A series of tough breaks

Volunteer service didn’t go as planned for Franklin Pierce “Pancho” Huddle, Jr. in 1966.

He arrived at his site in Tunisia to find “the end of the world, or you could see it from there.” It was the third country the Peace Corps had trained him for, after Ethiopia and Libya, and the circumstances were not in his favor.

Images: Medenine square (l) courtesy of Tunisia Travel Inspiration & granaries (r) courtesy Michael Kaplan at Facebook.

For one thing, he was deployed without the ten weeks of French language training the other volunteers had received, a required language in Tunisian classrooms. For another, his Tunisian boss denounced him as a spy.

The Peace Corps pretty quickly ushered Huddle out of the country, then retained him less than two years later for his talent with linguistics, hiring him for two seasons to direct Arabic training.

It was surreal. Like the Pied Piper of Hamlin, dozens and even hundreds of people would follow me downtown. Never could pay for a meal. (Pomegranates and camel head soup brought my weight from 195 to 155). Soon thereafter, the principal took away my classes saying in Arabic: “You are a spy from the spies of Egypt!” He was a Francophile and I was the Arabist enemy. Cue the laugh track.

This provided an invaluable lesson about resilience in navigating government bureaucracy, material that served him well as Ambassador to Tajikistan in 2001. There he stood up a platform from which to deploy secret operations, arms, and money into Afghanistan immediately after 9/11.

What else would you expect of someone who survived an airline hijacking ending in a crash on the Indian Ocean, killing 125 other passengers?

Ethiopian Airlines 961 crash off the Comoros Islands captured on tourist camcorder. (CNN)

Profiles in Service – More about the forthcoming book (Moonshine Cove Press, Dec 2025).

A Spy of the Egyptian Spies – Pancho’s Peace Corps experience.

Pancho’s ADST Oral History


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Comments

6 responses to “Profile: Franklin Pierce “Pancho” Huddle, Jr.”

  1. vibrant7d2899d7f9 Avatar
    vibrant7d2899d7f9

    Interesting brief. Pancho is a good friend. Look forward to reading more in the book. Parker

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Parker. Colorful input from Pancho made his story a must-tell. His oral history really sings.

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  2. Peter Tomsen Avatar
    Peter Tomsen

    Ben:  good morning!Don’t know if you had heard a short episode of Pancho before his plane plunged into the water.  His wife broke a sandwich into half, gave it to him as well as $20

    Liked by 1 person

    1. She’s my hero! He was trying to say goodbye and she was like, “On your feet! You’ll need your glasses from the overhead bin and something to eat. There isn’t going to be any inflight service once we hit the water!”

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      1. Peter Tomsen Avatar
        Peter Tomsen

        Really funny

        Like

  3. vibrant7d2899d7f9 Avatar
    vibrant7d2899d7f9

    Whenever we’re in the Bay area, we look up Pancho and Pam. I was nominated to go to Burma as Ambassador back in 1991. Pancho was to be my deputy. The Senate declined to give me confirmation. While I cooled my heals in Washington for about a year, Pancho as charge d’affairs had the chance to interact with all the thugs running the government. He was probably happy I never showed up, but we’ve been good friends since before this interlude.

    Parker

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