Read Camelot's Court: Inside the Kennedy White House Online
Authors: Robert Dallek
Chapter 8: “If We Listen to Them, None of Us Will Be Alive”
279
And Schlesinger in particular
: Schlesinger,
Journals
, 156–61.
280
In the summer of 1962
:
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962
, 484–97, 506–10, 541.
280
Kennedy was reluctant
: Ibid., 543–46; Gibbons,
The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War
, 12–21.
280
At the end of July:
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962
, 546–56; Shapley,
Promise and Power
, 160–61.
281
In August, the State Department
:
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962
, 581, 583–84.
282
In September, Kennedy sent
: Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, 495–500, 506–17.
283
Aside from conversations:
Branch,
Parting the Waters
, 656–70; Schlesinger,
Robert Kennedy
, 315–16; Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, 514–18.
283
While Kennedy temporarily fixed
:
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962
, 636–41, 660; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 165, 169.
284
No one close to Kennedy
:
New York Times
, Aug. 19, 28, 1962; Oct. 9, 1962;
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962
, 596–601.
285
Joe Mendenhall
:
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962
, 649–50, 661–62, 671–72.
286
At the center of the administration’s
: Ibid., 679, 687.
287
While the administration struggled
:
FRUS: Cuba, 1961–1962,
947–49; Poole,
History of the Joint Chiefs
, 159–60.
287
John McCone
: Halberstam,
Best and Brightest
, 152–53.
288
The minute McCone saw evidence
:
FRUS: Cuba, 1961–1962
, 947, 950, 955, 957.
289
Roger Hilsman
: Halberstam,
Best and Brightest
, 123, 190;
FRUS: Cuba, 1961–1962
, 963–66, 968, 1045, n. 1; Michael Forrestal, OH, JFKL; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 1, 130–31.
290
In trying to mute speculation
:
FRUS: Cuba
, 1004, 1052, 1070–71.
290
When news of the Soviet buildup
:
FRUS: Cuba
, 1002–1003; JFK Press Conference, Sept. 13, 1962, available online.
290
As with CIA and military
: See Matthias Uhl and Vladimir I. Ivkin, “‘Operation Atom’: The Soviet Union’s Stationing of Nuclear Missiles in the German Democratic Republic, 1959,”
Bulletin: Cold War History Project
(Fall/Winter, 2001): 299–306. Also see Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, note for p. 537 on p. 787, recounting my conversation with Raymond L. Garthoff, March 19, 2002;
FRUS: Cuba
, 1083–84.
292
At the beginning of October:
Foreign Relations of the United States: Cuban Missile Crisis and Aftermath
(Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1996), 13–15; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 393–95; McGeorge Bundy, OH, JFKL; Widmer,
Listening In
, 77.
293
Kennedy was convinced
: Dallek,
Unfinished Life,
538, 544;
FRUS: Cuba, 1961–1962
, 1047;
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 28.
293
The result shocked Kennedy
: Bird,
Color of Truth
, 226–27; Goldstein,
Lessons on Disaster
, 72–73; McNamara,
In Retrospect
, 32, 117; Schlesinger,
Journals
, 171–72; Thomas,
Robert Kennedy
, 209.
295
The presence of the missiles
:
Robert Kennedy in His Own Words
, 14–16.
296
Shortly before noon
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 397, n. 10, 409–11, 413–14; Jacqueline Kennedy,
Historic Conversations
, 273, n. 73, 274, 276, 278.
297
Bundy, acting CIA director
:
Presidential Recordings
, Vol. 2, 399–402, 407–11, 413, 423.
299
Listening to the discussion
: Ibid., 404–407, 411–13, 416, 421;
Robert Kennedy in His Own Words
, 38, 44; Aleksandr Fursenko and Timothy Naftali,
“One Hell of a Gamble”: Khrushchev, Castro, and Kennedy, 1958–1964
(New York: Norton, 1997), 214.
300
During the meeting
,
Bobby
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings,
vol. 2, 416, 425.
301
In the five hours before the group
: Ibid., 427–28;
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 45–47, 49, n., 100.
302
The same group of advisers
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 429–33.
302
Rusk and Martin now weighed in
: Ibid., 433–35.
303
Unwilling to decide
: Ibid., 435–39. On McNamara and nuclear weapons, see Shapley,
Promise and Power
, 119–20; McNamara,
In Retrospect
, 345; Robert S. McNamara,
Argument Without End: In Search of Answers to the Vietnam Tragedy
(New York: PublicAffairs, 1999), 158–59.
304
Kennedy’s hard line
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings,
vol. 2, 439–43.
305
Yet he could not discount
: Ibid., vol. 2, 444–47.
305
McNamara didn’t think the timing
: Ibid, vol. 2, 448–50, 468–69. On RFK and Bolshakov, see Fursenko and Naftali,
“One Hell of a Gamble,”
109–14; Robert F. Kennedy,
Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis
(New York: Norton, 1968), 19–22, 26–27; Isaiah Berlin, OH, JFKL.
307
After Kennedy left:
Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 463–65.
308
The recorded conversations
: For Stevenson’s letter, see
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 101–102; Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, 576.
309
By Thursday morning
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 512–15.
310
As the advisers convened
: Ibid., vol. 2, 516, 521–24.
310
McNamara was more supportive
: Ibid., vol. 2, 525–29.
311
Kennedy was not convinced
: Ibid., vol. 2, 528–29, 541, 550, 552.
