Robert Modell Shaplen (born March 22, 1917, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died May 15, 1988, New York, New York) was an American journalist whose incisive reporting made him one of the most-respected Asia correspondents. Over a 50-year career in which he reported for the New York Herald-Tribune (1937–43), Newsweek (1945–47), Fortune (1948–50), Collier’s (1950–51), and The New Yorker (1952–88), he chronicled the frustrations and failures associated with anticolonial revolutions in Asia.
Shaplen, who earned an M.S. from the Columbia University (New York City) School of Journalism, gave minute attention to detail and was credited with capturing the sights, sounds, and texture of Asia as well as establishing a historical perspective based on his long experience. He was with Mao Zedong in the remote caves in the mountains of Yan’an in 1946, covered the rise and fall of Indonesia’s President Sukarno during the 1960s, and was present at the fall of Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) in 1975. Though many felt his criticism of U.S. involvement in Vietnam was too moderate, he later adopted a less-moderate position and recounted his 1984 journey to Vietnam and Cambodia in his last book, Bitter Victory (1986). Some of his other works include A Corner of the World (1949), The Lost Revolution (1965), Time out of Hand: Revolution and Reaction in Southeast Asia (1969), and A Turning Wheel (1979).