Urquhart’s son, Thomas, confirmed he died at his home in Tyringham, Massachusetts, on Saturday but didn’t provide a specific cause, the New York Times reported.
Urquhart, born in Bridport, England in 1919, served in British military and intelligence during World War II before becoming the second official hired by the U.N. after its formation in 1945. He went on to be a principal adviser to the first five U.N. secretary-generals.
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Urquhart worked for the commission that set up the United Nations Secretariat in 1945, arranged the General Assembly's first meeting in London and settled on New York City as the U.N.'s permanent home. But he was best known for creating and directing U.N. peacekeeping operations in war zones around the world.
Urquhart called peacekeeping forces an army without an enemy and decided they should wear blue helmets to distinguish them from combatants. He said they should enter a war zone only with broad political support, with the goal of ending hostilities and facilitating negotiations.
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Before he retired in 1986, Urquhart had directed 13 peacekeeping operations, recruited a force of 10,000 troops from 23 countries and established peacekeeping as one of the U.N.’s most visible and politically popular functions. The U.N. peacekeeping forces won the 1988 Nobel Peace Prize.
Urquhart served 12 years as the U.N.'s No. 2 official, succeeding Ralph J. Bunche as under secretary general for political affairs in 1974.
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“Sir Brian’s imprint on the United Nations was as profound as that of anyone in the organization’s history,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Gutteres said in a statement. “As an aide to Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld, he helped to define the U.N.’s scope of action in addressing armed conflict and other global challenges. And as a close associate of Ralph Bunche, the renowned U.N. official and Nobel-Peace-Prize-winner, Sir Brian helped to establish and then propel international peacekeeping into wide-ranging use.”
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Urquhart joined the Ford Foundation after he retired and wrote books and frequent commentaries for The New York Review of Books and other publications. His books include a 1987 autobiography, “A Life in Peace and War,” as well as books on United Nations leaders and operations.
He is survived by his wife, his five children, a stepson, 14 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.