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Edwin L. Sibert
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Edwin L. Sibert

Edwin Luther Sibert (March 2, 1897 – December 16, 1977) was a United States Army officer with the rank of major general and served as intelligence officer during World War II and post-war Europe, where he assisted in the creation of the Gehlen Organization.[2] He would return to the United States and briefly serve in the Central Intelligence Group, the forerunner of the modern CIA. He was the son of Major General William L. Sibert and the brother of Major General Franklin C. Sibert. A graduate of the United States Military Academy in 1918, he would receive the Distinguished Service Medal three times for his service during World War II and the Cold War.[3]

Key Information

Early life and education

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At West Point in 1918

Sibert was born on March 2, 1897, in Little Rock, Arkansas, to Major General William L. Sibert and his wife Mary Margaret Cummings Sibert. He would be raised on military tradition, his grandfather William J. Sibert and great-uncle William B. Beeson having served in the Confederate army, and his father in the United States Army.[4] Sibert's early years would see his father assigned to Manila, Philippines (1899–1900), and the Panama Canal Zone (1907–1914).[5]

In 1914, Sibert would receive an at-large appointment to the United States Military Academy, graduating in 1918.[6]

Sibert later graduated from the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas in June 1935. He also graduated from the Army War College in June 1939.[7]

Career

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Dates of rank

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Promotions[6]
Rank Date
Second lieutenant 12 June 1918
First lieutenant (acting) 23 October 1918
First lieutenant 16 August 1919
Captain 1 August 1933
Major 1 April 1940
Colonel (acting) 15 January 1941
Lieutenant colonel (acting) 12 June 1941
Colonel (acting) 1 February 1942
Lieutenant colonel 4 August 1942
Brigadier general (acting) 31 October 1942
Colonel 11 March 1948
Brigadier general (acting) 31 October 1942
Major general (acting) 1 August 1948
Brigadier general 21 March 1953

Service

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Duty assignments[6][8]
Beginning Ending Assignment
1936 1937 Assistant Instructor in the Department of Tactics, United States Military Academy
July 1940 December 1941 U.S. Military Attaché to Brazil
December 1941 March 1942 Assistant Secretary, Combined Chiefs of Staff
March 1942 May 1942 Attending Field Artillery School, Ft. Sill, Oklahoma
May 1942 August 1942 Chief of Staff, 7th Division
August 1942 August 1943 Commanding Officer, Artillery, 99th Division
September 1943 March 1944 Assistant Chief of Staff (G2)European Theater of Operations
March 1944 July 1945 Assistant Chief of Staff (G2), 12th Army Group
July 1945 September 1946 Assistant Chief of Staff (G2)European Theater of Operations
September 1946 12 August 1948 Assistant Director of Operations, Central Intelligence Group (CIA)
13 August 1948 23 November 1948 Commanding General, Pacific Sector, Panama Canal Zone
24 November 1948 December 7, 1950 Commanding General, U.S. Army Forces, Department of Antilles
December 7, 1950 April 24, 1952 Staff Director, Inter-American Defense Board, Washington, D.C.
April 24, 1952 Commanding Officer, Camp Edwards, Barnstable County, Massachusetts

Awards and decorations

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Later life

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After retirement, Sibert lived on Martha's Vineyard and spent his winters in Charleston, South Carolina. He moved to McLean, Virginia in 1972 and died there from a ruptured aneurysm in 1977.[9] Sibert is buried at Arlington National Cemetery along with his father MG William Luther Sibert.[10]

References

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