abshire; father of the Rev. Lupton Abshire (Diane), Anna Boman (Dana), Mary Lee Jensvold (Steve), Phyllis d'Hoop and Carolyn Hall (Scott). Also survived by 11 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 228 South Pitt St., Alexandria, VA on Friday, November 14, 2014 at 11 a.m. Interment Arlington National Cemetery at a later date.
www.everlywheatley.com

Published in The Washington Post on Nov. 7, 2014

NEW YORK TIMES NOVEMBER 07, 2014
David M. Abshire, who led respected research groups and held high government posts but made his most visible mark by helping President Ronald Reagan navigate through the political storms of the Iran-Contra scandal, died last Friday in Alexandria, Va. He was 88.

His death was announced by the Center for the Study of the Presidency & Congress, a Washington group he helped lead.

Reagan sought Dr. Abshire in December 1986. He called him in Brussels, where he was the US ambassador to NATO, and asked him to accept a Cabinet-level job as coordinator of the White House's response to multiple investigations of the administration's secret sales of arms to Iran, despite an embargo on such sales.

There were allegations that US officials hoped the arms sales would secure release of several hostages in Iran, which would have been another policy violation. Proceeds from the sales were to be used to finance the anti-Communist insurgents in Nicaragua known as Contras, aid Congress had forbidden.

Reagan asked Dr. Abshire to handle all requests and obligations stemming from investigations in the House and Senate and from an independent commission headed by John Tower, a former senator from Texas.

"What we wanted was someone who would come and could immerse himself in all the details of this Iran controversy," Patrick J. Buchanan, then the White House communications director, said in an interview with CNN in 1986. "It really is a detailed job, and the rest of the White House staff, which was not involved in the controversy, has to get on with the budget, has got to get on with the State of the Union. We simply don't have the expertise."

In 1987, The New York Times said the job could put Dr. Abshire in a "potentially tricky position" and raised the possibility that he could turn up an incriminating "smoking gun."

Dr. Abshire accepted the post on the condition that the administration would be forthcoming. He said he regretted suppressing information about military incursions into Laos and Cambodia during the Nixon administration, when he was assistant secretary of state for congressional relations.

"That," he said, "was an example of how not to do it."

In his first meeting with Reagan, recounted in his 2005 book, "Saving the Reagan Presidency: Trust Is the Coin of the Realm," Dr. Abshire told the president that it was unwise to keep insisting that the United States did not trade arms for hostages. He pointed out that two-thirds of the public believed that the administration had made such a deal.

"Dave, I don't care if I'm the only person in America that does not believe it. I don't believe it was arms for hostages," he quoted Reagan as saying.

But in a dozen meetings with the president and in others with Nancy Reagan, Dr. Abshire pressed his case for admitting what seemed obvious to him and to others. He also released thousands of unedited documents to investigators, handled press relations, and signed off on the president's speeches about the subject.

On March 4, 1987, with evidence of the arms deal mounting, Reagan admitted in a speech to the nation that he had learned he was wrong. "What began as a strategic opening to Iran deteriorated, in its implementation, into trading arms for hostages," he said.

Dr. Abshire soon resigned, feeling he had finished the job 90 days after taking it. Reagan largely escaped personal blame and saw his approval rating rise from 46 percent to 64 percent in less than two years.

In 1962, he joined with Admiral Arleigh Burke to start the Center for Strategic and International Studies, originally as an affiliate of Georgetown University. Distinguished foreign policy figures Henry Kissinger, James R. Schlesinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and Brent Scowcroft have been senior advisers and adjunct fellows there.

Kissinger, at a colloquium in Dr. Abshire's honor in 2006, said that Dr. Abshire had a knack for getting people to do what he wanted, "making you feel that he's doing you a tremendous favor for giving you that opportunity."

From 1999 to 2012, Dr. Abshire was president and chief executive of the Center for the Study of the Presidency & Congress. He served on government task forces and policy study groups and wrote seven books. He headed Reagan's foreign affairs transition team after his election in 1980, and was mentioned as a candidate for national security adviser in Republican administrations.

His job as assistant secretary of state under President Nixon was to be a liaison to Congress. Nixon then appointed him chairman of the Board for International Broadcasting, overseeing Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty.

As NATO ambassador, Dr. Abshire helped parlay the deployment of American Pershing II missiles in Europe into a treaty limiting intermediate-range nuclear weapons there.

David Manker Abshire was born in Chattanooga, Tenn. An imposing figure at 6-foot-4, he never lost his Tennessee drawl.

He graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point in 1951 and, as a platoon leader in Korea, was awarded a Bronze Star and other decorations for bravery. He earned a PhD in history from Georgetown.

