Anne Hessing Cahn


Anne Hessing Cahn was a German-born American political author and arms control expert. She held a doctorate in political science from MIT and was notable for her criticism of the CIA among other U.S. agencies and leaders, particularly Team B and other aspects of the last days of the Cold War.

Biography

Cahn was born in Mönchengladbach, Germany, the daughter of Ernest and Herta Hessing. She fled from Nazi Germany with her family, first to France, then to California. She met physicist John W. Cahn while they were attending the University of California, Berkeley, and they married in 1950.
Cahn was Scholar in Residence at The American University. She served the US Government as Chief of the Social Impact Staff at the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Special Assistant to the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, and president and executive director of the Committee for National Security. In 2001, she chaired the board of directors, for , a private organization founded to "increase citizen participation in public policy decisions on energy, security and the environment." She was also on the board of directors for the United States Institute of Peace or USIP, established in 1984, which is an independent, nonpartisan, national institution established and funded by the United States Congress.
John W. Cahn died in 2016. The couple had three children, Martin Cahn, a physician in Seattle; Andy Cahn, a science teacher in Kenmore, Washington; and Lorie Cahn, an environmental scientist in Jackson, Wyoming. Anne Hessing Cahn died in Seattle, Washington, on December 8, 2024.

Selected works