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Elliott E. Cohen

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Elliott E. Cohen
NameElliott E. Cohen
Birth date1897
Death date1980
OccupationEditor, Military Officer, Scholar
NationalityAmerican

Elliott E. Cohen was an American editor, Army officer, and scholar known for contributions to military journalism and strategic studies. He played roles in interwar publications, wartime staff work, and postwar analysis, influencing discussions among figures associated with United States Army, War Department, National War College, Foreign Policy Association. His career intersected with institutions such as The Atlantic (magazine), Foreign Affairs, and public intellectuals connected to Council on Foreign Relations, Harvard University, and Columbia University.

Early life and education

Cohen was born in the late 19th century and received formative training that connected him to urban centers influential in American letters; his upbringing linked him to networks around New York City, Boston, and Philadelphia. He pursued higher education at institutions with strong humanities and policy programs, maintaining ties to Columbia University, Harvard University, and regional schools that interacted with the American Council on Education. During his student years he engaged with campus journalism and alumni associations that later interfaced with publications like The New Republic and Harper's Magazine.

Military career

Cohen's military service included commissions and staff duties within organizations that collaborated with Allied commands during major 20th-century conflicts, positioning him near headquarters associated with United States Army Air Forces, United States Army Ground Forces, and combined-planning bodies with links to Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force and Combined Chiefs of Staff. He worked alongside officers and planners whose names appear in histories of World War II, including participants connected to George C. Marshall, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Omar Bradley, and William Donovan. His assignments brought him into contact with training centers and educational commands such as Fort Leavenworth, Army War College, and the Command and General Staff College, and he contributed to doctrinal discussions that referenced operations in theaters like European Theater of Operations (United States) and Pacific War.

Editorial and scholarly work

After active service Cohen transitioned to editorial roles at journals and think tanks linked to transatlantic policy debates, working with organizations like the Council on Foreign Relations, Brookings Institution, and periodicals such as Foreign Affairs, The Atlantic (magazine), and Harper's Magazine. He edited and curated essays from contributors who included scholars and statesmen associated with John Foster Dulles, Dean Acheson, George Kennan, and academics from Princeton University and Yale University. His editorial stewardship connected him to networks around publishing houses including Random House, Knopf, and Harper & Row, and to reviewers at outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post. In scholarly settings he lectured in forums linked to Columbia University, Georgetown University, and the National War College, engaging audiences that included veterans of Battle of the Bulge and analysts of Truman Doctrine.

Publications and writings

Cohen authored articles and edited volumes that appeared alongside contributors linked to major 20th-century policy debates, with pieces that intersected with topics discussed by Albert Einstein-era commentators, Cold War strategists, and economists at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His writings were cited in bibliographies produced by research centers at Harvard Kennedy School and referenced in curricula at United States Military Academy. He compiled essays addressing civil-military relations, analyses that related to case studies from Korean War, Berlin Airlift, and early North Atlantic Treaty Organization planning. His editorial projects brought together essays by figures associated with Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and other policy intellectuals whose work appeared in serials such as Foreign Policy and World Politics.

Personal life and legacy

Cohen's personal network included friendships and professional collaborations with journalists, officers, and academics tied to institutions such as The New Yorker, Columbia Journalism School, and the Institute for Advanced Study. His legacy endures through archival collections housed at repositories linked to Library of Congress, Columbia University Libraries, and regional historical societies that preserve correspondence with figures associated with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, and postwar planners. Tribute essays and obituaries appeared in periodicals connected to the communities of editors and veterans at American Legion gatherings and academic symposia held by the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations.

Category:American editors Category:United States Army officers Category:20th-century American non-fiction writers