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The P R E SIDE NT I AL R E CO R DING S J OHN F . K ENNEDY The P RESIDEN T I A L R ECORDI N G S J O H N F. K E N N E DY THE GREAT CRISES, VOLUME TWO SEPTEMBER–OCTOBER 21, 1962 Timothy Naftali and Philip Zelikow Editors, Volume Two David Coleman George Eliades Francis Gavin Jill Colley Kastner Erin Mahan Ernest May Jonathan Rosenberg David Shreve Associate Editors, Volume Two Patricia Dunn Assistant Editor Philip Zelikow and Ernest May General Editors B W. W. NORTON & COMPANY • NEW YORK • LONDON Copyright © 2001 by The Miller Center of Public Affairs Portions of this three-volume set were previously published by Harvard University Press in The Kennedy Tapes: Inside the White House During the Cuban Missile Crisis by Philip D. Zelikow and Ernest R. May. Copyright © 1997 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America First Edition For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10110 The text of this book is composed in Bell, with the display set in Bell and Bell Semi-Bold Composition by Tom Ernst Manufacturing by The Maple-Vail Book Manufacturing Group Book design by Dana Sloan Production manager: Andrew Marasia Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data John F. Kennedy : the great crises. p. cm. (The presidential recordings) Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Contents: v. 1. July 30–August 1962 / Timothy Naftali, editor—v. 2. September 4–October 20, 1962 / Timothy Naftali and Philip Zelikow, editors—v. 3. October 22–28, 1962 / Philip Zelikow and Ernest May, editors. ISBN 0-393-04954-X 1. United States—Politics and government—1961–1963—Sources. 2. United States— Foreign relations—1961–1963—Sources. 3. Crisis management—United States—History— 20th century—Sources. 4. Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917–1963—Archives. I. Naftali, Timothy J. II. Zelikow, Philip, 1954– III. May, Ernest R. IV. Series. E841.J58 2001 973.922—dc21 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10110 www.wwnorton.com W. W. Norton & Company Ltd., Castle House, 75/76 Wells Street, London W1T 3QT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 2001030053 MILLER CENTER OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA The Presidential Recordings Project Philip Zelikow Director of the Center Timothy Naftali Director of the Project Editorial Advisory Board Michael Beschloss Taylor Branch Robert Dallek Walter Isaacson Allen Matusow Richard Neustadt Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. Robert Schulzinger Contents The Presidential Recordings Project By Philip Zelikow and Ernest May xi Preface to John F. Kennedy: The Great Crises, Volumes 1–3 By Philip Zelikow and Ernest May xvii Editors’ Acknowledgments xxv Areas of Specialization for Research Scholars xxvii A Note on Sources xxix Meeting Participants and Other Frequently Mentioned Persons xxxi TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1962 11:30–11:50 A.M. Meeting on U-2 Incident 12:35–1:00 P.M. Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 4:00–4:50 P.M. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 5:00–5:55 P.M. Meeting with Congressional Leadership on Cuba 5:55–6:10 P.M. Meeting on the Congressional Resolution about Cuba WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1962 5:00–6:15 P.M. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1962 TIME UNKNOWN. Conversation with Douglas Dillon 12:35–12:40 P.M. Meeting with Billy Graham and Dwight Eisenhower 3 4 19 33 52 73 81 82 110 112 115 vii viii CONTENTS 12:40–1:02 P.M. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhower 6:45–7:15 P.M. Meeting on Berlin THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1962 4:55 P.M. Conversation with John McCormack, Thomas Morgan, and Carl Vinson TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1962 5:00–5:56 P.M. Meeting with Maxwell Taylor on His Far Eastern Trip FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1962 11:30 A.M.–12:03 P.M. Meeting on Laos SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1962 11:00 A.M.–12:27 P.M. Meeting on the Soviet Union 1:18–1:30 P.M. Meeting on the Crisis at the University of Mississippi APPROXIMATELY 1:30–1:35 P.M. Meeting with Robert Kennedy on the Drummond Spy Case 2:00 P.M. Conversation with Ross Barnett 2:25 P.M. Conversation with Theodore Sorensen 2:30 P.M. Conversation with LeMoyne Billings 2:50 P.M. Conversation with Ross Barnett 7:36 P.M. Conversation with Torbert MacDonald SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30–MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 APPROXIMATELY 10:40 P.M.–1:00 A.M. Meeting on Civil Rights 12:14 A.M. Conversation with Ross Barnett Meeting on Civil Rights, Continued APPROXIMATELY 12:40 A.M. Conversation from the Oval Office between Robert Kennedy and Cyrus Vance Meeting on Civil Rights, Continued 1:45 A.M. Conversation with Ross Barnett 1:50 A.M. Continuation of Conversation with Ross Barnett 2:00 A.M. Conversation between Robert Kennedy and Creighton Abrams 4:20 A.M. Conversation with Creighton Abrams 118 135 149 150 154 156 178 178 181 182 222 230 233 237 238 239 247 250 251 288 290 299 299 306 308 310 312 CONTENTS MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 8:46 A.M. Conversation with Ross Barnett 9:31 A.M. Conversation with Archibald Cox 11:12 A.M. Conversation with Cyrus Vance and Robert McNamara TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1962 4:20–5:20 P.M. Meeting on the Budget and Tax Cut Proposal 5:25 P.M. Conversation with Kenneth O’Donnell and Cyrus Vance WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1962 9:20 A.M. Conversation with Cyrus Vance 10:05 A.M. Conversation with John McCormack SOMETIME THAT MORNING. Conversation with Lawrence F. O’Brien MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1962 10:30 A.M. Conversation with Mike Mansfield 12:00 P.M. Conversation with Albert Gore 4:48–5:10 P.M. Meeting on the Budget TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1962 9:54 A.M. Conversation with Mike Mansfield and Mike Kirwan WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1962 TIME UNKNOWN. Conversation with George Smathers TIME UNKNOWN. Conversation with Eugene Keogh TIME UNKNOWN. Conversation about James Meredith TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1962 11:50 A.M.–1:00 P.M. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 6:30–8:00 P.M. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis ix 314 314 316 317 319 321 352 355 356 357 359 361 362 365 369 378 379 381 382 388 389 391 397 427 x T H E P R E S I D E N T I A L R E C O R D I N G S P RO J E C T WEDNESDAY, October 17, 1962 10:00–11:30 A.M. Meeting with West German Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1962 10:00–10:38 A.M. Cabinet Meeting on the Federal Budget for Fiscal Year 1964 11:10 A.M.–1:15 P.M. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis NEAR MIDNIGHT. Kennedy Summarizes a Late-Night Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1962 9:45–10:30 A.M. Meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff on the Cuban Missile Crisis 468 469 499 499 512 572 578 578 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1962 2:30–5:10 P.M. National Security Council Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 599 Index 615 601 The Presidential Recordings Project BY PHILIP ZELIKOW AND ERNEST MAY B etween 1940 and 1973, presidents of the United States secretly recorded hundreds of their meetings and conversations in the White House. Though some recorded a lot and others just a little, they created a unique and irreplaceable source for understanding not only their presidencies and times but the presidency as an institution and, indeed, the essential process of high-level decision making. These recordings of course do not displace more traditional sources such as official documents, private diaries and letters, memoirs, and contemporaneous journalism. They augment these sources much as photographs, films, and recordings augment printed records of presidents’ public appearances. But they do much more than that. Because the recordings capture an entire meeting or conversation, not just highlights caught by a minute-taker or recalled afterward in a memorandum or memoir, they have or can have two distinctive qualities. In the first place, they can catch the whole complex of considerations that weigh on a president’s action choice. Most of those present at a meeting with a president know chiefly the subject of that meeting. Even key staff advisers have compartmented responsibilities. Tapes or transcripts of successive meetings or conversations can reveal interlocked concerns of which only the president was aware. They can provide hard evidence, not just bases for inference, about presidential motivations. Desk diaries, public and private papers of presidents, and memoirs and oral histories by aides, family, and friends all show how varied and difficult were the presidents’ responsibilities and how little time they had for meeting those responsibilities. But only the tapes provide a clear picture of how these responsibilities constantly converged—how a president could be simultaneously, not consecutively, a commander in chief worrying about war, a policymaker conscious that his missteps in economic policy could bring on a market collapse, a chief mediator among interest groups, a chief administrator for a myriad of public programs, a spokesperson for the interests and aspirations of the nation, a head of a sprawling political party, and more. The tapes reveal not only what presidents said but what they heard. For everyone, there is some difference between learning by ear and by xi xii T H E P R E S I D E N T I A L R E C O R D I N G S P RO J E C T eye. Action-focused individuals ordinarily take in more of what is said to them than of what they read, especially when they can directly question a speaker. A document read aloud to a president had a much better chance of registering than the same document simply placed in the inbox. Though hearing and reading can both be selective, tapes probably show, better than any other records, the information and advice guiding presidential choices. Perhaps most usefully, the secret tapes record, as do no other sources, the processes that produce decisions. Presidential advisers can be heard debating with one another. They adapt to the arguments of the others. They sometimes change their minds. The common positions at the end of a meeting are not necessarily those taken by any person at the outset. The president’s own views have often been reshaped. Sometimes there has been a basic shift in definition of an issue or of the stakes involved. Hardly anyone ever has a clear memory of such changes. Yet, with the tape, a listener now can hear those changes taking place—can follow, as nowhere else, the logic of high-stakes decision making. Casting about for analogies, we have thought often of Pompeii. As the ruins uncovered there have given students of Greco-Roman civilization knowledge not to be found anywhere else, in any form, so the presidential recordings give students of the presidency, of U.S. and world history, and of decision making knowledge simply without parallel or counterpart. They are a kind of time machine, allowing us to go back and be in the room as history was being made. And, unlike even the finest archaeological site, what we uncover are the words and deliberations of the people themselves in the moment of action, not just the accounts, summary notes, or after-the-fact reconstructions they left behind. Of the six presidents who used secret recording devices, three did so extensively. Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and Dwight Eisenhower recorded to a limited extent. John Kennedy, however, after installing an elaborate taping system in July 1962, used it frequently during the 16 months before his murder in November 1963. Using a different system, Lyndon Johnson made recordings throughout his presidency, especially in 1968, his last, tumultuous year in office. Richard Nixon, after two years without using any recording devices, installed a system which, because voice activated, captured every conversation in a room with a microphone. The existence of Nixon’s system came to light in July 1973 during congressional hearings on administration involvement in the 1972 Watergate burglary. Segments of tape obtained by Congress provided a major basis for the impeachment proceedings that led to Nixon’s later resignation. T H E P R E S I D E N T I A L R E C O R D I N G S P RO J E C T xiii The Watergate hearings brought an end to secret taping. Afterward, it became unlawful to record conversations without knowledge and consent. As the ruins of Pompeii reveal details of Greco-Roman life only up to August of 79 A.D., when lava from Vesuvius buried the city, so secret recordings reveal the inner workings of the U.S. presidency only from 1940—and especially 1962—down to mid-1973. On the premise that these recordings will remain important historical sources for centuries to come, the University of Virginia’s Miller Center of Public Affairs plans to produce transcripts and aids for using all accessible recordings for all six presidencies. We started with the methods and style we used in 1996–97 to produce a then-unprecedented volume of its kind, The Kennedy Tapes: Inside the White House during the Cuban Missile Crisis (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997). Though that volume improved on the then-available transcripts of a few Kennedy administration meetings, we kept trying to find ways to make the transcripts still better. This was a process of trial and error. Our initial hope was that professional transcribers, like court reporters, could do much of the primary transcription. That did not work out well. For those untrained in the history of the period, transcribing presidential tapes can be a bit like assembling a jigsaw puzzle without being able to see the picture on the puzzle box, and this is especially true when the audio quality is bad. Tapes of telephone conversations tend to be much easier, both because the speakers are using a machine that was linked to the original recording system (usually a Dictaphone in this case) and because there are generally only two participants in the telephone conversation. Recordings of meetings are much harder to transcribe. Most Kennedy recordings are of meetings; most Johnson recordings (and all those publicly released so far) are of telephone conversations. Originally short of funds and audio expertise, we initially worked almost entirely with ordinary cassette copies of the tapes. We later began relying on more expensive Digital Audio Tape (DAT) technology. We tried out other technical fixes, starting in 1996 with a standard noise reduction technique (called NONOISE in the trade). The results were disappointing. We have since tried out other, much more sophisticated techniques suggested by some sound studios. Though we have learned these techniques can sometimes be vital for especially murky material suffering from unusual interference, there is an offsetting risk of additional distortion and loss of data, including the subtle changes in tone that can affect accurate speaker identification. Two of our scholars, Timothy Naftali and George Eliades, were especially critical experimenters in this learning process. The same two scholars helped the growing team stumble on a more xiv T H E P R E S I D E N T I A L R E C O R D I N G S P RO J E C T useful bit of hardware. Looking for a way for two scholars to listen simultaneously to the same DAT copies, Eliades suggested use of a multiple outlet headphone amplifier (Rane’s Mojo amplifier). Eliades and Naftali also discovered that this hardware dramatically improved our ability to boost the audio signal from the tapes. We are continuing to tinker with the hardware, including more use of CD-ROM technology. We welcome suggestions for further improvement. The most fundamental improvements in transcription so far, though, have not come from machines. They came from people. Introduction of a team method for reviewing transcripts, an innovation developed and managed mainly by Naftali, has helped reduce the most intractable source of error—the cognitive expectations and limitations of an individual listener. For instance, when you expect to hear a word in an ambiguous bit of sound, you often hear it. Even without particular expectations, different listeners hear different things. So we have utilized a special kind of “peer review” in this new realm of basic historical research. The talents required from our scholars are demanding. They must be excellent historians, knowledgeable about the events and people of the period. They must also have a particular temperament. Anthropologists and archaeologists used to taking infinite pains at a dig, teaspoon or toothbrush in hand, might call this a talent for “field work.” So we are especially grateful to the historians, listed on the title page of the volumes, who have displayed the knowledge, the patience, and the discipline this work requires, rewarded by a constant sense of discovery. In consultation with our editorial advisory board and our scholars, we developed a number of methodological principles for the Miller Center’s work. Among the most important are: First, the work is done by trained professional historians who have done deep research on the period covered by the tapes and on some of the central themes of the meetings and conversations. They are listed on the title page as associate and volume editors. The historians not only delve into documentary sources but sometimes interview living participants who can help us comprehend the taped discussions. Our voice identifications are based on sample clips we have compiled and on our research. On occasion our list of participants in a meeting differs from the log of President Kennedy’s secretary, Evelyn Lincoln. We list only the names of participants whose voices we can identify. Our research has also turned up a few minor cataloguing errors made at the time or later. Second, each volume uses the team method. Since few people always speak in complete grammatical sentences, the transcriber has to infer and create paragraphs, commas, semicolons, periods, and such. Usually T H E P R E S I D E N T I A L R E C O R D I N G S P RO J E C T xv one or two scholars painstakingly produce a primary draft, including the introductory scene setters and explanatory annotations. Two or more scholars then carefully go over that transcript, individually or sometimes two listening at the same time, with their suggestions usually going back to the primary transcriber. In the case of often-difficult meeting tapes, like the Kennedy recordings, every transcript has benefited from at least four listeners. The volume editors remain accountable for checking the quality and accuracy of all the work in their volume, knitting together the whole. All of this work is then reviewed by the general editors, with the regular advice of members of the project’s editorial advisory board. Third, we use the best technology that the project can afford. As of 2001, we work from DAT copies of the recordings (not the less expensive analog cassettes ordinarily sold to the public by presidential libraries). Our transcribers are now moving toward transferring this digital data onto CD-ROMs. Each transcriber at least uses a professional quality DAT machine and AKG K240 headphones with the signal boosted by a headphone amplifier. Each listens to a DAT copy of the library master, checking with a DAT from which sound engineers have attempted to remove extraneous background noise. Fourth, we aim at completeness. Over time, others using the transcripts and listening to the tapes may be able to fill in passages marked [unclear]. Although the Miller Center volumes are intended to be authoritative reference works, they will always be subject to minor amendments. Editors of these volumes will endeavor to issue periodic updates. We use ellipses in our transcripts in order to indicate that the speaker paused or trailed off, not to indicate that material has been omitted. Fifth, we strive to make the transcripts accessible to and readable by anyone interested in history, including students. As the U.S. government’s National Archives has pointed out, the actual records are the tapes themselves and all transcripts are subjective interpretations. For instance, our team omits verbal debris such as the “uh”s that dot almost anyone’s speech. Listeners unconsciously filter out such debris as they understand what someone is saying. Judgments must be made. Someone says, for example, “sixteen . . . uh, sixty. . . . ” The transcriber has to decide whether the slip was significant or not. But the judgment calls are usually no more difficult than those involved in deciding where to insert punctuation or paragraphing. In the effort to be exhaustive, sometimes there is a temptation to overtranscribe, catching every fragmentary utterance, however unclear or peripheral. But the result on the page can add too much intrusive static, making the substance less understandable xvi T H E P R E S I D E N T I A L R E C O R D I N G S P RO J E C T now than it was to listeners at the time. Obviously, what to include and omit, balancing coherence and comprehension against the completeness of the record, also requires subjective judgment. The object is to give the reader or user the truest possible sense of the actual dialogue as the participants themselves could have understood it (had they been paying attention). Sixth, we go one step further by including in each volume explanations and annotations intended to enable readers or users to understand the background and circumstances of a particular conversation or meeting. With rare exceptions, we do not add information that participants would not have known. Nor do we comment often on the significance of items of information, except as it might have been recognized by the participants. As with other great historical sources, interpretations will have to accumulate over future decades and centuries. Preface to John F. Kennedy: The Great Crises, Volumes 1–3 BY PHILIP ZELIKOW AND ERNEST MAY T hese three volumes in the Miller Center Presidential Recordings series cover the three months after Kennedy first began to taperecord meetings. Before and after becoming president, Kennedy had made use of a recording device called a Dictaphone, mostly for dictating letters or notes. In the summer of 1962 he asked Secret Service Agent Robert Bouck to conceal recording devices in the Cabinet Room, the Oval Office, and a study/library in the Mansion. Without explaining why, Bouck obtained Tandberg reel-to-reel tape recorders, high-quality machines for the period, from the U.S. Army Signal Corps. He placed two of these machines in the basement of the West Wing of the White House in a room reserved for storing private presidential files. He placed another in the basement of the Executive Mansion. The West Wing machines were connected by wire to two microphones in the Cabinet Room and two in the Oval Office. Those in the Cabinet Room were on the outside wall, placed in two spots covered by drapes where once there had been wall fixtures. They were activated by a switch at the President’s place at the Cabinet table, easily mistaken for a buzzer press. Of the microphones in the Oval Office, one was in the kneehole of the President’s desk, the other concealed in a coffee table across the room. Each could be turned on or off with a single push on an inconspicuous button. We do not know where the microphone in the study of the Mansion was located. In any case, Bouck, who had chief responsibility for the system, said in 1976, in an oral history interview, that President Kennedy “did almost no recording in the Mansion.” Of the machine in the basement of the Mansion, he said: “Except for one or two short recordings, I don’t think it was ever used.” So far, except possibly for one short recording included in these volumes, no tape from the Mansion machine has turned up. President Kennedy also had a Dictaphone hooked up to a telephone in the Oval Office and possibly also to a telephone in his bedroom. He xvii xviii P R E FA C E could activate it, and so could his private secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, who knew of the secret microphones, often made sure that they were turned off if the President had forgotten to do so, and took charge of finished reels of tape when they were brought to her by Bouck or Bouck’s assistant, Agent Chester Miller. Though Kennedy’s brother, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, and Robert Kennedy’s secretary, Angie Novello, certainly knew of the tapes and dictabelts by some point in 1963, it is not clear that they had this knowledge earlier. Anecdotes suggest that the President’s close aide and scheduler, Kenneth O’Donnell, might have known about the system and might have told another aide, Dave Powers, but the anecdotes are unsupported. Most White House insiders, including counsel Theodore Sorensen, who had been Kennedy’s closest aide in the Senate, were astonished when they learned later that their words had been secretly captured on tape. After Kennedy’s assassination, Evelyn Lincoln was quickly displaced by President Johnson’s secretaries. She arranged, however, for the Secret Service agents to pull out all the microphones, wires, and recorders and took the tapes and dictabelts to her newly assigned offices in the Executive Office Building, adjacent to the White House. Though Robert Kennedy had charge of these and all other records from the Kennedy White House, Lincoln retained physical custody. During Kennedy’s presidency, only a small number of conversations were transcribed. Though Lincoln attempted to make some other transcripts, she never had much time for doing so. George Dalton, a former Navy Petty Officer and general chore man for the Kennedy family, took on the job. “Dalton transcripts” have not been released, but everyone who has seen them uses terms like fragmentary, terrible to unreliable, awful, or garbage. The tapes and dictabelts migrated with President Kennedy’s papers. First they moved to the main National Archives building in downtown Washington, D.C. Herman Kahn (an archivist, not the strategic analyst) was responsible for them within the National Archives system; Robert Kennedy was the custodian for materials belonging to the family, including all the tapes. Robert Kennedy disclosed the existence of the tapes in 1965 to Burke Marshall, a legal scholar and former Justice Department colleague. Lincoln and Dalton were looking after the materials, and Dalton was attempting some transcripts. The papers and the tapes then were moved to a federal records depository in Waltham, Massachusetts. In the summer and fall of 1967, when Robert Kennedy drafted his famous memoir of the Cuban missile crisis, Thirteen Days, he used what- P R E FA C E xix ever transcripts existed and almost certainly listened to tapes. Passages in the book which refer to “diaries” seem nearly all to be based on the secret recordings.1 After Robert Kennedy was assassinated in 1968, custody of President Kennedy’s private papers became the primary responsibility of Senator Edward Kennedy (Burke Marshall represented Jacqueline Kennedy’s interests). Dalton was employed by Senator Kennedy, and either some tapes or some of Dalton’s transcripts or both may have been moved into Senator Kennedy’s own files. Despite occasional rumors, none of the custodians publicly acknowledged that the tapes existed. When Nixon’s taping system was revealed in 1973 and Congress was seeking access to those tapes, Senator Kennedy was a member of the inquiring Judiciary Committee. With rumors by then rife, he and the family quickly confirmed that President Kennedy had, indeed, also secretly taped meetings and conversations in the White House. They publicly promised to turn the tapes over to the National Archives. During the next two years they negotiated a deed of gift that put in the hands of archivists at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston, Massachusetts, all tapes except those dealing with private family affairs. According to Richard Burke, a longtime member of Senator Kennedy’s staff, Dalton was instructed by the late Steven Smith, Senator Kennedy’s brother-in-law, to remove sensitive documents from the Kennedy papers and to cull the tapes in order to protect the family’s reputation. Burke also claims that he read transcripts by Dalton from Oval Office dictabelts of conversations with Marilyn Monroe and Judith Exner and that Dalton had erased potentially embarrassing passages.2 But Burke is an undependable source. A book he wrote about his years with the senator is full not only of errors but of outright inventions. Yet there are others, including at least one Kennedy Library archivist who received the tapes, who suspected that between 1973 and 1975, Dalton — possibly assisted by Kennedy aide Dave Powers and retired archivist and Kennedy family employee Frank Harrington —looked at the tapes to see what should be removed without leaving any record or documentation 1. See Timothy Naftali, “The Origins of ‘Thirteen Days,’”Miller Center Report 15, no. 2 (summer 1999): 23–24. 2. Philip Bennett, “Mystery Surrounds Role of JFK Tapes Transcriber,” Boston Globe, 31 March 1993, p. 1; Seymour M. Hersh, The Dark Side of Camelot (Boston: Little, Brown, 1997), pp. 454–55. xx P R E FA C E of their work. Dalton has refused to discuss what he did. Senator Kennedy’s then–chief of staff, when interviewed in 1993 by the Boston Globe reporter Philip Bennett, denied that Dalton had worked on the tapes at the direction of Senator Kennedy, but Burke Marshall told Philip Zelikow in February 2000 that he thought Dalton had been working on the tapes for the Senator, at least in general. In 1975, tapes recording about 248 hours of meetings and 12 hours of telephone conversations became part of the President’s Office Files at the library. While a treasure trove for history, this handover did not include all the recordings that President Kennedy had made, nor were all the recordings complete. Fortunately perhaps, the Secret Service agents had originally numbered and catalogued the reels of meeting tapes in a simple way, so removals and anomalies are easily noticed. There are a few. Three tapes were received by the library with reels containing “separate tape segments.” It is possible that they had been cut and spliced, for two of these tapes, including the one made on August 22, 1962, concerned intelligence issues and may have involved discussion of covert efforts to assassinate Castro. The Kennedy Library archivist Alan Goodrich says, however, that the “separate tape segments” may exist simply because the Secret Service agents were winding some partial reels of tape together to fill out the reels of blank tape being fed into the machine. Another tape from August 1962 is simply blank. Several more numbered tape boxes, for tapes made in June 1963, had no tapes inside, though the library has “Dalton transcripts” for at least four of these missing tapes. The fact that still other tapes received by the library had been miswound suggests at least that they had been clumsily handled. Since the library has not yet issued its own forensic reports about the “separate tape fragments” or blank tape or made the original tape reels available for outside examination or released the existing “Dalton transcripts” for missing tapes, we cannot draw conclusive judgments about just what happened. The dictabelt recordings never had any order. Lincoln seems to have filed them randomly. Some seem to have been partially overwritten. The Kennedy Library’s numbers merely distinguish one item from another. They provide no guidance to chronological sequence or content. As with the meeting tapes, the Kennedy Library has attempted to date and identify the tapes, and the editors of these volumes have confirmed and, in various cases, amended this information as a result of further research. A number of dictabelts were taken by Lincoln without authorization for a private collection of Kennedy memorabilia. Some of these went to the P R E FA C E xxi Kennedy Library after her death in 1995; others turned up in the hands of a collector who had befriended her. In 1998 the Kennedy Library was able to recover these dictabelts too, but there is no way of knowing whether there were others and, if so, what their fate was. Once in the jurisdiction of the Archivist of the United States, the recordings were handled with thoroughgoing professionalism. The library remastered the tapes on a Magnecord 1022 for preservation. The dictabelts were copied onto new masters. All copies of the tapes, including those used for these books, derive from these new preservation masters. Some minor anomalies were introduced as a result of the remastering. Listeners will occasionally hear a tape stop and the recording start up, replaying a sentence or two. That is an artifact of the remastering process, not the original White House taping. The original tapes were also recorded at relatively high density (1 78 inches per second). The remastered tapes necessarily have different running speeds that produce subtle audio distortion. The new masters, for example, seem to have people talking slightly faster than they did at the time. The library was initially at a loss as to how to make tapes available to the public. Many contain material still covered by security classification. Because of the poor sound quality of most of the tapes, it was not easy to identify sensitive passages. The library initially attempted to prepare its own transcripts and submit these for classification review. But the task was hard, the library staff was small, and funds were meager. Moreover, some archivists believed as a matter of principle that the library should not give official standing to transcripts that might contain transcribers’ errors. In the view of the National Archives and Records Administration, only the tapes themselves are archival records. All transcripts are works of subjective interpretation. The effort at transcription came to an end in 1983, and almost all the tapes remained under lock and key. In 1993 the library acquired new equipment and began putting the recordings onto Digital Audio Tape (DAT). These could be reviewed in Washington and digitally marked without transcripts. Changes in procedures, along with determined efforts by two archivists, Stephanie Fawcett and Mary Kennefick, accelerated the pace of declassification. Between 1996 and 2000 about half of the recordings in the Kennedy Library became available for public release; the rest await declassification review. While the Kennedy Library has been careful to make no deletions or erasures from tapes and dictabelts in its possession, the copies publicly released, and used for these volumes, do have carefully annotated excisions of passages still security classified. These passages were excised xxii P R E FA C E digitally, not literally, and remain intact on the library’s preservation masters. It is to be hoped that future, more tolerant declassification reviews may someday release some of the material that currently is excised. But even for the sanitized tapes, the library issues no transcripts. Our work on these tapes commenced in 1995. We obtained analog cassettes of tapes relating to the 1962 Cuban missile crisis as soon as they were released. Painstakingly, we listened to and transcribed those tapes. Each of us spent many hours listening to each hour of tape. Even so, our transcripts contained large numbers of notations for words or passages that were unclear or speakers that could not be identified. The resultant transcripts were published by Harvard University Press in 1997 as The Kennedy Tapes: Inside the White House during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Because of support from the Governing Council of the University of Virginia’s Miller Center of Public Affairs, and W. W. Norton, the transcripts of meetings on the missile crisis in volumes 2 and 3 of this series are more complete and accurate than were our original products. We were able to decipher in those tapes large numbers of words and passages previously incomprehensible and to identify speakers with greater certainty. We were also able to draw on the assistance of other historians employed in the Miller Center’s Presidential Recordings Project, employing and benefiting from the team method we describe in our general preface on the project. Some questions nevertheless linger because of uncertainties, already described, concerning the completeness and integrity of the tapes now available. Why were they made? Did Kennedy use the on/off switch with a view to controlling, even distorting the historical record? Did others, after his murder, tamper with the tapes in order artificially to shape the record of events? In view of the possibility that a small fraction of the meeting tapes were removed or mangled after the fact, can they really be regarded as better sources than self-serving memoirs or oral histories? To the extent that they are valid, undoctored records of conversations and meetings, do they tell us much that could not be learned from other sources? Our judgment is that any tampering with the tapes was so crude and ham handed that it extended only to removals. The extent of such removals may have been constrained by the original Secret Service cataloguing system. Since missing tapes would be noticed, too many missing tapes might cause an outcry and lead to unwelcome inquiries. So the removals of meeting tapes, if that is the explanation for the anomalies, were relatively limited. The situation of the dictabelts is different. Since they were not catalogued at the time they were made, we cannot know how many—if any—are missing. P R E FA C E xxiii The most plausible explanation for Kennedy’s making secret tape recordings is that he wanted material to be used later in writing a memoir. Since he seems neither to have had transcripts made (with two minor exceptions in 1963) nor to have listened to any of the tapes, it is unlikely that he wanted them for current business. He had himself written histories and was by most accounts prone to asking historians’ questions: How did this situation develop? What had previous administrations done? He knew how hard it was to answer such questions from surviving documentary records. And he faced the apparent likelihood that, even if reelected in 1964, he would be an out-of-work ex-president when not quite 51 years old. Did Kennedy tape just to have material putting himself in a favorable light? On some occasions, he must have refrained from pushing an “on” button because he wanted no record of a meeting or conversation. Especially on early tapes, there are pauses at moments when the President was speaking of tactics for dealing with legislative leaders. Almost certainly, he made recordings only when he thought the occasions important. As a result, the tapes record relatively little humdrum White House business such as meetings with citizen delegations or conferences with congressmen and others about patronage. Those who have spent much time with the tapes and those who have compared the tapes to their own experience working with Kennedy find no evidence that he taped only self-flattering moments. He often made statements or discussed ideas that would have greatly damaged him had they become public. Early in the missile crisis, for example, he mused about his own possible responsibility for having brought it on. “Last month I said we weren’t going to [allow it],” he said. “Last month I should have said that we don’t care.” He never seemed to make speeches during a meeting for the benefit of future listeners. His occasional taped monologues were private dictation about something that had happened or what he was thinking, obviously for his own later reference. Two other points apply. First, he had no reason to suppose that the tapes would ever be heard by anyone other than himself unless he chose to make them available. They were completely secret. Second, he could hardly have known just what statements or positions would look good to posterity, for neither he nor his colleagues could know how the stories would turn out. The tapes of missile crisis debates establish far more clearly than any other records the reasons why Kennedy thought Soviet missiles in Cuba so dangerous and important. They make abundantly clear that his preoccupation was not with Cuba or the immediate threat to the United xxiv P R E FA C E States. He feared that, if he did not insist on removal of the missiles, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev would be emboldened to try to take over West Berlin, in which case he—Kennedy—would have only two choices. He would either have to abandon the two and a half million West Berliners theretofore protected by the United States, or he would have to use nuclear weapons against the Soviet Union, for there was no imaginable way of defending West Berlin with conventional military forces. The Soviet missiles in Cuba would then be a “knife in our guts” constraining the U.S. nuclear threats to save Berlin. The tapes also explain as do no other sources Kennedy’s approach to the Mississippi civil rights crisis. They show him worrying about international economics, specifically the drain on U.S. gold reserves, to such an extent that he questions whether the United States can or should continue to keep troops in Europe. The tapes in some instances disclose facts still hidden by walls of security classification, as, for example, that the Kennedy administration had plans to create an illegal CIA unit to investigate U.S. journalists and officials. But the greatest value of these recordings does not reside in specific revelations. It comes, as is said in the general preface to the project, from giving a listener or reader unique insight into the presidency and presidential decision making. We are proud to be able to put this extraordinary source into the hands of students of history and politics. Editors’ Acknowledgments These initial volumes of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Recordings Series represent the work of a team of dedicated people. Besides the scholars listed on the title page, the editors are grateful to Lorraine Settimo, the executive assistant of the Miller Center’s Presidential Recordings Project, and to Andrew P. N. Erdmann, the scholar who assisted with the Eisenhower conversations. At the John F. Kennedy Library, Jim Cedrone, Alan Goodrich, William Johnson, and Mary Kennefick were especially helpful. And at the National Archives, Nancy Keegan Smith was of special assistance. Lastly, we are deeply grateful to our editors at Norton, Drake McFeely and Sarah Stewart, who exhibit such a rare combination of qualities: attention to detail, patience, and vision. Areas of Specialization for Research Scholars RESEARCH SCHOLARS David Coleman Cuba, Nuclear Test Ban George Eliades Vietnam, Laos, Nuclear Test Ban Francis Gavin Berlin Crisis, International Monetary Policy Max Holland Domestic Politics Jill Colley Kastner U. S.-German Relations Erin Mahan Berlin Crisis, U.S.-European Relations, Congo, Middle East, United Nations, China Timothy Naftali U.S.-Soviet Relations, Cuba, General Latin America, Intelligence Policy, Nuclear Test Ban Paul Pitman U.S.-European Relations Jonathan Rosenberg Civil Rights David Shreve Congressional Relations, Tax and Budgetary Policy, International Monetary Policy CD-ROM DEVELOPER AND MULTIMEDIA COORDINATOR Kristin Gavin RESEARCH ASSISTANTS Brett Avery Bush W. Taylor Fain Laura Moranchek A Note on Sources In addition to the various memoirs and other writings cited as sources in our footnotes, we have relied upon the relevant archival holdings for the White House and the various agencies of the U.S. government, held mainly in the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston and the National Archives, Washington, D.C. We have also relied on the less formal holdings of that useful private institute, the National Security Archive, Washington, D.C. Each footnote appearing for the first time in a chapter is fully cited on first reference. The one exception made was for the many footnotes citing the U.S. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States 1961–63 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office). Footnotes that include references to Foreign Relations of the United States are abbreviated as FRUS and include the volume number and page numbers. For FRUS references other than those from 1961 to 1963, the appropriate years are included. Meeting Participants and Other Frequently Mentioned Persons T he following is a concise guide to individuals who participated in taped conversations. We have supplemented these brief descriptions, when possible, with the thumbnail sketches made by former presidential special consultant Richard E. Neustadt in his book Report to JFK: the Skybolt Crisis in Perspective (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1999). Neustadt met the people he has written about. We feel that his vivid brush strokes add some additional color that we, at this distant remove, do not feel qualified to provide. We also include figures mentioned frequently in the conversations, such as foreign heads of government, who were not present at the meetings. Abrams, Creighton W., Colonel, U.S. Army; Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff and Director of Operations, Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, 1962–1963 Ackley, H. Gardner, Member, Council of Economic Advisers, 1962–1968 (Chairman, 1964–1968) Adenauer, Konrad, Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany, 1949–1963 Alexander, Henry, Chairman, Morgan Guaranty Trust in 1962 Allen, Ward P., Director, Office of Inter-American Regional Political Affairs, Department of State Anderson, George W., Admiral, U.S. Navy; U.S. Chief of Naval Operations, 1961–1963 Ausland, John C., State Department Representative to the Berlin Task Force, 1961–1964 Ball, George W., Under Secretary of State, 1961–1966 A Washington lawyer with an international practice, wartime associate of Jean Monnet (the advocate of European Union), adviser to Adlai Stevenson in 1952, ’56 and ’60, Ball had come into the Kennedy Administration as xxxi xxxii M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S Under Secretary for Economic Affairs; his focused energy, intelligence, and application already had won him a promotion. Barbour, Walworth, U.S. Ambassador to Israel, 1961–1973 Barnett, Ross R., Democratic Governor of Mississippi, 1960–1964 Bell, David E., Director of the Budget, 1961–1962; Director, U.S. Agency for International Development after December 1962 An economist, former Secretary of Harvard’s Graduate School of Public Administration, as it then was, and before that Administrative Assistant to President Truman, Bell was personable, thoughtful, analytic, and experienced. Billings, LeMoyne, Personal friend of President Kennedy; a roommate of the young JFK at Choate and, briefly, Princeton Blough, Roger, Chairman, U.S. Steel Corporation, 1955–1969 Boeschenstein, Harold, Senior Executive, Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corporation in 1962 Boggs, Thomas Hale, U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Louisiana, 1941–1943, 1947–1972; House Majority Whip, 1961–1971 Bohlen, Charles E., Special Adviser to the President, 1961–1962; U.S. Ambassador to France, October 1962–1968 One of the two top Russian specialists in the State Department, recently appointed Ambassador to France. More a thoroughly skilled operator than a deep analyst, Bohlen was bored in Paris, feeling out of things. Bundy, McGeorge, Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, 1961–1966 Formerly Dean of Arts and Sciences at Harvard at a young age, co-author of Henry Stimson’s memoirs, “Mac” was bright, quick, confident, determined, striving to be the perfect staff man, juggling many balls at once. Bundy, William P., Deputy Assistant of Defense for International Security Affairs, 1961–1963 Carter, Marshall S., Lieutenant General, U.S. Army; Deputy Director of Central Intelligence, 1962–1965 Castro Ruz, Fidel, Premier of Cuba, 1959– Celebrezze, Anthony J., Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1962–1965 Charyk, Joseph V., Under Secretary of the Air Force, 1960–1963 Clark, Ramsey, Assistant Attorney General of the United States, 1961–1965 Clay, Lucius D., President’s Special Representative in Berlin, 1961–1962; Special Consultant to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1962–1963 Cleveland, J. Harlan, Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs, 1961–1965 Clifford, Clark, Personal Attorney to the President; Member, President’s M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S xxxiii Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board from 1961 (Chairman from May 1963) Cline, Ray S., Deputy Director for Intelligence, Central Intelligence Agency, 1962–1966 Cox, Archibald, Solicitor General of the United States, 1961–1965 Day, J. Edward, Postmaster General of the United States, 1961–1963 Dean, Arthur H., Chairman, U.S. delegation, Conference on the Discontinuance of Nuclear Weapons Tests, Geneva, 1961–1962; Chairman, U.S. delegation, Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee, Geneva, 1962 de Gaulle, Charles, President of France, 1958–1969 Dennison, Robert S., Admiral, U.S. Navy; Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Atlantic Fleet and Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic, 1960–1963 Dillon, C. Douglas, Secretary of the Treasury, 1961–1965 Dillon was engagingly direct, practical, experienced, disinclined to reach beyond his own (broad) departmental boundaries, except on Kennedy’s invitation. Dirksen, Everett M., U.S. Senator, Republican, from Illinois, 1950–1969; Senate Minority Leader, 1959–1969 Dobrynin, Anatoly, Soviet Ambassador to the United States, 1962–1985 Dowling, Walter C., U.S. Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Germany, 1959–1963 Duncan, John P., Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, 1961–1963 Duvalier, François, President of Haiti, 1957–1971 Eastland, James O., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Mississippi, 1943–1978 Eisenhower, Dwight D., 34th President of the United States, 1953–1961 Feldman, Myer, Deputy Special Counsel to the President, 1961–1964 Fisher, Adrian, Deputy Director, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1961–1969 FitzGerald, Desmond, Chief, Far Eastern Division, Deputy Directorate for Plans, Central Intelligence Agency, 1958–1963 Forrestal, Michael V., Senior Staff Member, National Security Council, 1962–1965 Foster, William, Director, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1961–1969 Fowler, Henry H., Under Secretary of the Treasury, 1961–1964 Fowler, James R., Deputy Administrator, Far East, U.S. Agency for International Development Freeman, Orville L., Secretary of Agriculture, 1961–1969 Fulbright, J. William, U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Arkansas, 1945–1974; Chairman, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 1959–1974 Gilpatric, Roswell L., Deputy Secretary of Defense, 1961–1964 Wall Street lawyer, skilled, sophisticated, broad-gauged, loyal to McNamara. xxxiv M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S Goldberg, Arthur J., Secretary of Labor, 1961–1962; Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court, 1962–1965 Goodwin, Richard N., Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for InterAmerican Affairs, 1961–1963 Gordon, A. Lincoln, U.S. Ambassador to Brazil, 1961–1966 Gordon, Kermit, Member, Council of Economic Advisers, 1961–1962; Director, Bureau of the Budget after December 1962 Gore, Albert, Sr., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Tennessee, 1959–1971 Goulart, João, President of Brazil,1961–1964 Graham, William Franklin (Billy), Baptist minister and evangelist Graybeal, Sydney N., Division Chief, Foreign Missile and Space Activities, Central Intelligence Agency, 1950–1964 Greenewalt, Crawford H., Chairman, E. I. DuPont de Nemours and Company, 1962–1967 Gromyko, Andrei A., Soviet Foreign Minister, 1957–1985 Halaby, Najeeb E., Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration, 1961–1965 Halleck, Charles A., U.S. Representative, Republican, from Indiana, 1935–1969; House Minority Leader, 1959–1965 Harriman, W. Averell, Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern and Pacific Affairs, 1961–1963 Hart, Philip A., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Michigan, 1959–1976 Haworth, Leland, Member, Atomic Energy Commission from 1961 Heller, Walter W., Chairman, Council of Economic Advisers, 1961–1964 Helms, Richard M., Deputy Director for Plans, Central Intelligence Agency, 1962–1965 Hickenlooper, Bourke B., U.S. Senator, Republican, from Iowa, 1945–1969; Chairman, Republican Policy Committee, 1961–1969 Hillenbrand, Martin J., Director, Berlin Task Force and the Office of German Affairs, Bureau of European Affairs, Department of State, 1961–1963 Hilsman, Roger, Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research, 1961–1963 Hodges, Luther H., Secretary of Commerce, 1961–1965 Hoover, Herbert H., 31st President of the United States, 1929–1933 Humphrey, Hubert H., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Minnesota, 1948–1964; Senate Majority Whip, 1961–1964 Johnson, Lyndon B., Vice President of the United States, 1961–1963 Johnson, U. Alexis, Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, 1961–1964 M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S xxxv A senior career Foreign Service officer, most recently Ambassador to Thailand; successful in the Service in all senses of the phrase. Katzenbach, Nicholas deB., Deputy Attorney General of the United States, 1962–1966 Kaysen, Carl, Deputy Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, 1961–1963 A professor of economics on leave from Harvard, Kaysen worked up expertise in defense policy and weaponry, among other things; brilliant, subtle, confident, analytic but also a looker-around-corners. Keeny, Spurgeon, Deputy Special Assistant to the President for Science and Technology A physicist with training in international relations, associated from the start with the President’s Science Adviser’s Office, Keeny was personable, sophisticated, discreet, and a great gatherer of bureaucratic intelligence. Kennedy, John F., 35th President of the United States, 1961–1963 Kennedy, Robert F., Attorney General of the United States, 1961–1964 Keogh, Eugene J., U.S. Representative, Democrat, from New York, 1937–1967 Khrushchev, Nikita S., First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party and Soviet Premier, 1953–1964 Killian, James R., Special Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, 1957–1959 King, J. C., Chief, Western Hemisphere Division, Directorate of Plans, Central Intelligence Agency Kirkpatrick, Lyman B., Jr., Executive Director, Central Intelligence Agency, 1962–1965 Kirwan, Michael, U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Ohio, 1937–1970; Chairman, Subcommittee on Interior and Related Agencies, House Appropriations Committee in 1962; Chairman, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Kohler, Foy, Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs, 1959–September 1962; U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union, September 1962–1966 Kreer, Robert G., Director of the Diplomatic Communication Services, Department of State Kuchel, Thomas H., U.S. Senator, Republican, from California, 1953–1969; Senate Minority Whip, 1959–1969 Land, Edwin, physicist and inventor; member, President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board in 1962 Leddy, John M., Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of State until xxxvi M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S April 1961; Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, April 1961–June 1962; U.S. Representative to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development after October 1962 LeMay, Curtis E., General, U.S. Air Force; U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff, 1961–1965 Lemnitzer, Lyman, General, U.S. Army; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1960–1962; Commander in Chief, U.S. European Command, 1962–1969 Lincoln, Evelyn, Personal Secretary to President Kennedy, 1952–1963 Loeb, James, U.S. Ambassador to Peru, 1961–1962 Long, Franklin, Assistant Director for Science and Technology, U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, 1962–1963 Lovett, Robert A., Special Counselor to the President, 1961–1963; member, Executive Committee of the National Security Council, October 1962 Lundahl, Arthur C., Assistant Director of Photographic Interpretation, Central Intelligence Agency, from 1953 MacArthur, Douglas, General of the Army, 1944–1964 McDonald, David, President, United Steel Workers of America, 1952–1965 MacDonald, Torbert, U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Massachusetts, 1955–1976 Macmillan, M. Harold, Prime Minister of Great Britain, 1957–1963 A one-nation Tory in Parliament from the 1930s, close to Eisenhower since North Africa in the ’40s, complex, shrewd, detached and tough behind a bland, Edwardian exterior. Macmillan’s private humor and wry outlook on life endeared him to Kennedy, despite their age difference. Mansfield, Michael J., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Montana; Senate Majority Leader, 1961–1977 Marshall, Burke, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, 1961–1965 Martin, Edwin M., Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, 1962–1964 Martin, William McChesney, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 1951–1970 McCloy, John J., Special Adviser to the President on Disarmament Matters, 1961–1963 McCone, John A., Director of Central Intelligence, 1961–1965 McCormack, John, U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Massachusetts, 1928–1971; Speaker of the House of Representatives, 1961–1971 McNamara, Robert S., Secretary of Defense, 1961–1968 Recruited from the presidency of the Ford Motor Company, a driving, man- M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S xxxvii aging, no-nonsense—and also no-pomposity—rationalist; his adherence to reason and duty was so passionate as to hint at emotion hidden beneath. Meany, George, President of the AFL-CIO, 1955–1979 Meredith, James H., First African American student admitted to the University of Mississippi, 1962–1963 Mills, Wilbur D., U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Arkansas, 1939–1976; Chairman, House Ways and Means Committee, 1957–1976 Morgan, Thomas E., U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Pennsylvania, 1945–1977; Chairman, House Foreign Affairs Committee in 1962; member, Joint Committee on Atomic Energy in 1962 Moscoso, Teodoro, Assistant Administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development; U.S. Coordinator for the Alliance for Progress Murrow, Edward R., Director, U.S. Information Agency, 1961–1964 Nasser, Gamal Abdul, Prime Minister of Egypt, 1954–1956; President of Egypt, 1956–1958; President of the United Arab Republic, 1958–1970 Nitze, Paul H., Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs, 1961–1963 Experienced in defense and diplomacy since 1940, sophisticated, competent, cool, public cold warrior and private philanthropist, Nitze had all the skills and some of the limitations of the driving young banker he had once been. Norstad, Lauris, General, U.S. Air Force; NATO Supreme Allied Commander, Europe, 1956–1963 O’Brien, Lawrence F., Special Assistant to the President for Congressional Affairs, 1961–1963 O’Donnell, Kenneth, Special Assistant to the President, 1961–1963 Okun, Arthur, Staff Economist, Council of Economic Advisers, 1961–1964 Ormsby-Gore, Sir David, British Ambassador to the United States, 1961–1965 Former Tory MP, intelligent, sensitive, quick on the uptake and well connected: related both to Macmillan’s wife and to Kennedy’s late lamented brother-in-law, the Marquis of Hartington, killed in World War II. Pérez Godoy, General Ricardo Pío, leader of Peruvian military coup of July 1962; leader of the military junta, 1962–1963 Pittman, Steuart, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Civil Defense, 1961–1964 Prado y Ugarteche, Manuel, President of Peru, 1956–1962 Reuther, Walter, President of the United Auto Workers,1946–1970 Roosa, Robert V., Under Secretary of the Treasury for Monetary Affairs, 1961–1964 xxxviii M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S Rosenthal, Jacob, Executive Assistant to the U.S. Under Secretary of State, 1961–1966 Rostow, Walt W., Counselor of the Department of State and Chairman of the Policy Planning Council, 1961–1966 MIT economist, a driving enthusiast and conceptualizer with a tendency to listen to himself. Rusk, Dean, U.S. Secretary of State, 1961–1969 Experienced, thoughtful, conventional, perhaps essentially shy, temperamentally at odds with his presumed model and undoubted mentor, General Marshall, Rusk may never have felt at ease with JFK, to say nothing of articulate aides like Kaysen. Russell, Richard B., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Georgia, 1933–1971; Chairman, Senate Armed Services Committee Salinger, Pierre E. G., White House Press Secretary 1961–1964 Saltonstall, Leverett, U.S. Senator, Republican, from Massachusetts, 1945–1967; ranking minority member, Senate Armed Services Committee, in 1962 Samuelson, Paul A., Economist; member, Council of Economic Advisers, 1960–1968 Schaetzel, J. Robert, Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs, February 1961–March 1962; Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of State, March 1962–September 1962; Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs after September 1962 Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr., Special Assistant to the President, 1961–1964 Schroeder, Gerhard, Foreign Minister of the Federal Republic of Germany, 1961–1966 Schultze, Charles L., Assistant Director, Bureau of the Budget, 1961–1965 Seaborg, Glenn T., Chairman, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 1961–1971 Shoup, David M., General, U.S. Marine Corps; Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, 1960–1963 Sloan, Frank K., Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs in 1962 Smathers, George A., U.S. Senator, Democrat, from Florida, 1951–1969 Solow, Robert M., Member, Council of Economic Advisers, 1962–1968 Sorensen, Theodore C., Special Assistant to the President, 1961–1964 Sproul, Alan, President of the New York Reserve Bank, 1941–1956; Chairman, Task Force on the International Balance of Payments, November 1960–January 1961 Staats, Elmer B., Deputy Director, U.S. Bureau of the Budget, 1958–1966 Stevenson, Adlai E., U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations, 1961–1964 M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S xxxix Strong, Robert C., Director, Office of Near East Affairs, Department of State, 1961–1963 Sullivan, William H., U.N. Adviser, Bureau of Far Eastern Affairs, Department of State until April 1963 Sweeney, Walter C., General, U.S. Air Force; Commanding General, Tactical Air Command, 1961–1965 Taber, John, U.S. Representative, Republican, from New York, 1923–1963; ranking minority member, House Appropriations Committee in 1962 Talbot, Phillips, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, 1961–1965 Taylor, Maxwell D., General, U.S. Army; Military Representative of the President, 1961–1962, Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1962–1964 [H]e had come out of retirement after a distinguished career to support JFK in 1960: one person at the Pentagon the President knew well enough to trust. Thant, U, Secretary-General of the United Nations, 1961–1971 Thompson, Llewellyn E., Jr., Ambassador-at-Large, U.S. Department of State, 1962–1966 Tobin, James, Member, Council of Economic Advisers, 1961–1962 Tretick, Stanley, Staff photographer for Look magazine in Washington, 1961–1971 Troutman, Robert, Member, President’s Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity, 1961–1962 Tshombe, Moise Kapenda, Leader of the secessionist Katanga Province, the Congo, 1960–1963 Turner, Robert C., Assistant Director, U.S. Bureau of the Budget, 1961–1962 Tyler, William R., Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs, September 1962–1965 Vance, Cyrus R., U.S. Secretary of the Army, 1962–1963 Vinson, Carl, U.S. Representative, Democrat, from Georgia, 1914–1966; Chairman, House Armed Services Committee, in 1962 Wagner, Aubrey, Chairman, Tennessee Valley Authority, 1962–1978 Webb, James E., Administrator, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1961–1968 Wehrley, Roy, Director, U.S. Agency for International Development mission in Vientiane, Laos Wheeler, Earle G., General, U.S. Army; Army Chief of Staff, 1962–1964 White, Lincoln, Spokesman, U. S. Department of State, 1961–1963 Wiesner, Jerome B., Special Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, 1961–1964 xl M E E T I N G PA RT I C I PA N T S Williams, G. Mennen, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, 1961–1966 Wilson, Donald M., Deputy Director, U.S. Information Agency, 1961–1965 Wirtz, W. Willard, Secretary of Labor, 1962–1969 Zorin, Valerian A., Soviet Representative to the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee, Geneva, 1962–1964 Zuckert, Eugene M., Secretary of the Air Force, 1961–1965 The P R E SIDE NT I AL R E CO R DING S J OHN F . K ENNEDY T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 3 Tuesday, September 4, 1962 The President’s Labor Day holiday in Newport, Rhode Island, ended abruptly. A U.S. spy plane had just accidentally strayed over Soviet territory in violation of international law and the President’s 1961 pledge to maintain a moratorium on reconnaissance flights in Soviet airspace. Briefed first thing that morning in Newport, Kennedy sent instructions for his chief Kremlin-watchers to meet him at the White House once he returned. The stray plane had spent only a few minutes in Soviet airspace, and fortunately Moscow’s response was a note and not a salvo of antiaircraft missiles. Nevertheless, with tensions high in U.S.-Soviet relations, President Kennedy wanted to minimize the effect of this incident. He wished to waste no time in responding to the Soviet protest. In Washington, the State Department was drafting that response for the President’s approval. Even before this news arrived from Russia, President Kennedy had planned to devote considerable time on this Tuesday to discussing the Cold War. The week before Labor Day, two Republican congressmen had launched a searing attack on Kennedy’s Cuba policy, suggesting that the Soviet military buildup in the Caribbean was designed to make a missile base out of Fidel Castro’s island. Senators Kenneth Keating and Bourke Hickenlooper were alleging that the Kennedy administration knew this and was hiding the truth about Soviet activities from the American people. Indeed the administration did know a little bit more about the situation in Cuba than it had announced publicly. On August 29, a CIA U-2 had flown over most of Cuba. The photographs from that flight had revealed eight Soviet surface-to-air missile sites on the western half of the island. These were not the nuclear missiles alleged by the Republican senators. Nonetheless, this was the first time Soviet missiles of any kind had been seen in Cuba. Kennedy had to be concerned that it was only a matter of time before this significant development would be leaked to his opponents. President Kennedy felt it was time to reassert control of the situation, to take the lead in informing the public of what his experts believed was happening in Cuba. Over the weekend the head of policy planning at the State Department, Walt Rostow, had chaired a team to draft a major press statement for the President. Even before Kennedy’s plane arrived at Andrews Air Force Base, word was already going out to the congres- 4 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 sional leadership to be prepared for an afternoon White House briefing on the Cuban situation.1 11:30 –11:50 A.M. [W]e don’t owe him the whole truth . . . Meeting on U-2 Incident2 Since the May 1960 shoot-down of a CIA U-2 spy plane piloted by Francis Gary Powers, use of the U-2 had become a problem for the United States in international politics. In the words of the CIA, there was “universal repugnance, or, at the very least, extreme uneasiness regarding overflights.”3 Hope for a short-term solution of the Berlin problem before Dwight D. Eisenhower left office crashed with Powers’s plane. In the United States, candidate John F. Kennedy had joined the chorus of disapproval of Eisenhower’s decision to send a U-2 over Soviet territory so close to a planned summit. As a result of the failure of the Powers mission, the White House would never again send a U-2 to fly over the Soviet bloc.4 Two years later at a moment of even greater international tension, President John Kennedy faced his own U-2 problem. A U.S. Air Force U2 had strayed into Soviet territory on Thursday, August 30, but Kennedy apparently only heard about it when the Soviet protest arrived early on September 4.5 In response, the President gathered his top aides from State and Defense to consider how to mollify the Soviets and to guard 1. Date Diary, 4 September 1962, Richard Russell Papers, Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies, University of Georgia, Athens. 2. Including President Kennedy, Charles Bohlen, McGeorge Bundy, Martin Hillenbrand, Robert Kennedy, Foy Kohler, Robert McNamara, and Dean Rusk. Tape 18, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 3. “U-2 Overflights of Cuba, 29 August through 14 October 1962,” 27 February 1963, in CIA Documents on the Cuban Missile Crisis 1962, ed. Mary McAuliffe (Washington, DC: CIA, 1992), document 45. 4. Gregory W. Pedlow and Donald E. Welzenbach, The CIA and the U-2 Program, 1954–1974 (Washington, DC: CIA, 1998), p. 197. 5. After 1958, the U.S. Air Force assumed the responsibility for U-2 reconnaissance flights along the Soviet periphery. This particular flight was under the control of the Strategic Air Command. Like the CIA, the U.S. Air Force was not permitted to send U-2s over Soviet territory after May 1960. Although a resumption of U-2 overflights of Soviet territory was consid- Meeting on U-2 Incident 5 against yet another U-2 incident. But the U.S. government still needed the intelligence that U-2s could provide. Although satellite reconnaissance was still in its infancy, the successful launch of the SAMOS satellite in the summer of 1961 had taken some but not all of the pressure off the U-2 for information on Soviet military developments. Evidently, the U-2 involved in the 30 August incident had meant to fly parallel to the Soviet borders to pick up electronic intelligence but had lost its way. Kennedy began taping as Dean Rusk gives his assessment of the situation. Dean Rusk: It’s very clear indeed that the Soviets have got us right on the hip on this one. President Kennedy: Right. Rusk: Therefore the [unclear] and— President Kennedy: [Unclear] which I [unclear]. I saw your wife the other day at the airport. Charles Bohlen: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: And I saw Avis’s sister, wasn’t that . . .?6 Avis’s sister was there right at the airport to welcome me, along with a few others. Bohlen: Evidently. President Kennedy: She said she was Avis’s sister and three boys, and two boys. Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: She must . . . she couldn’t have too much to do up there if she went to the airport [unclear]. [A chuckle.] Rusk: [Unclear] have you been briefed on what actually happened on this? President Kennedy: Yeah. I wonder how the pilot made the mistake? Rusk: Well . . . very heavy winds blowing to the west and they just blew him off course. It was at night. Obviously, it could not have been— there—a reconnaissance photographic plane of the sort that the U-2 over a Soviet— President Kennedy: Oh, it was at night. ered by the Kennedy administration during the 1961 Berlin crisis, no intentional overflights of Soviet territory took place in the Kennedy years (ibid., pp. 189–97, 201). 6. Charles Bohlen had two daughters, Avis and Celestine. Here the President is referring to Celestine Bohlen, who later became a foreign correspondent for the New York Times. 6 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rusk: It was at night. President Kennedy: Right. Rusk: But I think the key element here is the basis of candor between you and Mr. Khrushchev on a matter of this sort. Because if he develops all sorts of wide-ranging suspicions of your own credibility then all sorts of other tight things like Berlin, Cuba could be directly affected and, I think, in a very adverse way. So, I would suggest for your consideration that we send a note and make a short statement, consistent with it, saying that it was investigated immediately upon receipt of the Soviet note. The investigation revealed that an unintentional violation may, in fact, have taken place. “A weather reconnaissance and air-sampling aircraft operated by United States Air Forces in the Northern Pacific was in the area east of Sakhalin at about the time specified in the Soviet note.7 The pilot of the aircraft has reported that he was flying a directed course well outside Soviet territorial limits, but encountered severe winds during this nighttime flight and may therefore have unintentionally overflown the southern tip of Sakhalin. My government has instructed me,” this will be the note, “that the policy of the United States government with respect to overflights of Soviet territory has in no way been altered and remains as stated by the President on January 25, 1961. If the pilot of the aircraft in question did, in fact, violate Soviet territory this act was entirely unintentional and due solely to a navigational error under extremely difficult flying conditions.” Bohlen: May I make [unclear interjection] I think you ought to say, “expresses the regret of the United States government.” President Kennedy: The regret thing might bring it back . . . the whole business of ’60, where I said that we should have regretted and [former vice president Richard] Nixon always said I apologize[d].8 I’d just as soon . . . I tried—I’d rather use a phrase here— Rusk: Well, if you, see if the pil— President Kennedy: —that suggested . . . which would not put us back in the regretting business. Rusk: If the pilot of the aircraft in question did, in fact, violate 7. Sakhalin Island was divided between Japan and Russia until 1945, when the Soviets occupied the southern half of this long island. 8. Kennedy is referring to the politics surrounding the Soviet shoot-down of Gary Powers’s U-2 in May 1960. The Eisenhower administration’s handling of the crisis became an issue in that year’s presidential election. Meeting on U-2 Incident 7 [Soviet] territory . . . You see it’s, leave that open. He may have, you see. But [if he] did in fact violate, this act was entirely unintentional and due solely to a navigational error under extremely difficult flying conditions. That’s enough of a regret, I should think, at this point. Martin Hillenbrand: Sir, may I bring up one point that I think— President Kennedy: Yeah. Hillenbrand: —is important to your credibility problem? Thirty-four seconds excised as classified information. Robert Kennedy: Can I make that point also that it’s almost the direct wording of the note that was issued after the U-2 . . . that first paragraph— Hillenbrand: My point is that I just wouldn’t specify what they’re collecting—I would leave it unspecified, but the nighttime will make it clear that it’s not a photographic one. President Kennedy: Well, the other thing, I, you’d have to maybe even explain that . . . Hillenbrand: I think you could say, “a routine.” Bohlen: Well, but the cause of the violation was the weather, the wind . . . Unidentified: Right. Hillenbrand: No doubt— President Kennedy: The purpose of the flight— Bohlen: The purpose of the flight was not going to— Rusk: “A weather reconnaissance and air-sampling aircraft” . . . It undoubtedly did some air sampling, didn’t it? Don’t all of our flights do some of this? Unidentified: I’m, you know . . . Robert McNamara: I don’t [unclear], the U-2 did. Unidentified: No, I don’t think so. Rusk: An aircraft on a routine mission— President Kennedy: Well, I don’t know . . . it’s . . . I think the . . . we owe him . . . we don’t owe him the whole truth [unclear]— McGeorge Bundy: Why don’t you just say an aircraft in international waters may have been blown over? Hillenbrand: That’s right. All I’m suggesting is we not say while on an air-sampling mission. Rusk: Knock out that sentence. Hillenbrand: I think that this would clearly affect the credibility of [unclear]. President Kennedy: Yeah. Hillenbrand: It is very likely that he would know that it’s not. 8 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 President Kennedy: Well, would he? Bundy: Is their charge as I understood it, the first take? [President Kennedy can be indistinctly heard.] They have charged a rather higher degree of violation than we believe to have occurred in this matter. They’ve talked about— Unidentified: Nine minutes. Rusk: They’ve only talked about nine minutes. But that may— President Kennedy: The point is there’s no photography. That’s the key to this U-2. Now, if we just say “nighttime,” we leave everybody to conclude that it’s not. Unless we want to at the time, to put out background that it wasn’t a U-2, it was obviously at night, so no photography was involved. That seems to me—that gets away from the U-2 idea. Bundy: It is a U-2. President Kennedy: The plane is U-2 but it gets away from— Bundy: The mission is not to spy in the sky. President Kennedy: Yeah. Bundy: Spies, yeah. President Kennedy: Does he charge it was photography? Rusk: No, they didn’t, sir . . . they didn’t say that. Kohler: Just say, “a U-2 reconnaissance, an American U-2 reconnaissance plane.” President Kennedy: Well, there wasn’t reconnaissance in this. Reconnaissance is photographic. How do we get that over? Is that for you? Rusk: Well, you get, then—“a weather reconnaissance aircraft operated by the United States Air Force.” President Kennedy: Why don’t we call it “a weather reconnaissance plane?” Kohler: That would be perfectly all right. As long you just don’t say, “[unclear] on a air-sampling mission,” I just . . . President Kennedy: Right. Bundy: In international waters. Rusk: In the Northern Pacific. Kohler: Yes. Rusk: It was in the vicinity, it was in the area east of Sakhalin at about the time specified by the Soviet note. It was not on a photographic mission, period. The pilot of the aircraft— President Kennedy: It was at night. It was at night and not on a photographic mission. You want to say that. We want to just have that backgrounded when we put it out, when we release this note. Hillenbrand: You just say a weather plane— Meeting on U-2 Incident 9 President Kennedy: Are we planning to release this note . . . ? Rusk: We’d convert that part of it into a short statement. Just the part that I . . . the . . . President Kennedy: But I think [unclear interjection] we could in a short statement that we put out, say it wasn’t photographic, it took place at night. Hillenbrand: If you just said “a weather reconnaissance airplane operating at night.” Bohlen: I think that takes . . . Hillenbrand: That would take care of it. President Kennedy: OK, but then I think we can—whoever puts this, if State puts it out, the thing to say is it’s obviously not U-2 because it was . . . at night. Weather . . . Bohlen: The only real problem we have in regard to the public statement is where this plane came from. It came from South Korea. Hillenbrand: This is, this kind of gets us too involved— Bohlen: And, this is one that we’ve decided . . . the best thing to do is just say we don’t say where it came from— Hillenbrand: You should deny it came from Japan. Bohlen: Except [unclear] background [unclear] on background to say that it’s been announced that there’s no U-2 operations from Japan. You might have a little trouble with South Korea [unclear]. President Kennedy: Can we see, read that again to us now, Mr. Secretary? Rusk: “A weather reconnaissance aircraft operated by—” President Kennedy: This should be to Khrushchev? Or who would this be to ? Rusk: This would be to— Bohlen: No, this would be a reply to the note. This statement would then [unclear] in an oral reply . . . Rusk: [mumbling in the background] This [unclear] no question who was [unclear] and who was— President Kennedy: . . . does contain that the United States [unclear] . . . [mumbles as he reads the draft note] the investigation will be a [unclear] to— Rusk: Right. President Kennedy: The investigation. Rusk: [reading] “An investigation revealed that an unintentional violation may in fact have taken place. A weather reconnaissance aircraft operated by the United States Air Force in the Northern Pacific, was in the area east of Sakhalin at about the time specified in the Soviet note.” The question [is] whether we specifically say no photography was involved. 10 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Hillenbrand: All right, well, if you put in that phrase there, “operating at night.” President Kennedy: Well, then we’re going to background, aren’t we? And say that . . . We’re going to say that here. We don’t say it to the Soviets [unclear]. Rusk: [reading] “The pilot of the aircraft has reported that he was flying a directed course well outside Soviet territorial limits but encountered severe winds during the nighttime flight and may therefore have unintentionally overflown the southern tip of Sakhalin. My government has instructed me to state that the policy of the United States government with reference to overflights of Soviet territory has in no way been altered and remains as stated by the President on January 25, 1961. [If ] the pilot of the aircraft in question did in fact violate Soviet territory, this act was entirely unintentional and due solely to a navigational error under extremely difficult flying conditions.” President Kennedy: Do we want to say “every precaution will be taken to prevent a recurrence”? Unidentified: Sounds good. President Kennedy: See that gets in, the regret, then after that . . . Bohlen: This implies as though you haven’t taken [them] before. And, of course, the course of this plane was well outside the— Bundy: I don’t understand how this damn thing happened, I must say. President Kennedy: I see that every—We are just restating it that every precaution be taken to prevent a recurrence. Rusk: “Precautions are . . .” President Kennedy: “Every step will be taken.” Rusk: “Precautions are . . .” Bohlen: “The existing precautions will be . . .” Rusk: “Precautions are . . . earlier—” President Kennedy: “Reexamined in [unclear] terms.” Rusk: “—directed earlier—” Unidentified: “Reconfirmed.” Rusk: “Precautions directed earlier by the President to avoid such incidents remain in full effect.” President Kennedy: But, except, we’ve had the incident. So, I think we ought to just say, if we are going to say anything, we ought to just say that we’re taking every step to prevent a recurrence. Bundy: Will be reviewed. You could say it will be reviewed. That would suggest that you— President Kennedy: Prevent a recurrence. Well, then . . . and then what would we release? Meeting on U-2 Incident 11 Rusk: I think we might make a statement that in effect is this note, even though we make the statement before the Soviets get the reply. Bundy: Why do we . . . Why do we—? Rusk: Make a statement entirely harmonious with— Bundy: Isn’t it better to have the Soviet government get the answer before we make it public that we think there may have been . . . Bohlen: Well, that means a certain number of hours, almost till tomorrow that we have to wait for the . . . Bundy: Why are we in such a tremendous hurry? Rusk: I think we ought to handle the press today. Bundy: I think maybe we could stonewall today, saying that the matter . . . that the President’s instructions are in force and the question will be, the case is being looked into. President Kennedy: What would be—you know, we can say the matter is being looked into—but what would be the matter of our making this as a public statement now before the Soviets have gotten it? Bundy: No. I was thinking that the same argument that the Secretary and Chip were making is . . . the critical issue here for the long haul is that we should do nothing that makes Khrushchev think he can’t trust you.9 It seems to me that the more seriously you respond [unclear] the response is more seriously from the U.S. government to the Soviet government if they get it first on a private line. President Kennedy: Did they release theirs before we got it? Bundy: They [unclear]. Bohlen: Yes, they gave Reuters [unclear] what we got this morning. Bundy: Well, they gave it to our man before they gave it, before they released it. But we didn’t get it until after they had . . . is that right? Bohlen: [Unclear] afternoon but [unclear]. Bundy: Thompson, presum—, had this, you see, as of yesterday. No, as of one P.M. today. President Kennedy: Well, then we’ve got two alternatives: one is to put it out now and then put it out an hour after we— Rusk: Well, you can give it to [Anatoly] Dobrynin and then put it out.10 Bundy: Hmm, hmm. That’s true, [unclear]. Right. Rusk: You can just send it over to him, send it to him, and then put it out. If it is in their hands at the time we put it out, it’s all right. President Kennedy: Then what would we put out? 9. Chip is Charles Bohlen. 10. Anatoly Dobrynin was Soviet ambassador to the United States since mid-March 1962. 12 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rusk: We would put out the text of the note. Bohlen: Do you want to do it in an oral statement or do you want to make it a formal note? Bundy: [to Robert Kennedy] Well, the question is whether we want to add anything that says, when you see him, you’re seeing him . . . Rusk: Make an oral statement but make the, but make the . . . Bundy: Bobby happens to be speaking to him at 2:15, is that right? 11 Rusk: I think we ought to get this to him before you see him, so that you can underline it, reaffirm it in whatever way is necessary. President Kennedy: OK. We ought to . . . It seems to me that we ought to . . . When Bobby is seeing him . . . we ought to give Bobby some instructions as to what his attitude ought to be on various matters. Dobrynin called you what day? Robert Kennedy: Saturday. President Kennedy: And he wanted to see you, he’d like to see you? Bohlen: You’ve had a response from [unclear]? Robert Kennedy: No, he wants to see me at 2:15. He said anytime and anyplace. He wants to talk just . . . I don’t know what it’s about. Bohlen: Berlin? President Kennedy: What is it that we ought to have—What is it, Bobby ought to, does anybody have any suggestions about what line he should take? Rusk: Well, I think that the principal positive thing is this question of the nontransfer of nuclear weapons and I’d [unclear] a few minutes with you about that.12 They have come back to it, so we’re moving to kind of pull this together with our allies so that we can go ahead on the nontransfer of nuclear weapons agreement with them. We’ve said that Mr. [Andrei] Gromyko’s reply to mine was constructive and open.13 I think you ought to take up the nuclear testing with him and point out that— President Kennedy: We ought to get this atmospheric . . . 11. Robert Kennedy’s 2:15 P.M. meeting with Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin is confirmed by a note in the Attorney General’s appointments diary, John F. Kennedy Library. 12. At the Geneva foreign ministers’ meeting in July, the United States had proposed an agreement on the nondiffusion of nuclear weapons from nuclear states to nonnuclear states as a way to assuage Soviet concerns that the United States would permit the Federal Republic of Germany to acquire nuclear weapons. The Soviets did not find the U.S. proposal satisfactory because it left the door open to West Germany receiving nuclear weapons as part of a multilateral NATO nuclear sharing agreement. 13. Andrei Gromyko was Soviet foreign minister since 1957. Meeting on U-2 Incident 13 Rusk: We really ought to get going on this and that we just really can’t understand why they make such a [unclear] deal about on-site inspections, which can’t possibly involve espionage. That this must be something else in their minds. But if he has any idea . . . he could give you more about what is really in their minds about this, do they really want to continue the testing? [Unclear]— President Kennedy: Well, yeah, that. And then the other thing is: what he ought [to] say about Berlin, what he ought to say about Cuba? He ought to indicate what [unclear] are not in Cuba. Rusk: Well, we have that proposed statement coming in on Cuba. President Kennedy: [to Robert Kennedy]You come into that meeting on Cuba and Berlin. Rusk: And then Berlin, I should think that, again, we hammer the business of the necessity of avoiding incidents, that the movement of the traffic from Friedrichstrasse to Brandenburg Gate or to the Brandenburg Bridge is intended to avoid incidents. And we hope their people will cooperate on that and that this is a matter that ought not to be allowed to [unclear] because [unclear]. But you’ve been fully briefed on that earlier report on this. President Kennedy: Yes. Well, why don’t we see whether we get— McNamara: [Unclear] the Attorney General add to this note also, to repeat again that it’s the President’s personal instruction to the Secretary of Defense that there will be no U-2 overflights . . . wish he could. Hillenbrand: Right. And also about photography. McNamara: Yes, and also about the photography. Hillenbrand: Yeah. I think coming from him— McNamara: I believe it is extremely important that [unclear]. President Kennedy: And before you . . . Chip will have gotten this over to them? As soon as it’s . . . Bohlen: Yeah, we can get— President Kennedy: But you go right now. You won’t be at this, involved in this Cuba thing, so you can go ahead with it. Bohlen: Well, [unclear]. President Kennedy: Then, there, when the press goes out, Manning ought to be told that he can reiterate to the press but—14 Bohlen: OK. 14. Robert J. Manning was the State Department’s press officer. 14 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Bundy: Manning is right here and— President Kennedy: Can he get this message [unclear]? Bundy: Yeah. President Kennedy: Well, we just reiterate that it was a U-2 flight. [Bohlen can be heard indistinctly in the background.] Rusk: Do we put that in the actual statement? President Kennedy: No, but the press, because— Bundy: It was obviously not engaged in photography by the Soviets’ own times? Did they give times? Unidentified: Yes. Bundy: 19:21 hours Moscow time. President Kennedy: That’ll just be a part of the story. Robert Kennedy: What if he says to me [unclear]? Bundy: You can say it again that you don’t know but you have the impression that flights, the planes of both sides have flown near each others’ borders. This has happened. Hillenbrand: I would suggest that when you say to this one . . . this flight, you know that we have to do air sampling, we have all sorts of routine missions with these aircraft, just as yours do. Unidentified: And the ships, too. Hillenbrand: We have just— Rusk: We have all sorts of aircraft flying from Alaska down towards— Unidentified: Excuse me. President Kennedy: The whole problem, you see, is I don’t know what that particular mission was, the plane was on. Robert Kennedy: I know. We talked about it with [Director of Central Intelligence John] McCone. President Kennedy: Well, it wasn’t intended to be over your coast. Rusk: And since it was at night, it obviously wasn’t photographic or— Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Rusk: I think— President Kennedy: Chip, can you— Unidentified: The Attorney General— President Kennedy: Chip, you’ve covered the [unclear]? Bohlen: Do you want me to . . . Hillenbrand: Chip, do you want [unclear] to a State Department—? Bundy: Yes, and the instruction will— Rusk: Now what about— Bundy: Will you tell Manning and Pierre [Salinger] that we say nothing [unclear]. Meeting on U-2 Incident 15 Rusk: [Unclear.] Bohlen: Well [unclear] it will automatically get to [unclear]. Rusk: Well, that’s right. We don’t send anything over tomorrow. Bundy: Let’s not [unclear] Pierre’s article. Bohlen: Do you want me to call and see him? President Kennedy: Why doesn’t Chip take—what? Rusk: I wouldn’t go over to see him. President Kennedy: Why not? Rusk: Why doesn’t he come to see me? President Kennedy: He doesn’t have to—what time?—Chip, just talk to him on the phone briefing him [on] the message [unclear]— Rusk: Or I could send him the thing. . . . I wouldn’t talk to him on the phone. Just a phone call telling him to . . . Bohlen: Well, then I think we’d better do this. We’d better give this to him and then have it repeated in Moscow by McSweeney to the Russian [unclear].15 President Kennedy: Fine. That’s the best way. Rusk: Give him a copy of the statement we make here and then send this to Moscow. Bohlen: Yeah, well, we won’t get it . . . How do I get it to him? Send it to him? President Kennedy: Have Chip call him up and read to him and say, “This is the message we’re sending to McSween[ey], I’ll send you over a copy of it but I wanted you to have it ’cause we’re going to put out a statement—” Rusk: Yeah. We’re making a statement on it [unclear]. Meeting breaks up. President Kennedy: McSween[ey] ought to be told, it seems to me, in the note that we send to him that you . . . this is what’s been given to Dobrynin at whatever time it was and also about the public statement put out. So— Rusk: Yeah. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: As long as [unclear] have this by the time McSween[ey] gets this. McSween[ey] ought to know [unclear] will have it. Because, you know [unclear]. Bohlen: Yeah, we’ll put this right on the wires . . . Rusk: That’s right. Let McSweeney know that it has been made public. Bohlen: You have to make it public. 15. John M. McSweeney was the U.S. minister-counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. 16 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rusk: [Unclear.] [Pause.] Unidentified: You took my estimate? [Door closes.] The incident over Sakhalin introduced a new note of caution in U.S. intelligence gathering. At the next meeting of the Special Group, which oversaw covert action by the U.S. government, the Air Force successfully pushed through a policy of standing down for the time being all U-2 flights manned by the Air Force.16 The CIA, which was the only other agency with a U-2 fleet, continued in the business. However, the loss of a U-2 leased to the Taiwanese government only a few days later would also put operational use of U-2s by the CIA under severe scrutiny.17 By September 10, Kennedy officials, especially McGeorge Bundy and Dean Rusk, were asking the CIA to shape its plans for U-2 surveillance of Cuba so as to minimize the risk of an international incident. This would have an effect on the timeliness of warnings to President Kennedy of the Soviet buildup on the island. Those events were still days away. In the meantime, after a little disjointed conversation, Kennedy’s advisers walked out of the Oval Office. The President accompanied them and left the recorder running. Twelve minutes of hall chatter follow amidst general sounds of secretarial work. The President’s secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, is heard answering two telephone calls. At approximately noon, members of an Arkansas delegation led by Senator William Fulbright entered the West Wing of the White House. The group included the University of Arkansas’s Schola Cantorum choir, which had just won first prize at a choir competition in Italy, and the ambassador of Italy, Sergio Fenoaltea. Two White House guards are overheard discussing the group. White House Guard #1: Did you bring over the Italian guy [Ambassador Sergio Fenoaltea]? White House Guard #2: Yeah. I got him. A few minutes later the group approaches the empty Oval Office. 16. From Marshall Carter to John McCone, 8 September 1962, in CIA Documents, McAuliffe, pp. 55–56. 17. “U-2 Overflights of Cuba, 29 August through 14 October 1962,” 27 February 1963, ibid., pp. 127–37. T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 17 White House Greeter: Mr. Ambassador, how do you do? Ambassador Fenoaltea: Very well. Ten minutes after the Arkansas group had entered the private secretarial and staff office adjacent to the Oval Office to await the President, Kennedy reentered the Oval Office. He clearly had little idea who these people were or why they had been allowed to wait for him in an office usually closed to public visitors. No White House staffer had informed him that Senator William Fulbright and the Italian ambassador were waiting outside his office. Apparently preoccupied with the two difficult foreign policy matters of the day, Kennedy had forgotten that at his August 29 press conference he had hailed this Arkansan choir and promised the press corps that the choir would be visiting him at the White House within the new few days. Staffer: It’s all set up, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Are you going to inform me now on what I ought to say? Staffer: Angie’s probably got it.18 President Kennedy: Well, ask Angie— Staffer: Pierre [Salinger] set this thing up.19 Staffer: Schola Cantorum at the University of Arkansas. President Kennedy: Are they? Staffer: Who’ll get Pierre? Staffer: Pierre. Staffer: [Unclear] to Pierre. Staffer: Pierre! Staffer: Are they there? Unclear exchange. Angie Duke enters the Oval Office to clarify the situation for the President. President Kennedy: You getting in on this Angie? Angie Duke: Pierre’s got it now. President Kennedy: Where’s Pierre? Duke: He’s down in his office— President Kennedy: Listen, from now on, Mrs. Lincoln, whenever we’ve got a group, I want all the information right here. 18. Angie Biddle Duke was the White House chief of protocol. 19. Pierre Salinger was the President’s press secretary. 18 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Amidst a babble of voices, the President asks McGeorge Bundy, who may have been with the President in the Oval Office throughout this momentary confusion, to find his secretary, Evelyn Lincoln. President Kennedy: Whose [unclear] is this? Bundy (?): [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Tell her to come in here. Bundy: Evelyn! [The telephone rings.] President Kennedy: Who are those people standing there? Evelyn Lincoln: I have no idea. President Kennedy: Well, now don’t let people come into your office to be listening to everything that goes on. Who are these people? Lincoln: Who brought them in? Who brought them? Staffer: They [unclear] take a picture. Mr. [unclear]. President Kennedy: Just keep them out until I’m ready for Christssake. Lincoln: Who brought them here? [Unclear.] Staffer: Ralph Tucker? Lincoln: Ralph Tucker? President Kennedy: Keep them out, Mrs. Lincoln. Lincoln: I can’t [unclear]. President Kennedy: I don’t want people standing around. The President and Bundy are intent on having a conversation about something that has just come to their attention. Amidst the babble in his office, Kennedy grabs a sheet of paper. President Kennedy: This isn’t coming in right. The United States government would like to give you a reminder [of its present course]. Bundy: Just an argument on how they couldn’t [unclear] helpful to the effort. Particularly about the United States. How in the world . . . the fact of the matter is, three . . . background. Our people produced the requisition, everything. President Kennedy: Yeah. I think we’d better have this thing organized. This is a shitty organization. I never know what the hell I’m supposed to say . . . [what I could use] is any suggestions. Bundy: [Unclear] but I think not. The choir members were successfully ushered out to the Rose Garden. The President then joined them and the choir began to sing. The performance lasted nearly five minutes, after which the President spoke to the audience. Laughter can be heard faintly in the Oval Office in reaction Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 19 to the President’s remarks outside, as well as some indistinct play-by-play from White House staffers chatting as the performance took place. At about 12:25 P.M., the President reentered the Oval Office. In a better mood, he asked that the Arkansans be given a White House tour. President Kennedy: Let’s see, can you get somebody to take them through the White House? Can you [unclear] people remind everybody that whenever I have a group, give me a little history with suggested points and [unclear]? Unidentified Staffer: Right. I will, sir. Staffer: [Unclear.] Staffer: But announce that you [unclear] out on the other side. We’ve worked that out. The sergeant’s going to take them through. Staffer: Yes. Staffer: The sergeant . . . The door opens. Someone says, “Gee, are you going to perform me that Boogie?” Someone answers, “Oh, yes, [this] afternoon.” The group passes through the corridor. There is a little chitchat. Unidentified: Oh, isn’t that gorgeous. The group from Arkansas has left and a few staffers were chatting. Telephones continued to ring, and Evelyn Lincoln’s voice can be heard in the background. Forgotten, the machine in the Oval Office kept running. 12:35–1:00 P.M. I think it’s a question about Cuba in the future. Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba20 The public event effectively broke Kennedy’s meeting with his national security experts in two. While Chip Bohlen left to draft a response to the 20. Including President Kennedy, McGeorge Bundy, Marshall Carter, Robert Kennedy, Robert McNamara, Dean Rusk, and Theodore Sorensen. Tape 18, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 20 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Soviet note on the U-2 incident, the rest of them moved to the Cabinet Room to discuss Soviet activities in Cuba. At issue was what form of public statement was required to reassure the American people that Kennedy had matters under control. Congressmen, especially Senator Kenneth Keating of New York, had begun to question the White House’s handling of the obvious buildup of Soviet weapons on the island. There were rumors of the installation of Russian missiles, certainly conventionally armed surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), but possibly even surface-to-surface nuclear rockets. Indeed, photography from a secret U-2 flight flown over the island on August 29 had just confirmed for Kennedy the existence of eight SAM sites. Although there was as yet no firm evidence of nuclear missiles, some in Kennedy’s inner circle think that it is only a matter of time before Khrushchev decides to install that kind of force in Cuba. This group, led by Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, viewed the impending public statement as a golden opportunity to send a clear warning to Khrushchev that the United States would never countenance a Soviet nuclear base in Castro’s Cuba. In any case, the President wanted a public statement on this new Soviet defensive missile system found in Cuba. On August 31, he had told General Marshall Carter, who was running the CIA in John McCone’s absence, to put the readout from the August 29 flight “in the box and nail it shut.”21 A freeze on sharing this information with anyone but the top foreign policymakers and analysts remained in effect. However, it was not going to last forever with interest so high on Capitol Hill and in the media. President Kennedy remembered to turn the machine on as the Secretary of State, a skeptic about the possiblility of any Soviet nuclear adventure in Cuba, read aloud from a draft statement prepared by the State Department. Tape machines were now running connected to microphones in both the empty Oval Office, where distant secretarial sounds could still be heard, and in the Cabinet Room, where the President’s Cuba team had assembled. 21. Lyman B. Kirkpatrick, Memorandum for the Director, “Action Generated by DCI Cables Concerning Cuban Low-Level Photography and Offensive Weapons,” CIA Documents, McAuliffe, document 12. Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 21 Dean Rusk: [reading from State draft press statement 22] “. . . in Latin America. Whatever armed strength the Cuban regime may develop will be restricted by whatever means—” McGeorge Bundy: Agreed. Rusk: “—may be necessary to that island. The U.S. will join with other hemisphere countries to insure that Cuba’s increased military strength will amount to nothing more than an increased burden on the people of Cuba themselves.” Robert McNamara: I think that’s excellent. Bundy: I think that general sentiment—I wouldn’t call it “increased military expen—increased expenditure on military gadgets.” I really think we don’t want to get into the position of being frightened by this group. Rusk: But this sense that Bob McNamara has about any placing by the Soviets of a significant offensive capability in the hands of this selfannounced aggressive regime in Cuba would be a direct and major challenge to this hemisphere and would warrant immediate and appropriate action. McNamara: I worry about that because they already have 16 MiGs which—23 Rusk: Do you feel that the MiGs are [a] significantly aggressive [addition]? McNamara: I do. And I further feel that they’ll be adding to what could be interpreted as offensive strength in the months ahead. President Kennedy: The missiles really are what are significant? Bundy: Surface-to-surface missiles are the turning point. Unidentified: SAMs. Bundy: Unless they were to put jerry-built nuclear weapons on MiGs which is— McNamara: Yeah. Bundy: —not a likely configuration. 22. The President’s copy of this draft is in the “Cuba, Security, 1962” folder, President’s Office Files, Box 115, John F. Kennedy Library. The document bears Kennedy’s notations and underlining. 23. The MiGs are Soviet fighter and ground attack aircraft. By the summer of 1962, the Soviets were to have delivered at least 41 jets and reconnaissance aircraft (MiG-19s and MiG15s) to the Cubans. See the 4 May 1961 report by Soviet defense minister Rodion Malinovsky as quoted in “One Hell of a Gamble”: Khrushchev, Castro, and Kennedy, 1958–1964, by Aleksandr Fursenko and Timothy Naftali (New York: Norton, 1997), p. 99. The U.S. government had detected these older model aircraft. It had not yet, however, detected the ongoing delivery of the most-advanced Soviet fighter/ground attack aircraft, the MiG-21. 22 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 President Kennedy: No. McNamara: They can, they may well put surface-to-surface missiles or missile launchers, artillery or missile launchers in there. They have that equipment in their own force. In the first place, it will be a question: Do they have it or don’t they have it? We won’t be sure. Is it equipped with a nuclear warhead or isn’t it equipped with a nuclear warhead? Is it substantial or isn’t it substantial? I just worry about the President having made a statement which can be used as a lever by elements of the Congress and of the public, unless we know exactly what we’re going to do under those circumstances. If we have a plan, we know what it is and we’re are all agreed on it, then I think a firm statement is excellent. But unless we have . . . it seems to me we could cause great [unclear]. Bundy: Our preliminary analysis of the consequences for us, Bob, of the establishment of a surface-to-surface nuclear capability gives me at least the feeling that we wouldn’t have to act. Rusk: I think we’d have to act, Bob, exactly how and by what stages we’d . . . for example, I would suppose that if you’re going to take on a bloodbath in Cuba, you’d precede it by a systematic blockade to weaken Cuba before you actually go to put anybody ashore. McNamara: See I wonder why we . . . if we do it then, why wouldn’t we do it today? This is one of the actions that we can consider today as a matter of fact. There’s no question the Soviets are shipping arms to Cuba; that’s clear. They’ve said so. Now, we can— President Kennedy: The reason we don’t is that, is because we figure that they may try to blockade Berlin and we would then try to blockade Cuba. But I think that the reason we don’t today is the [unclear] is that it wouldn’t do them that much harm for quite a while— Rusk: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: —and then Berlin would be the obvious response— Rusk: [Unclear.] The configuration in Cuba still is defensive. Now we’ve gone to great effort to try to find serious, significant Cuban penetration into the other countries around the Caribbean. The defense minister of Venezuela said they had captured only one Czech Bren gun. They just haven’t found anything. And, we’ve been having great difficulty in finding . . . except through money, Mexico [unclear] excuse. Bundy: The Jordan report on this subject would be very clear and that’s the principal argument . . . Rusk: But we’ve, but we really have . . . If we have to go to the U.N. to prove Cuban indirect aggression against the other members of the hemisphere, we’d have a heck of a job proving it. Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 23 Bundy: What we find is a lot of energetic students being taught “truth,” which is unfortunately not actionable. Rusk: You see, at Punta del Este, we told Venezuela to capture a big arms cache from Cuba and [unclear] helicopter pad [unclear].24 Well, there was nothing there according to the Venezuelan minister of defense. I am just saying, Mr. President, that we, that there is very little evidence, hard evidence, that the Cubans are really directly engaged in subversive activities in other countries around the Caribbean and Latin America. We haven’t even been catching arms. We haven’t been able to pin down hard evidence of the kinds of actions that would lay the basis for any direct action in Cuba. The principal posture of Cuba at the present time is defensive as far as the policy is concerned. President Kennedy: I think we ought to get two things. First, what statement I put out; and second, whether we ought to get the leadership down here, the Republican, key gasbags and others. This is . . . it’s sort of [unclear] which they have, [then] they can put it out in a way that looks like we’re not putting anything out, probably give them everything we do have. At least, it’s on the, it’s on the record. As I say, one of the problems is that a lot of stuff has been out, but it seeps out in a way that [will] convince these fellows . . . to look like they’re putting stuff out that we won’t put out. So, I think, that maybe, particularly this surface-to-air missile thing we ought to give them. Does everybody agree to that? We’re going to have to put that out anyway because that’s going to leak out— Bundy: I think so. President Kennedy: —in two or three days. Bundy: I think [unclear] it would be better. Rusk: Bob McNamara and [unclear] I are now scheduled to go before the Foreign Relations and Armed Services Committee of the Senate tomorrow morning for a briefing on the Soviet situation that’s bound to get into this. 25 And I think we’d better have the leadership down here and— President Kennedy: Today. Rusk: —and cancel that meeting. Bundy: You have the leadership, I think, at breakfast tomorrow, Mr. President. 24. The Organization of American States foreign ministers’ meeting was at Punta del Este, Uruguay, 22 to 31 January 1962. 25. On Wednesday, 5 September 1962. 24 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 President Kennedy: No, I have the leader—I meant the Republicans and Democrats. Bundy: Oh, the regular, bipartisan body. McNamara: There is a related point: You have asked, Mr. President, on two or three occasions whether we believe it would be wise to ask for authority from Congress to call up reserve and guard forces while they’re out of session, if international events make that desirable. I personally believe it would be wise to ask for that authority, assuming that we could achieve it without controversy. It relates to Cuba, in one respect, that the forces that we would require could be required for Berlin, Southeast Asia, or Cuba. Rusk: Mr. President, I think I would agree with the Secretary of Defense on that. I think we . . . it would be very helpful for us to have it but I think it would more effective if we could do it quickly and quietly. The Soviets would get the message. McNamara: Yes. Yes— Rusk: But, if we’re going to have a great turmoil— McNamara: Yes. Rusk: —and hullaballoo about it, then it would be better to have that in connection with a specific action taken— McNamara: Exactly— Rusk: —[unclear] call the Congress back in special session. McNamara: Exactly; but I mention it now because if the leadership wants to act in relation to Cuba, one of the best actions I can think of is exactly this. President Kennedy: Well, now—if we, let’s say we get them down here at five this afternoon, on an off-the-record basis we give them more or less what we know about these things and tell them when this information is to become available and the number of people that are there . . . and any other question they want. In the meanwhile we’re going to go over this statement. At least we’re going to have something to say about this. It’s going to get out . . . so that I can say to Pierre to put it out at six. Whatever he’s going to put out, he’s going to put out the information about these sites and any other statement we’ve got [unclear] worked out. Bundy: I would suggest that we be very careful, Mr. President, about going with that full statement today simply because the issues involved are very grave and— President Kennedy: That’s right but I think what we’ve got to do is . . . we can’t permit somebody to break this story before we do. Bundy: The SAM site business can be broken promptly. That doesn’t— Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 25 Bundy and the President start talking over each other. President Kennedy: But everyone’s going to want to know what we’re going to do about it. Bundy: We don’t have to put all these statements out at once. They don’t— Robert Kennedy: Can I raise a— President Kennedy: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: I think that [unclear] that while you were out that I don’t think that this is just a question about what we are going to do about this. I think it’s a question about Cuba in the future. And then I think that it’s the judgment of everybody around this table that this is only one step—we’ve seen it being built up for the last six months or eight months, whatever it might be—that this is going [to] continue. There’s going to be . . . three months from now, there’s going to be something else going on, six months from now . . . That eventually it’s very likely that they’ll establish a naval base there for submarines perhaps, or that they’ll put surface-to-surface missiles in. And what steps, we—what position will we be in at that time, if we consider that surface-to-surface missiles, and I think maybe we should reach a determination on that, that surface-to-surface missiles in Cuba would be so harmful that we would have to undertake an invasion of Cuba, or a blockade which eventually would lead to an invasion and the Marines going in, and the airborne, et cetera. Then, whether . . . Or even a naval base or some of these other things. That in this kind of a statement, that you traced the history of Cuba and even mention the Monroe Doctrine and say, point out that this was captured in a different way and the Monroe Doctrine doesn’t apply as it did in the past; but we still have our responsibilities to national security, that, making some of these points that were made in Secretary Rusk’s statement, and then also say that there’re certain things that would violate our national security. And we would then have to take appropriate action and such things would be the establishment of surface-to-surface missiles or the putting of, of, of a nuclear weapons base. Now, my point is, I think that it’s much more difficult for them to take steps like that after you’ve made that statement. That if they put them in and then you take offensive action, then I think that the Soviet Union is almost committed to support them. Number two, we’re going to be in a much tougher position in the future if the Soviet Union does sign a treaty with Cuba because then if you invade Cuba, or do . . . take any steps like that, you know that you’re going to have a world war. At the present time, [if] you invaded Cuba, you’re not, you’re not, certain of 26 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 that. In fact, I should think that they probably wouldn’t support . . . a lot of screams around the world. But I think that this statement . . . this gives us a reason to put out a statement as to what really is going to be our policy, not just on the surface-to-air missiles, but what is our . . . going to be our policy as far as Cuba in the future is concerned. I think that’s— Rusk: The great problem, the great difficulty, of course, as we all know [unclear] . . . I think that, looking at Cuba, I think that it would be fairly easy to come to answers to the questions that are posed at the present time. But the United States has such a worldwide confrontation with the Soviet Union that when the time comes to act, the President will have to take into account how that action relates to the worldwide confrontation and what the situation is everywhere else at the same time because his problems are total and comprehensive. I mean, if we were relatively isolated in the world, which we were before World War II, we could concentrate on Cuba and say, “If this in Cuba, then that follows.” But we’ve got a million men overseas in confrontation with the Soviet bloc and this is a part of that confrontation. This is the thing that makes it so agonizingly difficult. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. I understand that. So, therefore, I think that you really have to reach a determination of whether putting surface-to-surface missiles in Cuba would be where you’d really have to face up to it, and figure that you are going to have to take your chances on something like that. Everything you do, whether you do it in Southeast Asia, or Berlin or Cuba or wherever is going to have some effect on the Soviet Union elsewhere. And whether there are certain things that they do that— President Kennedy: But isn’t this what we’re saying? As I understood, that statement was that when they’ve got a— Robert Kennedy: Yeah, but [unclear] saying— President Kennedy: —upset the general balance in— Robert Kennedy: The point of that, the Secretary makes, Secretary McNamara says they’ve got that at the present time. President Kennedy: Yes. Robert Kennedy: Under that definition of a “substantial offensive capability,” quote unquote, that at the present time that the Cubans and the Russians have that in Cuba and that the . . . Bundy: Would our [unclear], air-defense posture against those MiGs be [unclear], Bob? Robert Kennedy: Some congressman or senator can come in and say, “Prove that they haven’t at the present time 16 MiGs,” and, then you’d Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 27 be in trouble. . . . “Why aren’t you doing something [unidentified mumbling] right at this moment?” Now maybe that— Bundy: Respond how? Robert Kennedy: Maybe you don’t have to say surface-to-surface missiles but I think that this is an opportunity where we really face up to what’s going to happen a year from today. Because they are going to get tougher [unclear]. [Bundy is whispering to the President.] Rusk: [Unclear.] I wouldn’t suppose, and of course this is . . . Bob to . . . [the President is heard whispering, “has to study now.”]. But I would not suppose that the mere fact that a, for example, that a motor-torpedo boat can come roar up along the Florida coast and throw a few shots ashore would mean that that was an offensive capability. I’m not sure that MiGs unarmed with nuclear weapons would provide any offensive capability of the significance that we’re talking about here. McNamara: No, I don’t mean to overemphasize the offensive capability of them. But they’re going to continue to increase whatever offensive capability they have— Bundy: I think that really is a question, Bob. It seems to me that everything they have put in so far, really is, insofar as you can make these distinctions, a defensive weapon. Fighters are defensive aircraft for use against bombers and photographic reconnaissance. The SAMs are the same thing, surface-to-air missiles don’t go . . . are a stupid way of reaching Florida. Robert Kennedy: Well, Mac, that’s what you do, I mean, at the present juncture, if you were them— Bundy: No, I’m only saying that the other step seems to me a much larger step than the development of the kind of thing we’ve seen over the last year and a half which is fully consistent with their behavior in a lot of other countries. Robert Kennedy: I just . . . I think we can all assume that they are going to take those steps eventually. Rusk: No, I think, Bob, even there that if we were imposing a blockade, for example, we could make it very clear that any firing on the American mainland by MiGs or anything else would lead immediately to the destruction of Cuba. Bundy: That’s right. McNamara: Oh I think that’s completely clear. What they’re going to try to do is build up a deterrent power. The first, and most obvious steps, are air defense. But those are not likely to be enough because really their air defense isn’t worth a damn. We can— Bundy: If it were a war, I agree with you. 28 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 McNamara: All right. And therefore— President Kennedy: If we were attacking the Soviet Union, it wouldn’t be worth much? McNamara: No. Against . . . in Cuba it isn’t worth— President Kennedy: Yeah. McNamara: —much and even in the Soviet Union, it isn’t worth very much, Mr. President, because we can go underneath it. So that isn’t going to be sufficient for the Cubans. They are going to say, “Well, that really didn’t help us much. We have to have more of a deterrent power.” And this, this— President Kennedy: The only real deterrent against a country our size is two things: First, the fact the Soviet[s] can act against us. McNamara: Yes. President Kennedy: [Unclear] in Iran, Turkey or anyplace else. And secondly, if that they can get a ground-to-ground— McNamara: Yes. President Kennedy: —with a nuclear weapon. That’s the real deterrent. McNamara: Yes. President Kennedy: Otherwise we can always move against Cuba. It just takes two more divisions than it took . . . McNamara: Exactly, exactly or a few more suppressive aircraft. Rusk: Mr. President, I think there is one thing that we can be— Unidentified: Yes. Rusk: —as certain about is . . . it can be a given that they have no . . . the Soviet Union would never in the world permit a nuclear weapon to be used against us from Cuba, except as part of a general nuclear war. President Kennedy: That’s why I agree. I don’t think . . . why they give the, and why do they give the . . . Then why don’t we give them the . . . ? Rusk: Now, they could—If they should announce some morning that they were placing nuclear weapons in Cuba— President Kennedy: Under Soviet control. Rusk: Whether they did or not; they just announced it, that could cause some real problems. President Kennedy: What is it you suggest that we announce today, aside from this statement, which is rather long? What is it, in short, you think we ought to announce as far as what our future action should be towards Cuba? Aside from consultations, or aside from Guantánamo?26 26. The U.S. Naval Base at Guantánamo Bay. The Cuban government granted the United States a lease for the base in 1903 and extended it in an agreement signed in 1934. Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 29 What Bobby, I guess, is saying is that we should announce today that if they put in ground-to-ground missiles, we will— Robert Kennedy: They take certain [unclear]—I think, no I think some study should go on— Rusk: Well, if we designated ground-to-ground missiles or we specified the nuclear weapon, I think we would create a kind of panic that the facts themselves don’t now justify. Bundy: That’s correct. Rusk: And that this could heat the matter up much faster than if we could get some general language, then, take account of the point that Bob McNamara made. . . . It would be better to get a warning to the Soviets in more general terms so that we do not create for them a major prestige problem in not moving down that trail and then make it very clear to our friends in the hemisphere— President Kennedy: This is . . . the key sentence is, “Any placing by the Soviets of a significant offensive capability in the hands of this selfannounced . . . would be a direct and major challenge . . . would warrant immediate—” Rusk: “appropriate action.” Robert Kennedy: Of course they’ve challenged us, though, repeatedly. We’ve got the Monroe Doctrine and they’ve spit in our eye on it. 27 The idea we’re going to challenge again or then. . . . McNamara: The next sentence is excellent.28 Very strong. Bundy: Yeah. It’s a very important sentence. McNamara: I agree. I think it can stand without the preceding sentence.29 Rusk: I think we ought to be careful, too, about supposing that the Monroe Doctrine has somehow disappeared or receded into the background. What has happened to the Monroe Doctrine is that it, in the 27. The Monroe Doctrine, proclaimed by President James Monroe in 1823, constituted a warning to European powers not to intervene in the Western Hemisphere. In the twentieth century, it provided a rationale for U.S. intervention in the Caribbean region. President Theodore Roosevelt declared as a “corollary” to the doctrine that the United States should maintain stable conditions and not give outside powers any cause to intervene in the region. 28. The next in the draft, with underlining as found on the President’s own copy, reads, “Further I say to our friends in Latin America that whatever armed strength the Cuban regime may develop will be restricted by whatever means may be necessary to that island.” 29. The previous sentence was “Any placing by the Soviets of a significant offensive capability in the hands of this self-announced aggressive regime in Cuba would be a direct and major challenge to all this hemisphere stands for and would warrant immediate and appropriate (forceful) action.” In Kennedy’s copy, forceful is underscored. 30 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 first instance, is a hemisphere problem. The Rio Pact.30 Implementation of the Monroe Doctrine would be attempted primarily through hemisphere action. But it still remains there as an element of American policy and our own national self-defense. If we ever needed to move and we’d move on the basis of the historic, special regime in this hemisphere. I think your press conference— President Kennedy: Of course, the point is that the hemisphere— they are being invited in, not forcing their way in. And the Monroe Doctrine was for another situation, which was that the country came and invaded Latin America. This is where they are not invading it; they are being asked in by the government, which is its de facto government. Rusk: We also [unclear] Mr. President. We never did, so far as I can recall at the moment, we never used the Monroe Doctrine as a flash-pan reaction to a particular situation. It was a basis for diplomatic action, for gnawing at it, for insisting to other governments that they respect it and take it. And it took a lot of time in most instances to apply the Monroe Doctrine. Door opens and closes. There is a short pause. I think, Mr. President, it would be a little difficult to talk about this additional information, or to say anything sort of—we have here on the fourth page—without some general reference and some background. I’m not sure that this would be too sharp to say [unclear] look at it and see that we should say [unclear] now. President Kennedy: I don’t know about number “D. Informal consultation.” 31 Rusk: Of course that is not a— President Kennedy: Why don’t we just say . . . take . . . consult with foreign ministers, other members—let’s just put it that way. Rusk: Why we can combine C and D.32 Yeah. Sure. 30. The Rio Treaty of 1947 (Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance), better known as the Rio Pact, was a collective security agreement. Under its provisions, an attack against one American state would be considered an attack against all. 31. The draft ends with a list of six measures to be initiated by the President, lettered A through G. Letter D reads, “I have asked the Secretary of State to take full advantage of the forthcoming meeting of the U.N. General Assembly to arrange for informal consultations with the Foreign Ministers of the other members of the Organization of American States on recent developments in Cuba as they may affect the security of the hemisphere; this is in accord with suggestions which have come from several of our Latin American friends.” 32. C reads, “I have asked the Secretary of State to consult with our friends in the Caribbean area about ways in which they can assist in the above programs further to insure their protection against the threat of Cuban military strength.” Meeting on Soviet Arms Shipments to Cuba 31 President Kennedy: Good. Now, this . . . what about G?33 This is saying we are going to recognize the government-in-exile, is it? Rusk: No, this does not go quite that far. It’s a move in that direction. But our great problem there is that the refugees are in complete disorder so far as leadership. Bundy: I would question whether we want to—if we do this—then the one that is formed will look like our puppet. It will be the Cuban government-in-exile formed by the President on his instructions. There is some disadvantage in that. Rusk: I think we might be able to shorten this in various respects. President Kennedy: Well, I think, that we can shorten this thing, boil it down. The key thing you need right now are these missiles, also put them into proportion: We are in much more danger from the Soviet Union than we are from Cuba. McNamara: Sure. President Kennedy: So that this thing again, the fixation on Cuba as opposed to someplace else, is really, if they’re to recognize that the missiles have changed . . . There are dangers in them. But other than that . . . we don’t want them to fall into that . . . we want to kind of make it clear to the country that [unclear as Bundy begins to speak] get our information as quickly as possible. Bundy: In that context—It seems to me, Mr. President, I would suggest that we get the information out of the White House because the information, the question has been raised as to whether you had all the dope, were getting the thing straight. And that needs to be got straight. Then I, I at least would suggest at least that the major points might better be made by the Secretary of State precisely because we are not doing anything very enormous at the moment there. President Kennedy: Now, the only key thing would be this, all of this . . . Bundy: You could reinforce it at a press conference. President Kennedy: Would be . . . whatever armed strength they develop . . . I mean, they seem to put a lot into this thing about . . . why they . . . so, this is going to be used against other Caribbean, so that sentence is rather important. Bundy: Very important. I agree. 33. G reads, “I feel sure as more and more Russians arrive in Cuba, more and more Cubans will be thinking and saying: ‘Cuba sí, Russia no.’ To take full advantage of this fact I hereby invite and urge Cuban exiles everywhere to unite within a single organization in which opportunities are left for eventual major participation at top levels by those resisting Communist domination within Cuba.” 32 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rusk: I think that’s the kind of statement that has to be made by the President. The declaration of a security, in effect, a security guarantee to all— Bundy: To the Caribbean states Rusk: —all of Cuba’s neighbors [unclear]. President Kennedy: I think what we ought to do is . . . why don’t you get . . . working. Bundy: Yes, we can shorten it up. President Kennedy: With Ted [Sorensen], to shorten it up, tighten it up. Then let’s have a—Bobby’s going to see this fellow at 2:15—then let’s have a meeting at, let’s get the leadership down here at five; all we’re going to do really is to tell them about these surface— Bundy: Bring them up—That will be essentially for briefing by General [Marshall] Carter then? President Kennedy: That’s right. Now, how much do we tell them [about] how we got it? Marshall Carter: We can give them a briefing, sir, that would give them all without telling them exactly how we got it. President Kennedy: I think you’ve got to say, you would say that— when we did get it—because, you see, at the press conference I said that we had no evidence. Bundy: No confirmation. Fully confirmed conclusions were possible only when, Thursday— President Kennedy: Friday. Bundy: —or Friday. Robert Kennedy: Not till Saturday. Bundy: It was Thursday night and Friday morning, wasn’t it? Unidentified: That’s right. It was Thursday night. President Kennedy: OK. Now you can work on this. So that part’s all right. I don’t—there’s nothing particularly . . . I think you can just say you got it and describe what it is to them. By then we will have this statement in order and then I think at that time the Secretary can say we want to keep some proportion. We’ve got Berlin and the big danger’s it would—They don’t have offensive capability against us and they also, they don’t have an ability to, in the final analysis, to prevent us from doing what we think needs to be done. But the big problem is the fact of these other obligations. So, if we lock them in, that takes care of really the big [unclear] physically. Bundy: I think you can, do you have a judgment, is today the time to reach that other larger question of whether we want to indicate that some such phrase “the significant offensive capability or further development which might create a direct hazard” or something of this sort? Whether you want to make that [unclear]? Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 33 President Kennedy: Well, Bobby are you suggesting that we say a specific thing rather than [unclear] “significant offensive”—? Robert Kennedy: Well I might be—could I work on it— President Kennedy: OK. Robert Kennedy: —for a little while? President Kennedy: We’ll need it in— Robert Kennedy: That’s my feeling. I think that we should take this opportunity. President Kennedy: Well, now, do we want to meet at four here and [put an] end to this thing, in a new . . . form, with everybody having given it some thought—? Bundy: Right. President Kennedy: And then we’ll have the leadership at five. Bundy: You . . . And your current thought is that we, you would then issue a statement through Pierre at the end of the afternoon? President Kennedy: That is correct. Even if it’s confined— Bundy: To a very limited— President Kennedy: —to a statement of what the facts are plus this key sentence from page 4. [to someone else] That’s all right [unclear]. But even if— The meeting ended and Kennedy left to shake hands in the Oval Office with a congressional candidate from Missouri. After that, he went to the Mansion for lunch and a swim. 4:00 –4:50 P.M. The difficulty here is that the intervention is being invited. That’s what’s causing all our difficulties . . . Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement34 In the three hours since this group last met, Robert Kennedy has been very busy. Besides drafting a new version of the statement on Cuba for the President, the Attorney General met with Soviet ambassador 34. President Kennedy, McGeorge Bundy, Marshall Carter, Ray S. Cline, C. Douglas Dillon, Carl Kaysen, Robert Kennedy, Curtis LeMay, Edwin Martin, Robert McNamara, Paul Nitze, 34 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Anatoly Dobrynin at the Soviet Embassy. The Russians requested this meeting to hand over a private letter from Khrushchev in response to the new Anglo-American proposals on the test ban matter. Kennedy came back from that meeting with little that was positive. Khrushchev was unwilling to countenance a partial test ban without some form of restraint on future nuclear tests underground. The Attorney General had made use of the meeting to mention Cuba, but the Soviet ambassador said nothing to deter Kennedy from his belief that it was only a matter of time before Moscow put nuclear missiles on the island.35 The group was larger for this second Cuban meeting of the day. Among the new participants were the Treasury secretary, Douglas Dillon; the assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, Edwin Martin; and the Air Force Chief of Staff, General Curtis LeMay. Kennedy was widening the circle to confirm the instincts of his key advisers and to tighten the statement before it went out. Discussion now centered on the new Robert Kennedy draft. In the struggle over whether to use the evening’s statement to send a warning to the Soviets, Robert Kennedy had scored a victory. The President started recording as he and his key advisers were considering how much of the intelligence data at hand on the Soviet buildup should be revealed in this statement. Dean Rusk : [Unclear] ships [unclear] instead of actions, suggesting he wants [unclear]. President Kennedy: I think in this one, we ought to say . . . and to avoid having the exact number of days ago— McGeorge Bundy: I think so. President Kennedy: Because otherwise it looks like it’s only been the last minute. Bundy: Well, I would say if it’s going to go, “It has become clear that the suspected landing craft [unclear]. Rusk: I would not put [unclear] in terms . . . They would say yes. And we can’t be sure of that fact. Theodore Sorensen, and Maxwell Taylor. Others attending the meeting but not identified as having spoken include Charles Bohlen and Martin Hillenbrand. Tape 19, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 35. What Robert Kennedy did not know was that indeed his suspicions were correct and Soviet missiles were on their way to Cuba, though they had not arrived there. However, Ambassador Dobrynin was as much in the dark about these missile deployments as the U.S. government. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 35 Bundy: Here is the foreign intelligence [unclear] because this [unclear] clear if we can get the substantive [unclear] on the side of [unclear]. [Pages are flipped.] President Kennedy: I think probably, in here somewhere, we probably ought to say is how many [unclear] technicians there are, military technicians there are [unclear]. [Ongoing unintelligible background conversation.] Bundy: What level of force can be stated, numbers of technicians? On the order of 5,000, or don’t you know? Marshall Carter: Three thousand would be closer.36 Unidentified: Three thousand. Unidentified: We’re talking about military personnel. President Kennedy: Technicians? Carter: Technicians, yes sir. Military technicians. Unidentified: Military technicians. Carter: This is within the last month, sir. Rusk: Military training and tactical personnel [unclear]. President Kennedy: Well, I think . . . let’s put that sentence here: “That consistent with . . . there are . . .” Unidentified: There appear to be about 3,000 in there, we have [unclear]. President Kennedy: That’s about right. Bundy: About 3,000. Unidentified: Three thousand. President Kennedy: What’s this statement for? Bundy: This is to get the facts. The factual paragraph will go before this. This is a slightly shortened version of the paragraph on page 1. [A page is flipped.] President Kennedy: What about saying, “There are approximately 3,000 technicians this side [unclear] there are . . . however . . .” Carter: You could add this up. [Unclear] presence. That might work. Unidentified: You just take that one [unclear] should probably have another one. Carter: Now on a substantive issue, Mr. President— President Kennedy: Why don’t I just [say], “As I have said before,” Bobby, “As we have said before.” [Unclear] just so it doesn’t look like this is a new fact coming out, this one on the technicians. 36. Ultimately, the White House would put out that there were approximately 3,500 Soviet military personnel in Cuba. The Attorney General’s draft statement has not been found. 36 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Ray Cline: Sir, you asked me a question this morning about our first evidence, we traced it back to mid-1960, to at least by July 1960 there were some military technical advisers— President Kennedy: Right. Cline: —sent to Cuba from the [Soviet] bloc. Bundy: Was that more than three years ago? Cline: No, [unclear]. Carter: We were carrying 500 up until this most recent influx, and there were 1,700 actually in, and 1,300 more within the last four or five days, so that it’s about 3,500 military technicians, but we’ve been carrying approximately 2,000 agricultural and economic assistants, Soviet types, since they first started coming in in mid-’60. Rusk: So that number has increased since they . . . [Rusk keeps talking under Kennedy—unintelligible.] President Kennedy: OK, well we have to rewrite that section, I think. I’d rather see, “As we have said before.” Bundy: Yeah. Right. Carter: We carry about 5,000, altogether: agricultural, economic, and military at this time. [Pause.] Bundy: What this statement in this form admits . . . This paragraph here, that’s the one on which we were having a discussion this morning. Rusk: The Attorney General redrafted it, as we said this morning . . . Robert Kennedy (?): We’ll look at that. Rusk: There is a paragraph here that I believe might . . . we might just want to make two or three small changes. I think [unclear]. [Lot of paper rustling. Short, unclear exchanges.] Robert Kennedy: The Secretary thinks that you should . . . Rusk: It’s page 4, I believe [unclear]. Unidentified: Have you seen this piece of paper? Unidentified: [Unclear.] Carter: [Unclear] I was more concerned about the first page with the facts [unclear]. That one there that you [unclear]. Unidentified: Coordination. Rusk: This last paragraph on page 4. President Kennedy: Why don’t we just start at the top of page 4: “Clearly the recent acceleration of Soviet military aid to Cuba is coming dangerously close to a violation of the Monroe Doctrine.” I think that’s a . . . it’s an ambivalent, ambiguous position. What [unclear] would be the subject of endless conversation about what does constitute a violation and what does not. [Bundy can be heard indistinctly in the background.] Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 37 Edwin Martin: Well Mr. President, the “however” clause which immediately followed that sort of impliedly says— President Kennedy: —But what is the “violation?” Martin: What is the “vio—”? They have not yet done the following things and the implication is that that would be— President Kennedy: I think we ought to leave this out, this Monroe— Douglas Dillon: We could get into a terrible fight about the Monroe Doctrine, because— President Kennedy: It’s so vague. Dillon: —others would say it has already been clearly violated. President Kennedy: I think we ought to leave the Monroe Doctrine out of that paragraph. I don’t think it’s necessary anyway.37 Bundy: I think if we do leave it out, if we leave out of any statement we make, there is no point in calling attention to it in the statement at all because it has the difficulty Douglas [Dillon] described. Rusk: The . . . Then what about calling attention to the interAmerican security arrangement [unclear] connection? President Kennedy: Well, I think we can just leave out the words “since the Monroe [Doctrine] was first announced.” Just say “for over a century and a half ” or something. Or it would just say, “For many years the United—the American states,” that would be the bottom of page 2. “For many years, the American states have consistently maintained their right to prevent the use of their ter—” Is this the principle of our agreements to prevent the use of the territory by nonmilitary [nonhemispheric] powers or is it to prevent the seizure of territory, or—What exactly is the Rio Treaty? What does it provide? Is that the key document, the Rio Treaty that will overturn it? Bundy: The collective security arrangement. Rusk: Well, I think it’s a general collective security phrase to ensure the safety and territorial integrity of the defense of the Western Hemisphere [unclear.] [Two other voices—unclear.] Cline: How about the Declaration on Solidarity for the Preservation of the Political Integrity of the American States, 1954, says—under the 37. The final statement did not contain any reference to the Monroe Doctrine. The U.S. position was that it had a right to react to anything that posed a threat to U.S. security or to the security of other members of the inter-American system. 38 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rio Treaty—said it [reading] “declares that the domination or control of political institutions of any American State by the international communist movement, extending to this Hemisphere the political system of an extra-continental power, would constitute a threat to the sovereignty and political independence of the American States, endangering the peace of America—”38 I think— Rusk: There were sweeping reservations that were read into that at the time that [unclear]. Cline: That’s right. This is the most clear statement that we have under the Rio Treaty on Communist intervention. It was called, “Against International Communist Intervention at Caracas, Venezuela.” Martin: That figured an inaccurate use of force [unclear] it all together. Rusk: Yes, I think the wording at the bottom of page 2 will have to be revised to bring in the actual language of the Rio Pact. Robert Kennedy: Can you get me—What is the language here of the Rio Treaty?39 President Kennedy: The key point is that the Monroe Doctrine— and all these things—is talking about the forcible seizure of the territory of one country, of a country in the Western Hemisphere, by a foreign power. The difficulty here is that the intervention is being invited. That’s what’s causing all our difficulties, but we therefore have to . . . Robert Kennedy: The Article 5 of the Rio Treaty says that “the territory or sovereignty or political independence of any American State is affected by an aggression which is not an armed attack.”40 Rusk: That’s right. 38. “Declaration of Solidarity for the Preservation of the Political Integrity of the American States Against International Communist Intervention,” accepted on 13 March 1954 at the conclusion of the Tenth Inter-American Conference, held at Caracas, Venezuela. For the full text of the declaration, see Department of State Bulletin 30, no. 769 (22 March 1954): 420. The passage continues: “. . . and would call for a meeting of consultation to consider the adoption of measures in accordance with existing treaties.” 39. The Attorney General is trying to rework his draft to incorporate these new ideas. Ultimately his draft would be completely revised and cut. 40. He is presumably referring to Article 6, which reads: “If the inviolability or the integrity of the territory or the sovereignty or political independence of any American State should be affected by an aggression which is not an armed attack or by an extra-continental or intra-continental conflict, or by any other fact or situation that might endanger the peace of America, the Organ of Consultation shall meet immediately in order to agree on the measures which must be taken in case of aggression to assist the victim of the aggression or, in any case, the measures Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 39 Robert Kennedy: “Or by any other type of situation that might endanger the peace.” President Kennedy: The whole name “aggression” is the point. These people are being invited in, that’s why— Robert Kennedy: It’s just whether the Soviet Union establishing bases here or putting missiles here, whether that is in fact an aggression which doesn’t constitute an armed attack [unclear]. Dillon: It depends a lot on the— President Kennedy: Well, we don’t have to settle that question today, though. I mean, this is really leading up to our main points. So that I don’t think we have to . . . I think the first sentence, [reading] “Considering U.S. policy is necessary [unclear], the special relationship among the countries of the Western Hemisphere, a relationship which has existed for many years and which has been the subject of many hemispheric treaties.” Rusk: Inter-American treaties. President Kennedy: Inter-American treaties. [reading] “This special relationship has been acknowledged throughout the world, and is recognized by Article 52 which provides for regional security arrangements.”41 Then we go on to January of this year . . . [Pause.] Robert Kennedy: You better get that changed. Unidentified: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: All right. Then I would say at the top of [page] 4, I’d leave that paragraph out. Rusk: Then first, [page] 4. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: First, take it out and say, “There is . . .” Yeah. Rusk: At the bottom of page— Robert Kennedy: Now what does that— President Kennedy: [testily] You have to understand, we’re going to have to redo this. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. President Kennedy: I just want to get the key . . . you have to lead up to explaining that. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. which should be taken for the common defense and for the maintenance of the peace and security of the Continent.” For the full text of the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance, 1947, see Department of State Bulletin 17, no. 429 (21 September 1947): 565–67. 41. Of the Charter of the United Nations. 40 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rusk: [Unclear.] “Soviet assistance” at the bottom of page 4, “limited to weapons normally associated with defense.” President Kennedy: Yeah. Rusk: And knock out the next sentence, and then say, “[Unclear] say to our friends in Latin America [unclear].” Unidentified: Well, you really want to say that there is nothing in the Soviet announcement which foreshadows such an eventuality; there is nothing there which precludes it either. And you just wanted [unclear] our way. Carl Kaysen: The reason for that sentence was really to put them . . . to read our interpretation into it, and to force them into [unclear]. Bundy: That puts us in a position of depending on their words. President Kennedy: Well, maybe it wouldn’t be if you keep in that sentence, “It will continue to be so confined.” I would say, that if it was going to happen, then we would take action against it. So I would think that . . . Rusk: I think rather than say “it will continue to be so confined,” “it must be so confined.” President Kennedy: We say “bloc assistance” [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Dillon: If you say, “It must be so confined,” does that mean you’re going to confine it? Rusk: Well, that’s what “it will continue to be so confined” means, in this context. Not negotiable. Dillon: [Unclear] statement . . . Unidentified: What’s this about [unclear]? [Pause. Mumbling.] Rusk: “Should it be otherwise, the greatest questions would arise . . . but otherwise the greatest questions would arise for our friends in Latin America.” Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: With all this information, it’s a little less red flaggish. Carter: [Unclear.] Dillon: The only thing I think you want to be careful of is . . . making a threat to do something if they get some particular weapon in Cuba. If you make your threat that you’ll never let it come out of Cuba, which is still the key; but the other thing means that you’re— President Kennedy: Well, I would say ground-to-ground missiles, you’d—42 42. Presumably, Robert Kennedy’s draft only ruled out the placement of offensive weapon systems on Cuba. Here the President is making clear what he thinks would be unacceptable: ground-to-ground missiles. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 41 Dillon: Well, that’s . . . if you want to put it on that maybe— President Kennedy: Yeah. Dillon: —that’s a strong enough one to put it on, but just saying “offensive weapons,” I don’t know what an offensive weapon is. They’d argue. Might say tanks are but I don’t know. Bundy: That’s a substantive question. I mean how far—it’s clear that we want to make a statement that makes it plain that they will be confined and not make a . . . head for the rest of the hemisphere with this stuff.43 Rusk: Well, what about this then? “To date, bloc assistance has been limited to weapons normally associated with defense. Were it to be otherwise the greatest questions would arise.”44 [Unclear] “Our friends in Latin America and throughout the world [unclear] Cuban regime [unclear] restricted by whatever means make it necessary to that island.” Nothing more . . . Dillon: That’s right, but you don’t say you’re going to go in there . . . Bundy: I think that “to that island” is technically not a . . . Ed [Martin] and I have figured out [Martin makes an unclear interjection] that you can’t keep them out of international waters with their patrol boats. So we’re going to have to say, “kept away from any part of the hemisphere.” Rusk: “By whatever means necessary to Cuba.” Martin: We have [had] an alternative plan. Bundy: [Unclear] take that “free passage of the high seas” unless you’re going to make a special order. President Kennedy: Let’s see which way that we are in the draft. Now, this first— Bundy: I think the factual part can be done very well from that first paragraph with the corrections you’ve made. It doesn’t need to be long. Then the question is really whether you want an extensive development, or any development of the Rio Treaty obligations or whether you want to go straight to some form of pledge, either as stated in the Justice draft or anywhere else. President Kennedy: There’s no difference between them. Robert Kennedy: Do you have another copy of that first factual? Bundy: No I don’t; it’s just the one. Rusk: I think there is some mistake [unclear] in the Attorney 43. Bundy consistently doubts the Soviets would ever use Cuba as a military base from which to threaten the United States. 