Brigadier General Henry Alfred Byroade, (July 24, 1913 β December 31, 1993) of Indiana was an American career diplomat.
Over the course of his career, he served as the American ambassador to Egypt (1955β1956), South Africa (1956β1959), Afghanistan (1959β1962), Burma (1963β1968), Philippines (1969β1973), and Pakistan (1973β1977).
Byroade graduated from West Point in 1937 and began as a career Army officer.
His first post in army was on the Hawaiian Islands as a member of the Corps of Engineers from 1937 to 1939.
The Corps sent him back in 1939 to engineering college.
He got his master's degree in civil engineering from Cornell University in 1940 before being stationed at Langley Field, Virginia, helping to form the first aviation engineer regiment.
In 1946, at the age of 32, he rose to the rank of Brigadier General.
In 1949 he was seconded to the U.S.
Department of State, where he headed the Office of German Affairs.
In 1952, he made the decision to resign from the Army, and was appointed Assistant Secretary of State for Middle East, South Asia and Africaβa post he held until 1955.
In 1954 he attracted criticism from both Israel and the Arab world for the administration's policy declaration in which he told the Israelis, "You should drop the attitude of a conqueror and the conviction that force is the only policy that your neighbors will understand," and told the Arabs, "You should accept this state of Israel as an accomplished fact." That same year, he referred to Israel's Zionist ideology and its free admission of Jews through the Law of Return as "a legitimate matter of concern both to the Arabs and to the Western countries."Byroade had been Ambassador to Egypt for more than a year when it was announced that he was being transferred.
He was considered a friend of Arab causes but unable, during his Egyptian assignment, to prevent an arms deal between Czechoslovakia and Egypt, or to dissuade the Egyptian government of Gamal Abdel Nasser from expanding its campaigns against the West.
Criticism of his effectiveness in Cairo in the Eisenhower Administration led to his reassignment to South Africa.
Emanuel Neumann, chairman of the executive of the Zionist Organization of America urged that he be removed from Cairo, claiming he had been an apologist for the Egyptian government.