Consolations of Insignificance: A New Zealand Diplomatic Memoir
By (Author) Terence O'Brien
Te Herenga Waka University Press
Te Herenga Waka University Press
9th May 2024
New Zealand
Paperback
192
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
Terence OBrien was a born diplomat urbane, clever, adaptable and hardworking, with a talent for strategy and negotiation. Although born in England, he was a loyal and dedicated New Zealander and spent most of his life working to improve the countrys position internationally. In his 50-year foreign affairs career he lived and worked in Asia, Europe and the South Pacific, and was involved in some of New Zealands most important diplomatic achievements of the 20th century, including establishing New Zealands first embassy in China, securing trade agreements with the United Kingdom after it joined the EEC, dealing with the fallout from New Zealands nuclear-free policy, directing New Zealand diplomacy during the Fiji coups, and gaining a seat on the UN Security Council during the turbulent early 1990s. This memoir is bursting with anecdotes from behind the scenes, and offers insight into the ways in which New Zealand has used its insignificance on the world stage to achieve results which outweigh its size and importance.
Terence O'Brien (19362022) served as a diplomat with the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade for over 40 years. He served as High Commissioner to the Cook Islands, Ambassador to the United Nations and the European Union, a term at the UN in Geneva including the World Trade Organization, and finally to the UN in New York, including a term as President of the UN Security Council. He was the founding director of the Centre for Strategic Studies at Te Herenga WakaVictoria University of Wellington. He wrote and lectured widely on international and regional relations, security affairs, and New Zealand foreign policy.