44. Rusk has hit on a new formulation of the warning to the Soviets. This phrasing would prevail. 42 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 General’s draft in the middle of page 4 indicating what there is not evidence of . . . Martin: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: I think we ought to have that and then we ought to— Bundy: That could follow on— Rusk: And then the statement on—that reassures our Latin American allies at the end. Dillon: Well, I think the way you’ve redrafted it [unclear] objection. President Kennedy: What we are doing is, first we’re going to give the details of what assistance they’ve sent to Cuba. Bundy: That’s right . . . what they have not. President Kennedy: Secondly, we have . . . And what they have not. Then secondly we are going to give a unilateral guarantee against the use of any of these forces against anyone in the hemisphere. Bundy: Against anybody else. President Kennedy: Third, we’re going to say that the [unclear] indirect methods of taking steps against them [unclear] direct. Then I think we ought to say something about, at the end, that we have to keep in mind for those who are . . . This is a dangerous world and we have to keep in mind . . . don’t want to use the word totality again, but all of the dangers we live with. The fact of the matter is the major danger is the Soviet Union with missiles and nuclear warheads, not Cuba. We don’t want to get everybody so fixed on Cuba that they regard . . . So in some way or other we want to suggest that at the end. This is a matter of [unclear] danger, as is Berlin as is Southeast Asia as are a great many areas which are— Bundy: I think there is a question, Mr. President, whether you want to do that in this statement or whether that’s something we make clear as we go along. President Kennedy: Well, I know, I think we’ve got to say something about that otherwise you don’t want everybody to blow on this, you get everybody so mesmerized here that all these other places which are also— Rusk: I think, perhaps [unclear]— President Kennedy: This is not an aggressive danger to us except indirectly. Bundy: As it now stands. President Kennedy: Compared with these other places. Now somewhere we’ve got to get that in, it seems to me, right from the beginning. Give some guidance. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 43 Dillon: How far do these surface-to-air missiles shoot if they want to use them to hit the ground? Bundy: Thirty miles. Dillon: [Unclear.] Pause. Some flipping of pages. Bundy: Would you like us to go and work on it? President Kennedy: Haven’t similar missiles been given to Iraq and what, the U.A.R. [United Arab Republic of Egypt and Syria]? Bundy: Similar missiles are on order for Iraq and the U.A.R. and [unclear]— President Kennedy: Indonesia? Paul Nitze: Indonesia has them, yes sir. Cline: [Unclear] the equipment has been delivered to Indonesia and they are proceeding at a very leisurely pace there and this is the only place that they’ve set up such a program. President Kennedy: Do you think it might— Bundy: This is a quick, smart, secret operation. Unidentified: That’s right. Bundy: They were put in fast here in Cuba. It is in that sense quite different from their ordinary military assistance. [Voices of agreement.] Rusk: The problem with stating these points you mentioned at the very end, Mr. President is to put [it] in terms of general tensions and the need for making progress on all fronts, to not put it in such a way that it appears that we are timorous about Cuba, because we are scared to death of [unclear]— President Kennedy: No, but what I just want to get everybody to keep in mind, what is really— Rusk: Right. President Kennedy: —dangerous, and what’s really annoying— Nitze: At some stage wouldn’t it be wise, Mr. President, to lay the background as to why this isn’t symmetrical, why that it’s the Russians who are really threatening people all over the world? Our measures are defensive mainly. We feel differently. Whereas the Russians have come in with a real aggressive phase. [Unclear.] Because otherwise you get on this tit-for-tat kind of a thing, justification where you have to understand time lines. Bundy: Have you got [unclear] language Mr. Secretary as to what we figure will be the consequences? Because that’s— [Unclear response.] President Kennedy: Yeah, well I think we ought to . . . do we characterize this as an announcement [unclear] aggressive regime? 44 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Papers rustling. Dillon is speaking to someone in the background. President Kennedy: All right. Now let’s see. We’ve got this first page [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] Bundy: The first paragraph, it’s on—there it is, Bobby. President Kennedy: Now, the question, I don’t [unclear]— Bundy: Then we would add the paragraph from page 4— Rusk: [Unclear.] Bundy: Of Bobby’s draft, the middle paragraph, “no evidence of,” except I would suggest that we omit the last sentence. That seems to me— President Kennedy: I’ve taken that out. Bundy: —entirely a question of their faith. President Kennedy: All right, now what do we say after this? Bundy: And after that we would move toward . . . Rusk: I would say what comes below, we’re going to have to revise. The use of [unclear]. Bundy: “I say to our friends in Latin America and throughout the world.” President Kennedy: [Unclear] grandiloquent thing, that’s an oratorical phrase? Rusk: Well, “Our friends in—” Bundy: “I can assure our friends in Latin America”? President Kennedy: Let’s just say, “The armed strength [unclear] in Latin America.” Bundy: Or “whatever armed strength.” All right. And say not “to that island,” I would think . . . President Kennedy: Well, I think that gets over the idea we have [unclear]. Martin: [Unclear] precious distinction. Kennedy and Unidentified: What? Martin: The high seas is a precious distinction in [unclear] statement. Bundy: Well, it’s an important one because the question will come up when they begin using the high seas with MTBs [motor-torpedo boats] as to whether the President has committed himself to prevent that. I would be sorry to see him in that bind. Brief, unclear exchange. President Kennedy at one point says, “What?” Inaudible. President Kennedy: Bobby, you rewrite that sentence. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 45 Bundy: I would say . . . Rusk: Maybe you rewrite that sentence and let’s take the last sentence that [unclear]— Bundy: Well, I think it’s important to say. Look, we put in another draft—I admit that it’s not as eloquent language—“will be prevented by whatever means might be necessary from threatening any part of the hemisphere.”45 President Kennedy: OK. Martin: Seems to me that gets the point across. President Kennedy: All right. “Threatening militarily . . .” They’re threatening every part of the hemisphere now in the indirect sense, so that we’re talking now about the military— Bundy: “Prevented from action against any part of the hemisphere.” Unidentified: “Any action against—” President Kennedy and several others: “Military action.” Unidentified: “Military action against.” President Kennedy: Yeah. Rusk: And in the final sentence where . . . here we will have to write a sentence to relate this to other problems [unclear]. Bundy: You have one other sentence though about grave damage, which danger, which we need a decision either for or against. Rusk: Start the paragraph: “To date, bloc assistance has been limited to weapons normally associated with defense. Were it to be otherwise, the greatest questions would arise. The armed strength which the Cuban regime may develop will be restricted by whatever means.” For sure. President Kennedy: See, the reason we’ve got to put in something at the end, otherwise you’re going to get a suggestion of blockade right now and blockade these shipments and . . . so that I think we better just—46 Bundy: Well, we could say simply, “Against the real dangers which confront the world, the current threat of, the current hazards in Cuba are not—” Unidentified: “Kept in pers—” Bundy: “Must be kept in perspective.” 45. This less than eloquent phrase makes its way into the final version of the statement. 46. The President is seeking more policy flexibility than would have been allowed by a strident statement. The sentence about restricting or confining Cuban power never makes it into the final version. Instead the Cuban problem is set within the complex of concerns defining the worldwide struggle against Communism. 46 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Unidentified: “Perspective.” President Kennedy: “The dangers which confront the world in . . .” Unidentified: [Unclear.] Bundy: Well, I would . . . I don’t know that I’d localize it, at all. “Which Soviet—” President Kennedy: “Communist.” “Communist.” Bundy: “With which Communist aggression threatens the wor— Communist aggressiveness,” I would say, “threatens the world.” President Kennedy: “And the peace.” Long pause, with the sounds of writing and page turning. Several unclear, whispered exchanges. Someone says “statement of the general threat.” Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] Read that [unclear]. Rusk: [reading] “The Cuban ques—”[unclear] “The Cuban question must be considered as part of a worldwide challenge posed by Communist threats to the peace and must be dealt with as a part of that larger issue in which all free men have a prominent stake.” It gets the idea without—47 Bundy: Without [unclear] either way. It’s very clear. Robert Kennedy: We might put that at the beginning, I think, of the first paragraph, rather than at the end where we say [unclear] happen [unclear]. Might be well to have this right under . . . when we get into a discussion of this whole problem. Unidentified: After the factual statement. Bundy: That’s probably going to be the second paragraph. Unidentified: After the factual statement. Bundy: But before we . . . the defense [unclear] . . . Unidentified: [Unclear.] All right, [unclear]. Bundy: But before we say there is no defensive [unclear] I would think . . . Let’s put this together in detachable fragments [unclear]. [Unclear exchange. Someone says, “Time is running out.”] President Kennedy: Five, yeah. Robert Kennedy: Can we head up there before that? [Unclear] take it up now? Bundy: Well, we’ll do our best. President Kennedy: Here’s . . I don’t know what—You’ve got Bobby’s haven’t you? 47. Here Rusk was expressing President Kennedy’s point that Cuba must be kept in perspective, since the real concern was the Soviet Union and the most acute dangers were in other parts of the world. This language would also be part of the final version. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 47 Bundy: Yeah. President Kennedy: What about this business of Guantánamo? [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: Here at the end. Bundy: I swiped it out.48 Unidentified: Yeah. I think that . . . Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Yeah, we ought to have a sentence in there “as any further . . . as further information is received and verified—” Bundy: “It will be promptly made available.” President Kennedy: “In accordance with the President’s statement a week ago.”49 Robert Kennedy: That’s almost covered in that first page. Bundy: It’s in one of the papers. I think we did get this. Robert Kennedy: Mac, you might look at the first page. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Bundy: Well . . . the [Central Intelligence] agency has a brief of what they plan to do, Mr. President, which you may want to review before the . . . Rusk: “As further information is developed and confirmed.”50 Carter: Would you prefer to look at it or . . . President Kennedy: What’s this on? Carter: This is substantially what we gained in this morning, Mr. President, except— President Kennedy: Oh about the . . . I’d like to ask General [Curtis] LeMay a little about what these SAM sites could mean if we were going to carry out an attack on Cuba. What hazard would this present to you?51 Curtis LeMay: Well, it would mean you’d have to get, of course, your force in there to knock them out so that the rest of the attacking forces would be free to take on the other targets. That’d be the first thing we’d do. We’d have to go in low level and get them. 48. Guantánamo would be mentioned in the final text. 49. Presumably referring to his news conference on 29 August 1962 where he addressed the issue. 50. This becomes the language of the final draft; but just before Salinger reads the statement, the President has this rewritten so that it is clear that he has consistently promised to provide information as “it is obtained and properly verified.” Understandably, the President is concerned about his personal credibility. Compare the news conference version to the “last draft,” 4 September 1962, “Cuba” folder, National Security Files, Box 36, John F. Kennedy Library. Besides this change, Salinger provided additional information at the press conference on the range of the SAMs. Otherwise, the statement as read and this so-called last draft found in McGeorge Bundy’s Cuba file are identical. 51. On 7 September, Kennedy would order military planning for assaults on SAM sites. 48 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 President Kennedy: OK. LeMay: These missiles have no low-level capability so you go in low and take them out. President Kennedy: You’d have to go hit the radar? LeMay: And the missiles, too. Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Would that be a difficult operation? LeMay: No, sir. Rusk: They would probably have low-level, smaller antiaircraft guns. LeMay: Lose our tactical fighters going in low, uh, huh. Rusk: Yeah. President Kennedy: You mean they would use antiaircraft [guns]? Rusk: They would use 20 mm [unclear]— LeMay: Well, they would probably not see us until we got within a few miles of the coastline. Rusk: Yeah. LeMay: And you’d put part of your force on those missiles to knock them out. Rusk: Right. LeMay: Of course, you’ve got to get the airfields very quick too. Rusk: Sure. LeMay: But this complicates any assault plans you might have. It’s another target you’ve got to worry about. President Kennedy: Yeah. How about . . . let’s see . . . how are we now . . . are we going to continue our observation of the island? Unidentified: [Unclear.] Carter: We have not yet faced that problem, sir. We have a bird ready to go tomorrow morning and we would like to send it to cover that portion which was obstructed by clouds on the [August] 29th mission. We could go in across the Isle of Pines—hit the two—[pointing to a map] hit right there on the first of the green sites and then cover the island down and back, avoiding the present area. We don’t need any more coverage of that area now.52 President Kennedy: This would be about 75,000 feet, would it, depending? LeMay: Sixty-five [thousand], 70,000 feet, yes sir. 52. A U-2 photographed the central and eastern portions of Cuba on September 5. The mission detected three additional SAM sites in the central portion of the island. Heavy cloud cover prevented the U-2 from seeing much along the eastern side of the island. “U-2 Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 49 Carter: I think that’s a safe operation. But I think also it’s safe for the entire island now, but next week it may not be and it might not be now. President Kennedy: He has to go over land doesn’t he, to get this thing, these [unclear]? Carter: Yes sir, these are verticals.53 LeMay: Well, once these things become operational they have the capability of shooting a U-2 down, of course. We can go to the low altitude 101s, but [unclear].54 President Kennedy: You can’t get much, can you? LeMay: You can’t hide them very well. President Kennedy: You don’t get much I suppose either, do you? LeMay: Well, you’d get the definite targets you’re looking for. You’d have to cover a big wide area. You need more sorties to do that. The specific areas you’re interested in, you could [unclear]. President Kennedy: So the question really is the hazards to this flight tomorrow. LeMay: Yes, sir. Carter: I think the hazard would be very, very slight and we would like to go ahead with it, sir. President Kennedy: It’s fine with me. Do you have any? Robert McNamara: I think we definitely should go ahead, Mr. President. Bundy: I would agree. President Kennedy: Fine. Now, that would be about—after that it would probably get more difficult. So what are we going to do then? We ought to go, at least—I know it’d seem abrupt so let’s be thinking about what [unclear]. There’s no way we can do this . . . Thirty-three seconds excised as classified information. Cline: This flight tomorrow, ought to give us complete coverage of the island and I think we would assess that and perhaps suggest we do an open flight or a . . . that it is safe for another major flight based on [unclear]. Carter: Of course, you’ll get noise from the 101s [if President Overflights of Cuba, 29 August through 14 October 1962,” 27 February 1963, in CIA Documents, McAuliffe, pp. 127–37. 53. Vertical photography was taken from directly overhead, rather than at an angle, pointed inland from a flight along Cuba’s periphery. 54. The McDonnell RF-101 Voodoo was the world’s first supersonic photoreconnaissance aircraft. Originally built as a fighter-interceptor, it was a highly maneuverable, low-altitude reconnaissance plane. 50 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Kennedy adds low-level surveillance flights] but you’re going to get noise no matter what happens anywhere. President Kennedy: OK, why don’t we stand down for a meeting at five. Now, on this meeting at five certainly one of the questions that is going to come up is this question of our ability or inability to get our NATO allies to do anything about their ships carrying this stuff. That would be addressed to you, Mr. Secretary [unclear]. Rusk: Yes, and I will comment briefly on that, that it’s not very promising at this point. We’ve taken it up with them again. But . . . to explain some of the difficulties, but that’s not very helpful. Carter: Does the opening sentence adequately take care of your injunction [unclear] Mr. President? President Kennedy: This is what you might read? Carter: Yes, sir, this is what we’ll give them. President Kennedy: Yeah, that’s fine. I think that’s right. I think the . . . just what the facts are which is just that . . . [Loud paper rustling.] President Kennedy: At the meeting then, I think I’ll ask that you, General [Carter], to just brief on . . . go over that part of the material which has been made available previously and then this recent material . . . if you want to comment . . . and then [turn to] the Secretary of Defense and General LeMay will then be asked about the military significance of this. Also they’ll talk about Guantánamo. Now, if they want to talk about this question of Guantánamo, you should respond— McNamara: Yes, I talked to Admiral [George W.] Anderson this afternoon, Mr. President, and he recommended that we maintain the present forces at the present levels, unless we observe, by various means, reinforcements of Cuban military personnel in the area.55 President Kennedy: Now, this statement of Bundy’s is—I wonder if at this meeting the personnel we’ll want here will be Secretary of . . . the CIA, Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, General LeMay, and Mr. Nitze. I wonder if the other gentlemen could perhaps go into my office and take a look at this statement [unclear] as soon as Bundy has it ready and then see if you fellows could come to a conclusion on it and then if we get it all straightened out, then I will have the Secretary of State and Defense take a look at it and we’ll put it out right about six. President Kennedy: Why don’t we all wait in . . . The meeting breaks up. Only fragments of conversation can be made out. 55. Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr., was Chief of Naval Operations. Drafting Meeting on the Cuba Press Statement 51 Bundy: Mr. President walk into [unclear]. [Bundy keeps mumbling.] [Papers shuffling.] McNamara: [Unclear.] I don’t have [unclear]. Yes, I think so. It seems to me [unclear]. I’m not sure we [unclear]. Bundy: How much do we want?56 Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] McNamara: All right. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] How much do we want? McNamara: I would recommend . . . Last time you had 250,000 for 11 months. I’d recommend 150,000 for say 5 months, up to the first of March, end of February. [Unclear.] Worked out fine [unclear] in effect while they’re out of session. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Fine. Unidentified: And I think we did a good job [unclear]. Nitze: I appreciate your help. [He laughs.] Unclear exchanges. Meeting has broken up. McNamara: Could I just ask, Mr. President, whether you want to raise [unclear] question with the [congressional] leadership [unclear]. I agree with [unclear], the surface-to-air missiles should not represent the stage at which our traditional strength [unclear] putting nuclear weapons there as a deterrent actually makes Cuba more [unclear] recognizable deterrent. Unidentified: They could put some more strength there [unclear] concentration of artillery [unclear]. Unidentified: We’ve got [unclear]. Nitze: You have an appointment to see Foy Kohler at five? 57 McNamara: Yeah, would you call him? Thank you very much. It may be too late but at least. But she may have already done it. Dean Rusk had a barely audible conversation with someone before the congressmen arrive. The Secretary of State then, it seems, left the room, but Robert McNamara stayed behind to greet the congressmen. 56. The discussion has shifted to the call-up of reserves that Kennedy believes is necessary to prepare the U.S. armed forces for any contingency in the rough patch ahead. 57. Foy D. Kohler would replace Llewellyn E. Thompson, Jr., as U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union on 27 September 1962. 52 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 5:00 –5:55 P.M. . . . I think Berlin is coming to some kind of a climax this fall, one way or another, before Christmas. And I think that today I would think it would be a mistake for us to talk about military action or a blockade [against Cuba]. Meeting with Congressional Leadership on Cuba58 The Attorney General and McGeorge Bundy moved to the Oval Office to complete work on the President’s Cuba statement, as the congressional leadership filed into the Cabinet Room. Earlier in the day, the White House invited 20 people to attend, including Speaker of the House John McCormack of Massachusetts, Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, and Vice President Lyndon Johnson.59 Robert McNamara was in the Cabinet Room as the congressmen arrived. At the tail end of the drafting meeting he had mentioned to the President that a call-up of reserves might be needed during the forthcoming congressional recess. As the congressmen took their seats around the Cabinet table, McNamara isolated a key congressional player to put in a word about the administration’s pressing military need. Robert McNamara: [quietly as an aside to an unidentified congressman, perhaps Senator Russell] Well, I think the President wants to tell you what he knew of it. While you’re standing here, may I mention that [unclear] possibility of obtaining authority [to] call up reserve [unclear] personnel while Congress is out of session.60 He can’t do it. The old 58. Including President Kennedy, Senators Everett Dirksen, J. W. Fulbright, Bourke Hickenlooper, Mike Mansfield, Richard B. Russell, and Alexander Wiley; Congressmen Charles A. Halleck, John McCormack, and Carl Vinson; Marshall Carter, Curtis LeMay, Robert McNamara, and Dean Rusk, all identified in the discussion. Senators Thomas H. Kuchel and John Sparkman and Congressmen Carl Albert, Leslie C. Arends, Robert B. Chiperfield, and Armistead Selden are listed on the President’s appointments diary but not identified as speakers. Tape 19, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 59. Sometime later, Senator John Sparkman of Alabama was added to the list of invitees. According to a note to the President’s appointments secretary Kenneth O’Donnell, Vice President Lyndon Johnson, Senators Hubert Humphrey, George Smathers, and Leverett Saltonstall and Congressmen Hale Boggs and Thomas Morgan could not attend. 60. The 87th Congress adjourned on 14 October 1962 and the 88th Congress convened on 10 January 1963. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 53 [unclear] expired on the first of August [unclear] the resolution . . . or rather on May—yeah, the first of August the resolution was passed. In theory . . . that authority . . . again, unless he declares a national emergency which is [unclear] impossible to ask Congress. Now this, however, is likely to cause controversy because of this [unclear]. It certainly would be the wrong thing to ask for. We are united as a nation at this time. [Unclear] I don’t think so [unclear]. Well, it’s Cuba, Berlin, and Southeast Asia, all the [unclear]. No. No sir, I do not. [Unclear.] I wouldn’t anticipate [unclear] requirement. [Unclear.] The authority shows, our purpose and firmness of will. You know, we’ve asked for it only for a period while Congress is out of session until the end of February, from the 1st of October to the end of February. We could have it [unclear]. This bill was passed [unclear]. While McNamara has this private conversation, the number of congressmen and the voice level in the Cabinet Room rises significantly. John McCormack: [Unclear] resolution on the holidays. Is that right, Ev? Everett Dirksen: Yeah. McCormack: Constitution Day. Dirksen: How many more of these [unclear] are going to come? [Unclear exchanges and greetings.] Unidentified: They’re not all here, Mr President. They’re not all here yet. [Unclear exchange.] President Kennedy: General, why don’t you come in and sit over there. [Whispered exchanges.] Dirksen: Oh, we are having fun— President Kennedy: I know you’re having fun, but— Dirksen: I invited you to come up to the battleground if you run out of [unclear]. [Laughter.] Richard Russell: It’s at the country’s expense Mr. President. I can assure you of that. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Dirksen: The last thing was [Senator Paul] Douglas trying to knock the lobbying sections out of the bill. John Cooper came along and got it all bitched up, then they had 15 parliamentary inquiries and as of this moment, nobody knows what he voted on.61 But he voted on something. Alexander Wiley: Mike, you come over here. Come on. [Whispered exchanges.] 61. John Sherman Cooper was a Republican senator from Kentucky. 54 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: All the big shots should be at the table, not the little shots today. [Unclear exchanges.] Unidentified: Pull up a chair. Unidentified: You sit back there thinking that you’ll have people thinking that pipe as far away from everybody as possible. [Unclear exchanges.] President Kennedy: Just wait just a minute. Alex. [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear] California. Unidentified: He’s in California. Unidentified: Oh, he’s in California? Unidentified: Back tonight. I saw Fulbright was in town. President Kennedy: That singing group from Arkansas here this morning was fantastic . . . [unclear] group from the University of Arkansas [unclear] won that prize with forty other countries at singing medieval church music. Charles Halleck: Is that the group that all the singing experts said was no good? [Several voices agree. Laughter.] [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [That] shows you you can’t believe everything [unclear]. Unidentified: It just proves . . . Russell: In my opinion I thought the . . . Unidentified: Huh? Russell: In my opinion the Italians loved it. [Unclear exchange.] President Kennedy: I think we’re . . . I think we’re starting anyway. This meeting is to give the leadership the latest information we have on Cuba. Perhaps General Carter, who is executive director of the Central Intelligence Agency, who is representing the intelligence community today in Mr. McCone’s absence, will lead off with first what we had up till Friday, then the information we got this weekend.62 Marshall Carter: Up until Friday of last week we’ve had considerable indications—in fact, firm indications—of Soviet shipping up to as many as forty ships having come into Cuba since mid-July. Spasmodic reports, many from refugees and from some defectors indicating the type of equipment, but nothing on which we could really pin a confirmation. New sources, highly reliable, new information that has just come in over this last weekend now gives us clear confirmation of exactly what 62. McCone was on his honeymoon at Cap Ferrat, on the French Riviera. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 55 the Soviets have been putting in, in recent weeks. We have surface-to-air missiles, some artillery, and some motor torpedo boats with missile launchers. I’d like to go into the details of exactly what this equipment is that we have been able to confirm. They are now building, on the island of Cuba, eight surface-to-air missile sites, one probable assembly area just south of Havana and two additional sites, one on the far eastern side of Cuba. I’d like to show you these on the map here. There has been very little permanent construction at these sites, indicating that they are going in on a crash basis and yet they could be operational, some of them, within a week. It takes a minimum of 125 technically trained personnel to operate one of these sites and to the best of our knowledge, no Cubans have been receiving this technical training. This excludes the security personnel and administrative personnel required to operate a site. The sites on the western slope of Cuba, eight of them, cover the entire third of the island. Just below Havana is what appears to be an assembly area from the information we are getting, and in the far right, we have here an indication of an additional site. Each of these sites has a central radar and normally six launchers, each normally having a missile. They are exactly the type of equipment that the Soviets utilize in Russia and is known as their [NATO designation] SA-2. It has characteristics somewhat better than the Nike Ajax, not as good as the Nike Hercules. Its horizontal range is 25 to 30 miles, its altitude capability 60[,000] to 80,000 feet with one system, 80,000 to 100,000 feet with an improved system. We have not received information as to which of the systems they are putting in. Low altitude capability is about 2,500 feet and the maximum operational area for these missiles; the best capabilities are between 10,000 and 60,000 feet. It appears that there will be additional surface-to-air missile sites put in subsequently. Now further defector and clandestine reports from the central province indicate that at least two sites will be located there—I’ve put them in in green—but we have not received any confirming information on those. The pattern now is emerging that would indicate approximately 24 sites in total would cover the entire island of Cuba. In addition to the surface-to-air missile sites that are being put in, we have confirmed reports on eight Komar-type missile-launching motor torpedo boats. These have an operational radius of about 300 miles at a speed of 45 knots. Each of the boats has two missile launchers, but these launchers are not reloadable, so that they must go back to shore or to a mother ship to get new loads. They are radar-guided missiles and they 56 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 have an effective range of between 15 and 17 miles. It carries a 2,000pound high-explosive warhead. This is a conventional type of missilelaunching motor-torpedo boat such as the Soviets utilize in their waters. Some Cuban naval personnel have received training in the Soviet Union but we do not know whether or not they were trained on the Komartype boat. These are in addition to the 13 motor-torpedo boats and the six submarine chasers that we had reported earlier this year. These same highly reliable sources indicate that current shipments also include some additional army-type armaments such as tanks and armored personnel carriers, possibly also some combat aircraft. We now credit the Cubans with having 60 MiG fighters operational including at least a dozen MiG 19s. There is no report on any MiG 21s or of any bombers. Soviet shipments of military equipment continue to show no signs of letting up. There are about 16 Soviet dry cargo ships now en route to Cuba and we estimate at least ten of them are probably carrying military equipment. Total numbers of military and military-related shipments to Cuba since mid-July approximate 65 vessels. The routine shipments of Soviet goods continue mainly in Western bottoms.63 At least 1,700 Soviet military technicians have arrived in Cuba in late July and early August. Bloc military personnel, as you know, first began arriving in Cuba in mid-1960 and up until this most recent influx, we have been carrying about 500 military-type technicians, several thousand agricultural and economic type. Thirteen hundred military-type technicians have just recently arrived and we estimate now from 3,000 to 3,500 military technicians on the island of Cuba. We would anticipate that additional Soviet technicians, both military and economic, would be coming in these subsequent shipments. That concludes the present situation as we were able to confirm it just this past weekend from, what I say, are very reliable sources, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Questions, gentlemen? Russell: How many of these missile torpedo boats did you say they had? Carter: There are eight of them there, sir, now. Hickenlooper: Are they water to water, water to air? Carter: Water to water, short range, highly accurate, however, or reasonably accurate. The . . . Hickenlooper: Not subject to water to air? 63. Ships registered in non-Communist countries. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 57 Carter: No sir. We give them an estimated probable error [in accuracy] of about 100 feet. President Kennedy: At how many miles? At 15 miles? Carter: At 15 miles, yes, sir. President Kennedy: We would hope to have the rest of the information in a very short while about other sites on the rest of this island [unclear]. Carter: Yes sir, we are seeking out information from the eastern portion of the island. And as it comes in through various sources we will collate it and I would hope by next week or within the next ten days we would have any new developments in that area. Halleck: Mr. President, I wonder if I could ask something? President Kennedy: Yeah, shoot. Halleck: Do you consider this a defensive operation or force, or an offensive [operation]? Carter: Well, there are no indications of any offensive weapons right now, sir. These weapons are defensive. At least, the surface-to-air missiles are. The interpretation as to tanks or armored personnel carriers—since they are on the island . . . I think we’d better revert to the Department of Defense to make that analysis. The motor-torpedo boats, well they are . . . I think I’m not competent to comment on that, sir. General LeMay [would be] better. I would say they are either defensive or offensive depending upon how they are used. Curtis LeMay: I don’t think these torpedo boats have offensive capability. I think [unclear] defensive buildup. President Kennedy: [whispering] Did he just say “defensive”? Unidentified: Yes, sir. Russell: Doesn’t matter what you say, Mr. General, if they would decide to kick us out of Guantánamo, every bit of this stuff could be offensive. They could bring their artillery and then put them in those hills back of Guantánamo and run us out. Then we do what? Unidentified: I would think they’d be [used] mainly against other Latin American countries. Russell: Oh, against it, yes. Hickenlooper: Mr. President, is there any buildup or threat against Guantánamo at the moment? I mean indication of movement or concentration? Carter: No sir. Normal harassment that takes place all the time, sir, but nothing . . . no real indication. President Kennedy: Might just say something about Guantánamo. 58 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Dean Rusk: Well, they seem to be staying very much at arm’s length from Guantánamo, with any significant forces, [unclear] moving some forces. President Kennedy: The Secretary of Defense wants to say something about Guantánamo, what we got there? McNamara: Yes, Mr. President. We have relatively light forces there at the present time, approximately 1,500 men including about 400 sailors who have been trained for ground combat. An attack on Guantánamo would have to be met with forces from the United States, forces which are available, which are on alert, fighter aircraft and airborne troops. [Unclear background conversation.] Hickenlooper: Mr. President, may I ask if—is there any stepped-up activity on the part of Soviet submarines in the Caribbean waters, the Gulf [of Mexico], around that area, the shipping lanes? Carter: No, sir. At least we have no indication of it, sir. Hickenlooper: Well, I said stepped-up activity. There probably is some activity around in there. Carter: Very, very slight, in that area, sir. And very spasmodic. Hickenlooper: Thank you. Rusk: There’s been a surprisingly small amount of submarine activity in the Atlantic area by the Soviets. Russell: Mr. Secretary, you remember how many dollars they get each year out of Guantánamo, their employees there? Rusk: They have 3,200 Cuban employees, of whom 1,000 live on the base. So that means about 2,200 go back and forth every day. McNamara: They might get something on the order of seven million dollars a year perhaps. There are roughly 3,500 employees involved. Russell: They’re requiring these people to turn in their dollars too, aren’t they? McNamara: Yes. Rusk: So far as we know, there’s been no systematic attempt to harass the workers on the base, nor has there been any interference with the water supply there. They run a regular check on the water supply. Halleck: Are the Cuban workers permitted to buy at the PX on the base at Guantánamo and then go off base with their purchases, back into Cuba, such as medicines, luxuries, this that and the other thing? McNamara: I don’t believe so, but I can’t answer for certain. [Pause.] Russell: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [to Rusk] Do you want to say anything? Rusk: Mr. President, I might just comment on two points on the political side. One, the attitude of the other American states and the effect Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 59 of this on them. We do believe that this will give much further impetus to the motion that started in the hemisphere about a year ago. We detect a deeper concern in what’s happening in Cuba. You will recall that at the last Punta del Este Conference in January, this hemisphere showed considerable movement in rejecting Castro as a solution to the hemispheric problems and unanimously condemned this regime in Cuba as a MarxistLeninist government and—with not in all of the cases unanimity—took a number of actions that moved toward hemispheric solidarity. Since that time, the Argentine government was in fact overthrown over this issue, the Frondizi government, and this attitude toward Castro is one of the key sources of present tensions in Brazil where the reaction to Castro has been getting stronger.64 In the case of Mexico, if I can make this very much on an off-therecord basis, we do get more help from Mexico, privately, underneath the scenes, than they are willing to confess publicly or make any noise about. They’ve got a political problem there. But I think we can count on growing, rather than diminishing solidarity in the hemisphere, in response or in the face of this continued buildup of arms in Cuba. Now, on the other side of that, it seems that it’s necessary for us—we have done this in a number of ways privately and the President has thought about the public aspect of it—we’ve got to make it very clear to all of our friends in the hemisphere that these Cuban armed forces aren’t going anywhere. They’re not a threat by force of arms to the other countries of the hemisphere. Now, you’ll be interested that we’ve—actually the special security measures established at the Punta del Este Conference as an instrument of the OAS . . .65 We’ve gone to extraordinary effort to try to catch the Cubans actually smuggling arms or putting in bands in countries around the Caribbean, and thus far we haven’t been able to turn up very much. The principal effort that the Communists are making in Latin America seems now to be money, and the training of young people as potential agents, training these Cubans. But we haven’t been able to catch any of this illicit traffic in arms that we were hoping to intercept [unclear] the Punta del Este Conference. They seem to be playing a cautious game on things of that sort. Now, in the NATO framework, we have been trying to get our 64. The Argentine government under Arturo Frondizi was overthrown on 29 March 1962. 65. Organization of American States. 60 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 NATO allies to take a harder look at this Cuban problem than they have thus far been willing to do. We’ve made some progress, but not nearly enough in our estimate. In the case of Canada, their trade with Cuba in 1961, [was] on the order of 35 or 40 million dollars. This year it will be on the order of six or seven million dollars. Part of that is because Canada is forbidding any reexport of anything from the United States to Cuba. They are applying the COCOM list to Cuba and it cuts off quite a number of things and also, our own embargo on Cuba has deprived Cuba of dollars that they might use to buy large quantities of foodstuffs and things of that sort from Canada. So it’s partly action by Canada, partly because the Cubans haven’t got any dollars. We are very much concerned about the use of free world shipping in the Cuba trade.66 But this is a very, very difficult problem to deal with, because there is such a vast supply of shipping and a surplus of shipping for normal trade these days, that the customary arrangements with the Soviet bloc [are] bare-bones charters, without specifically identifying them for the Cuba trade. A very small percentage of the tonnage available in fact goes into the Cuba trade, something like 1 percent, 2 percent, in that order of magnitude. A number of the NATO countries claim that they do not have the legal authority to move without having parliamentary action similar to our Trading with the Enemy Act. But, in any event, since their problem would be to break trading relations with the Soviet bloc as a whole, as far as shipping is concerned . . . Countries like Norway, U.K., Greece, that have a heavy reliance upon their shipping services for foreign exchange for their own necessities, would find it very difficult to do that in specific relation to Cuba. Nevertheless, we are talking about this development with our NATO allies and hope very much that they can find some way to put pressures on those shippers who are in fact taking an active part in the Cuba trade. But it is a difficult one because of the vast surpluses of shipping and the nature of the charters that are normally used in the trade that get diverted or turned away into the actual Cuban part of it. Dirksen: What flag is predominant would you say? Rusk: It varies: U.K., Norway, Greece. Unidentified: Portugal. Rusk: Portugal slightly, Italy slightly. And— 66. Referring to recent press reports that the demand for shipping between the Soviet Union and Cuba was so high that vessels registered in NATO member countries were being used. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 61 President Kennedy: West Germany. Rusk: Yugoslavia and West Germany, all of them are involved with it. Russell: Mr. Secretary, you . . . speaking of the Mexican cooperation, I was very much concerned last year when I was down there talking to some of our people, particularly [three seconds excised as classified information] telling me about these dummy corporations that were shipping parts and replacements to the Cubans to keep their industry going. I understood that practically all of them were American in origin. They were transshipping, the dummy corporations in Mexico to Cuba. And the Canadians are pretty bad about that too. They bought a great deal of parts and replacements [unclear] few get rich, the big boys over there. Has that matter been [unclear]? Rusk: We’ve seen some reduction of that, again partly because of Cuban foreign exchange, which— Twenty-four seconds excised as classified information. Russell: The Russians would never let that happen you see. It’s got too much nuisance value to . . . They’ve kept them going. Rusk: There’s practically no trade as such now between Cuba and Latin America, very limited now. The foreign minister of Chile, for example, told me the only thing they sell to Cuba is garlic. And we thought that was probably something we wouldn’t worry too much about. [Some chuckling.] Alexander Wiley: Mr. President, may I ask a question? How do you define the question of missile sites? I understood you to say that they were defensive instead of offensive, is that right? Carter: Yes, sir. These are designed for shooting down aircraft and that’s all. Wiley: Well, now then, the next question is, what is our policy in relation to Cuba? I’m just back from the hinterland and everybody is inquiring about it and I said I’ll have to talk to the executive who spearheads foreign policy or the Secretary of State. What is to be our policy? Just to sit still and let Cuba carry on? President Kennedy: [Unclear statement.] On this matter we are going to make an announcement in regard to the existence of these sites today. We’re also going to state that the United States would prevent the use of any of these military weapons, any of this force against any neighboring country, but that this . . . which I have never thought a very likely prospect but at least it has been discussed. Any concern that this buildup, military buildup would be used against another country, another neighbor would be . . . We will indicate that if that were done, the United States would intervene under its Rio Treaty and the Monroe Doctrine and all the rest. 62 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 As to whether the United States would intervene in Cuba in order to . . . at this point, I would think it would be a mistake. We’re talking about—we have to keep some proportion—we’re talking about 60 MiGs, we’re talking about some ground-to-air missiles which from the island, which do not threaten the United States. We are not talking about nuclear warheads. We’ve got a very difficult situation in Berlin. We’ve got a difficult situation in Southeast Asia and a lot of other places. So that if I were asked, I would say that I could not see, under present conditions, the United States intervening. It would be a major military operation. General LeMay can describe it in more detail. It would be a major military operation. Wiley: Blockading [unclear].67 President Kennedy: Well, a blockade is a major military operation, too. It’s an act of war. We could blockade . . . there’s no evidence that that would bring down Castro for many, many months. You’d have a food situation in which you’d have people starving and all the rest. In addition, Berlin obviously would be blockaded also. And if Berlin were blockaded one of our reprisals obviously could be the actions of various kinds against Cuba. But I would say today . . . listen I think Berlin is coming to some kind of a climax this fall, one way or another, before Christmas. And I think that today I would think it would be a mistake for us to talk about military action or a blockade [against Cuba]. Blockades are very difficult. It’s a big island and you have to stop ships of the Soviet Union and other ships. And it would be regarded as a belligerent act; and it would be regarded as a warlike act. I would think we would have to assume that there would be actions taken against countries. . . . I think that we therefore should not do that. I don’t see that the Soviet . . . This is annoying and it’s a danger. I think the dangers to this hemisphere [unclear] by Cuba is by subversion and example. There’s obviously no military threat, as yet, to the United States. The military threat quite obviously is still the Soviet Union which has missiles and hydrogen bombs. So that, in answer to your question, I would . . . even though I know a lot of people want to invade Cuba, I would be opposed to it today. So I think we ought to keep very close surveillance on Cuba which we are doing and keep well informed and make it very clear that the placing in Cuba of missiles which could reach the United States would change the nature of the . . . buildup and therefore would change the nature of our response. Rusk: Mr. President, I think it might be worth commenting that the 67. Over previous weeks, Wiley had called publicly for a blockade of Cuba. