On July 18, 1924, a mob in Tehran killed U.S. foreign service
officer Robert Whitney Imbrie. His violent death, the first
political murder in the history of the service, outraged the
American people. Though Imbrie's loss briefly made him a cause
célèbre, subsequent events quickly obscured his extraordinary life
and career. Susan M. Stein tells the story of a figure
steeped in adventure and history. Imbrie rejected a legal career to
volunteer as an ambulance driver during World War I and joined the
State Department when the United States entered the war. Assigned
to Russia, he witnessed the October Revolution, fled ahead of a
Bolshevik arrest order, and continued to track communist activity
in Turkey even as the country's war of independence unfolded around
him. His fateful assignment to Persia led to his death at age
forty-one and set off political repercussions that cloud relations
between the United States and Iran to this day. Drawing on a wealth
of untapped materials, On Distant Service returns readers to an era
when dash and diplomacy went hand-in-hand.