Klaus Törnudd
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Klaus Mattias Törnudd (born. 26 December 1931 Helsinki) is a Finnish diplomat and researcher in politics and international politics. He has been a professor and ambassador for political science.
The parents of Klaus Törnudd were the translator Allan Viktor Törnudd and Helene Margareta Niininen, a child care inspector who became known as a writer. He belongs to his father's side in to the Törnudd family.[1]
Klaus Törnudd graduated from Svenska Lyceum in Helsinki in 1949, graduated from the University of Helsinki in 1956 and graduated as a PhD in 1961 from a non-military subject Soviet Attitude towards Non-Military Regional Co-operation. He had been employed by the Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs since 1958. Between 1961 and 1964, he was Assistant and Second Secretary of the United Nations Office in New York.[2]
Törnudd served as Secretary of State for 1964–1966 in Cairo and then as the Deputy Secretary for Foreign Affairs of the Year. Between 1967 and 1971 he was a professor of international politics at the University of Tampere.
However, he returned to the diplomatic circle, initially for two years as a secretary in Moscow.
Special Representative
Between 1973 and 1974, he worked at the Special Representative for the OSCE project in Geneva and then at the Political Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, head of which he served in 1977–1981.
During this time, the department was particularly active in defending Finland's neutrality in relation to the Soviet Union. From fall 1981 to January 1983, Törnudd was on leave from the Ministry and was responsible for the Swedish-speaking general professorship of the University of Helsinki. He was also a docent of General Political Science at the same university in the years 1975–1996.[2]