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 63 Soviets have been reluctant to make a flat all-out commitment to Cuba. There is a good deal of information that Castro’s famous statement last December that he was an all-out Marxist-Leninist was a statement which seriously annoyed the people in Moscow for two reasons: one was that it exposed him to other people in Latin America. Senator [Bourke] Hickenlooper and Congressman [Armistead] Selden will remember how much of an impression that made at the Punta del Este Conference, for example, and therefore it made him less effective in Latin America. But secondly, the impression is that he made that statement in order to try to force the hand of the Soviet[s] to make commitments to Cuba that the Soviets weren’t ready to make. They have stayed—it’s not sure now they’re making a flat all-out security commitment to Cuba in this situation and . . . either publicly or privately. President Kennedy: After all, the United States put missiles in Turkey, which are ground to ground with nuclear warheads. We have to keep some . . . it seems to me we have to weigh our dangers. I would say the biggest danger right now is for Berlin. Perhaps you want to comment on what happened in Berlin today and . . . Rusk: Yes, I’d say— Wiley: May I say, Mr. President, that I think that the majority of the people agree with the conclusions that you’ve made, that the world is a hot spot and we’d better not make it hotter by any of our own acts. I got your statement to mean that we’ll be ready and willing and able to carry on but we will not, to the slightest degree precipitate, well, a third world war. [Pause.] Hickenlooper: Mr. President. President Kennedy: Yes. Hickenlooper: I can see how the present extent of the buildup as reported here poses no military threat of any great significance at this particular moment, physically to the United States. But, the thing that bothers me is the psychological impact on the Latin American countries. Whether or not the continued, reported and established buildups in Cuba of bloc country arms, technicians, people, with inaction here, I’m not suggesting action one way or the other, that isn’t part of my discussion. The effect that it has on the Latins, and the argument that we’re a paper tiger and the fomenting groups in Latin America say, “See look what’s happening 100 miles from the United States. They do nothing about it. The United States is . . . we have nothing to fear, we can spit in their face, we can do this, that, and the other thing.” That is, the dissident groups in Latin America which are not diminishing in strength so far as I can find. And it’s the psychological impact that bothers me, at least as much if not 64 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 more than some of the physical threats, or potential threats that might be involved at the moment. I think it’s quite a serious psychological situation in Latin America. Every time it’s announced that more Russian troops, people, more Russian technicians, whether they are troops in civilian clothes or whether they are agricultural technicians or whatnot, predominantly it comes out that the more of those that come in . . . more missiles, more weapons, and so on, I’m afraid it gives stimulus to those dissident groups down there which pose an increasing difficulty for us in those countries. I may be wrong but . . . President Kennedy: I will say that the Soviet Union exercises some restraint in some areas. They haven’t after all talked about a peace treaty since 1958 and they haven’t raised it.68 We did as I say put missiles in Turkey with nuclear warheads and they didn’t take action. We have engaged in assistance of various kinds to Iran, Pakistan, and other areas. So that I think that we both proceed with some caution because we both [Hickenlooper tries to interrupt] realize where the real danger to the countries lies finally, but I quite agree that Cuba is . . . On the other hand, Senator, I’m not so sure looking at it over the last 12 months whether you’d say that what’s happened in Cuba has particularly helped the Communist cause. I would say that there’s a lot of things that helped the Communist cause but I think they are more internal in each country and not what’s happened to Cuba. I would say that every survey I’ve seen in the last 12 months shows the sharpest drop in the support of Castro, which was, perhaps since ’59. Hickenlooper: Mr. President, I have noticed in whatever meager and perhaps inaccurate information I get, I think I have noticed a sharp drop over the last year, year and a quarter, in Castro, the popularity of Castro, or the respect for Castro as an individual, or as a leader. But Castroism is a thing that I believe they separate from Castro in their thinking. That is, the idea that you can take from the big fellow, that you can go take and do it with immunity. That you can confiscate, that you can have this, that, and the other thing, which they ally with Castro’s movement in Cuba. They know Castro is a Commie, they know he’s under Communist domination, but I don’t know whether the Spanish say Castroísimo or, what is 68. President Kennedy is playing down his Khrushchev problem. Khrushchev’s 1958 threat to sign a peace treaty with the East German government triggered the 1958 to 1962 Berlin crisis. Although Khrushchev had backed down from following through on this threat in 1959, he had not stopped talking about his readiness to sign a peace treaty. Khrushchev reiterated this threat at the Vienna Summit of June 1961 and again, most recently, in July 1962. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 65 it? Whatever. Anyway, the Castroism in Spanish is a thing that they differentiate as compared to Castro as the individual. I may be wrong about that but that is the impression I get. Rusk: Mr. President, I think there is no question that the extreme left down there will tend to make some noise about this kind of buildup. I think there is a compensating factor on the other side, Senator. I think that more and more people of the responsible sort are becoming much more sober about Cuba than a year ago. A year ago at Punta del Este, as you know, certain of these countries down there didn’t really think about Cuba; they were thinking about their own internal problems and those at a distance from Cuba—Argentina, Brazil, Chile—weren’t very helpful at Punta del Este. Now, there are growing concerns about it. I think there is a more sober approach. And I would have to report [unclear] that some of the reactions have been not what ought to be done about Cuba, but to use the Cuban situation as a pretext for saying to us: “Well, now that means, of course, the opportunity presents itself to have more destroyers and more cruisers and things of that sort.” And that’s as a matter for their own military establishments. It is not really called for at this point [unclear] in relation to Cuba. But, I think on balance the development down there has been wholesome, in response to this. [Unclear.] The President asked me to comment for just a moment on what happened in Berlin today. Over the weekend the three allies insisted to the Soviet Union that their guard coming in from Friedrichstrasse to the War Memorial would have to be moved to gates down near the War Memorial to avoid incidents, traffic hazards, provocations that were resulting from their use of the Friedrichstrasse Gate for their armored personnel carriers, carriers that they adopted after the stoning incidents ten days ago. We gave them until this morning to reply because they had to turn around with Moscow.69 Hickenlooper: That’s the War Memorial at Brandenburg Gate? 69. An imposing Soviet War Memorial in Berlin had been erected just inside West Berlin, near the Brandenburg Gate. Each day, Soviet soldiers charged with guarding the memorial would travel down Unter den Linden, through the Brandenburg Gate, from East Berlin to West Berlin. Disturbances and instances of harassment from West Berliners, particularly students, had intensified with the recent one-year anniversary of the sealing of West Berlin (13 August) and the killing of an East German, Peter Fechter, as he was trying to cross the Wall and escape to West Berlin. This led the Soviets to transport their soldiers in Armored Personnel Carriers (APCs), creating a difficult issue for the Western powers striving to keep to a minimum the Soviet military presence in West Berlin. By changing the crossing point from the Brandenburg Gate to the Sandkrug Bridge, the Western powers shortened the distance that the Soviet APCs would have to travel through West Berlin. 66 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Rusk: That’s correct. So we’ve just had information from Berlin that the Soviets did accept the Sandkrug Bridge which is just beyond the Brandenburg Gate and is very near the War Memorial. And we were interested and pleased that they responded in that way because they were beginning to build up a position there and we cut that back to the original [unclear]. Russell: That’s good news. Short unclear exchange between Rusk and President Kennedy. Russell: That’s good, but one question, Mr. Secretary. You hear all kind of rumors that Castro is becoming more and more of a figurehead, that two of the old-time Communists are running Cuba and he’s more or less a front. Is there anything to that? Rusk: My own reading of our information on that, Senator Russell, is that this is not the case, that it would have, it might have been true perhaps four or five months ago but that Castro, whatever his faults, has been more or less accepted by the Soviet Union as the person who has to be backed even though there is friction between himself and the hard-core, old-time Communist apparatus.70 Now, I think you do get reports about his heavy drinking and his administrative hopelessness and things of that sort. But we’re inclined to believe that the Soviets have agreed to tolerate his “un-Communist” kinds of weaknesses, if you like, because they need his hold on the Cuban people. I suspect, myself, that they’d have much greater difficulty with the Cuban people if Castro were removed and you had the old-line apparatus trying to take over completely. Dirksen: General Carter, assuming that those sites you pointed out are essentially for defensive purposes, how long would it take to convert them to an offensive facility? Carter: They’re not convertible, sir. You’d have an entirely new installation. The only thing you could use would be the administrative facilities, the buildings and roadways. Dirksen: What else would they require? Carter: You’d require launching pads, and an entirely new missile delivery system and missile guidance system, if you are going into a static operation. Now, of course, we do have mobile surface-to-surface missiles in our own inventory and in the Soviet inventory. We have seen no sign of those at all in Cuba. 70. In March 1962, Castro removed the powerful longtime Cuban Communist leader, Anibal Escalante. On the shake-up in the Cuban leadership see Fursenko and Naftali, “One Hell of a Gamble,” pp. 163–65. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 67 Russell: Is it contemplated that there’d be any change in the flight instructions to any of our planes as a result of the construction of these bases? Carter: No, sir. This is— Russell: Or would you know about that? General LeMay, do you know about that? [A voice is heard indistinctly in the background.] Carter: It should not be required. Russell: Well, we’ve been getting such information by flying along the shores and all of Cuba and not just by [unclear]. I didn’t know whether we were going to continue to get that information or whether it’d prevent us from knowing if they did put in an intermediate-range missile base.71 Carter: Well, these— President Kennedy: General, let me just say, this is going to present us with some difficulties of securing information of the type you describe. So that we are now considering what should be the action we would take in order to keep informed about what additional . . . Russell: [Unclear.] Rusk: I think there is one point the Senator mentioned— President Kennedy: But there is no doubt that we can’t fly low. Rusk: As far as international waters are concerned, I’ve already announced this week that we would insist upon our right to use international waters or international airspace for at least the planes. President Kennedy: What are the— Russell: Well, we won’t go into that.72 Carl Vinson: Mr. President, is there any possibility of any more drastic action through the OAS as a result of this arms buildup? Rusk: I will be talking with the foreign ministers of the OAS and the U.N. assembly in the next—in about ten days’ time.73 We have talked with several of them separately on this general subject. We would like to step up, if we can, the activities of that special security committee. But thus far, I must say, we’ve had very little luck in getting hard information about action directed against the other countries in the hemisphere. They tend to think those are the kind of ordinary Communist 71. The chairman of the Armed Services Committee is asking about the possible consequences of the SAM deployments on U-2 flights over the island. 72. Senator Russell was a member of the smaller group of congressmen who were regularly informed about CIA operations. 73. Rusk met with the Latin American ambassadors the following afternoon, where he proposed an informal meeting of foreign ministers. 68 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 techniques of money and training [unclear] and things of that sort. Arms, we think they haven’t been able to buy. We’d love to catch them. Russell: The President referred to our responsibilities there to these other countries. Just what would we do if they had an upheaval say in [the] Dominican Republic and the Communists took over there? A handful of Castroites there, perhaps not many. But are we under any more responsibility there to restore some democratic form of government than we are in Cuba? President Kennedy: Well, I’d say that that is our problem, quite obviously not the military problem, but Haiti is now a [unclear] and I would think that the United States should intervene if it appeared that there were going to be a revolt or a coup d’etat in the Dominican Republic that would put Communists in control, then I would think the United States would intervene at that point. Russell: We moved up, I know, when it looked as if the fallen dictator’s family might— President Kennedy: That’s right. Russell: —move back in. I didn’t know whether that . . . of course you’ve got about as much of a dictator on the other end of the island as there was in Santo Domingo. Duvalier, I think, is [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear, but someone mentions Castro.] President Kennedy: Yes, I think that obviously Duvalier . . . and we don’t know where he’s going, but we have to . . . but I would think that if we ever had any others that Castro is taking over, then the United States would with as many other countries as we could, would try to intervene. We have, in the case of [the] Dominican Republic, we had Colombia and Venezuela with us. And I think that we ought to attempt to strengthen our inner OAS arrangements in the Caribbean so that if there is a situation, we can intervene with the support of at least one or two other Caribbean countries at the critical moment. Hickenlooper: Well, Mr. President, isn’t there some evidence that almost all of the Caribbean countries are willing to join in whatever intervention the United States should determine— President Kennedy: I’m sure with the exception perhaps of Haiti, I’m sure they would. Hickenlooper: Well, with the exception of Haiti, yes, yes, yes. President Kennedy: And Mexico, I’m sure they would if they see— Hickenlooper: Indeed. President Kennedy: Whether they would join in Guatemala would depend really on the conditions in Guatemala. But I would think if the . . . Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 69 There might be a difference of opinion as to the personnel. And we might say someone is Communist which the Venezuelans or someone else might not say. But, I think, if the provocation were clear, I don’t think there is a doubt—I don’t see anyone who would not support us at this time with the exception of Haiti. Unidentified: And Mexico. President Kennedy: I think the problem always is, as it was with Castro, is they come into power as something else, and our information is not complete and therefore we assume that they may be all right. I think that would be our problem with Guatemala. But I— William Fulbright: Do you— The President and Senator Fulbright try to speak at the same time. President Kennedy: No, you go ahead; I’m finished. Fulbright: Do you feel that this might be a sort of a testing out of our adherence to the Monroe Doctrine, in part? Rusk: May I comment on that very briefly, Mr. Chairman—Mr. President? I’m inclined to believe that the Cuban development came as a surprise to the Soviets two years ago. They saw in this an opportunity to cause us some difficulty in this hemisphere. They had not planned it quite this way all the way through and that they came aboard with large assistance when it became necessary to support the Castro regime. I don’t believe it started out as a probing of the Monroe Doctrine, but I do believe that the attitude we take about the effect of Cuba in the hemisphere is very important in terms of the Monroe Doctrine, in terms of, more importantly at this point, the inter-American defense treaties. To be sure that the Soviets realize that there is suspicion beyond Cuba, that they are in for trouble here . . . and then the Cuban situation has to be looked at in this total context as a threat and so in a given circumstance to see what has to be done at the time. Russell: Mr. President, this statement to which you refer, you not only refer to these missile sites, but you give all the facts as to the technicians, and . . . President Kennedy: Yes, but the technician information has been— Russell: The whole story is being released . . . I think that’s a very wise— President Kennedy: The technician material has been put out before— Russell: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: —but the missile sites we did not get until Friday and that is being put out to . . . so it’s the missile sites— [Unclear background whispering.] 70 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Carter: Not in the same degree, Mr. President, as it appears. Russell: No, it’s much later. As I understand from what General Carter says, it’s larger than we thought it was when we made this other statement. President Kennedy: Well, I think we’ve known for at least two weeks. In the State Department briefing, it seems to me the figure of 3,500 was used, wasn’t it? Rusk: Yes, sir. Unidentified: [Unclear]— Carter: Three to five thousand, I think. President Kennedy: Right. Carter: It’s a pretty good fix now at about 5,000 total. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: That includes [unclear]. Carter: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: That’s correct. That’s right. But, of the 5,000, how many are military? Carter: At the most, 3,500. President Kennedy: So there’s 3,500, and the others are other kinds of technicians. Carter: Yes, sir. Russell: I think it’s an [unclear] just to give the whole thing out. Let’s say MiGs, and armored torpedo boats and old kit and bother nothing. Just throw it out and let the people have it . . . hearsay . . . You have so many rumors, if you don’t do it this way . . . The tape quality deteriorates intermittently over the next few exchanges. Russell: . . . it’s worse than it actually is . . . President Kennedy: Right. Well, I think we’re setting a number—I don’t know if we got the torpedo boats in this one. Have we put out the torpedo boats before? Carter: No, sir. [Pause.] President Kennedy: Perhaps General LeMay, before we conclude, might just want to say what the military problem is of these sites in case there is ever a military action against Cuba. What it would take— LeMay: This complicates the military circumstances [unclear]. These missiles are not good at altitude [unclear] go in underneath their effective altitude and knock them out. Unidentified: [Unclear.] LeMay: I would [unclear] use our strategic force [unclear]. Unidentified: No. Meeting with Cong ressional Leadership on Cuba 71 LeMay: I see no complications regarding the general operation [unclear]. Rusk: [Unclear.] McNamara: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [Unclear.] General, go see if the statement we’re going to put out is ready. I might read it to . . . Background conversation while Rusk is talking is unintelligible. Rusk: Mr. President, although the forces actually in Guantánamo may appear to be rather light, the capability of these forces on the one side is very heavy. And further, the other side, the Cubans have gone to considerable lengths to make it clear that they don’t have intentions of attacking Guantánamo. One of the current jokes around the United Nations is the Cubans [say] “Don’t the Americans hope we would attack Guantánamo?” That kind of thing. So, I think, the lightness of the forces in Guantánamo is not necessarily a measure of the situation. Mansfield: Well, Mr. President, I’d hate for you to lie down, but I think it ought it to be understood that when you issue a statement, and give these facts and figures, that the reaction may well be a call for action of some kind or another. I would hope that this would not be used for the purpose of creating a situation which would tend to undermine your authority and your responsibility. I would hope that we would move with caution and we will not be carried away by these figures and facts that you have given us this afternoon. I think we would have to expect that there will be a certain reaction which may not be very satisfactory. President Kennedy: Oh, I expect that, but as I say, [short, unclear aside to someone else]. All right, as I say we’re talking about 58 MiGs, we’re talking about some ground-to-air missiles. That really isn’t comparable to the threats we face all around. So that I think that’s just the perspective we have to keep it in, even though no one would desire more to see Castro thrown out of there; but throwing Castro out of there is a major military operation. It’s just a question of when we decide that that’s the proper action for us to take. It is an operation which has to be mounted over a period of time and we could anticipate that there would be reactions in other parts of the world, by the Communist bloc against other vulnerable areas as we carve out Cuba. So I think we just have to try to keep all that in perspective. Mansfield: Well, that’s the point— President Kennedy: There’s no easy aspect to throwing Castro out. If we had it, we’d do it. Except an outright military action which involves a great many divisions—a number of divisions—and a great 72 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 deal of our military power and I think we’ve got Berlin, we’ve got Turkey and Iran . . . We’ve got southeast Asia, so I— Unidentified: Formosa also. Fulbright: Do you think? President Kennedy: And Formosa. Fulbright: Do you think, Mr. President, if we did decide to take some firm action about Cuba, that this would turn the pancake over, that this would start Russia off here, there, somewhere else? Rusk: I think this will lead to a very very severe crisis indeed. I couldn’t predict exactly what the Soviets would do but I would think that they would almost certainly make a major move on Berlin of some sort. You remember, the unfortunate combination of Hungary and Suez in 1955 and ’6. Now, if on the other side, as the President indicated, the Soviets made a move on Berlin, this opens up some possibilities with Cuba with world support, that we would not have if we at the moment took initiative against Cuba because of circumstances. Fulbright: This is the other side of the pancake. Rusk: See, that’s the other side of the pancake. Because this is a part of the worldwide confrontation of the free world and the Soviet Union. We have a million men outside the United States as part of this confrontation. All right, this has to be thought of in relation to the whole because you can’t deal with these simply as little isolated [unclear] instances but the total situation. Russell: That’s undoubtedly true, but Senator Mansfield is right about . . . it may cause a great deal of reaction because this Cuban thing— President Kennedy: That’s right. Russell: —is in the nature of an offense to the national pride, [chuckling] and there’s something personal about it too. It’s so close down there that . . . a man wouldn’t get ruffled about something that happened in Berlin, much less Hungary or some other part of the world, but he would get upset about Cuba. Unidentified: [Unclear.] [Short pause.] President Kennedy: Well, this statement will be out and it won’t have any reference to our meeting here but it will be a statement of fact and you’ve heard the facts as they come along, we’ll make available to you. And I would think that if we ever get any information about ground-to-ground missiles then the situation would then be quite changed and we would have to [unclear]. Unidentified: Well, thank you, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Meanwhile we will . . . Unidentified: Thank you [unclear] Senator Russell. Meeting on the Cong ressional Resolution about Cuba 73 Meeting breaks up. Unidentified: Mr. Secretary. Unidentified: Hello, Alex. [Unclear.] Wiley: [Unclear.] McNamara: Yes, I wanted to speak to Senator Russell also [unclear]. Unidentified: My greatest friend. The tape spools out. At the end of the meeting with the congressional leadership, Robert McNamara, it seems, gathered a few of the congressmen for a short separate meeting with the President to discuss the need for a special grant of standby authority to permit the administration to call-up 150,000 reservists. Kennedy had been considering a call up in August as a response to the increasingly tense situation in West Berlin. His advisers had discouraged him. Now, it seemed that recent events in Cuba could provide another argument for the reserve call-up that Kennedy wanted. 5:55–6:10 P.M. . . . [D]efinitely say “in view of the developments in Cuba” . . . people understand that . . . Meeting on the Congressional Resolution about Cuba74 For the second time in twenty months, President Kennedy intended to seek congressional authority for special reserve mobilization powers. In mid-1961, following the dramatic Kennedy-Khrushchev summit in Vienna, where the mercurial Soviet leader had vowed to solve once and for all the Berlin problem, Congress approved a call-up as part of a program of expanding defense spending. Now it was the specter of twin crises, in and around Cuba and Berlin, combined with the fact that Congress was about to recess for the midterm elections, that prompted the administration’s request. 74. Including President Kennedy, Everett Dirksen, Lyman Lemnitzer, Robert McNamara, Paul Nitze, Dean Rusk, Richard Russell, and Carl Vinson. Tape 20, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 74 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Getting authorization in 1962 was going to be more difficult. In retrospect, the 1961 call-up seemed to have been a mistake. National newspapers and congressional offices received complaints from some of the 150,000 men who had been pulled away from civilian jobs and their families in 1961. Yet despite the unpopularity of the 1961 call-up, the Pentagon had since late July been kicking around drafts of a new congressional reserve authorization. The immediate cause was a new campaign of threats from Moscow, which Khrushchev had launched in the summer by insisting on some kind of resolution of the Berlin tangle after the U.S. midterm elections. For over a month, these drafts had not become policy. Although he shared his advisers’ concerns about the implications of Khrushchev’s threats to Berlin, President Kennedy was not prepared to push for this authorization until the political climate had improved. Now, with the Soviets’ hurriedly and mysteriously building up Cuban defenses, Kennedy sensed Congress might be prepared to call up reserves to meet an anticipated superpower conflict. A threat from Cuba resonated more than one from Berlin with the American people. With the administration about to make public its statement on the discovery of Soviet defensive surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) in Cuba, it was time to see whether public concerns over Cuba could translate into congressional support for authorization to call up 150,000 reservists in 1962. As McNamara corralled key congressional leaders, he knew how important it was that this request not meet any significant political opposition. Khrushchev was now in the habit of telling American visitors that democracies would not fight. It was this notion that the administration needed to dispel. For a message of unity and determination to be sent to the Kremlin, any administration request for reserve authorization would have to proceed smoothly and without controversy through Congress. The time and place of this meeting remain unclear, though all internal evidence points to its having taken place on September 4 after the larger congressional briefing on the Cuba statement. With this smaller group convened, possibly in the Oval Office, the recording began with McNamara’s reporting on the results of the 1961 U.S. military buildup and the reasons why more was needed now. Robert McNamara: The authority that was granted last summer has expired. As you know it covered authority to call up 250,000 men during a period of 11 months and that authority expired with the 1st of July. Since that authority was granted, we have added about 300,000 men Meeting on the Cong ressional Resolution about Cuba 75 to the regular forces: roughly 40[,000] to 50,000 men to the Navy, about the same number to the Air Force, and 110[,000] to 120,000 men to the Army. All of the forces are in substantially better shape today than they were on June 30th of last year. The Army has been expanded in terms of combat-ready divisions by about 45 percent. There were then 11 combat-ready divisions. There are today 16 combat-ready divisions. The Air Force has had a very substantial expansion in its tactical air strength. A portion of that tactical air strength that has been added, however, is not yet combat ready and won’t be combat ready for six to nine months. The Navy has been expanded by the addition of a large number of amphibious craft as well as logistical support ships. So, we are much stronger today than we were 13 or 14 months ago when we asked for authority to call up Reserve and Guard personnel. On the other hand, there are both military and political and psychological reasons why it would be desirable, we believe, to have authority to call up between 150[,000] and 250,000 personnel during the period that Congress is out of session, say roughly from the 1st of October to the end of February. We’ve been considering that. I just mentioned it briefly, a moment ago, to Chairman [Carl] Vinson and Chairman [Richard] Russell.75 They mentioned that the House would meet on Friday— Unidentified: On Thursday. McNamara: Rather Thursday. We have a draft resolution, essentially the same as the resolution passed a year ago. I think we’re all agreed, all of us who have considered this problem, that if there is to be any controversy, any debate, any argument over whether this is a wise move or not, it would be undesirable to submit it to—[Tape cuts off briefly.] President Kennedy: Then [unclear] the numbers revised [by] General [Burgess]? McNamara: Yes, sir. We would. President Kennedy: But it seems to me quite possible that you would have to call up some air units before the end of the year, if not earlier. Because I think they would be the most likely units we’d call. We don’t have any plans to call up any [National] Guard divisions? McNamara: No, sir. They . . . If— President Kennedy: That’s why I think the 150 is enough. When it 75. Respectively, chairmen of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees. 76 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 gets beyond that, then we’re [unclear] crisis more, and after that we draft a [unclear]. McNamara: It seems almost certain that any units that were called up during this intervening period between now and, let’s say, the end of February could be composed of men who had not been called up within the last year and a half. President Kennedy: With the exception of the air. McNamara: Well, even in the air, Mr. President. We have located seven squadrons of fighter aircraft and personnel who were not called to active duty and who would therefore be the squadrons we’d call to reinforce either the U.S. reserve or to move to Western Europe. And similarly in the Navy we think that, except under most unusual circumstances, we could call the 8[,000] or 10,000 naval reservists that might possibly be needed in the event of blockade and antisubmarine warfare from personnel who had not served within the past year and a half. In the case of the Army, because of the very substantial increase in armed strength, as I mentioned, a 45 percent increase in the number of combat ready divisions, we see no real requirement for a call-up during this period. But with the possibility that such might be necessary, we would like to have authority to call up a total of at least 150,000 men. Were it necessary to call Army personnel, again personnel could be called who had not served within the past year and a half. Dean Rusk: Mr. President, if I might just make a very brief comment on the one aspect of this. If the Soviets have been cautious this past year about Berlin in key times, a lot of it was due to the speed and the calm with which the Congress moved last autumn in response to the President’s request for additional strength in the military field. If this could go through with relative quiet and speed, it would be a very useful signal in Moscow, but if it were to create a grave controversy, then that would be—create another problem. Everett Dirksen: Mr. Secretary, how are we going to avoid acrimonies today in view of the gripes that obtained in the last call-up of reserves . . . ? President Kennedy: Sir, that’s why we’re talking to you now. Dirksen: Yeah, [unclear]. Now, I think there is probably one way to pour some sugar on that department and achieve that tactic, if in any kind of a statement you were going to particularly mention . . . definitely say “in view of the developments in Cuba” . . . people understand that . . . and a few other things, put ’em in . . . have no doubt in their minds as to why this is needed. You [unclear]. Now, Mr. President, I was [unclear] yesterday, I Meeting on the Cong ressional Resolution about Cuba 77 was the guest of the Winnebago Labor Day, on Labor Day.76 The only thing they wanted to talk about, those that talked to me, wanted to talk about Cuba . . . in Cuba. So this is very much in the average person’s mind and you’ll have to lay it right on the line in any statement you make; otherwise they’ll be hell-a-poppin for one and we won’t have any good answers for them, unless you give us the answers. McNamara: We can say that it will not be necessary. As a matter of fact, we can insert into the resolution, a statement that personnel who had served within the past year and a half would not be called back involuntarily. And we could certainly say that in view of world conditions, including Cuba, we believe it necessary to request this authority to act during the period when Congress is out of session. Richard Russell: Excuse me, Mr. Secretary, [unclear] go back and get the qualified personnel without meeting again with the same group? McNamara: Yes, we can. Russell: The only other question you had is about the recommendation to reducing the National Guard reserve force. Is this [unclear] in any way contemplated? McNamara: No, definitely not. Russell: Because that ought to be explained somewhere. McNamara: Yes, that can be—that’s very very— Unidentified: Yeah. Unidentified: Who would we ask? [Unclear exchange. Then indistinct discussion among the participants.] Unidentified: Why don’t we lead on this? Russell: I think that we may have some controversy about this now, Mr. Secretary— Unidentified: [whispers in the background] We will. Russell: —because it’s a political year and you’re on the eve of an election. And there have been some legitimate gripes on the part of some of these fellows who have been called up . . . [unclear] griping, there’s been a lot of questioning, and we can get the bill through all right. But I can’t guarantee you that if we [unclear] controversy . . . that the President’s [unclear] I’ll do it anyhow [unclear] if he wants to do [unclear] to assume my part of the responsibility to get that through [unclear]. Dirksen: [Unclear.] 76. Senator Everett Dirksen spoke at the Winnebago County (Illinois) Labor Day picnic (Rockville Register Star, 4 September 1962). We are grateful for the assistance of the Everett Dirksen Center, University of Illinois, in tracking down this reference. 78 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 President Kennedy: Even when pointing out that it’s deeper than [unclear] international [unclear]. Dirksen: Deeper [unclear] so damn vulnerable [unclear]. President Kennedy: Can we do this in this manner? The Secretary of Defense can talk to the leadership again and to Senator Russell and to Senator . . . to Chairman Vinson in the next two or three days in more detail about the kind of language about how no one would be called up with the exception of [unclear] of say a thousand people because it’s possible we might want to [unclear] Cuba. If we really had an emergency, we could call up an important [unclear]— Russell: I bet a good many would volunteer. President Kennedy: —go over to talk to the leadership and unless he . . . McNamara: Yes, Mr. President, we can do that. This doesn’t— President Kennedy: You get [unclear] think about in the next day or so. Carl Vinson: I’m working with [unclear] this week. If it does not have to be done this week, it might be better. [Unclear.] The President, McNamara, and the Congressman speak simultaneously. President Kennedy: [Unclear] through just at the end, which you suddenly lost the . . . McNamara: Yes, I agree [unclear], Mr President. It’s pertinent to the subject that we discuss it more. But we will draft a resolution and discuss it further. The meeting seems to have ended and the President has apparently left. The recorder picks up bits of conversation. Lincoln: Can I come in? McNamara: [Unclear] I don’t think it’s necessary to call any of those that were called up before. Do you? Lyman Lemnitzer: [Unclear exchange in the background as Lemnitzer speaks.] I wouldn’t think so and [unclear] all right. McNamara: Yeah and get this [unclear]. Lemnitzer: I would like to have the 300 people at that point, in January for Cuba. McNamara: Well, those could be . . . more of those could be extended service of people you have. Lemnitzer: No, not exactly because we don’t have any qualified F-84 people available to do that. They would have to come from the National Guard, if you wanted for us to move, wanted to do the job properly. Paul Nitze: Is this a question of manpower ceiling now for you or— McNamara: It’s really the 300 specialists on that [unclear ]— Lemnitzer: What we did, you see, is we formed some new regular Meeting on the Cong ressional Resolution about Cuba 79 units. We didn’t have in the regular establishment any qualified F-84 people, or practically none.77 We had to start up a school and send these people to school. Now we’ve had a plan for getting National Guard people, by name, actually to fill these slots. They’ll all be out of school by January so this list has been coming down all the time. McNamara: What I’d like to avoid, Paul, is sending up a bill that has— Nitze: One [Unclear.] McNamara: Yeah, one for 300 people, because the criticism will be, or a criticism against the bill, will be that we’re going to call up people that had just recently served. I’d like to be able to put in a flat statement that we won’t call back people who served recently. Nitze: Of course, if you . . . You know, it might be that if you just have a proviso covering a thousand men, this is so small that you take the heat off of it. McNamara: Yeah, but then it points the finger directly and you really get a lot of gripes. I think we can— Lemnitzer: Well, if we had a little more time, I’d imagine we could get three hundred volunteers. McNamara: Yeah, I think so, too. Lemnitzer: [Unclear.] Whether it would be the exact people we request or not [unclear]. McNamara: Well, yeah. I agree, too. Lemnitzer: With a little time, I think we can try to find them [unclear]. McNamara: I think so, too. And there isn’t much . . . we’re not talking about a long period here. Lemnitzer: No. McNamara: We are only talking about 120 days. I think we could safely have— Lemnitzer: [Unclear] until January it would be a great help if we could use these men. McNamara: Yeah. Lemnitzer: Because by January you just get the bodies out of school. McNamara: Yeah. Lemnitzer: They would then start the unit training— McNamara: Yeah. 77. Manufactured by Republic, the F-84 was a fighter-bomber introduced in 1948. The F-84 swept-wing version followed in 1951. 80 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 4, 1962 Lincoln: Do you want [unclear]? Tape is shut off, perhaps by Evelyn Lincoln. After these discussions, the President had a long one-on-one session with Senator Albert Gore of Tennessee. Then he met with Sorensen and Pierre Salinger. And finally, he closed the day with a five-minute chat with McGeorge Bundy. None of these meetings was taped. Meanwhile Pierre Salinger, the White House press secretary, read the final text of the President’s statement to reporters: All Americans, as well as all of our friends in this hemisphere, have been concerned over the recent moves of the Soviet Union to bolster the military power of the Castro regime in Cuba. Information has reached this Government in the last four days from a variety of sources which establishes without doubt that the Soviets have provided the Cuban Government with a number of antiaircraft defense missiles with a slant range of 25 miles which are similar to early models of our Nike. Along with these missiles, the Soviets are apparently providing the extensive radar and other electronic equipment which is required for their operation. We can also confirm the presence of several Sovietmade motor torpedo boats carrying ship-to-ship guided missiles having a range of 15 miles. The number of Soviet military technicians now known to be in Cuba or en route—approximately 3,500—is consistent with assistance in setting up and learning to use this equipment. As I stated last week, we shall continue to make information available as fast as it is obtained and properly verified. There is no evidence of any organized combat force in Cuba from any Soviet bloc country, of military bases provided to Russia, of a violation of the 1934 treaty relating to Guantánamo, of the presence of offensive ground-to-ground missiles, or of other significant offensive capability either in Cuban hands or under Soviet direction and guidance. Were it to be otherwise, the gravest issues would arise. The Cuban question must be considered as a part of the worldwide challenge posed by Communist threats to the peace. It must be dealt with as a part of that larger issue as well as in the context of the special relationships which have long characterized the inter-American system. It continues to be the policy of the United States that the Castro regime will not be allowed to export its aggressive purposes by force or by the threat of force. It will be prevented by whatever means may be necessary from taking action against any part of the Western W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 81 Hemisphere. The United States, in conjunction with other hemisphere countries, will make sure that while increased Cuban armaments will be a heavy burden to the unhappy people of Cuba themselves, they will be nothing more. His official day at an end, the President went for his evening swim at 7:35 P.M. Wednesday, September 5, 1962 The President reached the Oval Office after breakfast with the congressional leadership. The international news that morning was not good. The Soviets had decided to flex a little muscle in the air corridors linking Berlin to the world. On Tuesday, Soviet MiGs had unexpectedly “escorted” three commercial airplanes flying over East Germany on their way to West Berlin. These actions stood in stark contrast to Moscow’s apparent acceptance of a Western plan to regulate Soviet troop movements to the Soviet War Memorial in West Berlin. The news from Moscow would not get any better in the course of the day. The Soviets would decide to reiterate their opposition to any four-power meeting on Berlin, asserting instead that the best way to eliminate tension in that divided city was to sign peace treaties with both Germanies and remove all troops from West Berlin. And on this day, the Kremlin would also dismiss the Kennedy administration’s explanation of the U-2 accident in the Soviet Far East. “Unworthy of responsible politicians,” said the authoritative newspaper, Izvestia.1 This morning Kennedy’s chief foreign policy advisers testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee about the current crisis in U.S.Soviet relations. Neither Dean Rusk nor Robert McNamara mentioned the administration’s intention to ask for standby authorization to call up reserves. This was still closely held among the few congressional leaders who had been briefed on Tuesday. But they did talk about Cuba, Berlin, and the fact that the United States still had more nuclear weapons than the Soviet Union.2 1. “Russians Scorn U-2 Note; Call the Flight Aggressive,” New York Times, 6 September 1962. 2. Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Together with Joint Sessions 82 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 The President, on the other hand, had a largely ceremonial morning. He signed into law a bill designating Frederick Douglass’s home as a national historical site. Then, after a brief meeting with the U.S. ambassador to Portugal, the President spent some time with participants in the Experiment in International Living program. Kennedy returned to the White House after lunch at 3:50 P.M. He switched the tape recorder on and off rapidly, catching what appear to be the words, “Ambassador Steven[son].” Then silence. The President went into a 13-minute meeting with the Democratic governor of Wisconsin, John Reynolds, before turning to the next big issue on his agenda, nuclear testing. 5:00 –6:15 P.M. I get the impression with all this material [that] this is a case of go out and see what happens. Because you know, nobody knows. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series3 President Kennedy was uneasy about the remaining tests in the DOMINIC series. Following the start of the Soviet test series that summer, Defense and the AEC had pushed for an increase in the number of U.S. nuclear tests. The Soviet tests seemed to have revealed a much greater antimissile capability than had been expected, and there was concern that the United States needed more information for its own ABM development. The answer for the United States seemed to be more high-altitude tests, which could simulate the effect of nuclear war on satellites and missile communications, to keep in step with the Soviets. For some time, Kennedy had expressed concern over high-altitude tests. There was a body of evidence that these tests added radiation—electron particles—to the Earth’s magnetic field, a potential hazard to satellites and, worse, to astronauts who happened to be in Earth orbit. Over the objections of the British and some U.S. scientists, Kennedy had approved high-altitude tests in the original DOMINIC plan. with the Senate Armed Services Committee (Historical Series), 5 September 1962, Volume 14, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., 1962 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1986). 3. Including President Kennedy, McGeorge Bundy, Leland Haworth, Carl Kaysen, Robert McNamara, Dean Rusk, Glenn Seaborg, Theodore Sorensen, Robert Seamans, Jerome Wiesner, Adrian Fisher, and James Webb. Tape 20, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 83 Now, however, just as he fielded requests for more of these tests, Kennedy had additional reasons to doubt his original grant of approval. On September 1, the Atomic Energy Commission had admitted that the highaltitude STARFISH test, conducted on July 8, had unexpectedly added significant amounts of radiation to the Earth’s magnetic field, causing damage to the fuel cells on three satellites. Of great embarrassment to the U.S. government was the fact that one of the damaged satellites, which lost its ability to communicate with Earth, was British. Kennedy could not abandon high-altitude tests easily. At Geneva, the U.S. and British governments had proposed a draft of a partial test ban that would have outlawed all atmospheric and high-altitude testing as of January 1, 1963. Although the initial Soviet reaction to this proposal had been negative, Kennedy wished to have all high-altitude testing out of the way quickly just in case a change in Soviet disarmament policy made a treaty possible before the new year. Canceling the remaining tests, however, would be a direct challenge to what his military experts were telling him about the new Soviet antiballistic missile program. They wanted him to swallow a few, last-minute, high-altitude tests as part of DOMINIC, so that the U.S. missile defense program could keep up with what the Russians were doing. And, if these contradictory pressures were not enough to keep in mind, Kennedy knew that NASA had another Mercury space mission scheduled for September. Kennedy did not want the astronaut, Walter M. Schirra, to be endangered by a high-altitude test.4 So, if Kennedy approved more high-altitude tests in 1962, they would have to be scheduled with Schirra’s mission in mind. The President did not want a high-profile postponement of that Mercury mission to draw attention to any decision to press on with a few last high-altitude shots. Before the nuclear test meeting began, President Kennedy and a few of his national security advisers discussed Cuban policy. Press speculation following the President’s September 4 statement centered on the possibility of early military action against the island. The recording picked up an elliptical discussion of the possibilities of imposing a blockade. Dean Rusk: I think you were starting to say something about this. Unidentified: I think— President Kennedy: The blockade thing is really [dead]. 4. Born 12 March 1923, in Hackensack, New Jersey, Captain Walter “Wally” M. Schirra flew on Mercury 8, Gemini 6, and Apollo 7. 84 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Unidentified: [Unclear.] McGeorge Bundy: A newsman? President Kennedy: You know what I think we ought to do, would be to get a good analysis of what the problems are of blockade—of how long it would take to have [unclear]. [Unclear exchange.] There are a few steps we can have ready [unclear]— Robert McNamara: Well, things we can do now: We could even check the [unclear]. But I am very reticent that the blockade would be very effective on that.5 [Unclear interjection.] And it would certainly lead to retaliation, then, almost certainly, I would assume, by the Soviets.6 Dean Rusk: It might in broad terms be very [unclear]. President Kennedy: Let’s deal with that unless [unclear]. My attitude on [unclear interjection by McGeorge Bundy] off by the weather. Bundy: [Unclear.] What we could do, what could we do . . . Unidentified: Building up an independent— McNamara: In addition to the deterrent we [unclear]. Unidentified: —[a] target zone. When we put it out. [Unclear discussion.] Bundy: Third paragraph. I have all the latest substantial [unclear]. McNamara: The problem is that there is still substantial doubt whether the [unclear] Soviets retaliate with their forces in Berlin or elsewhere . . . but put that kind of a blockade in [Cuba] and it will be effective immediately with the quantities [unclear]. President Kennedy: That’s obvious. McNamara: And we didn’t discuss [unclear]. Rusk: [Unclear.] [Unclear exchange.] McNamara: He said it wouldn’t take any U.S. soldiers. Unidentified: I didn’t know you said seven. McNamara: I didn’t tell him how many. [Unclear] U.S. soldiers. Unidentified: Sorry. McNamara: I think— Rusk: They believe they can hold on. McNamara: Substantial casualties [unclear] in Cuba. Unidentified: In any event, we got a call from your office [unclear]. Unidentified: Well, this isn’t going to be worse in the future. [Laughter.] 5. The Soviet military buildup on Cuba. 6. In the 4 September drafting meeting the President had worried that the Soviets would respond to any blockade of Cuba with a blockade of West Berlin. