Read The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War Online
Authors: David Halberstam
Tags: #History, #Politics, #bought-and-paid-for, #Non-Fiction, #War
excessive with compliments
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 35.
Ridgway and “Lightning” Joe Collins
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 35.
and no sympathy for himself
: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.
Ned the Anointed
: Appleman, Roy,
Escaping the Trap,
p. 45.
to designate one’s standing with the general
: Leary, William (editor),
MacArthur and the American Century,
p. 241.
“instinctive knack of ingratiation”
: Coleman, J. D.,
Wonju,
p. 93.
you simply could not speak to a superior that way
: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.
“on a desert island”
: Blair, Clay, interview with John Chiles, U.S. Army War College.
you had to play to his entire team
: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.
“Is this Almond speaking”
: Mike Michaelis oral history at U.S. Army War College; author interview with Layton Tyner.
albeit in a losing war
: author interview with Layton Tyner.
“we will die fighting together”
: Heefner, Wilson,
Patton’s Bulldog,
p. 185; author interview with Layton Tyner; Hastings, Max,
The Korean War,
p. 84.
“a defeated Confederate General”
: Goulden, Joseph,
Korea,
p. 201; Lem Shepherd, oral history at Marine Corps History Archive and oral history at Columbia University.
“August is the month of victory”
: Shen Zhihua, Cold War International History Project, Winter 2003, Spring 2004.
CHAPTER
12
“direct lineal descendant of FDR”
: Smith, Richard Norton,
Thomas Dewey and His Times,
p. 35.
“It is a crusade”
: Oshinsky, David,
A Conspiracy So Immense,
pp. 49–50.
“now a Republican country”
: Ibid., p. 53.
then a traditionally liberal
: Ibid., p. 53.
“horses with blinders on”
: Miller, Merle,
Plain Speaking,
p. 164.
to $6 or $7 billion a year
: Ferrell, Robert (editor),
Off the Record,
p. 133.
hurtling over the wires
: Collins, Lawton,
War in Peacetime,
p. 39.
“no boats, no votes”
: Christensen, Thomas,
Useful Adversaries,
p. 39.
the rush to demobilize
: Heinl, Robert,
Victory at High Tide,
p. 4.
“it was a rout”
: Ibid., p. 4.
“out of a paper bag”
: Bradley, Omar, with Blair, Clay,
A General’s Life,
p. 474.
“kill a horse”
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
p. 738.
as so many of our top strategists
: Myers, Robert,
Korea in the Cross Currents,
p. 79.
“Bring the boys home”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 338.
had greatly angered MacArthur
: Rovere, Richard, and Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.,
The General and the President,
p. 120.
“from his command on April 11, 1951”
: Acheson, Dean,
Present at the Creation,
pp. 126–127.
“on behalf of the big bankers”
: Cumings, Bruce,
The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II,
p. 45.
“pearls before swine”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 465.
“‘You stand for everything that has been wrong for America for years’”
: Chute, David,
The Great Fear,
pp. 42–43.
“You owe it to Truman”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 547.
“that little fellow across the street”
: Halberstam, David,
The Best and the Brightest
, p. 332; author interview with John Carter Vincent.
“a constituency of one”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 464.
“than they have seen fit to use”
: McLellan, David S.,
Dean Acheson: The State Department Years,
p. 383.
“Chiang going out”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 475.
“and hang on to our friends”
: Davis, Nuell Pharr,
Lawrence and Oppenheimer,
p. 294.
“worldlier English prototype”
: Cooke, Alistair,
A Generation on Trial,
pp. 107–108.
“come to the brink, like Chambers”
: Halberstam, David, author interview with Murray Kempton,
The Fifties,
p. 13.
too many glitches in Hiss’s story
: author interview with Homer Bigart,
New York Times
.
“and could vouch for them absolutely”
: Weinstein, Allen,
Perjury,
p. 37.
“what I have to do”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 491.
spoiling for a fight
: author interview with Lucius Battle.
Average Americans would have understood that
: author interview with James Reston for
The Best and the Brightest
.
“a tremendous and totally unnecessary gift”:
Goldman, Eric,
The Crucial Decade,
pp. 134–135.
“I hope they hang him”
: Donovan, Robert,
Tumultuous Years,
p. 133.