Dr. Abshire, who died in a nursing home in Alexandria, leaves his wife of 56 years, the former Carolyn Sample; a son; four daughters; and 11 grandchildren.
DAVID M. ABSHIRE

On October 31, 2014. Beloved husband of Carolyn S. Abshire; father of the Rev. Lupton Abshire (Diane), Anna Boman (Dana), Mary Lee Jensvold (Steve), Phyllis d'Hoop and Carolyn Hall (Scott). Also survived by 11 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 228 South Pitt St., Alexandria, VA on Friday, November 14, 2014 at 11 a.m. Interment Arlington National Cemetery at a later date.
www.everlywheatley.com

Published in The Washington Post on Nov. 7, 2014

NEW YORK TIMES NOVEMBER 07, 2014
David M. Abshire, who led respected research groups and held high government posts but made his most visible mark by helping President Ronald Reagan navigate through the political storms of the Iran-Contra scandal, died last Friday in Alexandria, Va. He was 88.

His death was announced by the Center for the Study of the Presidency & Congress, a Washington group he helped lead.

Reagan sought Dr. Abshire in December 1986. He called him in Brussels, where he was the US ambassador to NATO, and asked him to accept a Cabinet-level job as coordinator of the White House's response to multiple investigations of the administration's secret sales of arms to Iran, despite an embargo on such sales.

There were allegations that US officials hoped the arms sales would secure release of several hostages in Iran, which would have been another policy violation. Proceeds from the sales were to be used to finance the anti-Communist insurgents in Nicaragua known as Contras, aid Congress had forbidden.

Reagan asked Dr. Abshire to handle all requests and obligations stemming from investigations in the House and Senate and from an independent commission headed by John Tower, a former senator from Texas.

"What we wanted was someone who would come and could immerse himself in all the details of this Iran controversy," Patrick J. Buchanan, then the White House communications director, said in an interview with CNN in 1986. "It really is a detailed job, and the rest of the White House staff, which was not involved in the controversy, has to get on with the budget, has got to get on with the State of the Union. We simply don't have the expertise."

In 1987, The New York Times said the job could put Dr. Abshire in a "potentially tricky position" and raised the possibility that he could turn up an incriminating "smoking gun."

Dr. Abshire accepted the post on the condition that the administration would be forthcoming. He said he regretted suppressing information about military incursions into Laos and Cambodia during the Nixon administration, when he was assistant secretary of state for congressional relations.

"That," he said, "was an example of how not to do it."

In his first meeting with Reagan, recounted in his 2005 book, "Saving the Reagan Presidency: Trust Is the Coin of the Realm," Dr. Abshire told the president that it was unwise to keep insisting that the United States did not trade arms for hostages. He pointed out that two-thirds of the public believed that the administration had made such a deal.

"Dave, I don't care if I'm the only person in America that does not believe it. I don't believe it was arms for hostages," he quoted Reagan as saying.

But in a dozen meetings with the president and in others with Nancy Reagan, Dr. Abshire pressed his case for admitting what seemed obvious to him and to others. He also released thousands of unedited documents to investigators, handled press relations, and signed off on the president's speeches about the subject.

On March 4, 1987, with evidence of the arms deal mounting, Reagan admitted in a speech to the nation that he had learned he was wrong. "What began as a strategic opening to Iran deteriorated, in its implementation, into trading arms for hostages," he said.

Dr. Abshire soon resigned, feeling he had finished the job 90 days after taking it. Reagan largely escaped personal blame and saw his approval rating rise from 46 percent to 64 percent in less than two years.

In 1962, he joined with Admiral Arleigh Burke to start the Center for Strategic and International Studies, originally as an affiliate of Georgetown University. Distinguished foreign policy figures Henry Kissinger, James R. Schlesinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and Brent Scowcroft have been senior advisers and adjunct fellows there.

Kissinger, at a colloquium in Dr. Abshire's honor in 2006, said that Dr. Abshire had a knack for getting people to do what he wanted, "making you feel that he's doing you a tremendous favor for giving you that opportunity."

From 1999 to 2012, Dr. Abshire was president and chief executive of the Center for the Study of the Presidency & Congress. He served on government task forces and policy study groups and wrote seven books. He headed Reagan's foreign affairs transition team after his election in 1980, and was mentioned as a candidate for national security adviser in Republican administrations.

His job as assistant secretary of state under President Nixon was to be a liaison to Congress. Nixon then appointed him chairman of the Board for International Broadcasting, overseeing Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty.

As NATO ambassador, Dr. Abshire helped parlay the deployment of American Pershing II missiles in Europe into a treaty limiting intermediate-range nuclear weapons there.

David Manker Abshire was born in Chattanooga, Tenn. An imposing figure at 6-foot-4, he never lost his Tennessee drawl.

He graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point in 1951 and, as a platoon leader in Korea, was awarded a Bronze Star and other decorations for bravery. He earned a PhD in history from Georgetown.

Dr. Abshire, who died in a nursing home in Alexandria, leaves his wife of 56 years, the former Carolyn Sample; a son; four daughters; and 11 grandchildren.

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DAVID
MANKER
ABSHIRE
1 LT
US ARMY
WORLD WAR II
KOREA
APR 11 1926
OCT 31 2014
BSM W/V & OCL



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