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 85 President Kennedy: All right. McGeorge Bundy calls the nuclear test meeting to order. The chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, Glenn Seaborg, is to lead off with a briefing on the latest Soviet test series. Announced on July 21, this test series started on August 5 with a gigantic atmospheric test estimated at 30 megatons. In the days that followed, the Soviets tested many nuclear devices with much smaller yields. Bundy: Mr. President, this is a preliminary meeting for a meeting of the NSC [National Security Council] tomorrow. [Tape cut off briefly.] And then look at the draft letter which essentially states the direct and appropriate amount of defense commission. Glenn Seaborg: Well, very briefly there have been 18 airburst tests, and then there was this one underground test, where we really just got a picture of the crater of.7 Since the start there have . . . we only have a little bit of the radiochemistry at the moment. Twenty-nine seconds excised as classified information. Seaborg: The other thing I think that’s interesting about the series is there’s been a tremendous concentration on relatively small-yield tests; we’ve gotten several in the less than 5 kt [kiloton] and some that were probably less than 1 kt are the ones which we don’t really have a good yield [unclear.]8 This is much more so than we’ve ever seen before when they’ve tested. Jerome Wiesner: That’s not surprising given the last series, which concentrated on hard wood— Unidentified: That’s right. President Kennedy: But it indicates . . . what does that indicate? Unidentified: Well, the thing it might indicate [is] that they’re aiming at the small tactical— President Kennedy: Tactical. Unidentified: —type of devices; that would be my guess. Twelve seconds excised as classified information. Seaborg: These are still pretty tenuous but there are a number of connections between Tyuratam and the other testing areas and also with Novaya Zemlya. And there is a certain, at least, possibility that they will fire 7. An airburst is the explosion of a nuclear weapon in the atmosphere, but below 100,000 feet and at such an altitude that the expanding fireball does not touch the Earth’s surface. Test devices detonated above 100,000 feet are known as high-altitude tests. 8. Yield is the energy released in nuclear explosions, usually expressed in terms of the equivalent tonnage of TNT required to produce the same energy release. 86 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 something from Novaya Zemlya, coming from Tyuratam up to Novaya Zemlya or perhaps from some other inland site. But [unclear] likely to be Tyuratam.9 Eleven seconds excised as classified information. Seaborg: Which were similar to those tests which occurred off in the Novaya Zemlya area, which gives us some thought that perhaps if they are going to do a high-altitude test, they will do it up there. President Kennedy: This gives [unclear], all right. What problems might that present—similar to the problem of, that we— Seaborg: We don’t—I gather you’d have to ask Jerry [Wiesner] on this but my feeling is that this is less likely to cause trouble than at those higher latitudes.10 But as of last week those scientists—[unclear interjection]. No, you’re thinking of the shot . . . no those radiation effects—but we really don’t know enough about it to be sure one way or the other— it probably would depend on what the yield is. President Kennedy: How much? By what factor would you have to increase the number of—11 Unidentified: Electrons. Unidentified: Electrons. President Kennedy: —to make a lunar journey prohibitive? Wiesner: It would make it difficult if you wind up with [unclear] . . . President Kennedy: A moral [unclear]. Wiesner: More advanced . . . Would you say a factor of 50 would really push it . . . serious trouble? Unidentified: Well, as of right now, we feel that we probably can get through; however, it is already a matter of concern and it is an additive effect. And so we would really be concerned if the electronic power increased by a factor of say ten times. I think that would almost rule out the flight. 9. The Tyuratam Missile Test Range was east of the Aral Sea in the Soviet republic of Kazakhstan. Referred to as Baikonur in official Soviet press releases, it was the location of the first Soviet launch of an intercontinental-range ballistic missile in August 1957. 10. Jerome B. Wiesner was the President’s special assistant for science and technology and director of the White House Office of Science and Technology. 11. The President has in mind the controversy about the effects of high-altitude testing on the upper atmosphere. On 11 August the Soviets had asked the United States not to conduct any tests that endangered their cosmonaut Major Andrian Nikolayev. Here Kennedy wonders whether the more recent Soviet high-altitude tests had added additional charged particles— electrons—to the upper atmosphere, which could interfere with radio communications or even pose a threat to the lives of astronauts who orbited through this space. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 87 Unidentified: There are actually two things that—there are a number of things you could do, I might point out. First of all, you could launch. You see your present difficulties occur at one hot spot in the Atlantic. If you could carry out your launchings in a way that avoided that—handicapping your launching time. You could get it back to a very substantial reduction by doing that. Secondly— President Kennedy: I’d have to move the whole space program up to New England then. [Laughter.] Unidentified: Yeah. Unidentified: What did we move it for then [unclear]? Unidentified:12 [Unclear] I think you could fire from any of our bases and avoid that. It just depends on the nature of your launch as a matter of fact and the nature of your mission mostly. Secondly—whereas I think NASA is justifiably worried about the present 8R estimates of dosage, a human being could take 10 [to] 20 times that dosage of electrons, and medical people tell us, and still survive and not be sick, not be hurt. I think the [unclear]— President Kennedy: In any case, I was thinking just because of this . . . We haven’t gotten any response from the Soviets— Unidentified: I think a factor of 50 would really get you in serious trouble. I think Bob is right that at a factor of 10 you’d begin to worry— I think you could manage, if you found yourself in this embarrassment, but I don’t— President Kennedy: OK, right, in any case. Unidentified: It also causes heaps of trouble, if you start— James Webb: Well, I think we can shield, but it might cause us some trouble. 13 Rusk: Would any [unclear]? Has anything happened in the recent Soviet series that is any surprise at all? Unidentified: No. Seaborg: I think the only thing surprising is that they haven’t really been—so far at this stage in the analysis—nothing surprising has showed up. But [unclear]. I think it was a little bit of a surprise that this first one was clean; I think one rather expected it not to be.14 12. Probably Robert Seamans of NASA. 13. Shield the astronaut from this radiation. 14. A weapon that produces less residual radiation relative to other weapons of the same energy yield is said to be cleaner. 88 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 President Kennedy: What about our tests? How would you summarize our tests, as far as . . . so, how would they? If they were talking about our tests would they dismiss them quite as you dismiss theirs? Seaborg: I think that they would not be able to understand the sophistication of some of the biggest advances we have. Well, one other point I might mention: we have electromagnetic timing measurements on the . . . pulse measurements on a number of these high-yield shots and so far all of them have been two-stage as far— Unidentified: Well, we’ve missed the 25 megaton, we’ve— Seaborg: No. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Seaborg: No, no. We got it but not with the airplane; we got it.15 [Unclear.] Unidentified: That’s a two-stage one, too? Seaborg: And that’s two-stage . . . Now this data—I think, at this stage one must always remember one is still relatively looking . . . taking a first look at the data. Unidentified: I think— Seaborg: Last year things changed several times in the process . . . Unidentified: I think one observation that might be made here. And I don’t want to put a lot of weight on it; but that is: this 25-megaton shot being clean can be inter[preted] . . . I mean, it has significance in various ways. But our most advanced ideas, namely the ripple concept, leads to an inherently clean system and maximum efficiency.16 Unidentified: You don’t know whether it is a clean weapon or another weapon that is— Unidentified: Right. Or [unclear interjection] whether it’s clean to be clean or whether it’s clean [unclear interjection]. Seaborg: I’m sorry, I believe it has lead in it. And I think that’s quite a different process. I’ll check, and I don’t have it here, but that’s my understanding [unclear and unclear interjection] in lead so that it’s not an amazing development. Webb: Well, perhaps it isn’t— Seaborg: It wouldn’t show up in lead. Webb: With reference to your earlier question, Mr. President, I think 15. The U.S. Air Force and the CIA cooperated in using reconnaissance planes to collect electronic signals from Soviet test ranges. The U-2 that strayed over Soviet territory in late August was likely on one of these missions (see “Meeting on U-2 Incident,” 4 September 1962). 16. A ripple device permits the firing or releasing of two or more munitions, in this context nuclear weapons, in close succession. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 89 probably the single most-advanced thing they wouldn’t be able to make much sense out of, namely the ripple, which is of course a very reduced yield and a very complicated device. So, I doubt that they could really make any sense of it. Unidentified: So, they would have the same troubles we have with their efficient weapon last time. [Chuckles.] Webb: Yes, I think so. Unidentified: Not being able to decipher what it was. Seaborg: I don’t think also that they have anything like the sophisticated system that we have for [unclear]. Twenty-two seconds excised as classified information. Kaysen: . . . I think, leads to the very low weight, high-yield weapons. Are the two most— Unidentified: Why in other words, yes— Unidentified: The two most important. Kaysen: Yes. And with some real [unclear] advances in the primary, the primary— Unidentified: Well, those came from underground. Bundy: [Unclear] and did them underground. That’s correct. Kaysen: I was speaking of— Twenty-four seconds excised as classified information. President Kennedy: All right, well, let’s . . . Can you? Bundy: That’s essentially all— President Kennedy: [Unclear] now? [flipping through chart] Where do you want us to look? Bundy: Well, at their yield. At the back of graph 3, Mr. President, that you will see the series of tests which [unclear]— Unidentified: We brought a chart that indicates that . . . Bundy: The next to last page, page 17, following the schedule, what it amounts to is a series of values, you get 6 of one, 5 of the other.17 Unidentified: That’s right. A total of 11. Bundy: Of high-altitude tests primarily for determining these effects, which we still so imperfectly understand from 50 kilometers on up, 25 kilometers on up.18 And a series of five new atmospheric tests primarily designed to 17. In reaction to the new Soviet test series, President Kennedy had indicated in August that he would authorize an additional 11 tests in the DOMINIC series, some of which would be high-altitude tests. 18. For details on the scope, character, and purposes of the DOMINIC test series, see Chuck Hansen, U.S. Nuclear Weapons: The Secret History (New York: Orion Books, 1988), pp. 81–89. 90 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 explore further the problem of very high yield weapons with probably low weights. The most important being the Ripple II and Ripple III experiments, I believe. President Kennedy: Where are those? Bundy: On the right-hand side. President Kennedy: OK. Bundy: It may be worth just a moment to explain what that is. I should think Lee [Haworth] or Glenn [Seaborg] . . .19 Because that is probably the most important technical development in our own Dominic series. Kaysen: That’s the sort of breakthrough of the Livermore laboratory. One minute, 29 seconds excised as classified information. During the portion of this conversation excised for reasons of national security, the President evidently asked Glenn Seaborg a question that led to the following discussion of the role of underground testing in the U.S. program of nuclear trials. Rusk: . . . you might Glenn Seaborg, before you get to the President’s question, looking ahead at your own program underground, do you see, [unclear] strictly from your own point of view, a period of six months say in which you would not yourself expect to conduct underground tests for reasons of your own? Do you . . . Are there going to be any recesses? Seaborg: You mean if there were . . . If the possibility existed of carrying on tests in the future on a— Rusk: Yes. Seaborg: Optimum time schedule? Rusk: If there were no, if you like, interference from the outside. Are there periods of time in which you would not be doing anything anyhow—if you were just running your own . . . Seaborg: I think our present view is that from the standpoint of the best rate of advance by testing, that the Atomic Energy Commission would prefer the— Rusk: Steady course. Seaborg: The steady course at an optimum rate, where the tests would be [unclear]— President Kennedy: Let’s see—how many underground tests have we carried on now, since last September? Seaborg: About 15. 19. Leland J. Haworth was a commissioner of the AEC. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 91 President Kennedy: We had 15 underground tests and 15 atmospheric tests. Seaborg: No about 25 are— President Kennedy: So, we’ve had 25 atmospheric. Seaborg: About, yes. President Kennedy: Twenty-five atmospheric tests. We’ve had 75 tests in the last 11, 10 months now.20 I can’t see what there is above . . . ahead of us in the next nine months or a year that make it so necessary for us to continue to test beyond what you have talked about here. So, I mean, we are starting to talk about what, 75 times or 60, aren’t we? I mean that’s what we’re— Unidentified: Mr. President could I make a comment on that? President Kennedy: Yes. Unidentified: There is something that is in the underground program that’s of great interest to us. And that’s about mainly our clean weapons in the low-yield range.21 Fifty-one seconds excised as classified information. Bundy: Broadly speaking, the underground testing program can now provide for continuous and rapid weapons development and effects tests when we get calibration for everything up to 50 or even 100 kt.22 And I think if we were to put it this way, Mr. President, so that you could see the choices: I don’t believe that there will be any significant, really heavy pressure from the laboratories for continued atmospheric tests for a period of a year to 18 months after this series is completed in the higher yields. And I think if we were to continue without atmospheric testing in 1963, you would have high morale with a high rate of progress. Underground testing, simply because it is the outlet, has a kind of psychological impact on the vitality and the energy of the laboratories and there is, therefore, a certain cost of cutting that off. On the other hand, the fact that we have had these 50 tests makes it perfectly plain 20. The President was only off by one test. Since the Soviets broke the moratorium in September 1961 and by the time of this meeting, the United States had tested 27 times in the atmosphere as part of the DOMINIC series, 44 times underground as part of the NOUGAT series, and 5 times underground or on the surface as part of Operation STORAX—a total of 76 tests. (Gallery of U.S. Nuclear Tests, Federation of American Scientists, www.fas.org). 21. These were for tactical use. 22. The first U.S. underground test (RAINIER) occurred in 1957. By 1962, most U.S. nuclear testing was done underground at the National Testing Site in Nevada. In fact, two-thirds of all U.S. tests since the resumption of testing in September 1961 took place underground. 92 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 that in the underground area we are, not only more experienced, but better informed and better prepared than any other country. Kaysen: Of course, somebody has [unclear]—but we are also learning how to test higher and higher yields underground. This probably could now be used to test weapons up to about 100 kilotons and possibly could go up as high as a megaton. The point that Mr. Bundy makes about the general effect on the laboratories and the state of readiness that it keeps the laboratories in and the state of higher morale that it provides for the laboratories is, of course, a point [that] we have made many times.23 Seaborg: I think it is just about happenstance perhaps; there has to be a time at which the things that one, the advances one would hope to make—the most significant advances that are down in the ground are ones which require a series of experiments rather than a —you build up to a point and have a sudden go/no-go test. The all-fusion weapon, is one example. Wiesner: But the all-fusion weapon, Mr. President, shouldn’t weigh very heavily in your mind, in my opinion. [Seaborg is mumbling in the background.] Because, the fact of the matter is today the all-fusion weapon, as the result of some of the tests, looks more dismal than it did a year ago. Keep in mind that people [unclear] make it. And it’s got to be regarded as a long-term development program. I don’t think it should be a major factor in seeing whatever your thinking is . . . President Kennedy: Well, let’s go to work on these other matters [unclear]—were you going to say something about that? Seaborg: No, that’s all right but— Wiesner: Wouldn’t you agree with the— Seaborg: Well yeah, the high cleanliness . . . whether it’s all-fusion or the other is the same general— [Unclear exchange.] Wiesner: Which is the one that people hold out as a very cheap, and therefore very attractive weapon. It’s still a gleam. And it is probably a dimmer gleam now than it was a year ago. Unidentified: Well, this is of course part of the go/no-go [unclear]. Wiesner: Yes. Unidentified: It doesn’t make it, for us, in a year, either. Unidentified: That’s right. Unidentified: From a military standpoint, some of these small, cleaner systems can be very useful. [Some agreement in the background.] 23. See Leland Haworth’s and Glenn Seaborg’s comments at the test ban meeting of 1 August 1962. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 93 Unidentified: Yeah, I’m sure that’s right. President Kennedy: Let’s take a look down this—how many tests are we talking about? Unidentified: Eleven until [unclear]. President Kennedy: And they would be run from what date to what date? Bundy: I would say from the third week in September to the first week in November. But this illustrated schedule which is on page 17 probably should be slipped and this is as good point as any to indicate the really grave complexity of this, which is the reason we’ve asked Mr. Webb and Dr. Seamans to be here . . . is that we have a Mercury shot scheduled now for the 25th of September. While we do not believe that test Fluvio or test Nike/Hercules currently scheduled for the 17th to the 22nd will do more than very temporary damage to this orbiting area, we don’t know that.24 And it would certainly be necessary to measure the atmosphere before sending up Mr. [Walter] Schirra.25 And our preliminary thought in a staff discussion of this yesterday, was that we might do better, assuming that this in principle, in the main, were it acceptable to you, Mr. President, to slip the whole thing a couple of weeks.26 And to put this initial shot safely behind— the Mercury shot—rather than to have any question of this kind arise. The way the diplomatic situation has developed there is a kind of an informal image of a January 1 point at which there may be pressure not to do atmospheric testing in light of what you and the Russians have said to each other; I don’t know whether Butch would agree on this.27 Adrian Fisher: Yes I would. I think January 1 is sort of a point— President Kennedy: What? About atmospheric testing or all of them? Fisher: Well, January 1 is the date which we said we would— President Kennedy: Stop the testing. Fisher: —would like to have an effective treaty. If you put it in terms of an effective treaty . . . But still if saying that, if you start up on January 1 with a series of large bangs, I think that gives you a little bit of a trumpet blowing an uncertain note. President Kennedy: Of course, this Schirra may be a week or two weeks delayed . . . might be so? 24. These high-altitude tests were subsequently postponed, scaled back, and renamed. 25. Astronaut Schirra was originally scheduled to blast off aboard Mercury 8 on September 23. 26. The remainder of the DOMINIC test series. 27. Butch was Adrian Fisher, deputy director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. 94 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Webb: It could be. But we are certainly making every effort to go off by the 25th. Bundy: The alternative would be if, let’s say for the moment—that we were to say that we gave NASA ten days or two weeks from the 25th to try to get him up. If that, for various technical reasons, did not happen, it might be well to put the Mercury shot over to December, where there’s another one scheduled. Then get the series out of the way, and go forward. McNamara: Could we not carry on some of the airdrop tests?28 Bundy: We could do that. The airdrop tests are really not a problem. [McNamara is mumbling in the background.] But they are very easy anyway, Bob. They can be done at any point. McNamara: I agree. I am just suggesting that instead of pushing the whole schedule forward two weeks— Bundy: The tight part of the schedule is the high-altitude testing part. That’s where there are uncertainties. McNamara: I think there is some merit in starting the testing . . . Bundy and McNamara speak at the same time. Bundy: I agree, [unclear] with the current tests. I would only [unclear] started, if the Soviets stop. McNamara: However, in that case we could start airdrops. Wiesner: Well, there is a problem though, that the ripple weapons have to be fabricated. Unidentified: That’s right. Wiesner: So that you can’t drop them tomorrow. They are still in the laboratory, in development. Unidentified: These were actually the earliest dates at which they could be made ready. President Kennedy: You mean and each weapon, in other words— Unidentified: They are being run through the laboratory right now. President Kennedy: This is a schedule which is based on when these weapons will be ready? Unidentified: Yes. I’d speak [unclear] now. [Unclear.] Bundy: [Unclear] two ranges, Mr. President. In the high-altitude test 28. Most of the tests in the DOMINIC series (25 April 1962 to 4 November 1962)—29 out of the 36 tests— were airdrop tests. They involved dropping the nuclear device from an aircraft, detonating it in the air, and measuring its yield. Unlike high-altitude tests, which were designed primarily to measure weapons effects, airdrop tests were used for weapons development. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 95 cases, it is based on pad availability, essentially the BLUEGILL test,29 the URRACA test,30 and the KINGFISH test31 [unclear]. President Kennedy: [Unclear]? Seaborg: Wouldn’t this help you some, Jerry, with respect to this airplane question? Wiesner: In what? Seaborg: The BLUEGILL. . . . Isn’t there a problem of outfitting an aircraft by September 17th anyway? Unidentified: Well, there is. There is the question of whether it’s a critical . . . a critical air [unclear] or not. [Unidentified person agreeing in the background.] We could be ready to fire sometime in that period, but there might be some degradation of the experiment. Of course this is something that can happen any time in the course of an operation. But I think at this stage it would help. However, what about HAYMAKER prime risk two, you would [unclear] perhaps?32 Unidentified: Well, I don’t believe Ripple II, I am quite sure Ripple II cannot. I believe that the HAYMAKER can; but I have to check it— Unidentified: That’s right, HAYMAKER [unclear]. McNamara: In any case, HAYMAKER doesn’t have to be postponed. That’s the point I’m trying to make here. Unidentified: Yes. Bundy: [Unclear] That problem doesn’t arise yet, so I think we can start— Unidentified: On the 23rd— Bundy: —the third week of September . . . [Unidentified person says, “That’s right.”] Rusk: Does the BLUEGILL shot get into the space problem at all? 33 29. The BLUEGILL test was aborted on 3 June 1962 when the Johnston Island missile tracking system failed. The BLUEGILL Prime [the second BLUEGILL test] was the test that blew up the launch pad and contaminated the launch site at Johnston Island on 25 July 1962. The Thor missile engine failed after ignition, and the missile control officer hit the destruct button while the missile was still on the ground. BLUEGILL was a high-altitude test to evaluate a W-50 warhead in a Mk 4 reentry vehicle. (Hansen, U.S. Nuclear Weapons, pp. 86–87.) 30. The highest nuclear test (1,300 kilometers) ever planned by the United States, URRACA was controversial from the moment DOD official Harold Brown announced the schedule for high-altitude testing 29 April 1962. It was considered the most likely test to add additional radiation to the Earth’s magnetic field, and it was subsequently canceled. 31. The KINGFISH test was a test similar to BLUEGILL in intention and design. 32. A HAYMAKER underground test, in the NOUGAT series, took place 27 June 1962. 33. BLUEGILL Double Prime was intended to be the lowest of the high-altitude tests. Like the earlier BLUEGILLs, it too failed. 96 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Kaysen: They are predicted not to. Bundy: We think not but we would have to make a check, Mr. Secretary, before we set up an announcement— Rusk: It would be better for the BLUEGILL shots, if the altitude permits it in honesty . . . to consider those ordinary atmospheric tests rather than high-altitude outer space tests. Unidentified: [Snickering.] Unidentified: If you don’t, well let’s try. [Unclear interjection.] There is some concern about the possibility of BLUEGILL getting something up to levels that will have some effect on the man in space . . . [unclear] far up that— Unidentified: We don’t believe this—but we believe it enough that we’d have to make measurements after the shot to be sure. President Kennedy: Well, I don’t think we want it around that we blew off something a week before that made us postpone the thing for three months.34 I think we shouldn’t take that chance. I would rather take it on the other end. [Unclear] telling me [unclear] had some slippage [unclear] by November 1st, well, let’s say that as we . . . then let’s not have it then. Let them go ahead and let’s . . . then go till November 20th, [unclear] not [unclear]. Bundy: What we would actually do Mr. President, I think, is to move the BLUEGILL-URRACA-KINGFISH series back two weeks. There’s a particular problem about KINGFISH which is worth attention, too. And that’s the one now scheduled next to last on the 14th of October. President Kennedy: Well, let’s just set it as our policy that we will not put off any tests that raises any reasonable prospect of interfering until Schirra goes. And then let’s try to decide which of these tests we can throw out. We don’t want to do them all, if we can help it. Seaborg: You mean which of these we’d terminate? President Kennedy: Yeah. Seaborg: Well, our candidate among the developmental tests would be the fourth, THUMBELINA.35 President Kennedy: What about URRACA? President Kennedy had been uneasy about this planned test since the British 34. Schirra’s Mercury mission. 35. Thumbelina was the name of a nuclear device. Although there was no test called THUMBELINA in the DOMINIC series, a Thumbelina device was ultimately tested in an airdrop test called CHAMA on 18 October 1962. The Thumbelina nuclear device was lightweight with a small diameter. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 97 raised an objection to it in May. Kennedy created a special panel, including scientists Wolfgang Panofsky and James A. Van Allen, to study the radiation effect of URRACA on the natural radiation belt—the so-called Van Allen radiation belt—in the Earth’s magnetic field. Although this distinguished panel assured the President that URRACA would not contribute significantly to the number of electrons, the President was biased against the test. For months his AEC chief Seaborg and McNamara had been fighting a rearguard action to save it. With evidence that the July STARFISH test had added so much radiation to the magnetic field that one British and two U.S. satellites had been severely damaged, the President was even more determined not to take any chances with URRACA. Seaborg: No, that’s [laughter]. Unidentified: That’s our only [unclear]. Unidentified: That’s our only [unclear]. President Kennedy: What? Seaborg: That’s the AEC’s only high-altitude shot. President Kennedy: I know. But we . . . I know, it’s one of the saddest things I’ve ever . . . I mean, it needs 1,500 kilometers. [Laughter.] Seaborg: Oh, well, no, we should have made the point that that has been reduced, Mr. President. President Kennedy: To what? Seaborg: From 165 kilotons to 10 kilotons to make the contribution to the artificial radiation belt negligible. President Kennedy: All right. So, now it is down to 10 kt? Seaborg: It is down to 10 kt. President Kennedy: At 1,500 kilometers? Seaborg: It is— Bundy: Mr. President, if you wanted to look at the problem of the contribution to the electrons, the test to concentrate on is KINGFISH. Seaborg: Yes, and we should get to that, I think, because that’s— Bundy: That’s the— Rusk: [Unclear] the URRACA. I would like to ask an irreverent question, if I can [unclear]? Seaborg: Yes. Rusk: I get the impression with all this material [that] this is a case of go out and see what happens. Because you know, nobody knows.36 Is that [unclear]— 36. Rusk is raising a sore subject. Only days earlier the AEC had to admit that the STARFISH test at 400 kilometers had unexpectedly added large amounts of radiation to the Earth’s mag- 98 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Seaborg: Well that’s [unclear]. Wiesner: If it’s worse than that, you know. [Laughter.] Seaborg: No, I don’t agree with that and I wouldn’t describe it that way. Rusk: [Unclear] saying the knowledge of the existence of unpredicted phenomena could be very important. Seaborg: Yes, and we’ve found unpredicted things, for example, in KINGFISH— Unidentified: We sure did. Wiesner: This is the place where Glenn’s loyalty to his organization, I think—37 President Kennedy: Now tell me why it is that this is the AEC’s only test? Seaborg: Well, because they are effects shots and the other—38 President Kennedy: But, I mean, Livermore—Los Alamos. This is a Los Alamos [Scientific Laboratory] test? Seaborg: Yes. Unidentified: This is their only high-altitude— Seaborg: The only high-altitude test. Unidentified: The rest are Defense Department tests. Seaborg: That was primarily AEC’s; of course they are all at Livermore [unclear].39 [Unclear] sort of joint. President Kennedy: Yeah, but I don’t know . . . And that really is. What are you going to try to find from this test? Seaborg: How to . . . ourselves . . . test if it becomes desirable in space. And to make the diagnosis from those tests that would be necessary for weapons development and how to ascertain whether the other fellow is testing [unclear]— netic field, causing damage to the fuel cells on three satellites. According to Seaborg’s later memoir, Dean Rusk would rib him for years about AEC’s erroneous prediction about the effects of this high-altitude test [Glenn Seaborg, with the assistance of Benjamin S. Loeb, Kennedy, Khrushchev and the Test Ban (Berkeley; University of California Press 1981), p.156]. 37. Seaborg is probably referring to the ill-fated STARFISH test. In his memoir, Seaborg admits that the AEC had tried to hide the fact that it had been so wrong on STARFISH. In its first assessment of the test results on 20 August, the AEC wrote that the increase in radiation had been “generally anticipated.” Yes, it had been anticipated, but for the higher-altitude URACCA test not for STARFISH; and the AEC believed these changes would be insignificant for the Van Allen belt, in any case (see Seaborg, Kennedy, p. 157). 38. Effects shots are tests designed to test the effect of a nuclear blast on communications, electromagnetic pulses, and so on, in outer space. 39. Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, initially the University of California Radiation Laboratory. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 99 President Kennedy: Well, I think what we ought to do is go around the room and everybody throw in what test they would give up, if they had to. And then we can . . . I say we’re going to cut this list down. What do we want now? Seaborg: All right. Well, I have given you the Thumbelina [device test], yes, sir. President Kennedy: All right. Now, Jerry [Wiesner]. What one would you give? Wiesner: Oh, dear. President Kennedy: Let’s get . . . the problem is which is the least useful scientifically? Wiesner: I would rather go the other way and say which ones I think are most valuable. President Kennedy: Let’s do it my way. Let’s just . . . Wiesner: All right, your way, well . . . [chuckling]. President Kennedy: Which one would you throw off the list? Wiesner: My list will be longer this way. I’d agree with THUMBELINA. I would say that HAYMAKER Prime is probably useful, but not necessary. I would— President Kennedy: What’s the least useful? Wiesner: Least useful: probably THUMBELINA or URRACA. President Kennedy: URRACA. We’ve already got THUMBELINA; so we get URRACA. Wiesner: URRACA. President Kennedy: All right. Wiesner: I think Ripple III could be dispensed with, wouldn’t you agree, [unclear]? Kaysen: I’d give up Ripple III, before I’d give up URRACA, yes. Unidentified: Yes. Wiesner: Now, not all of the 10-kiloton tests in the high-altitude series are necessary. You’ll get interesting and useful information— President Kennedy: Yes, but, OK. Who are we going . . . Wiesner: But, you could drop all three if you wanted to. President Kennedy: Do you . . . one? What one do you [unclear]? [Laughter.] Unidentified: Well, if I were . . . I think of the high-altitude things, I think that I would throw out first number 6. I’d just have 33c. President Kennedy: That’s called? [Bundy whispers.] Unidentified: Then I would throw out, I think, next the low-yield BLUEGILL. The 25 kilometer 10 kt. President Kennedy: Number 1? 100 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Unidentified: Four. Unidentified: Four. No, 4. See, 4 is a two-stage package actually— President Kennedy: Yes. Unidentified: It’s 165 kilotons at 50 kilometers as a backup for BLUEGILL. And if BLUEGILL is successful, then it’s 10 kilotons at 25 kilometers. President Kennedy: [Unclear] questions. Do you have any, Mac? Bundy: I am sure that I would agree on throwing out THUMBELINA and I think the test that you need to pay most attention to, Mr. President, is KINGFISH number 2, in the high-altitude series. President Kennedy: That’s right. [Four seconds excised as classified information.] What about Nike/Hercules?40 Seventeen seconds excised as classified information. Seaborg: I think that’s the test you’ve read, Mr. President. Wiesner: No, no. It’s number 5. Seaborg: Oh. McNamara: The Nike/Hercules tests bear on KINGFISH— Unidentified: That’s right. McNamara: And I think today we should simply agree that we don’t know whether KINGFISH can be carried out.41 Bundy: Right. Five seconds excised as classified information. McNamara: Information can be gained from the, particularly the first Nike/Hercules, possibly from the second Nike/Hercules also, that will bear on the potential effects of KINGFISH, and we should certainly not carry out KINGFISH or decide to carry it out until one or both of those Nike/Hercules tests have been carried out, Mr. President. Unidentified: Mr. President— Wiesner: Ah, excuse me . . . The trouble with that Bob is that the best estimates that we have now is you drop KINGFISH much below 40 or 50 kilotons, you won’t get any of the blackout effects we are trying to study.42 McNamara: I agree fully. 40. The President is asking about tests using a Nike/Hercules missile to launch the test device to a somewhat lower altitude, about 25 kilometers, which might accomplish the goals of some of the high-altitude tests, like KINGFISH. 41. The Secretary of Defense is referring to the new uncertainty concerning the radiation effects of this particular high-altitude nuclear test. 42. KINGFISH is also designed to test the effect of a very high altitude (circa 95 kilometers) nuclear blast on command and control systems. Bringing the test lower or reducing its yield to avoid the harmful effects on the Van Allen belt would make it less useful for this purpose. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 101 Wiesner: [Unclear.] McNamara: As I say, I think that the Nike/Hercules tests will however bear on whether you should carry it out at all. Unidentified: Uh, huh. But, Mr. President, I think— McNamara: I don’t think we can decide today, for sure— Unidentified: No. McNamara: —whether we should carry it out. Carl Kaysen: I think there is a new dimension or element of the problem, which perhaps we didn’t have to worry about so much before. Before, we looked at total yield and we looked at what’s important and what’s not. We now have a number of 10-kt shots at different altitudes, which hasn’t you know—Bob McNamara has just said the purpose of finding out what we know about certain phenomena. I think if we look at the political side of the business of putting electrons up into space, it’s not only how many electrons we actually put up, but the total number of high-altitude shots that has some . . . That is a problem, that is something we ought to look at, so that— President Kennedy: Well, now, let me ask you, point out these shots which present the electron possibility. Forty-six seconds excised as classified information. President Kennedy: There’s not much use our going to the Russians and telling them about the problem of electrons and then going ahead and doing it ourselves and adding more electrons. Unidentified: Well, I was thinking in estimating, however, if the Russians do put one up, in the 30- or 40-megaton amount [unclear], which is not likely . . . But if they shot a very high yield one up to the, at the most vulnerable altitude and increased by a factor of five or ten the radiation that’s already up there, then we’re beginning to get into the range where [unclear] it’s becoming not, maybe not impossible but [unclear] which is complicated and difficult. I don’t regard it as likely that the Russians [unclear] . . . additional. President Kennedy: [Unclear] too; but we haven’t heard unless I ask [unclear] that we try again with [unclear] the Russian ambassador [unclear] not much available, not much to draw on over there. Wiesner: I think that Carl’s point is very important in that the total number is [unclear]. President Kennedy: Well, let’s . . . on this matter of KINGFISH, it seems to me the Defense Department ought to come forward with additional reasons for [unclear] tests [unclear] and they can propose, so that we maybe can cut down the electrons and can give us . . . which we regard as . . . based on this information. What happened before [unclear] 102 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 whether they suggest that we ought to do it or not or whether we can strip it down to . . . enough to make [unclear] useful but not hazardous. We can’t very well make any less [unclear] that the Russians as far as . . . [unclear] ourselves. Eight seconds excised as classified information. McNamara: But we are not certain that even with that reduction by a factor of ten that we have a safe test. We don’t know of any way to find out other than to carry out the Nike/Hercules tests. Wiesner: On the other hand we [unclear] number of what will happen in [unclear]. President Kennedy: The upper limit we deem . . . Wiesner: The worst possible thing that we think could happen is, and this we think is unlikely, it could double what’s already up there. Unidentified: If all the electrons are ours. Unidentified: If all the electrons that their bomb would generate— Unidentified: If they’re all going in the wrong place would [unclear] increase 50 percent. Wiesner: You see. Right now we think we’ve got 25 percent of the electrons.[Unclear.] If you got them all, you’d get 50 [unclear]. Unidentified: Of course that could be a different distribution. Rusk: We know that some of these shots are creating a problem for us in space [unclear]. I would suppose that our criteria have not changed from what is necessary for national security into it would be good to do or good to know. There is a rigorous test: What is required by national security? [Unclear.] Bundy: Mr. President, you asked the question what tests do we take now. I do not find that it’s an unacceptably long list in the context of the various ideas and possibilities and knowledge probably that we have. I agree with the Secretary [of State] that that’s the proper test. I think this may be our last clear chance to do this, and I think that there’s a great deal to be said for getting in a posture in which we have clearly found out the things we need to find out. Because we may have a year or a year and a half when it’s not easy to find out.43 President Kennedy: You think— Rusk: In fact, a major change in the weight-yield ratio, for example, is very important from a security point of view that [unclear]. Wiesner: I think you have to be careful about that because it is my understanding that this test, the Ripple II, will not put you in that posi- 43. When the pace of diplomatic negotiation would make testing politically infeasible. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 103 tion. This will put you in a position to design a weapon, which will require further testing, so that— Unidentified: No, it will put you in pretty good position. Wiesner: Except you’ll have this one. You’ll have this one, which will not be the 30 to 40 megaton. Unidentified: No, that’s right. Unidentified: It might be 15. Unidentified: Yeah. Wiesner: I understand that. So that I think that should be clear. Unidentified: But it will be a big gain. Wiesner: On the other hand, Mr. President, you want to recall the KINGFISH-type experiment was one of the basic reasons that we felt we had to resume testing.44 Which was to get [these] effects [unclear]. Because of the bad luck we’ve had in the Pacific we’ve not carried out this test. Many of the others, I think, would be cut if you took seriously the criteria we started applying initially, which the Secretary has talked about. McNamara: I would speak to that point, Jerry. I think Ripple III should not be cut. Forty-four seconds excised as classified information. McNamara: We may have to burst higher than we previously anticipated to avoid anti-ballistic missile systems. Therefore I think Ripple III is an important test as I think Ripple II is an important test. So, I wouldn’t cut out either Ripple II or Ripple III. There are others that might be cut; but not those two. President Kennedy: Where are we with BLUEGILL? Well, in any case we are agreed that we will not start these tests until after this . . . Schirra has gone ahead, we’ll give the order, then. McNamara: Except, Mr. President, for some air-drop tests. President Kennedy: Air-drop tests? McNamara: Yes. President Kennedy: If we can. If we can do that. Bundy: How long would you like that, figure that period would be, Mr. President? Do you want to make it indefinite? President Kennedy: [to the NASA representatives] Well, we ought to be able to know within two weeks if you are ever going—we hope you are going to go within two weeks of the time you’ve said. 44. Soviet high-altitude tests in 1961 had been at higher altitudes than had been anticipated by U.S. analysts. 104 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Webb: I would certainly say that. Of course, worldwide weather is the problem here. [President Kennedy agrees.] [Unclear] recovered. But I think it is feasible to set the [unclear]. If we don’t get off within two weeks of the time, we do have another [Mercury] flight scheduled in December. We’d simply cancel that and go on with December at which time we can have a chance to make it [unclear]. President Kennedy: It seems to me we probably won’t want to do that. With all the . . . you don’t want to build up the Schirra flight, then you cancel it till December. That will look like a setback. So, I would think we’d probably have to go with this flight, if you are ready to go September 25th . . . want to . . . waiting on the weather then, I think, we ought to wait until you go and just do whatever else we can do which will not affect this. Webb: We’ll do everything we can to go at the earliest possible— President Kennedy: Then the other problem is that these tests will be taking place probably after the Soviets have announced that they have desisted their tests. 45 We assume— Unidentified: They have closed the area until the 15th of October—46 President Kennedy: So we have to assume— Unidentified: But that doesn’t mean that they won’t continue with any [unclear]. Rusk: No, they told us that they are going to be finished by November 1st. President Kennedy: So we ought to be shooting for November 1st ourselves. We don’t to want to sort of string them out at the last moment if we can help it, obviously. That may mean therefore if we have to . . . if we are not able to put a couple of these airdrops into that period from September 25th that’s going to put our schedule up till November 12th and 15th, won’t it? Bundy: The tightness in the schedule, Mr. President, is much more likely to come not in the airdrop tests but in the high-altitude tests. The three that are interlocked because of the launch pad problem— Unidentified: And the airdrop won’t present much of a problem. Bundy: —are BLUEGILL, URRACA, and KINGFISH. President Kennedy: URRACA, KINGFISH, and what? Bundy: And BLUEGILL on 17 September, URRACA 29 September, and KINGFISH on 14 November. 45. The President means ended. 46. The area is the Soviet testing zone. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 105 President Kennedy: Well, we’re all agreed that we’ve got to go with BLUEGILL and we have to go with KINGFISH though we’re going to have another discussion on KINGFISH, aren’t we? [Unclear exchange.] Unidentified: Mr. President, I’d like to make one consideration that you should have in mind, and that’ll get to the background to the test ban negotiations, background to the discussions of outer space generally. And there is under consideration before you the idea of heading off this military use of space, which is the Soviet concept to get our reconnaissance satellite, with our counter position, which is no weapons of mass destruction in outer space. Now, there’s not a general resolution on that yet; but that’s the way the thinking tends . . . is shaping up. Now [unclear] is [unclear] to many ones in outer space, at the same time you make your proposal. And that’s [unclear] URRACA, and . . . [unclear interjection] which you hold your position on KINGFISH is— President Kennedy: Well, URRACA is in trouble . . . anyway. But the other . . . KINGFISH is the— Unidentified: It’s our most important test. President Kennedy: . . . most important test. Unless we have a great October, I [unclear]. Bundy: [Unclear] is the most important test. President Kennedy: What? Bundy: [Unclear] ranks after BLUEGILL, STARFISH, and URRACA, in the earlier recommendations, I think Unidentified: That is right. Unidentified: One part of the reason for that I believe was DOD wasn’t ready to go ahead with it. I think they always felt it was an important test. Seaborg: KINGFISH was always in the forefront of these. We didn’t think we could do it this year. Wiesner: Mr. President, one other thing is that [unclear] responsibility for the fallout [unclear] getting rid of Thumbelina [unclear]— President Kennedy: Yeah. Wiesner: Because that’ll [unclear]. President Kennedy: I see. Bundy: I might mention, Mr. President, although it is not a part of this specific presentation that there is also a possibility, that there is a recommendation on it, there is a request for authority to make a fourth lattice shot. And this would also create fall-out and those problems and the Defense Department yesterday was apparently pulling very hard [unclear] all this attention [unclear] the [boron?]