After leaving Cambridge, Aubrey went into the army, and being very fluent in Arabic, he was transferred to the Middle East. He... and then, of course, after the war he became strongly and passionately identified with. .. with Israel, he became the voice of Israel, he was first the Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations, and later he became Foreign Minister in Israel, and Deputy Prime Minister. And then dropped out of politics completely in, I think, probably in ’67. He... he deeply disapproved of the taking of the West Bank, he thought there would never be any peace or any reconciliation, and in this view he was utterly separated from the government, which wanted to hold onto the West Bank forever and... and Aubrey, basically having achieved, by his ability and eloquence, the... the highest positions, was dropped.
But he then, I think, enjoyed much of the rest of his life as a historian, although he missed the... the cut and parry of debate, or whatever it’s called. He spent a year at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, and I asked him how he was enjoying life there, and he said, 'I pine for the arena'. The arena. He... he was wonderful, he was a wonderful gladiator in the arena, he could... invariably courteous, however murderous, though... though I don’t think ‘murderous’ is the right word, but his eloquence could have caused his assassination. He... he was a very remarkable man and I’m glad that I got to know him in his later years when he would often come to New York and we... we became quite close.