Emory C. Swank


Emory Coblentz "Coby" Swank was the United States Ambassador to Cambodia from 1970 to 1973.

Personal life

Swank was born in Frederick, MD and graduated magna cum laude from Franklin & Marshall College in 1942 where he was a member of Sigma Pi fraternity and Phi Beta Kappa. He earned his master's degree in the English Language and Literature from Harvard University in 1943. He entered the U.S. Army during World War II and was awarded the Bronze Star in Europe. He married Margaret Katherine Whiting in 1949. He is described as being 5-foot-10, 170 pounds, soft-spoken, and formal in dress. For years, he did fifty pushups per day.

State Department Career

At the end of the war, Swank spent one semester as an English instructor at Franklin and Marshall. In 1946, he began his career with the U.S. State Department. He was fluent in Russian and French and graduated from the National War College
He served in China, Djakarta, and Romania. From 1961 to 1963, he was a special assistant to Secretary of State Dean Rusk. He was appointed deputy chief of mission in Laos in 1964. In 1967, he was named chief deputy to ambassador Llewellyn Thompson in Moscow. In 1968, he was the U.S. signee for a space treaty between Great Britain, Russia, and the United States.

Cambodia

Swank was the first United States diplomatic representative to Phnom Penh after the U.S. reestablished diplomatic relations with the country in 1969. On September 7, 1970, shortly after arriving in Cambodia, he survived an assassination attempt when someone rolled a bomb carrying bicycle towards his car that did not got off. He did not know about the attempt until several hours later.
He boosted the embassy's staff from sixty to two hundred. He passed on orders to Cambodian leader Lon Nol but thought that the U.S. should be doing more to help the country and warned of a civil war. He clashed with State Department leaders about policy towards the country and was eventually reassigned to a dead-end desk job advising NATO. He later said that his time in Cambodia had been the most frustrating of his career. He would spend two years advising NATO before retiring in 1975.

Cleveland Council on World Affairs

From 1977 to 1987, Swank lived in Cleveland, OH where he headed the Cleveland Council on World Affairs. He revitalized the group by forming a motivated and efficient staff, improving finances and fundraising, and attracted an array of outstanding speakers on international issues which brought in new members. He successfully applied for grants from various foundations, led a Model United Nations, and ran programs for high schools. He also helped start the Akron Council on World Affairs.
When retired, he wrote a book of poems and lectured on cruise ships.