. Seaborg: [Unclear] to trigger a shot to see about X rays up and 106 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 down. And you [unclear] experiment. You look like you get the data, but we certainly are not interested in pushing that problem. Wiesner: It’s a test that’s not unlike, it’s a test not unlike the one we had [unclear] trouble [unclear] accidentally. Seaborg: It’s about the same magnitude. There are in effect two shots: There’s one at one-and-a-half or 1.7 megaton, kilotons each but right on the surface. McNamara: Mr. President, in view of the problem of the Russians completing their tests on November 1st and ours which slipped, as we discussed it, and extending substantially beyond that point, I’d like to suggest we take this schedule, and at least as far as the Nike/Hercules and the KINGFISH shots are concerned, reschedule this to be completed by the 1st of November. I don’t know exactly how we’ll do that; but if you could give us that objective, I think we can work it out. But I don’t think we ought to have a schedule extending beyond November 1st. Unidentified: This poses a problem with regard to Mercury. McNamara: It does, well, but I am going to assume for the minute that we will accept a delay in Mercury and reschedule in such a way as to complete it by the 1st of November. President Kennedy: How long do you think you’ll need? It’s possible to give you five weeks; but it might only give you three. McNamara: It might only give us three weeks; but we have constructed another pad, fortunately. Unidentified: It doesn’t come in till the 15th— McNamara: I know it doesn’t come in until the 15th of October; but it is available for two weeks. And for two weeks, we will have two pads. For the period before that, we will only have one pad. I think we ought to simply take it as our objective to finish this off by the 1st of November, at least on schedule. Bundy: Mr. Secretary, I think we ought to be awfully careful about this high-altitude test, just out of the experience we have had in trying to cram it into a tight schedule. I would hate to see us come down to a period in which we were missing certain things in October [unclear] for the one that I would myself think in the light of the whole pattern of our relations with the Soviet Union, it is essential for us to [unclear] [McNamara begins to interject]. Pressure for [unclear]. McNamara: I don’t think it’s essential, Mac. But I think we can gain a lot by preparing to complete it by the 1st of November. As a matter of fact, we will begin to anticipate problems and find solutions to them. Mac, my concern about what may happen, if we have to defer our tests Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 107 until after Mercury starts [is] Mercury may not take off until the end of November, or the end of October. We’ve got to have some action here to try to compress our schedule. The best way to get it is simply say, assume you don’t start until the third . . . or three weeks after the 15th of September and finish the 1st of November. Rusk: But on the political side, if we were quite clear that we had given them [unclear] their two shots go off after they had stopped, we didn’t say that. President Kennedy: [Unclear] finish. Rusk: [Unclear.] Well, we wouldn’t want to do that, then the [unclear] got to be larger [unclear]. President Kennedy: What about BLUEGILL? Now, what is BLUEGILL doing in the way of electrons? Wiesner: Very little. [Unclear exchange.] President Kennedy: Can you get it at 95 [unclear]? Is that the difference? Unidentified: Yes, the pressure goes up very greatly. President Kennedy: You can’t [unclear] . . . dropping KINGFISH? Unidentified: Well, the trouble is dropping KINGFISH— President Kennedy: Now what is KINGFISH going to tell us that BLUEGILL doesn’t? Fifty-one seconds excised as classified information. President Kennedy: . . . Let’s do this. Wiesner: [Unclear] you call URRACA because we don’t know about that very high altitude— President Kennedy: Let’s take to . . . we’re going to be back here tomorrow. I think overnight let’s be thinking—I think we ought to . . . I think 11 [tests] is too many given our time problem. So we’ve got to try to drop— take it down to 8. And we just have to see where we, and then let’s see what our—given the problem of—let’s do two schedules: One in which they go off on time—give them two days; and the other is two weeks. When . . . And how would we organize it in order to get it done as close to the November 1st date as Bob McNamara has suggested in recognition that that’s not a final decision right now? Then let’s . . . What other matter do we have to consider in regard [to this]? There’s nothing more we can do about KINGFISH. You got that down about as fine as you can. Unidentified: Have to learn more, sir. It is conceivable that we will have to wait for the yields [unclear] times and the exact height of the [unclear]? 108 W E D N E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 5, 1962 Unidentified: Learn as much as we can up until . . . for the time that you need, the advance time that you need, learn as much as you can from it [unclear]. President Kennedy: Now is there anything . . . you got three, as I understand it, there are three Nike/Hercules? Seaborg: Three, yes. Well, one is a scout. Unidentified: Two are Nike/Hercules and one is a scout, XM 33c. President Kennedy: They’re all . . . Unidentified: The BLUEGILL one. President Kennedy: XM 33c was put in somebody’s list. Which one is that? What do you call it? Unidentified: That’s six, seven, and eight [unclear]. Twenty-four seconds excised as classified information. President Kennedy: The fact of the matter is, if the Soviet Union ever really gets this space ship which presented us with a real military matter, couldn’t you stop it? Unidentified: If there are people . . . Yes, if they— President Kennedy: Have people on it. Wiesner: Well, if it were up above 500 kilometers or so. Unidentified: [two people talking at the same time] Even at a low altitude, you could do it for quite a while because quite high levels for a day— Wiesner: For a few days this stuff could be made very intense. Unidentified: Oh, yes we could stop it, yes. President Kennedy: If it were manned? Unidentified: If it were manned and we wanted to. Wiesner: You could probably even stop electronic equipment, if you wanted to— President Kennedy: Yeah. Wiesner: But it would take the [unclear]. McNamara: Well, the probability is we could shoot it down with Nike/Zeus from Kwajalein.47 Wiesner: You could probably even stop solar cells from there. McNamara: We will have by next May, Mr. President, [unidentified interjection] the capacity at Kwajalein to shoot down satellites in the order of 150- to 200-mile altitude and we can probably increase that to 800 miles of altitude, say 1,300 kilometers, within a year or two. 47. The U.S. Army’s first antiballistic missile [ABM] system was designed in the mid-1950s, and then redesigned as the Nike-X. Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series 109 President Kennedy: We assume they will have the ABM? McNamara: And we assume they will have the same, yes. Wiesner: You see we’re doing it with the Nike/Zeus. McNamara: Yes. Wiesner: And they have a comparable system. McNamara: Yes. Wiesner: In fact, we could do it with our regular missiles, if we wanted to. McNamara: There is a great probability that Leningrad system will have some capability of this kind.48 Wiesner: See, if we really wanted to attack a satellite now, we think we can do it relatively quickly with a Minuteman, or even with a smaller missile. President Kennedy: Well, in any case, we are going to be back again tomorrow morning and we are going to see if we can get this thing down to eight and then what the schedule ought to be in view of priorities [unclear]. Unidentified: Right. Seaborg: Mr. President, there is one thing: Cutting the weapons development tests won’t help much on the schedule. Unidentified: No. Seaborg: We have to do it on the left-hand column. President Kennedy: Now, we are also concerned, which we haven’t talked about much, about radiation. Wiesner: Well, this is why I feel strongly about THUMBELINA. Unidentified: That’s where THUMBELINA helps. Wiesner: THUMBELINA helps a great deal; but the Ripple II and III [tests of ripple nuclear devices] will also make a substantial difference. I understand the Secretary’s— President Kennedy shuts off the machine. The National Security Council, at its meeting on Friday, decided to reduce the 11 remaining tests to 8, dropping the AEC’s HAYMAKER Prime, URRACA, and a DOD high-altitude test. The President saved THUMBELINA because it had been designed by Los Alamos and would provide an important development base for that laboratory. There were two alternative sets of dates for these eight tests, depending on the date of 48. The Soviets were thought to be building an ABM system around Leningrad. 110 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 Walter Schirra’s Mercury mission. Under no circumstances would the high-altitude BLUEGILL shot go up until after Schirra had come down.49 Kennedy had one more meeting before the end of Thursday with Arthur Goldberg and Walter Reuther, the head of the United Auto Workers [UAW]. This was apparently the meeting Reuther had requested the previous week to talk about the recent problems between the UAW and the AFL-CIO. This was not taped. The President left the Oval Office at 7:40 P.M. Monday, September 10, 1962 The twin pots of Cuba and Berlin continued to simmer. Cuban policy seemed to be increasingly a difficult domestic matter for Kennedy. The administration had managed to keep the congressional resolution for the reserve call-up under wraps until Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield introduced it on September 7. Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen had kept the secret, but just as soon as Mansfield made his statement, the Republican leadership began a campaign in favor of much tougher action against Cuba. At the same time, an incident half a world away was also complicating Kennedy’s Cuba policy. On September 8 a U-2 reconnaissance aircraft on a joint U.S.-Taiwanese mission had disappeared over the People’s Republic of China and was presumed shot down. Given the administration’s existing concerns about the consequences of a U-2 incident over Cuba, the event in Asia reopened the debate over what risks were acceptable to maintain surveillance over the island. The most disturbing news to reach Kennedy was about Khrushchev and Berlin. In his second meeting that year with a high-level U.S. visitor (the first in May, with Salinger and Sorenson), Khrushchev had brought Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall to his Black Sea resort at 49. Diary of Glenn Seaborg, Entry, 6 September 1962, John F. Kennedy Library. In the end, there would be nine remaining tests in the DOMINIC series. Five of the nine were airdrop tests, of which ANDROSCOGGIN (2 October 1962) and HOUSATONIC (30 October 1962) tested the Ripple II device, and CHAMA (18 October) the Thumbellina device. The ANDROSCOGGIN failed, which may be the reason why there was an extra test in this last group. The four high-altitude tests were CHECKMATE (20 October 1962), BLUEGILL Triple Prime (26 October 1962), KINGFISH (1 November 1962), and TIGHTROPE (4 November 1962). All of the high-altitude tests took place after Walter Schirra’s nine-hour Mercury mission on 3 October 1962. M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 111 Pitsunda. The Soviet press was about to announce that Berlin negotiations were deadlocked and there would be a pause. Khrushchev now told Udall, who told Kennedy, just what would happen after that pause. He said, “We will give [President Kennedy] a choice—go to war, or sign a peace treaty [ending occupation rights in Berlin]. We will not allow your troops to be in Berlin.” Khrushchev added, “if any lunatics in your country want war, Western Europe will hold them back.” If that were not enough, “It’s been a long time since you could spank us like a little boy— now we can swat your ass. So let’s not talk about force. We’re equally strong,” Khrushchev blustered. “You want Berlin. Access to it goes through East Germany. We have the advantage. If you want to do anything, you have to start a war.” But Khrushchev promised a lull before he brought the crisis to a conclusion. “Out of resepct for your President we won’t do anything until November [after the midterm elections].” None of this was public. What was public was bad enough. Khrushchev had also met with visiting U.S. poet Robert Frost, who then recounted to reporters (in a cleaned up version of what Khrushchev actually said) how Khrushchev had told him that “we were too liberal to fight.”1 In Congress, when the talk wasn’t on Cuba, there was discussion of a plan to allow the self-employed to build retirement accounts of their own, what would become the Self-Employed Pension–Individual Retirement Account (SEP-IRA), and the President’s foreign aid bill. The President had spent the weekend at Hammersmith Farm in Newport, Rhode Island, catching some of the excitement of the upcoming America’s Cup Challenge. Ahead of him this Monday were a series of important meetings, only half of which he would choose to tape. A sense of history and, of course, politics apparently influenced the President’s choice of what to tape this day. Former president Dwight D. Eisenhower remained a special challenge for Kennedy. Enormously respected throughout the world, Eisenhower retained the affection of millions of Americans. Journalist and sometime Kennedy adviser Joseph Alsop once described the difference in the hold that the younger President and Eisenhower had on the American people. Kennedy commanded their minds, but only Eisenhower had been given a place in American hearts. The former president had just returned from a lengthy 1. Memorandum of Conversation between Khrushchev and Udall, 6 September 1962, in FRUS, 15: 309. Kennedy apparently read this document, since he alluded to its contents at least once, on tape, later in the day. On Frost, see Richard Reeves, President Kennedy: Profile of Power (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993), p. 351. 112 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 European tour, which had included a long conversation with the prickly German chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Kennedy needed Eisenhower’s blessing, or at least a political nonaggression pact, to keep control of the domestic debate on measures appropriate to the current tensions in Europe. Later in the day, Kennedy would meet with his Berlin team to discuss the latest developments and to hammer out the responses that the Western alliance would make if Khrushchev seized West Berlin. Possibly just before turning to Eisenhower and these foreign matters, Kennedy called his Secretary of the Treasury to discuss whether to veto the Self-employed Pension Bill. Time Unknown Now, what I’ve got to indicate, therefore, is that I’ll veto it if it’s hung on this bill and that they’ve got a better chance to override my veto if it’s separate than they have with this bill. Conversation with Douglas Dillon2 Despite overwhelming congressional support for H.R. 10, the Selfemployed Pension Bill, President Kennedy felt compelled to oppose the measure. A similar bill had passed the House on three previous occasions but had always been rejected by the Senate. Three days before this conversation, on September 7, the measure gained the approval of the Senate for the first time, and though it emerged in a much diluted form compared to the original House proposal, it appeared headed for only a modest reworking in the House-Senate conference committee. The precursor of the many tax deductible private pension plans of later years, Keogh-Smathers—as it was often called—provided for the partial deductibility of contributions to private pension plans made by owner managers and the self-employed.3 2. Dictabelt 3A.6, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. C. Douglas Dillon, secretary of the treasury. See also transcripts for the President’s conversations on H.R. 10 with Albert Gore on 8 October 1962, and with George Smathers on 10 October 1962. 3. The principal sponsors of the original bill were Eugene J. Keogh, Democratic U.S. representative from New York, 1937 to 1967, and George A. Smathers, Democratic U.S. senator from Florida, 1951 to 1969. Under its final provisions, eligible self-employed individuals could deduct 50 percent of their contributions up to an annual maximum of $2,500 or 10 percent of Conversation with Douglas Dillon 113 Having received estimates that it would produce a revenue loss of $100 to $125 million, Kennedy expressed a private desire, soon made public, that he would prefer to veto the legislation.4 The Treasury had also weighed in against the bill and had recommended a veto on the basis of the expected revenue drain and on the realization that the lion’s share of benefits under the measure would go to wealthy physicians and attorneys. Only the likelihood of near unanimous congressional support and a potential veto override gave the President any reason to consider signing H.R. 10.5 And though Kennedy believed that the bill was, indeed, based on a principle of taxpayer equity (since it provided some private pension plans with tax benefits comparable to those enjoyed by public pension plans) and that it might be worthy of consideration in a larger package of tax reform, the estimated revenue loss and the status of its expected beneficiaries convinced him to issue a veto threat. While it eventually would be passed as a separate bill, some of its champions in the Senate launched a preemptive, and ultimately abortive, search for the appropriate “veto-proof ” legislation on which to add, by amendment, the provisions of H.R. 10. In the following conversation with Treasury secretary Douglas Dillon, Kennedy ponders a strategy by which the administration could convince supporters of the bill not to hang it on other more favored legislation. Douglas Dillon: [Unclear] allow me to say that . . . even if he’s retiring in due course—6 President Kennedy: Yeah. Dillon: [Unclear] will be chosen shortly— President Kennedy: Right. Dillon: [Unclear] wait until after Congress has gone home. President Kennedy: Right. OK . . . fine. Good. their annual income, whichever was less. In addition, the tax benefits would not be granted to an employer if he did not offer the same partially deductible retirement contributions to all employees. The original House version allowed for 100 percent deductibility up to the $2,500/10 percent limits. A Senate floor amendment by Senators Russell Long (D-Louisiana) and Eugene J. McCarthy (D-Minnesota) changed this to 50 percent. 4. The estimated revenue loss in the original House version was $365 million. 5. It passed the House unanimously and garnered only four no votes in the Senate: Paul Douglas (D-Illinois), Albert Gore (D-Tennessee), Pat McNamara (D-Michigan), and Wayne Morse (DOregon). The final version of the bill that emerged out of the Senate-House conference committee also passed unanimously in the House and received only eight no votes in the Senate. 6. “He” is unidentified. 114 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 Douglas Dillon: You don’t have to worry about that. President Kennedy: OK, good. Now, let’s see . . . this problem of H.R. 10. They . . . see, [Everett] Dirksen and everything, they’re arguing that unless they hang it on this bill, that I’ll veto it.7 Now, what I’ve got to indicate, therefore, is that I’ll veto it if it’s hung on this bill and that they’ve got a better chance to override my veto if it’s separate than they have with this bill. It’s rather . . . it may not be right, but that’s the only way. Because, otherwise, they’re going to hang it on this bill. Dillon: Yeah, although . . . you think they . . . you don’t think they have the votes? President Kennedy: Well, I . . . they won’t unless they think I’m going to veto it. Dillon: I see. President Kennedy: So, I’m giving the impression that we’re going to veto it, and I thought the Treasury people ought to at least have that line— Dillon: Yeah, fine. President Kennedy: —that this would be too much of a revenue loss, it doesn’t belong in this bill, and we just have to veto it. Dillon: Yeah, the same sort of thing we said about the Cannon amendment. President Kennedy: Yeah, right. Dillon: That [unclear]. President Kennedy: OK, good. Dillon: OK. President Kennedy: All right. Thank you. At 12:30 P.M. the former President arrived at the White House through a side door. Minutes after Eisenhower’s arrival, the Reverend Billy Graham paid a call on both Presidents in the Oval Office. Graham was just returning from a visit to Latin America and had some news to bring the President about the strength of Fidel Castro’s supporters in South America. President Kennedy tapes the meeting through the receiver of his telephone. He rarely used this method of taping.8 7. Everett M. Dirksen was a Republican senator from Illinois, 1951 to 1969, and Senate Minority Leader, 1959 to 1969. 8. It is possible that the conversation on Dictabelt 3A.7, which has not been found, was the object of President Kennedy’s effort to tape. Ending that conversation, the President might have forgotten to switch off the dictabelt machine and thus this room conversation was picked up by either an open receiver or the telephone speaker. Meeting with Bill y Graham and Dwight Eisenhow er 115 12:35–12:40 P.M. And the anti-Communist forces are getting hysterical because they feel that we’re not defending them like we ought to, right or wrong. Meeting with Billy Graham and Dwight Eisenhower9 The Reverend William Franklin Graham, Jr.—more popularly known as Billy Graham—paid a brief courtesy call on the President before departing for the second half of his 1962 Latin America tour. Relations between President Kennedy and Graham, the most popular Protestant evangelist of the era, had never been close, in part because of the minister’s friendly relations with both Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon. Eisenhower’s arrival for his luncheon with President Kennedy allowed the brief exchange of greetings. Graham took the opportunity to reiterate the importance of Latin America’s problems. Although Latin America was an overwhelmingly Catholic region, Graham was deeply concerned that Communist inroads posed a general threat to religious freedom in the area. This short conversation begins with Graham discussing his experiences during the first portion of his Latin American tour in early 1962, when his proselytizing campaign encountered resistance by local authorities and violent demonstrations. It was recorded on the Dictaphone connected to the President’s telephone and, therefore, is of poor quality.10 Billy Graham: There are these guerrillas up in the mountains in Colombia. I was there. They killed 32 in the town I was in the night I 9. Including President Kennedy, Dwight Eisenhower, Billy Graham, and Evelyn Lincoln. Dictabelt 3A.8, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 10. In January and February 1962, Graham toured Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Chile. Then beginning in São Paulo, Brazil, on 25 September 1962, he toured Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and Uruguay. “Billy in Catholic Country: He Collides with Clergy,” Time, 23 February 1962, pp. 77–78; Current Biography Yearbook, 1973 (New York: H. W. Wilson, 1974), pp. 151–54; Marshall Frady, Billy Graham: A Parable of American Righteousness (Boston: Little, Brown, 1979), pp. 441–46; Billy Graham, Just As I Am: The Autobiography of Billy Graham (San Francisco: Harper San Francisco, 1997), pp. 188–92, 199–206, 356–57, 360–68, 389–402; Carroll Kilpatrick, “President Confers With Ike 2 Hours,” Washington Post, 11 September 1962, pp. A1, A6; New York Times, 24 January 1962, p. 3; Wallace Terry, “Billy Graham Condemns Sterilization,” Washington Post, 11 September 1962, p. A6. 116 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 was there.11 And they swooped down. They’ve killed over 300,000 in the last 14 years.12 And they claim now that Castro is in control of these guerrillas. Unidentified: In what? In Colombia? Graham: In Colombia. And he says the way to the United States is through the Colombian Andes. And hoped [unclear] get organized and give weapons to [unclear]. And so, the infiltration is tremendous. And the anti-Communist forces are getting hysterical because they feel that we’re not defending them like we ought to, right or wrong. And I know it’s a very delicate problem. Dwight D. Eisenhower: But it isn’t easy. [Unclear.] But these ones, the 20[,000], the 25,000 . . . but a . . . but, the main thing . . . that they charge . . . American policy is that [we support] an oppressive regime . . . the supporters, that is . . . [we’re] keeping them down, and . . . And, therefore, America is wrong. “America ought to give us the weapons and not to our bosses.” And [unclear] . . . Graham: And how to get it to them— Eisenhower: And [unclear]. . . . [Unclear] we were discussing, however, on the telephone today [unclear] pushing, pushing for them and I’d like to take them on the ears: What do you mean by it? President Kennedy: As matter of fact from Bogotá [unclear]. The, a, there’s no a . . . the a . . . Colombia actually has, you know, [Alberto] Lleras Camargo, he’s a first-class [unclear] government—13 Eisenhower: Oh, yes. Oh, yes. They [unclear]. The tape skips. Unidentified: —The [unclear] president [unclear] the same thing. The person was asked if he had been asked to help finance the [unclear] to help them to get out of the [unclear]. Graham: Right. [Unclear exchange.] If you can do the same thing somehow in Brazil. Unidentified: We’ve diversified the problems down in there [unclear]. 11. Graham refers to his visit to Cali, Colombia, during his Latin American tour earlier in 1962. In his autobiography published in 1997, Graham records the incident slightly differently, reporting that the guerillas killed “fourteen people not far from where we were staying” in Cali (Graham, Just As I Am, pp. 364–65). 12. From 1948 to 1962, Colombia endured La Violencia, a period of intense violence between Liberal and Conservative political factions that left over 200,000 Colombians dead. 13. Alberto Lleras Camargo, who had just stepped down after his second term as president of Colombia (1945–46, 7 August 1958 to 7 August 1962), was a strong supporter of Kennedy’s Alliance for Progress. Meeting with Bill y Graham and Dwight Eisenhow er 117 Graham: Well, I was sure delighted to see you. Please give my regards to the Mister Vice President. Graham starts to leave, causing a number of people to speak at the same time. Someone says “Nice to see you.” Graham: Thank you very much. Nice to see you. [Multiple voices continue.] Unidentified: . . . in Georgia. Graham: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Oh, I see. Graham: He’s playing golf— Unidentified: Oh. Oh. Graham: —in North Carolina right now. Good-bye. Thank you. Unidentified: All right, Mister Graham. All right. Graham: Fine. Thank you. Evelyn Lincoln: Have a good evening. Graham: Thank you. I’m so glad to see you. Again the sounds of a number of people saying good-bye to Graham. Someone says “Thank you very much,” and another says to Graham “Well, we’ll wish you [unclear] Vice President.” Graham: Yes. [Unclear.] [Laughter.] Bye. Thank you. Bye. Unidentified: May I, Mrs. Lincoln? Evelyn Lincoln: Sure, sure. Unidentified: The Attorney General won’t be here until about one. And he’ll stand by and then he’ll [unclear] unless of course the [Attorney General] judge. He’ll go over the canal about 20 minutes to seven. Then we’re bringing him back for a short tour [unclear] Billy Graham later that [unclear]. President Kennedy: All right. Unidentified: . . . and for his pictures [unclear]. President Kennedy: Are you gentlemen all set? [Two voices agree simultaneously.] Unidentified: Thank you, General Schulz from the rest of us.14 [Pause.] Unidentified: We’ll need a ride. [Unclear.] Unidentified: No. Leave that right there. [Unclear.] After Billy Graham left the White House, Kennedy and Eisenhower met in the Oval Office to discuss Eisenhower’s trip to West Germany. 14. Brigadier General Robert L. Schulz, retired, longtime aide to General Eisenhower. 118 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 12:40 –1:02 P.M. You can’t go up the autobahn waving an atom bomb. . . . [T]he first time . . . a bridge is blown out in front of you, you can’t begin a nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union over getting to Berlin. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhower15 In late July, President Kennedy’s predecessor, Dwight David Eisenhower, made a six-week trip to Western Europe. On his return, President Kennedy wrote him and requested a meeting. The two Presidents were not only from different generations but also from different political parties. President Kennedy felt that Eisenhower found him young and inexperienced even though Kennedy himself thought the older man woefully uninformed. In explaining why his brother often conferred with Eisenhower, Attorney General Robert Kennedy recalled that “feeling Eisenhower was important and his election was so close—he always went out of his way to make sure that Eisenhower was brought in on all matters and that Eisenhower couldn’t hurt the administration by going off and attacking.”16 On September 10, the two Presidents met at the White House. Eisenhower brought Kennedy a copy of a memorandum about his conversation with West German chancellor Konrad Adenauer on August 2.17 In the discussions before lunch, the two U.S. Presidents dealt with the topics from that memorandum, which covered primarily NATO issues. Kennedy was interested to discover whether Eisenhower might cause him political trouble by criticizing his European defense policies. He need not have been worried. There was a large degree of continuity between the two administrations’ West European policies. The heavy financial load that the United States carried for the mili- 15. Tape 21, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 16. Edwin O. Guthman and Jeffrey Shulman, eds., Robert Kennedy in His Own Words: The Unpublished Recollections of the Kennedy Years (New York: Bantam Books, 1988), p. 55. 17. “Conversation with Chancellor Adenauer,” 2 August 1962, Dwight Eisenhower papers, post-presidential series, Box 27, folder: Principal file, 1962, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 119 tary defense of Western Europe, which had so vexed Kennedy during August, remained on his mind. Kennedy was interested in hearing Eisenhower’s thoughts on pressing for greater allied contribution to a conventional ground force buildup in Europe. For President Kennedy, the ongoing Berlin crisis necessitated a NATO strategy based on graduated military responses in order to limit a war before it escalated to nuclear conflagration. President Eisenhower had also grappled with the crisis over Berlin. West German chancellor Konrad Adenauer questioned President Kennedy’s commitment to Berlin and resisted the U.S. insistence on a conventional force buildup in Central Europe. Adenauer feared that a NATO strategy that stressed conventional defense below the nuclear threshold might make war more likely and thus expose West Germany as the probable chief theater of war. President Kennedy and Eisenhower believed that French president Charles de Gaulle was capitalizing on Adenauer’s anxiety and disenchantment with the United States. The two American Presidents feared that de Gaulle’s vision of Europe was anti–Anglo-Saxon in outlook and threatened the integrity of NATO. They speculated about the various implications of the Franco-German rapprochement, ceremoniously signaled on September 14, 1958, at Colombey-des-Deux-Églises, where the two European statesmen met. Periodic meetings between the West German chancellor and the French president had continued. Most recently, in July 1962, Adenauer had spent three days in France. Then in September, de Gaulle had visited Bonn. Another problem that had carried over from the President’s August meetings on Berlin and Europe was a change in the U.S. military command. Adenauer worried that it signaled a shift in U.S. nuclear strategy toward greater reliance on conventional weapons. In late July, the Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (SACEUR), General Lauris Norstad, had announced his resignation, effective November 1, 1962.18 His intended replacement was the present Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Lyman Lemnitzer. Kennedy had nominated General Maxwell D. Taylor as General Lemnitzer’s successor. Norstad had enjoyed a special relationship with the Europeans because he had conceived SACEUR’s role as increasingly independent of Washington and had envisioned NATO as a fourth 18. Norstad’s resignation was eventually postponed to 1 January 1963 because of the Cuban missile crisis. 120 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 nuclear power. His departure, amidst a controversy over the deployment of a land-based medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM) force under SACEUR’s direct command, fueled West German and French resentment of U.S. hegemony. The tape recording begins as Eisenhower commiserates with Kennedy about the European allies. Dwight D. Eisenhower: For now, as I mentioned in my note, I think that events have sort of overtaken— President Kennedy: Well, I wrote him a letter, and he wrote back a very nice letter. I talked to Globke here the other day, and evidently he [Adenauer] goes into these fits of depression.19 Whether it’s their sort of overdependence upon us, which makes them particularly sensitive to what we do, but . . . I find that—I’m sure you did—somewhat harassing because here we do these things . . . we keep our forces there. The French have only a division and a half in West Germany instead of four.20 The Germans just cut their defense budget from 17 billion down to 15.8, which means they aren’t going to reach the figures that they originally said they would.21 Eisenhower: I know. They told me they wouldn’t. President Kennedy: Yeah, well, they just cut it within a two- or three-week period. I think, since your visit there. The finance minister [Ludwig Erhard] made [West German minister of defense Franz Josef] Strauss cut it so that this has dropped—so now we’re going to appeal to them. Well, with all that, and the fact that the British, the Army of the Rhine is not to NATO standards— Eisenhower: Yes, yes. President Kennedy: I feel that sometimes that they place more burdens on us than they’re entitled to do. Eisenhower: That’s correct and, I’m going to tell you, Mr. President, when I went through in 1951—January—I went around to all these, every one of these places. I said, “Now as far as I understand the policy of my government”—that was Truman’s plan. I said, “This is an emergency effort to get you people a chance to get on your feet. You’ve got 225 mil- 19. Dr. Hans Globke was state secretary in the office of Chancellor Adenauer. 20. As set forth by NATO Policy Directive MC 26/4 in the summer of 1961. 21. The West German Ministry of Defense had requested 18.2 billion deutsche marks. The West German Bundestag approved a defense budget of 14.97 billion deutsche marks. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 121 lion people. We know you’ve got a collective labor force about twice the size, in skilled labor, twice the size of ours. There’s no reason why you people can’t keep the ground forces. Now in the meantime, the United States has got to keep the deterrent—all the big bombs and all the rest of it. We’ve got to keep the big thing and an enormous air force. Your expenditures in those things don’t need to be very heavy, but you’ve got to begin to produce these conventional and land forces.” “Well,” which they said, “Well, you want us just to be the ol’ land man and you come in and be the . . . you know, the glamour boys.” I said, “To the hell with that, we’re trying to find the . . . how can we put together our assets to have the best defense.” Now I tried to sell—I sold this idea. I mean, they said they accepted it. But as time has gone on, and for eight years, I desperately tried behind the scenes to get these people to admit we ought to begin to get out; they wouldn’t do it. And I’m afraid that just through custom they have thought of the—begin to think of the thing as their right, that this is just their . . . And if you say, “Well, you now ought to do a little more, that you ought to pay for this or that [or anything].” Oh, they get very emotional. But Mr. Adenauer started off to tell me about relations between France and Germany. These he said were improving markedly and rapidly, and that both he and General de Gaulle were committed to a complete rapprochement, and that his own trip through—about six or seven days through France—had been almost a triumphal tour. He was very pleased.22 And he said he thought that this was going on to . . . so that very soon, they would be allowing all people to go back and forth over their borders without even, without cards, like we demand up in . . . cards you carry between Mexico and so on. He says it’s all just free circulation. I said, “Well, if you start the intermarrying, then you’ll have union, and be all right.” He is very keen on this and, really, I think, is now looking upon French-German friendship, and a sort of an entente, as a new type of, almost an axis of influence in that area. This was what he said was the encouraging part about the European thing and he thought this also of the Common Market.23 22. Adenauer made a state visit to France in early July 1962. 23. Signed in 1957, the Treaty of Rome established the European Economic Community (EEC), also referred to as the Common Market, and the European Atomic Energy Commission 122 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 And I— we —had a long talk about the Common Market, which seemed to have no —nothing—no application to defense. Then he came . . . the next thing that bothered him though very very much was the relief of Norstad.24 And he told the long story of the— about this being a surprise and everything else. And he was very unhappy—first, that he was leaving. He said, “Norstad has gotten to be an influence that we think is almost necessary—backup.” I told him then of my friendship with Lemnitzer, and I said, “I don’t see how you can get a better man. Now, he hasn’t had quite as much experience in this kind of thing [as] Norstad.”25 But he was. . . . I sent Lemnitzer over to [British field marshal Sir Harold] Alexander as his operation officer in a big army group, and, I said, “He does know something about allied work together.”26 Now, he said, then, but he [Adenauer] said, “By and large, we see this as two things. You’re putting in . . . you’re sending Lemnitzer out and Norstad out because they apparently have not understood the policies, or not have followed the policies that America is now adopting. And you’re putting in General [Maxwell] Taylor.”27 Then he reached over and got a book, and this book was [laughs] General Taylor’s book.28 And he said, “Now I must tell you, General,” he said, “I tell you as your friend, if this book—if the philosophy of this book—is going to be adopted in Europe,” he said, “I am afraid there will be disastrous consequences in Western Europe.” And I said, “Well, you better go ahead, Mr. Chancellor.” “Well,” he said, “well, the philosophy of this book is that we should (EURATOM). The original six signatories were Belgium, the Federal Republic of Germany, France, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. 24. General Lauris Norstad, Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (SACEUR), 20 November 1956 to 1 January 1963. 25. General Lyman Lemnitzer was Norstad’s successor as SACEUR, 1 January 1963 to 1 July 1969. 26. Then Brigadier General Lemnitzer was Alexander’s U.S. deputy, his deputy chief of staff, for the 15th Army Group during World War I. 27. Reference to General Maxwell Taylor, Lemnitzer’s successor as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Taylor served as U.S. Army chief of staff under President Eisenhower from 1955 to 1959 and emerged as a leading critic of the Eisenhower administration’s policies. 28. Reference to Taylor’s The Uncertain Trumpet (New York: Harper, 1959), a landmark study of U.S. military security needs, which indicted Eisenhower’s national security policy, generated considerable controversy around the 1960 election, and popularized the term flexible response to describe the need for limited military options short of nuclear war. See “Meeting about Berlin,” 6 August 1962, for a discussion of West German anxiety. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 123 not depend on atomic bombs.” And he said, “we’re going to—we shouldn’t fight and strive to fight our wars by conventional weapons.” He said, “If we do this, and if we adopt this kind of philosophy, this means that America is again ready to see Europe overrun. Then we will start— starting way back to where we were in 1942—to go back and plan [to retake a Soviet-occupied Europe] and after all of this destruction and occupation.” And he said, “This time it won’t be as easy as it was under Hitler.” And this should, by and large, he said, he saw this as a very strong evidence of an enormous and revolutionary change in American policy, defense policy in Western Europe. And I said, “Well, now, I’m not going, I can’t quarrel about that. I mean I can’t argue the case because I am not privy to exactly to the inner circles of portions of what you’re saying. But I do know this. They’ve [the Kennedy administration] said they’re spending a good many billions to keep our deterrent in a very top shape, and the missile work as far as I can see is not only going ahead but, from all that my G-2 friends tell me from time to time, our strength is growing up even more rapidly than what we thought, first calculated, and to greater value.29 Therefore, I can’t see that any of our, any government—any American government—is discounting the effect of the deterrent or its need to use it in the face of overwhelming strength. Now, shortly after that, that was the gist of his talk, although he brought in all sorts of details and, you might say, auxiliary sort of reasons to support this. But then I got a word. It came out from one of his friends, one of his people, that reached me, oh, a week later. Said that General Taylor had given some testimony that greatly reassured him.30 Now, I didn’t read this testimony; I didn’t want to . . . But apparently . . . The German said, that spoke to me said, that apparently General Taylor no longer believes exactly what he said in his book because he had changed his mind. So, the big, real thing, was when I saw this in the paper and then this German came to see me and told me this. I said, “Well, I think maybe there’s no need for telling you because 29. The abbreviation G-2 is used in the Army to refer to staff intelligence personnel. 30. On 9 August, while Eisenhower was touring Europe, the U.S. Senate by unanimous vote confirmed Taylor’s nomination as Chairman of the JCS. The action followed a hearing by the Senate Armed Services Committee. At one point, Taylor assured the committee that “I am not returning, if you gentlemen confirm me, as a crusader for change but rather one to make the present system as effective as possible” (see Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, 24 August 1962, p. 1421). 124 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 it’s probably something you’d write about a friend with and knew about the change.” President Kennedy: Well, I think that . . . Of course, I think they misstated Taylor’s position. As you know, Taylor’s been very strong on tactical atomic weapons. Eisenhower: Yes. Oh, yes . . . Oh, yes . . . President Kennedy: And I, so I . . . there’s in fact . . . Norstad . . . I think it’s a great loss—Norstad. For example, last spring . . . As you know, [General Lucius] Clay and Norstad had a rather difficult time.31 Eisenhower: Oh did they? No, I didn’t know that. President Kennedy: Yeah. Well, there was a good deal of tension there. Eisenhower: Hmm. President Kennedy: For example, last spring, General Clay wanted to have the civilian—at the time buzzing was taking place take place in the corridor—he wanted a fighter escort at that time.32 General Norstad disagreed. And we went with General Norstad. And I think it was the right thing, as [a] matter of fact. They, as you know, they called the buzzing off. But there was a good deal of . . . I don’t know whether it’s wanting to go back to other times—but there was a good deal of friction. Eisenhower: I didn’t know that. President Kennedy: But I think that Norstad is first class, but when he came back last winter, he said . . . I guess he’s had what—two heart attacks—or one? Eisenhower: Yes, that’s right. President Kennedy: So he said he wanted to resign at the end of this year. So, then when General Lemnitzer’s time ended [as JCS Chairman], I was either faced with having him reappointed again or putting him back, so this seemed to be the best arrangement. But it was unfortunate that General [James] Gavin left in September, who had been identified with support for the French nuclear effort.33 And General Norstad left. General Lemnitzer went in. And these things are regarded, I think, as quite significant. And the chancellor is 86. But as I say, I find—I think that the criticisms, which are traditionally leveled at 31. General Lucius D. Clay was the President’s special representative in Berlin until May 1962, thereafter special consultant to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Clay was chosen for his symbolic role as the hero of the 1948 Berlin airlift while he was the U.S. military governor for occupied Germany. 32. Reference to Soviet harassment of Western aircraft. 33. General James Gavin was the U.S. ambassador to France until mid-September 1962. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 125 the United States, when you think that the amount of ground divisions we have there, the amount of effort we’re putting in various places. Again the French—a division and a half in West Germany. I talked to Ambassador [Hervé] Alphand this morning, and I said, “I don’t understand.”34 I said, “This French-German rapprochement is wonderful, but here the Germans, who have been quite critical of us this summer, as I say, have cut their defense budget in the last month even though they’ve got a very strong economy. And the French have a division and a half even though your minimum goal is four under NATO, and you really should have six.”35 He said, “Well, we’ve got them for the defense of France.” But I said, “Well, look, you can’t have two divisions here [in Western Europe] and two others . . .” The British are— Eisenhower: That’s right. President Kennedy: [Unclear] on us. So I think that the press, particularly some feed this, these European criticisms of our efforts—I think that considering the load we carry compared to the load they carry . . . Eisenhower: That’s right. President Kennedy: It’s incredible. Eisenhower: I would agree, and, a matter of fact, I would . . . I tried my best, although every time I did the diplomats always said, “Now you do it, you’re going to lose Europe now; that’s all there is to it because their temper and this and that and the other thing and the psychological reaction.” But I tried every possible way. I said, “Well, now let’s make these smaller divisions. Let’s begin to show them that we are concerned about this big spending.” After all, we built almost unaided that great infrastructure that starts right at the ports and goes all the way through the place. We’ve got airfields. We’ve got everything and, of course, de Gaulle did not . . . De Gaulle didn’t talk to me substantively at all. He just proved very nice, very hospitable, and all that, very kind, but we didn’t talk about it. And he wouldn’t, you know. He’s a very very [unclear] man. But, on the other hand, the German gave me the understanding that not only were they going to go right up to their target. But I said, “Of course, your target is too small. You are a people of still only 60 million. 34. Hervé Alphand was French ambassador to the United States. President Kennedy and he met between 11:05 and 11:34 A.M. 35. Four divisions were specified under NATO Policy Directive MC 26/4. 126 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 You’re right there on the firing line. Our country, which is, I say, three times the size, is doing much more than three times what you’re doing, and you people ought to be waking up to this.” But I’m astonished that they cut their— President Kennedy: Yeah. Well, Bob McNamara is coming over to give you the figures on it.36 Eisenhower: Well, I think when I write to Adenauer I’m going to tell him that I’m astonished. President Kennedy: That would be very helpful. I think we’ll get Secretary McNamara to give you the figures. I think that . . . Your talk was very helpful, too. Of course, he has great regard for you and John Foster Dulles—37 Eisenhower: We’ve always been very friendly. President Kennedy: Yeah. So I think the fact that you . . . That helped reassure him very much, especially when you spoke about Lemnitzer and Taylor. Eisenhower: Oh yes. Oh, oh, Lemnitzer . . . to hell with it. President Kennedy: Yeah, that’s right. Eisenhower: And I said, “I just can’t believe that you’ll have anything but satisfaction.” Now, he did bring out that . . . before he gave me all the circumstantial evidence that showed that what’s his name, Norstad, knew nothing about his immediate relief. Because he . . . Norstad, only by happenstance had been there about five days earlier. And was talking with him, the plans that they were going to do together, and so I said well maybe he was under a . . . President Kennedy: Well. . . . No . . . That’s right. We gave him . . . It was only five days before his relief because he came back here about a month in July. He came back in July, and we talked about this. He had earlier said that he would like to resign between August and September and the next January—he gave a four- or five- month period. Well, we picked October—the first of November because of the Lemnitzer, Joint Chiefs . . . So when he came back here in July, we talked about whether we ought to go to January, and he said no. And he also said he’d like to come out right away because otherwise it would be rumored and his influence would 36. McNamara joined Kennedy, Eisenhower, and Secretary of State Dean Rusk for lunch and then met in the Cabinet Room with General Marshall Carter, deputy director of the CIA, and the two presidents. 37. Dulles was secretary of state under Dwight Eisenhower until his death from cancer in 1959. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 127 be nonexistent. So that we moved it, at Norstad’s own suggestion, with a good deal of speed. Now they may have felt that that indicated that we were . . . Quite the reverse, I’d give anything to have Norstad there because I think we’re going to have a terribly difficult time with Berlin and I think Norstad has so much experience and they have so much confidence in him. It’s a very tough job for Lemnitzer to go in after him. Eisenhower: That’s right. And not only that, but, at this stage, I’ll say this: Norstad is a very tough fellow, when he [makes a] commitment. He’s a very great supporter of his own convictions, and normally, I must say, I think [unclear]. Well, now, I can disabuse you of Laurie [Norstad] . . . Of his mind on that particular thing because he thinks that we were—that is our country—was trying to put them in sort of a secondary position—take it and like it. See we started . . . It happened when Mr. Truman called me and asked me to go over there. He . . . The great argument, he was . . . “unanimously these 12 countries,” Mr. President, “12 countries have asked for you.” And I said, “Well as long as they’ve asked for me in person, Mr. President, I mean duty is you will have to send me over.” But God, how I’d hate to leave home. [Laughs.] I did. So then we . . . when I was leaving. I was going out . . . and I finally agreed to come over here and stand for this Republican nomination. And I said to him I would be . . . “It must be done unanimously; it must be done correctly.” So I gave plenty of warning, and they worked and they so . . . and, I wanted, what’s his name— President Kennedy: [General Alfred] Gruenther.38 Eisenhower: Gruenther. They decided to take Ridgway because Ridgway was coming out of Korea, and I think they wanted to send him over.39 I don’t think that Ridgway was the temperament for that kind of a job. But anyway, he didn’t . . . He came back and became the chief of staff about a year later. But both saw . . . all we did was done unanimously [unclear] by requesting the President to do this. He knew all this past history, and that bothered him because he said it looked like their opinions weren’t very 38. General Alfred Gruenther was a close personal friend of Eisenhower and served as his chief of staff while Eisenhower was SACEUR, 1951 to 1952. Gruenther was then SACEUR himself, 11 July 1953 to 20 November 1956. 39. General Matthew Ridgway was commander of the U.N. Command in the Far East, 11 April 1951 to 30 May 1952. He was SACEUR, 30 May 1952 to 11 July 1953, and served as U.S. Army chief of staff, 1953 to 1955. 