311
If Kennedy needed support
: For a portrait of Bohlen, see Isaacson and Thomas,
The Wise Men
; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 524–25;
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 96–97, 107.
312
Bohlen’s departure:
Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 515, n. 20;
Robert Kennedy in His Own Words
, 18.
313
Kennedy was also content to have
: On Thompson, see Taubman,
Khrushchev
, 397, 449–50, 458; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 532–35, 539, 547–49.
314
After two days of discussion
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 557, 563, 565, 567–68.
314
A series of evening meetings
: Ibid., vol. 2, 572–77.
315
It is striking that Kennedy
: Dallek,
Unfinished Life
, 92–94, 517; Reeves,
President Kennedy
, 363.
315
The meeting confirmed his assumption
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 2, 580–98.
317
Kennedy was also angry
: Schlesinger,
Robert Kennedy
, 511.
317
While Kennedy had concluded
: Sorensen,
Kennedy
, 692;
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 116–22.
318
Despite his show of confidence
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings,
vol. 2, 600–01;
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 126–36, 141–51, 162–63.
319
On Monday, October 22
:
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 153, 157–63.
319
The initial Soviet response
: Ibid., 170–71, 174–75.
319
That evening, at the end
: Ibid., 177; Robert Kennedy,
Thirteen Days
, 49, 98.
320
October 24 was a day
:
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 177; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings,
vol. 3, 183–85; Fursenko and Naftali,
“One Hell of a Gamble,”
258; Robert Kennedy,
Thirteen Days
, 52; Schlesinger,
Robert Kennedy
, 514.
321
There were also hopeful signs
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings,
vol. 3, 188, 191, 196–97, 209–10.
321
Yet the crisis was far from over
: Ibid., 197; Shapley,
Promise and Power
, 176–78.
322
But even if Kennedy:
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 174–75, 185–87.
322
But Schlesinger passed along:
Ibid., 187–88, 198.
323
Kennedy sent his reply:
Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings,
vol. 3, 232–81;
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 210–12, 224–26, 232.
324
On Friday morning
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 3, 286, 297–302, 309–10, 313, 317, 321, 323, 328.
324
If he had to resort
: Ibid., 346–48.
325
Meanwhile, all this talk
: Ibid., 331–36; Fursenko and Naftali,
“One Hell of a Gamble,”
259–60, 263–65.
325
And then at about nine
:
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 235–40.
326
Although an end to the crisis
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 3, 356–87.
327
The discussion continued
: Ibid., vol. 3, 387–483, especially 387–400 and 427–28. For JFK to NK, Oct. 27, 1962,
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 268–69.
328
The letter was to be hand-delivered
: Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 3, 483–88.
328
Kennedy had ample reason
:
FRUS: Cuban Missile Crisis
, 275.
329
Kennedy was spared
: Fursenko and Naftali,
“One Hell of a Gamble,”
283–87; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 3, 512–17.
329
Kennedy and his civilian advisers:
Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 3, 517–18
;
Mimi Alford,
Once Upon a Secret
, 93–96; Jacqueline Kennedy,
Historic Conversations
, 236, 262–63; Isaiah Berlin, OH, JFKL; Michael Beschloss,
The Crisis Years: Kennedy and Khrushchev, 1960–1963
(New York: HarperCollins, 1991), 544. JFK’s remark to Galbraith is quoted by Sheldon Stern, “Noam Chomsky and the Cuban Missile Crisis,” Oct. 18, 2012, History News Network, online. JFK to McNamara, Nov. 5, 1962, Box 274, National Security File, JFKL; Poole,
History of the Joint Chiefs
, 183–85.
331
What lessons did Kennedy
: Schlesinger,
Robert Kennedy
, 507; Schlesinger,
Thousand Days
, 831; Jacqueline Kennedy,
Historic Conversations
, 254, 271; Zelikow, May, and Naftali, eds.,
Presidential Recordings
, vol. 3, 518;
Robert Kennedy in His Own Words
, 18, 420. Also see James G. Blight, Bruce J. Allyn, and David A. Welch,
Cuba on the Brink: Castro, the Missile Crisis, and the Soviet Collapse
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1993), 249, 352–56, on the likelihood of a nuclear exchange.
333
Bobby should have included
: Anatoly Dobrynin,
In Confidence: Moscow’s Ambassador to America’s Six Cold War Presidents (1962–1986)
(New York: Times Books/Random House, 1995), 78–79, 84–93.
Chapter 9: “Mankind Must Put an End to War”
335
In December 1962:
Gallup, vol. 3:
The Gallup Poll, 1959–1971
, 1793, 1796, 1798–99, 1810; Meyer Feldman to JFK, Aug. 15, 1963, POF; O’Donnell and Powers,
Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye
, 13; PPP: JFK, 1963, 828; Schlesinger,
Journals
, 185.
336
Only Vietnam cast a shadow
:
FRUS: Vietnam, 1962,
750–51, 757–58, 761, 763–65, 789–96.
337
After visiting Vietnam
: Ibid., 779–87, 797–98; Halberstam,
Best and Brightest
, 205–08; Gibbons,
The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War
, 131.
338
A front-page
New York Times
story:
Gibbons,
The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War
, 132–34; O’Donnell and Powers,
Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye
, 15; David Kaiser,
American Tragedy: Kennedy, Johnson and the Origins of the Vietnam War
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000), 180;
New York Times
, Dec. 3, 1962.