#64: The world. Getting better?

Published: July 25, 2013, 9:10 p.m.

92 years of life can give you some perspective. Especially if you spend seven-odd decades in service of others, as a diplomat and peacebuilder working on five continents.\xa0

Today, we interview Ambassador John W. McDonald, co-founder and chair of the Institute for Multi-Track Diplomacy, about his extraordinary journey: from his far-flung childhood in a military family to his arrival\xa0as a young foreign service officer\xa0in postwar Germany in 1947; from the\xa0Berlin airlift to the nerve center\xa0of the\xa0Marshall Plan; from camel caravans through snow-choked Afghanistan to jungle airports in Bolivia.\xa0

Our guest built a railroad from Turkey to Tehran, helped run United Nations agencies and create new ones\u2014and then, at age 70,\xa0after a 40-year career\xa0in government, with no resources except a co-founder and a dream, created a new organization that is helping citizens build peace from Cyprus to Kashmir.

Oh, and we should mention: he has a personal connection to the show. You know our host, Ben Wikler? He's John McDonald's grandson.

As you hear\xa0Ambassador McDonald share stories and lessons from his long and world-spanning life, you'll catch the intensity of his optimism, his enthusiasm\u2014and you'll see why he's so hopeful about where the world is going next.