“Traitors in the high councils”
: Goldman, Eric,
The Crucial Decade
, pp. 134–135.
“a dead cat around his neck”
: Ibid., p. 134.
CHAPTER
13
“when it came to the final responsible”
: Gellman, Barton,
Contending with Kennan,
p. 14.
“its preservation was tremendous”
: Foot, Rosemary,
The Wrong War,
p. 60.
“even I don’t make her nervous”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 150.
“My voice now carried”
: Kennan, George,
Memoirs 1925
–
1950,
pp. 294–295.
“a ceremonial Chinese bow and a polite giggle”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 477.
“and borders on recklessness”
: Foot, Rosemary,
The Wrong War,
p. 39.
“than with the Secretary of Defense”
: Bradley, Omar, with Blair, Clay,
A General’s Life,
p. 519.
“but don’t put any figure in the report”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Man,
p. 499.
“scaring me out of my shoes”
: Acheson, Dean,
Present at the Creation,
p. 373.
at Princeton, “saved us”
: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan,
The Wise Men,
p. 504.
CHAPTER
14
“just mild about Harry”
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
p. 493.
“And poor people of the United States”
: Ibid., p. 320.
not one of these fancy tractors
: Abels, Jules,
Out of the Jaws of Victory,
p. 182.
“clear thinking and forceful”
: Bradley, Omar, with Blair, Clay,
A General’s Life,
p. 444.
the pages of Sinclair Lewis
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
pp. 324–325.
“but did not know what they were getting”
: Phillips, Cabell,
The Truman Presidency,
p. 47.
“of democracy if it works”
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
p. 525.
“Ajax of the Ozarks”
: Abels, Jules,
Out of the Jaws of Victory,
p. 95.
“Truman, Harry Truman”
: Goldman, Eric,
The Crucial Decade
, p. 83.
“a dead Missouri mule”
: Ibid., p. 19.
“neck-and-neck race”
: Manchester, William,
The Glory and the Dream,
p. 465.
“from rocking the boat”
: Abels, Jules,
Out of the Jaws of Victory,
p. 150.
“keep this table vacant”
: Ibid., pp. 12–13.
“as a Washington lawyer and national”
: McFarland, Keith D., and Roll, David L.,
Louis Johnson and the Arming of America,
p. 133.
got the Defense portfolio
: Ibid., pp. 137–139.
“I’ll give ’em hell”
: Donovan, Robert,
Tumultuous Years,
p. 16.
“with them and not at them”
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
p. 675.
“smug, arrogant, and supercilious”
: Abels, Jules,
Out of the Jaws of Victory,
p. 141.
“Brownell lamented years later”
: author interview with Herbert Brownell for
The Fifties
.
“I thought I was”:
Smith, Richard Norton,
Thomas Dewey and His Times,
p. 26.
“looking under beds”
: Ibid., p. 507.
“obstinately laboring president”
: Abels, Jules,
Out of the Jaws of Victory,
p. 180.
“let’s get on with the job”
: Phillips, Cabell,
The Truman Presidency,
pp. 243–244.
why Truman had won
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
p. 712.
CHAPTER
15
not augur well for the future
:
Life
magazine, December 20, 1948.
as Omar Bradley wrote
: Bradley, Omar, with Blair, Clay,
A General’s Life,
p. 549.
to stay clear of him
: Goulden, Joseph,
Korea,
p. 155; Donovan, Robert,
Tumultuous Years,
pp. 260–262.
“stop kicking him around”
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
pp. 184–185.
“the communists in China”
: Donovan, Robert,
Tumultuous Years,
p. 261.
“of willpower and courage”
: author interview with Lieutenant General (Ret.) Ed Rowny; Toland interview with Rowny, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.
might exceed battle
: Ridgway, Matthew B.,
The Korean War,
p. 36.
“great national asset”
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
pp. 188–189.
“and its position in the U.N.”
: Goulden, Joseph,
Korea,
pp. 161–162.
“worst appointment Truman ever”
: McCullough, David,
Truman,
p. 741.
“does away with the Navy”
: Heinl, Robert,
Victory at High Tide,
pp. 6–7.
“one mental case with another”
: Bradley, Omar, with Blair, Clay,
A General’s Life,
p. 503.
“I can’t and he’s one of the”
: Ferrell, Robert (editor),
Off the Record,
p. 189.