Keen On America

When the United Nations Actually Mattered: Remembering the Burmese Schoolteacher who Ran the U.N. in its Glory Days

Sep 7, 2025
Thant Myint-U, a Cambridge University historian and grandson of former UN Secretary-General U Thant, reflects on the UN's peak influence during the 1960s. He shares insights on how U Thant played a pivotal role in averting nuclear war during the Cuban Missile Crisis, facilitating critical communication between superpowers. The discussion highlights forgotten history, exploring the complexities of diplomacy and peace-making in a post-colonial world. Myint-U urges a renewed focus on the UN's mission amidst current global conflicts, especially in Gaza and Ukraine.
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INSIGHT

UN Born Optimistic But Constrained

  • The UN was born from WWII hopes but immediately hampered by Cold War mistrust between the US and USSR.
  • Early public enthusiasm made the UN central to global attention and diplomacy in the 1940s–60s.
ANECDOTE

From Headmaster To UN Ambassador

  • U Thant rose from a small-town Burmese schoolteacher to Burmese ambassador to the UN by 1957.
  • He moved to midtown Manhattan and entered the center of global diplomacy within a decade.
INSIGHT

Neutrality Enabled Persuasive Mediation

  • U Thant built a reputation as a cosmopolitan diplomat who could get along with everyone, aiding his mediation role.
  • Burma's neutral position in the Cold War amplified his ability to bridge diverse states.
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