Robert F. Kelley (1894 February 13, Somerville, Massachusetts – 1976) was an adamantly anticommunist official of the US State Department who influenced a generation of Russian specialists such as George F. Kennan and Charles Bohlen.
In 1922 he joined the State Department and, in 1926, became the head of the newly created Division of Eastern European Affairs.
Kelley was concerned about the speed with which nonrecognition ended and urged Secretary of State Cordell Hull and President Franklin Roosevelt not to trust Soviet promises about resolving outstanding issues.
Kelley came under scrutiny and was eventually removed from his position after proponents of a more conciliatory line towards Russia moved against him and the Eastern European Division.
[1] Kelley left the State Department in 1945 to join a private organization that eventually sponsored Radio Liberty, an anti-Soviet broadcasting service.