SECRECY NEWS
From the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2017, Issue No. 2
January 5, 2017
Secrecy News Blog: https://fas.org/blogs/secrecy/
** JEREMY J. STONE, 1935-2017
JEREMY J. STONE, 1935-2017
Jeremy J. Stone, a pioneering arms control advocate who served as
president of the Federation of American Scientists (FAS) from 1970 to
2000, passed away on January 1, 2017 at his home in Carlsbad,
California.
A mathematician by training, he turned to nuclear arms control in the
early 1960s with a focus on preventing the development and deployment of
anti-ballistic missile (ABM) systems due to their destabilizing
potential. The Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, signed by the US and the
USSR in 1972, was shaped in large part by Jeremy and his scientific
colleagues, who collectively created the foundation for nuclear arms
control in the last decades of the Cold War.
Jeremy jump-started the process of scientific exchange with China in the
early 1970s. He was a prominent defender of dissident Soviet scientist
Andrei Sakharov, and he instituted new mechanisms for monitoring and
upholding the human rights of scientists around the globe. He discovered
and helped terminate a CIA program to open U.S. mail.
All of these episodes, and many more, were vividly and insightfully described in his 1999 memoir "Every Man Should Try: Adventures of a Public Interest Activist".
Jeremy was a chess-player, on and off the chess board. He took a
strategic approach to his work and his life. He did not drift. He was
always on his way towards one goal or another. He might take you with
him if you were lucky.
He was a scintillating conversationalist who could successfully engage
even the most tongue-tied staffer or physicist. He had a sophisticated
sense of humor which he wielded skillfully -- perhaps following the
example of his early Hudson Institute boss, the nuclear strategist
Herman Kahn -- to disarm opponents and to make his own ideas more
palatable to skeptical or hostile audiences.
He was lucky in love, having been married for 58 years to BJ (Yannet)
Stone, a brilliant, beautiful and kind mathematician , who passed away
in 2015.
He was an exceptionally capable talent-spotter, and he could see the
latent potential in people that they could scarcely imagine in
themselves. At the Federation of American Scientists, he gathered a
group of scruffy young individuals of no particular academic pedigree or
obvious distinction and he shined his peculiar light on them until they
bloomed. He presented them (us) with enormously difficult problems --
ballistic missile defense, nuclear proliferation, global arms sales,
government secrecy -- and challenged them to tackle those problems in
creative new ways.
Of course, he was not without flaws. His intuitive powers, which usually
made him uncommonly perceptive, occasionally hardened prematurely into
convictions that proved to be unfounded. In one particularly lamentable
episode, he suggested mistakenly that MIT physicist Philip Morrison, a
Manhattan Project veteran and FAS founder, had once spied for the Soviet
Union. Making such a false allegation could have been an unforgivable
offense. But Morrison, himself a person of awesome depth and
distinction, forgave him, although with some sadness.
More typically, Jeremy was a profoundly generous and thoughtful person.
His intelligence and problem-solving abilities were often directed to
meeting the needs of others -- not just friends or employees (he once
directed poorly dressed staff to buy some new clothes at his expense),
but also casual acquaintances, foreigners, children and strangers. He
knew how to give a gift, and he usually anticipated exactly what gift a
particular person wanted or needed.
Above all, Jeremy was an institution builder, turning the Federation of
American Scientists into a public interest platform of significant
influence.
"FAS is a legitimate and prestigious scientific association," wrote Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
in a classified cable to the US Embassy in Japan in 1975. "Dr. Stone...
is [a] highly regarded lobbyist on foreign policy and has wide contacts
on the Hill. Embassy should have no reservations about facilitating his
appointments in Japan," Kissinger wrote.
By the time I showed up at FAS in 1989, the organization under Jeremy's
leadership had become a powerhouse of intelligent and effective advocacy
in arms control and quite a few other areas. My own cohort included
figures like John Pike, David Albright, Lora Lumpe, and the late Tom
Longstreth, to name just a few. Wandering the halls of our Capitol Hill
headquarters, I would sometimes run into Carl Sagan, former CIA director
Bill Colby, Philip Morrison, Paul Nitze, former JFK aide Carl Kaysen,
Ted Taylor, Dick Garwin, former Senator Alan Cranston, and you could
never be sure who else. One day I literally collided with Hans Bethe in
the hallway outside Jeremy's office. (No particles were emitted.) Jeremy
made all of that possible, providing a forum for scientists and others
to participate in the national policy process and a strategic vision to
guide them.
After leaving FAS, Jeremy pursued further adventures in conflict resolution as president of Catalytic Diplomacy, created a website in honor of his father, I.F. Stone, and advocated for independent journalism.
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