128 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 important. But I told him that just had to be something that was mechanical . . . No one would do that deliberately. He seemed to take that— President Kennedy: Well, Norstad wanted us to move because he thought there would be rumors about . . . As I say, Norstad asked—told me—that he couldn’t, that this was what his desire was when he was over in the winter. Then when he came in July, and he talked to me about what our timing was, he said he’d like it to come as quickly as possible. So what we did was announce Norstad and then say that if we were asked to submit somebody, we would submit the name of General Lemnitzer and put it up to the North Atlantic Treaty Council. Well, of course, the French are attempting always to justify the need for their own atomic [force], independent of us.40 So, I think, they raised some difficulty about it but . . . I don’t know what—where these—when you think, as I say, what the United States has done for 17 years in Germany, I think that— Eisenhower: There’s one point that I do think we’ve got to remember. These people have . . . They were in an awful shape; then the Marshall Plan of course got them back, and they recognize that. I’ll tell you the nation that speaks more publicly and openly about the help of America, American help, is Germany. You never hear of this brought up in France or Britain—sometimes in Britain. But up in Germany, it’s almost a religion. Everybody that comes to you says, “Well, now, of course, we realize what we owe to America.” But the effort to get these people to doing their own part—I just don’t know beyond this very argument. If it were the six divisions there—with the little bit that, the 12 that Germany will have, the one that France, so on. You’re bound to be back to the Rhine before you can collect yourself. President Kennedy: Yeah . . . yeah . . . yeah . . . Eisenhower: You see. Unless you go into this atomic business. And if that’s going to be true, you’ve got to have greater strength that can be deployed rapidly. Well, if they’re going to cut down . . . There’s just . . . President Kennedy: Yeah . . . yeah. Eisenhower: There’s something wrong here. I don’t know just what it is. I hadn’t heard this. I was hopeful . . . I knew that when de Gaulle brought back his Algerian army, he was going to put most of his 40. Since assuming power in 1958, de Gaulle had declared unequivocally and repeatedly that France would achieve independent national nuclear capability. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 129 Algerian army in France. But I never dreamed that he wouldn’t go and fulfill his commitments—41 President Kennedy: Well, I agree. That’s what I said. I said to [French ambassador Hervé] Alphand, “This great Franco-German . . . We are always subject to very sharp criticism by the Germans for not doing one thing or another.” I said, “But we are doing everything we committed to under NATO and in addition carrying SAC, and in addition the navy, and in addition Southeast Asia.” I said, “Now, France isn’t even fulfilling its NATO commitment.” But, of course, the reason is that they know that they don’t depend on the French and they depend on us. So, therefore, they’re always concerned about our intentions because they realize that without the United States, they would be exposed. The fact is that he would be perfectly right about in talking about our immediate use of nuclear weapons, it seems to me, if we didn’t have the Berlin problem, because then obviously any Soviet intrusion across the line would be a deliberate one and would be a signal for war. When we have this problem of maintaining our position in Berlin, where you may be using sort of gradually escalating force to maintain yourself in Berlin, you can’t suddenly begin to drop nuclear weapons the first time you have a difficulty. That would really be the only—and it’s a very valid reason for our emphasizing the necessity of their building up conventional forces. When I saw Clay, he said, “You can’t go up the autobahn waving an atom bomb. And say, the first time you put a . . . a bridge is blown out in front of you, you can’t begin a nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union over getting to Berlin.” Eisenhower: Well of course, on that one, Mr. President, I’ve personally, I’ve always long thought this from the beginning. If they believe there is no amount of strength you can put in Berlin, they can say that. I would think that you could . . . What’s his name—Khrushchev—said to me at Camp David.42 He was talking about [The United States’s] needing some 41. In 1958, de Gaulle returned to power to end the French-Algerian war. Peace talks began in March 1961, but bloodshed continued until Algeria gained independence on 1 July 1962. In September 1961, de Gaulle had begun withdrawing French forces from Algeria. Under NATO policy directives MC 70 and 26/4, France was committed to contribute four divisions but had produced only two and one-third divisions to that point. 42. Rural retreat of U.S. presidents in northern Maryland, 70 miles northwest of Washington, D.C. Established in 1942 as “Shangri-La” by Franklin Roosevelt, Eisenhower renamed it for his grandson in 1953. When Khrushchev visited the United States in September 1959, he and Eisenhower had several discussions at Camp David. 130 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 more troops [in West Germany]—there was somewhat at that time in the public about more, a couple more divisions, and so . . . He [Krushchev] says, “What are they talking about?” He says, “For every division they can put in Germany, I can put ten, without any trouble whatsoever.” And I said, “We know that.” And I said, “But we’re not worrying about that.” And I said, “I’ll tell you. I don’t propose to fight a conventional war. If you declare . . . if you bring out war, bring on war of global character . . . There are going to be no conventional, nothing conventional about it.” And I told him flatly. And he said, “Well.” He said, “That’s a relief. Neither one of us can afford it.” “Yes,” I said that, and I said, “OK, so I agree to that, too.” [Laughing.] President Kennedy: Right. Right. Eisenhower: But, you see, what these people are afraid of . . . I mean the essence of his argument was, if you try to fight this thing conventionally from the beginning, when do you start to go nuclear? And this will never be until you yourselves in other words become in danger and he said, “That means all of Europe is again gone.” And that— President Kennedy: But, of course, we’ve got all these nuclear weapons, as you know, stored in West Berlin. All we are . . . What they are really concerned about is that the Russians will seize Hamburg, which is only a few miles from the border, and some other towns, and then they’ll say, “We’ll negotiate.” So then Norstad has come up with this whole strategy. I think the only difficulty is that no one will . . . That if we did not have the problem, I say, of Berlin and maintaining access through that autobahn authority, then you would say that any attempt to seize any part of West Germany, we would go to nuclear weapons. But, of course, they never will! But it’s this difficulty of maintaining a position 120 miles behind their lines— Eisenhower: Mr. President, I’ll tell you . . . Here’s something, I can’t document everything . . . but Clay was there. Poor, poor old Smith is gone.43 We begged our governments not to go into Berlin. We . . . I asked that they build a cantonment capital, a cantonment capital at the junction of the British, American, and Russian zones. I said, “We just don’t, we can’t do this. . . . ” Well, it had been a political thing that had been done first in the Advisory Council, European Advisory Council, in London. And later confirmed and . . . But Mr. Roosevelt said to me this 43. Eisenhower was probably referring to Joseph Smith, who as an Army brigadier general, had been headquarters commander for the Berlin airlift of 1948–49. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 131 twice—I’m talking about my concern. And he said, “Ike”—and he was always very, you know, informal—he said, “Ike,” he said, “quit worrying about Uncle Joe. I’ll take care of Uncle Joe.” That’s exactly what he told [me]. Once in Tunis and once when I came over here about the first or second or third of January of ’44. That’s the last time I ever saw him. Now he just wouldn’t believe that these guys were these tough and really ruthless so-and-sos they were.44 There’s one other thing that Adenauer brought in that you might have interest—more than I would—under the security standpoint. He was talking about the French problem and about bringing the British into the Common Market.45 And he got into, you might say, into the same nest. Now he said, “You know, just a few years, when you were here, General, France wanted Britain in this whole—you might call it ‘association’—in order to balance off Germany.46 Now what they’re frightened of, is that Britain comes in and Britain will have greater influence in the association than will France.” Now he said, “This is a . . .” He cited plenty of evidence there. But he said, “One of the reasons they’re making it so difficult for you to come into the Common Market . . .” And he said, more or less, as a suspicion of his, that they were going to be able to prevent [British entry into the 44. Eisenhower did travel with Franklin Roosevelt in Tunis on 21 November 1943. He also met privately with Roosevelt at the White House on 5 and 12 January 1944. There are no records of those conversations. In March and April 1945 Eisenhower had refused to divert his forces to a race to capture Berlin before the Russians, partly because he knew the postwar occupation zones had already been decided. Later criticized for this judgment, he tended to be defensive about it [see Stephen Ambrose, Eisenhower, vol. 1 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1983), pp. 391–404]. In now recalling how those zones, and Berlin’s place in them, were originally determined, Eisenhower mixes memories of general conversations with Franklin Roosevelt about future relations with Russia in November 1943 and January 1944, when there was probably little or no specific discussion of Berlin, with the memory of his own subsequent early-1944 proposal for a “cantonment capital.” Eisenhower made that proposal at a time when Roosevelt still toyed with the idea of connecting Berlin to the edge of a sketchily imagined U.S. occupation zone. Under pressure from the British, the Soviets, and his diplomats, Roosevelt gave way later in 1944 to the scheme which neither he nor Eisenhower had originally supported but which was finally adopted [see Herbert Feis, Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1957), pp. 360-65; Dwight D. Eisenhower, Waging Peace: The White House Years, 1956–1961 (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1965), p. 335 and note 5]. 45. On 31 July 1961, Prime Minister Harold Macmillan announced Great Britain’s bid for accession for the EEC. De Gaulle rarely disguised his reluctance to accept Britain’s entrance. 46. During the negotiations for the Treaty of Rome, which established the EEC in 1957, de Gaulle supported Britain’s entrance. The United Kingdom, however, decided against joining the Common Market and formed the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) with Austria, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland. 132 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 Common Market] because they would make it impossible really for Britain to come in, except at the price of complete desertion of the Commonwealth. “And you know,” he said, very . . . very wisely, he said, “You know today, if I were prime minister of Britain, I would not know what is the answer here.” He says, “For immediate, economic advantage, they should come into the Common Market. But when you think of all the tradition and all of the connections they would have to sever and the bad will that would be engendered throughout the [unclear],” he said, “Oh, this is a tough problem for them.” President Kennedy: He doesn’t really want them in? He thinks because it will weaken the [unclear] the British and just us. Eisenhower: No, I think . . . I think he would like them in. But he doesn’t think France wants them in. Because the French . . . He said France is finally getting into a position they’ve been wanting . . . to get some kind of a lever on all of Western Europe—where they’re really bigger . . . big shots. President Kennedy: And once the British come in they’ll have a— Eisenhower: That’s right. They become sort of a [unclear]. An unidentified speaker interrupts the conversation to tell Kennedy that his lunch companions have arrived. Unidentified: Secretary Rusk and Secretary McNamara are over at the House. President Kennedy: OK. We’ll walk over. Unidentified: And General Carter had to come from CIA, as you know . . . and he . . . Mac Bundy said that he could— President Kennedy: I’ll tell you what we’ll do—we’ll get right after lunch. [speaking to Eisenhower] I just had General Carter . . .47 I just wanted him to show you the Cuban SAM sites. . . .48 Eisenhower: I’d like to see them. President Kennedy: [speaking to an aide] So right after lunch if he could just . . . We’ll meet him in this office. Unidentified: You’ll meet him here? President Kennedy: Right. In this office. Yeah. [Conversation begins to fade as they depart.] Why doesn’t he come because I’d like to have 47. Lieutenant General Marshall S. Carter was deputy director of the CIA. 48. Surface-to-air missiles. Meeting with Dwight Eisenhow er 133 Secretary Rusk and Secretary McNamara . . . We’ll all meet here right after lunch. Unidentified: Fine. President Kennedy: It’ll be about 2:15.49 Unidentified: Fine. [Door shuts.] Tape recording continues for several minutes until someone enters the room and turns off the switch. Following lunch in the Mansion, Kennedy, Eisenhower, Rusk, and McNamara joined Marshall Carter in the Cabinet Room. Kennedy did not tape that meeting. On September 12, 1962, Eisenhower drafted a letter to Chancellor Adenauer about the points discussed between the two U.S. presidents. Eisenhower ended his letter with a passage meant to calm the aging chancellor’s anxiety about the U.S. commitment to the defense of West Germany: “Please do not bother to reply to this document. As a friend of yours and your countrymen and as a loyal citizen of my own I have tried only to act as a messenger of thoughts expressed to me personally (by each of our two nations’ respective leaders) on subjects to which I have adverted.”50 On September 14, Kennedy and Rusk approved this letter before it was sent to Adenauer. After Dwight Eisenhower left the White House, at about 3:00 P.M., Kennedy returned to the family quarters for a hour. He had a series of meetings before him that afternoon, none of which he taped. For an hour he spoke with the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Harry F. Byrd of Virginia, a staunch opponent of anything that smacked of deficit spending. Next there came a group led by the outgoing secretary of labor, Arthur Goldberg; the secretary of the Navy, Fred Korth; the secretary of commerce, Luther Hodges; the solicitor general, Archibald Cox; and the attorney general, Robert Kennedy. Hodges stayed on after this meeting and was joined by Senator Robert Kerr, Theodore Sorensen, and the White House domestic team. At 6:00, Kennedy huddled with Clark Clifford, the Washington lawyer and intelligence community wise man, 49. Kennedy is referring to the time of the intelligence briefing set up for President Eisenhower in the Cabinet Room after lunch. 50. Personal letter, Eisenhower to Adenauer, 12 September 1962, Dwight Eisenhower papers, post-presidential series, Box 27, folder: Principal file, 1962, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library. 134 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 who in early August had pushed for the establishment of a CIA unit to help investigate press leaks. Finally, from 6:28 to 6:45, the President met with Rusk, McGeorge Bundy, and Robert Kennedy. Although no memorandum of conversation exists for this meeting, its subject was almost certainly sending U-2s over Cuba. A week earlier the Soviets had protested the straying of a U2 over Sakhalin Island, and just the day before a U-2 piloted by the Nationalist Chinese under arrangement with the U.S. government had been shot down over Communist China. Nevertheless the CIA was requesting two extended flights over portions of the island not covered by the flights of August 29 or September 5. Fearing another U-2 diplomatic incident, Secretary Rusk had concerns about flying over a country that now had Soviet surface-to-air missile batteries. There was reason to believe that the recently discovered SAM sites, which were in the eastern and central portions of Cuba, might be operational. Bundy had called for a 5:45 meeting of CIA representatives with Rusk; Lansdale; James Reber, the head of the Committee on Overhead Reconnaissance (COMOR); and the Attorney General in his office to discuss the Secretary’s concerns. Rusk, Bundy, and Robert Kennedy came directly from that meeting to see the President. The President agreed with Rusk. The White House apparently ordered a worldwide stand-down for all U-2 flights until September 16. When U-2 flights resumed over Cuba, they were to be quick missions, termed in-and-out flights, that photographed small parts of the island of particular interest to the agency without coming near known SAM sites. Due to unexpectedly bad weather the in-and-out flights would be further delayed until September 26 and 29. As for the central and eastern parts of Cuba, the areas with known SAM sites, there was, as yet, no agreement to take the risk to photograph them.51 A gathering of the administration’s Berlin team followed. Kennedy 51. The story of Bundy’s 10 September meeting was reconstructed after the fact by two CIA officers during congressional investigations in 1963 into the intelligence background to the Cuban missile crisis [see Ernest deM. Berkaw, Jr., to the Executive Director, CIA, 28 February 1963, FRUS, 10: 1054–55 (The FRUS version indicates this memorandum was prepared in 1963 but carries the date of 10 September 1962, giving the impression this document was backdated for the CIA’s records.); Lyman Kirkpatrick, Memorandum for the Director, “White House Meeting on 10 September 1962 on Cuban Overflights,” 1 March 1963, in CIA Documents on the Cuban Missile Crisis 1962, Mary McAuliffe, ed. (Washington, DC: CIA, 1992), document 21]. The results of the later Oval Office meeting can be inferred from Gregory W. Pedlow and Donald E. Welzenbach, eds., The CIA and the U-2 Program, 1954–1974 (Washington, DC: CIA, 1998), pp. 199–211. Meeting on Berlin 135 decided to tape his advisers explaining this particular national security headache. 6:45–7:15 P.M. [T]he planning that goes into this preferred sequence will be extremely valuable to governments when we have to make the decisions nearer to the time. Meeting on Berlin52 Since President Kennedy’s meetings about Berlin in August, the administration’s contingency planning had progressed. His chief advisers now encouraged him to approve a proposal on “Preferred Sequence of Military Actions in the Berlin Conflict,” which largely drew on the Berlin and maritime contingency (BERCON/MARCON) plans discussed in August.53 Now President Kennedy needed to approve the sequence of military actions before the Washington Ambassadorial Group and the NATO Council convened later in the month. Earlier that day, McGeorge Bundy had sent Kennedy a draft of the paper and a cover memorandum that explained disagreements about the use of nuclear weapons and the wisdom of specifying in advance a sequence of actions.54 The President began recording as his advisers outlined the differing views among the Departments of State and Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. Dean Rusk: [voice fades in] . . . as simply a part of a catalog of plans. A year ago the North Atlantic Council asked me and [SACEUR General Lauris] Norstad to undertake such planning with regard to Berlin, and 52. Including President Kennedy, McGeorge Bundy, Mike Forrestal, Martin Hillenbrand, Lyman Lemnitzer, Robert McNamara, Paul Nitze, and Dean Rusk. Tape 22, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 53. Draft not found. For the revised military subgroup proposal for the Washington Ambassadorial Group on the preferred sequence of military actions in a Berlin conflict, see FRUS, 15: 315–20. 54. FRUS, 15: 313–15. 136 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 these BERCON/MARCON plans on which you agreed—long ago—are a result of that.55 Norstad feels that he needs a general planning type of approval from the North Atlantic Council, and [the] Council ought to know what’s going on. I do think that it is important for the North Atlantic Council to . . . members of NATO to . . . know what may in fact lie ahead if this Berlin matter gets, you know, more difficult because they may be living in a kind of a dream world, and some of them may not be facing up to the fact that this could get very tough indeed if the situation develops further. Now, on the interallied discussions there are two points on which there may be some disagreement among the four principal powers. The first would be the timing in the application of maritime sanctions. The British are inclined to hold that off longer than we think we ought to. We, the Germans, and the French have pretty well agreed to move on those fairly early. But the British will want to delay for long-standing attitudes toward maritime matters. Secondly, there is some, there may be some difference in the stage at which some type of nuclear weapon would be involved. I think Mr. [Paul] Nitze could indicate the views of the different national delegations on that. Otherwise, I think the general approach is agreed among the Four, and it would be a very sobering thing for the North Atlantic Council to get into. The actual BERCON/MARCON plans themselves have been already discussed with the North Atlantic Council, I believe. Isn’t that correct? Paul Nitze: The views of the standing group . . . the standing group has sent its comments to the North Atlantic Council. Rusk: Oh. Well, the governments though . . . have had means of becoming familiar with that, with the nature— Nitze: That’s right. Rusk: I think it ought to be pointed out to you, Mr. President, that Norstad is concerned about the North Atlantic Council seeming to . . . putting too much emphasis on what we refer to as the preferred sequence of those reactions. He does not feel that the circumstances of the time, or the action of the enemy, would make it clear enough that this is the way the scenario’s going to unfold. Now, we think it must be underlined to the North Atlantic Council that we can’t guarantee our preferred sequence, but that the planning that goes into this preferred 55. For the BERCON/MARCON contingency planning discussions, see “Meeting on Berlin,” 3 August 1962 and 9 August 1962. Meeting on Berlin 137 sequence will be extremely valuable to governments when we have to make the decisions nearer to the time. Of course, all these matters are subject to later decisions by government in light of the circumstances. President Kennedy: What is the obligation of the other NATO powers in case any of these . . . What are we asking of them? They’ve got a Berlin commitment too, haven’t they? Rusk: Well there’s, there’s for example, there would be . . . For example in Phase I, there would be mobilization, alert and mobilization activities which would . . . President Kennedy: By all of the NATO powers? Nitze: Phase II. Rusk: I’m sorry, I thought that was certain mobilization mentioned in Phase I, Paul, is that not right? Nitze: [Unclear.] Rusk: I beg your pardon . . . Nitze: [That] supposes it to have already taken place as a result of our [unclear]. McGeorge Bundy: We’re in Phase I. Nitze: Yes. Rusk: Yes, I’m sorry. It’s Phase II, isn’t it . . . [flips through pages]. Paragraph 2 at the bottom of page 3 . . . President Kennedy: Under [unclear] and then to instruct. Now, do we know what it is we want each one of these countries to do? For example, Belgium, what kind of mobilization, a gradual military buildup of naval measures and air measures including repressive measures? Do we know sort of what we’d want each of the . . . program to be? Nitze: Long term is we want them to meet their force goals, we know what divisions we want them to call up, and what we want them to do, in broad terms, but in specific terms we have not . . . President Kennedy: Let me say force goals— Lyman Lemnitzer: Within NATO there are specific measures, what he calls an alert, steps which they should take to move forces, to call up [unclear] character. Nitze: But, for instance in Phase II we would expect the British to call up their territorials, and then to move over the top the forces that are necessary to bring them up to the three divisions to which they are committed by the NATO MC 26/4 force goals. President Kennedy: Of course, isn’t that a peacetime goal? Or is that the alert goal? Lemnitzer: No, it is a peacetime goal, but they are not up to it. Nitze: They are not up to it. 138 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 President Kennedy: What country in NATO is up to its goals, except for the United States? Nitze: Canada. President Kennedy: Canada? Lemnitzer: Canada and the United States. Unidentified: Well, Belgium is pretty well up to its commitment. So, there are varying degrees . . . Rusk: And the Netherlands are not too far away . . . Robert McNamara: Well, none of them are up to it in terms of proper logistical support. None of them are ready to fight, Mr. President, and each of them would have to call men to active duty in Phase II in order to prepare for the action in Phase III, and as a matter of fact, it would be the calling of reserves to duty in Phase II that we would hope would deter Phase III. But I think it’s fair to say none of the NATO forces are properly equipped with combat support and logistical support forces. President Kennedy: All of ours? Ours are? McNamara: [Unclear] ours. Nitze: And we would contract; perhaps reinforcing the forces we’ve got there now. We’ve got the two division sets of equipment and we might want to fly over . . . McNamara: Yes, and almost certainly in Phase II we would call up additional air squadrons. Rusk: We nonetheless suddenly we have . . . We have column one and column two. Column one was the Third Division force. McNamara: Yes. Rusk: And column two showed the additions we would hope that the different countries would make to that. Presumably we would press pretty early for the column two. McNamara: Yes, but we would first press to move to column one, which they have not moved to as yet. President Kennedy: Well, the only thing is, do we want to say this, on page 4, where it said, “Should the risk of loss be too great, extended flights would be suspended.” Do we want that on any record? Nitze: Well, there’s an important point involved here. . . . If the Soviet Union were to use their ground-to-air missiles in the corridor, we couldn’t continue flights in the corridor without going after those ground installations. And, if you go after the ground installations, you also go after the airfields from which the Soviet planes come up, would be an expansion of the activity beyond what we contemplated in Phase I and would really involve very serious risks of the conflict becoming a big Meeting on Berlin 139 one. And the thought was that you’d better take these mobilization measures which are contemplated in Phase II before you go that far. President Kennedy: This Phase II, though, we’re talking now really about Phase II, aren’t we? Lemnitzer: Yes. Nitze: Yes, during Phase II, you would continue the flights as long as you could, but if they started using these ground-to-air missiles, or put in a— President Kennedy: It seems to me we ought to maybe consider rewording that sentence because I think it sounds like maybe they will try and then they’ll knock us down and then we’ll stop and then it will be up to NATO when we start again. Don’t you think we ought to put it a little more . . . we will cease and mobilize and then— Bundy: And [many] steps will be taken. President Kennedy: Prepare to commence again rather than sort of leaving it more questionable. Nitze: I think that the British are going to come in with some suggested amended language for that particular sentence. And I think their government has approved the whole document except for that sentence and I think they’re going to come in into our next meeting with a slight change in it. I think they’ll make the same point that you have in mind, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Could you keep that in mind . . . the NATO decision? Couldn’t we say NATO would have to face the necessity, in light of stated military preparedness for air action, beyond the scope of Live Oak operations, in order to reestablish air access after suitable concentration of forces has taken place?56 This other thing, they get it all, in the end. Garbled exchange between Bundy and an unidentified speaker. Sound of pages being turned. President Kennedy: Now, when we say the three powers would, if necessary . . . what are we . . . What do we want to call in the . . . Have you got that? When do we call on NATO to make its forces, air forces available? Nitze: The concept is that as long as the effort is purely on the air corridors along the autobahn, that this is a tripartite responsibility. The 56. Live Oak was the planning group created by SACEUR Lauris Norstad to deal with the military aspects of the Berlin problem. Headed by a British major general, it also included U.S. and French officers and a West German observer. 140 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 moment it spreads beyond the air corridors or autobahn, then it becomes a NATO responsibility. President Kennedy: I wonder if there’s something we could impress upon the other NATO [countries] about what their obligations will begin to become; or do you think they’ll be impressed enough with the prospect that it might escalate into nuclear, to be willing to participate fully in any support they can give us short of nuclear action? In other words, this doesn’t seem to ask very much of NATO except for this, really, almost information sheet. Isn’t it for them, for the other members of NATO aside from the British and the French and Germans? Nitze: They would have to participate fully in the buildup to Phase II. All the actions in Phase III and in Phase IV would be NATO action. Rusk: I think we might knock out that four, the last line on page 3, for example naval measures, national, tripartite and NATO, because naval measures would be themselves outside of the corridor— Nitze: Well, we’d wanted really to have some degree of flexibility so that the three powers could do naval harassment and even some forms of encroaching blockade without the possibility of being vetoed by NATO. But I think you should still . . . could take out the or without. [Unclear] I think. Rusk: I don’t think the . . . that the veto . . . that unanimity is going to deal with these in places in time and it’s necessary [unclear]. McNamara: The paragraph requiring the action by the other members of NATO, Mr. President, is the second paragraph on page 4. . . . Perhaps it is sufficiently self explanatory, and can certainly be enlarged— President Kennedy: [Unclear] mean “to mobilize and deploy jointly additional military forces”? McNamara: It means . . . President Kennedy: [reading] “Achieving the force levels and state of readiness necessary to the defense of NATO and the launching of BERCON/MARCON operations.” It doesn’t say what— McNamara: Yeah. President Kennedy: Of all M-day forces.57 Bundy: Theoretically, the M-day forces go well above the 30 division levels or any current levels. Nitze: Yeah. President Kennedy: We wouldn’t want to state what those additional military forces would be? 57. The abbreviation M-day forces stands for Reserve Forces. Meeting on Berlin 141 Bundy: Well, they know what they are, Mr. President. Under the existing NATO planning, they would total, if they all were produced, something like 47 divisions, if I remember the figure correctly. General Lemnitzer will have it in mind. Lemnitzer: I am not sure of the total. We will check it. Bundy: But it implies a NATO-wide mobilization, and they will all know that that is what is implied under existing contingency plans on a NATO-wide basis. This document, it is important to say, relates to an existing NATO strategy. This is simply the Berlin strategy within existing NATO strategy. Martin Hillenbrand: We have another paper which will be considered by the NAC [North Atlantic Council] at the same time, and that relates to the specific question of tripartite-NATO relationship, and what parts of these operations will be under necessarily under tripartite control, and where the obligation is for NATO as a whole.58 McNamara: Which we could declare by saying a major element of military action will be for each of the Western European members of NATO to mobilize and deploy. . . . Make it more specific. Bundy: Under NATO M-day plans. McNamara: Yes. Bundy: Yeah. McNamara: [whispering] We also hope each of the NATO nations contemplate through the use of [unclear]. President Kennedy: Do the words on page 5, “the initiation of some form of nuclear action” . . . has the word initiation got anything to do [with] [unclear] [sounds of flipping pages] at the bottom? If our continued impression would be observed, it would be the realization of the imminence of nuclear war?59 Or is initiation satisfactory? [Unclear exchange.] Nitze: The point we were trying to get across here was that the other NAC members would have to realize that we might be faced with a situation where we would have to initiate. If we could take out the words 58. The tripartite powers were the three Western powers with treaty rights and obligations in West Germany—Great Britain, France, and the United States. The defense of the Western position in Berlin would start as a tripartite responsibility and then expand to involve all of NATO. The involvement of the entire NATO alliance would occur if the Soviet challenge exceeded a certain threshold. 59. Kennedy is hinting at the possibility that the Western powers might have to be the first to use nuclear weapons in a conflict with the Warsaw Pact over Berlin. They would preempt the Soviet use of nuclear weapons because of the “realization of the imminence” of total war. 142 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 initiation of, and it would still be implied when you say “will be some form of nuclear action.” Bundy: I think that’s better. Nitze: “Resort to.” President Kennedy: Yeah. Nitze: We can just take out the initiation. Bundy: I think “resort to” is pretty good. President Kennedy: Yeah. Nitze: “Resort to.”60 President Kennedy seems to take a phone call, not related to the discussion at hand. President Kennedy: Right, OK, . . . Huntsville [Alabama]? Yeah, which day can you do it? Next week? Why don’t you check that out and . . . Let me see, I’ll be in Huntsville Tuesday, this week. Because it looks like I’ll be down there this Sunday. What about the [unclear] burning of those things [unclear]? Yeah . . . have you announced how many FBI you’ve got; or are they putting in helicopters. Yeah, OK, fine. Right. OK. Good. Bye.61 [Hangs up phone.] President Kennedy: You are going [to] change that to make it . . . Bundy: We’re going to say “resort to,” simply— President Kennedy: “Resort to.” Nitze: It would be “to resort to.” President Kennedy flips his copy of the document, searching for the offending phrase. President Kennedy: All right, then. Rusk: Mr. President, it’s the very last paragraph, on page 6, [unclear] language [unclear] because it would be too much of a row to NATO, the North Atlantic Council. Paul, I don’t see any particular point, from our point of view, in hanging on to it. We might as well drop it. Nitze: Apparently, the Germans have also said they wanted to drop it. I’m not quite sure why they want to drop it. 60. The critical sentence in this planning document thus read: “If the course chosen [by NATO] were conventional action and this fails to make the Soviet Union back down and has not precipitated general war, the last remaining pressure to be exerted will be to resort to some form of nuclear action” (FRUS, 15:320). 61. On 11 September 1962, President Kennedy planned to visit defense facilities at Redstone Laboratories in Huntsville, Alabama. He would be accompanied by British defense minister Peter Thorneycroft, who was visiting the United States 9 to 17 September. On Sunday, 16 September, Kennedy was expected to be in Newport, Rhode Island, with Thorneycroft as his and Mrs. Kennedy’s guest. Meeting on Berlin 143 Rusk: Well, apparently, there is [unclear] some of these big power decisions here, this in effect, the Council is going to have to arrive at rapid decisions at the time of execution. I think that’s really what . . . Bundy: In realistic terms, it’s not accurate, that paragraph. Unidentified: Yeah. Bundy: You ought to know, Mr. President, that General Norstad himself is worried about the restrictiveness of this paper in terms of the use of nuclear weapons. The reason this is important is that he will be making a presentation on his views, at a certain stage. I don’t know just when this will, how this will work. But the Council has asked for his views on the general issue of the future of nuclear weapons in NATO, and this connects closely to this general question of when they will be used in the minds of Europeans who are hesitant about what they perceive to be changes in our policy. President Kennedy: Well, you know that President Eisenhower’s conversation with Adenauer [unclear] some confusion, and all the rest. Bundy: Yeah. President Kennedy: He’s going to give . . . is General Norstad going to give the . . . policy? Bundy: The presentation of his paper will be handled, as I understand it, by Paul Nitze, isn’t that right? Nitze: No, Tom Finletter.62 Bundy: Tom Finletter. Nitze: [I’ll] bring Tom up to date on the . . . Bundy: What will Norstad’s relation to this paper be? Nitze: I don’t think he will have a relationship to it. He’s already expressed his views to the Joint Chiefs on the paper. His views have been taken account of by the Joint Chiefs [of Staff]. Lemnitzer: Yes, he’s also . . . That’s right, and we’ve recommended, concerned with most of them and a good many of his views have been incorporated into this paper. Not all of them, but . . . Nitze: I think the most important one is the . . . is the second sentence, in the second paragraph on page 1. Lemnitzer: The Joint Chiefs are most concerned [unclear] get the idea that we were going through step by step by step. President Kennedy: Have you tried ever [unclear] avoid the subject? Is that the one? 62. Thomas Finletter was the permanent representative to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. 144 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 Bundy: Yeah. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [reading] “Nations may render [unclear] of nuclear weapons. . . .” Rusk: Point out the standard [unclear]. Nitze: This we thought met his major point. . . . President Kennedy: Will he at some time talk about the failure of the NATO people to come up with their, let’s say, with General Eisenhower [unclear] . . . Adenauer complaining about us?63 Well, I think it would be well to have these other points made.64 Did somebody make these? Or will General Lemnitzer do that? Lemnitzer: Well, he makes them continually, to most of the nations particularly the British. He’s been after them for several years. President Kennedy: What’s your impression of them? Nitze: At the moment the French have won the most in their conversations [unclear]. Lemnitzer: [Unclear.] I think he’s already given up on the French for the time being, for more divisions, but as they come back from Algeria, I think that we would have to continue to press the French. President Kennedy: Is he going to talk about medium-range ballistic missiles?65 Bundy: At a certain point, he’s under obligation, really, to talk to NATO. He put that off earlier on so as not to have any confusion about his views and his retirement. But this is a separate issue. The only reason I mentioned it is slightly cognate in the minds of many of the Europeans, because our instinct of holding off this decision till the latest possible moment is related in their minds to what they take to be our lack of enthusiasm to General Norstad’s modernization program.66 He will defend his point of view on modernization in medium-range ballistic missiles at some point before the council. I don’t know the date of that. 63. “He” is General Norstad. 64. Kennedy is referring to the inability of NATO allies to meet the conventional force goals set in the fall of 1957 by MC 70 and again in the summer of 1961 by MC 26/4. 65. For Norstad’s views on the deployment of MRBMs in Europe, see the “Meeting with Dwight Eisenhower,” 10 September 1962. 66. Bundy is referring to the Kennedy administration’s foot-dragging in establishing a European land-based MRBM nuclear force. Many administration officials, especially in the Department of State, opposed a land-based force because the allies would demand control over the missiles in their territory. State preferred a sea-based multilateral force (MLF), which would avoid the issue of national control entirely by employing mixed NATO crews. Kennedy held a dim view of the MLF. Although the President shared State’s concerns about allied pressures for their own national nuclear forces, he doubted the MLF was a viable alternative. Meeting on Berlin 145 President Kennedy: I think it would be helpful if he put in the, why he regards conventional forces, and their buildup, to be completely consistent with his view on . . . because he knows I want to make an exclusive . . . I’d like to have it, so that their . . . Also it affects— Rusk: They’re going to jump on his bandwagon as an excuse for not going ahead with a conventional buildup. Bundy: Yeah. Well, they do this in their own minds . . . Unidentified: Right. President Kennedy: Well, I think if he says that, he’s regarded as very pure on the subject, we’re not, if he would say it, and explain it. Could we suggest that he make that part of his presentation? McNamara: I hope to avoid that presentation as long as possible, Mr. President, and to the best of my knowledge it isn’t scheduled at the present time. Lemnitzer: Well, there’s one on the 25th of September; that was sort of a tentative date. I don’t know whether it’s been firmed up. I don’t [know] what the status of that one is, Mr. President. President Kennedy: OK, [unclear] now we’ve got to go to . . . [to McNamara] You’re coming tomorrow? McNamara: Yes, I think so. I’m worried about [British defense minister Peter] Thorneycroft . . . President Kennedy: Is he not— Bundy: Isn’t Mike coming, too? McNamara: Yes I believe so, Mac, but we have a problem that Dave Ormsby-Gore is having a dinner for him tomorrow night.67 I don’t know if that gets us back there in time for— President Kennedy: You’ve got to get back in time for that. McNamara: Yes, I’m taking him out for dinner tonight in lieu of— President Kennedy: We’ll just send you to Huntsville— McNamara: We could have limited [unclear]— President Kennedy: —dinner Wednesday or is that Albert? Bundy: Don’t know myself how high— McNamara: The surgeon general sent me [unclear]. [Laughter.] I don’t know. Bundy: I think they would relax to just have this dinner without Thorneycroft or even give up the dinner; that would be great! Mixed exchange amidst continued laughter. Someone says, “Thorneycroft can come late.” 67. David Ormsby-Gore was the British ambassador to the United States. 146 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 McNamara: I said we would talk to him tonight. Just say we can be back here by nine tomorrow night, and leave with you [unclear] an hour . . . President Kennedy: An hour isn’t . . . it seems to me you can cut it an hour short, we’ve been through that so much. McNamara: I haven’t— President Kennedy: But he— McNamara: And he hasn’t either. President Kennedy: So it would be . . . McNamara: It’s probably desirable to do it. I’ll talk to him and see what his preferences are . . . Bundy: I do think the dinner is a trivial matter. President Kennedy: Who did you get, some congressmen and senators? Bundy: No, just Thorneycroft and his party. President Kennedy: Is his party all coming with us? McNamara: No, only two or three. President Kennedy: These are—Is [unclear] coming with us? Bundy: I don’t know, Mr. President. You’ve got a lot of problems. [chuckling] I wouldn’t try to manage that dinner. Nobody else can. President Kennedy: [Unclear] give my speech . . . Is Chip [Charles] Bohlen [unclear] is much more familiar with our whole scene than Tom Finletter would be but perhaps Tom would—68 McNamara: Finletter, . . . I think it is a forum where he’d do it and he has asked if Paul can come over to acquaint him with it so that he had [unclear]. [Garbled exchange.] Nitze: Well, we’ve considered it to be the natural thing that the U.S. would put this forward. President Kennedy: I mean, aren’t the British and the French [unclear]? Hillenbrand: We’ll put it forward as our view, and then the British, French, and Germans would all support that. President Kennedy: [shuffles papers while talking] . . . after the presentation of the four-power military set group proposal. Nitze: NATO cost us a little jealousy in the Four Power, in the Ambassadorial Group. [Laughter.] President Kennedy: All right. McNamara: Mr. President, Lem[nitzer] and I met with the Senate committee this morning and this afternoon. I don’t believe we’ll have any 68. In October Bohlen is expected to leave for Europe to replace General James Gavin as U.S. ambassador to France. Meeting on Berlin 147 problem in putting a resolution through the Senate. Senator [Richard] Russell has planned to do that very promptly. His [unclear], as a matter of fact, was talking this afternoon and I believe it was unanimous.69 Rusk: I’ll [unclear]. McNamara: We’re scheduled to go before the House . . . President Kennedy: So would they get that, including particularly Khrushchev’s conversation with [Secretary of the Interior Stewart] Udall about America [unclear] divided.70 McNamara: I think it’d be extremely helpful. We’d go before the House on Thursday; we’ll have more trouble there. The process is becoming a real controversy. Lemnitzer: The more individual opinions in the House, with 37 members, everyone has got some particular angle to follow. . . . President Kennedy: They can all vote for it. McNamara: I’m sure they will. I’m sure they will. Nitze: I think so. President Kennedy: I would like to get, you know, this statement [unclear] passed to them about the backlog in foreign aid; I’d like to get what they at the Defense Department . . . if you did the comparable statistics, you know . . . he’s got this thing where he just would [unclear]. McNamara: Yes there is roughly 2 billion dollars of other than fiscal ’63 [unclear]. Now he adds fiscal ’63, whatever he’s thinking of a billiontwo, perhaps, to the two billion, so he probably comes up with three billion two or three billion four. President Kennedy: But, I mean, if you took your total, I’m talking about the total Defense Department . . . what is your budget? McNamara: Oh, I can’t tell you that . . . President Kennedy: Seventy or 80 billion? McNamara: Oh, I can’t answer the question, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Mac, [unclear]? Bundy: Can I [unclear] the problem? 69. President Kennedy had asked Congress for standby authority to call up 150,000 reservists for one year and to extend active duty tours without declaring a state of emergency. On 24 September, the House of Representatives granted him that power. 70. On 29 August, Secretary Udall arrived in the Soviet Union for an 11-day visit to see hydroelectric projects. On 6 September, Udall met for two hours with Khrushchev. During their conversation, Khrushchev raised the subject of Berlin and informed Udall bluntly that the Soviets would not allow Western troops to remain in Berlin and that the United States and its allies would not dare to go to war over this. At one point, Khrushchev told Udall that Kennedy was not in a position to reach an agreement over Berlin because he lacked support in Congress (see FRUS, 15: 308–10). 148 M O N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 10, 1962 President Kennedy: Yeah, yeah. But in other words . . . [Garbled exchange.] McNamara: . . . in the Defense Department. We have it for so many years back [unclear]. Bundy: We might get Charlie Hitch to do something.71 McNamara: Oh, yes, it’s all available, and we’ll get out a quarterly report on it. Meeting breaks up. Voices, milling around, slamming doors, laughter. Multiple conversations taking place. The following statements can be heard. Bundy: Lifetime obligation to [unclear]. Lemnitzer: [Unclear] back here, but I’d like to set it up under you. President Kennedy: Would you set it up and send me a cable? Lemnitzer: [Unclear] all I can get, I will. I’ll get it to you on [unclear] 11th. President Kennedy: That’s fine. Lemnitzer: Right. Unidentified: [Unclear] unless he’s coming back here. The President . . . Nitze: Are you going back to the building or not? Lemnitzer: Yes, I am, Paul. Nitze: Could you take my . . . this with you? Lemnitzer: Well, I don’t want to lose it. Nitze: Well, look, I see [unclear]. I’ll . . . let me take it home and put it in my safe. Unidentified: So you’re going right to your office [unclear]. Nitze: Yeah, but probably not to the Pentagon. Lemnitzer: I’ve decided to be there [unclear]. Nitze: I can just put it in my safe. Lemnitzer: OK. All right. [Unclear.] See you later. Nitze: Yeah. Bundy: Mr. President, have you got a minute? The President goes out, leaving the machine on. On 13 September, the Ambassadorial Group met to discuss the paper further. The group made only minor revisions, as Rusk persuaded the 71. Charles Hitch was assistant secretary of defense for budgetary affairs. McNamara admired Hitch, the former head of the economics division at RAND, for his efficiency and innovation. Hitch devised the Planning-Programming-Budgeting System (PPBS), which centralized planning in the Office of the Secretary of Defense and reduced the independence of the service secretaries. T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 13, 1962 149 allies that NATO acceptance of the preferred sequence would demonstrate to the Soviets that any threatening move in Berlin would meet with unified Western resistance. Following the Berlin meeting, the President went for his evening swim. Then it was time to return to the Executive Mansion. Thursday, September 13, 1962 The President arrived in the Oval Office at 9:40 A.M., after breakfast with the Democratic legislative leadership. It was his first full day in the White House since Monday, September 10. Early Tuesday Kennedy had flown to Huntsville, Alabama, for an intensive two-day tour of the heartland of the U.S. space program, where he received a series of briefings on the status of his goal to put a man on the moon. By the time of his return on Wednesday night, he had visited the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville; Cape Canaveral in Florida; the NASA facility in Houston, Texas; and the McDonnell Douglas plant in St. Louis, which had built the Mercury capsules and was now working on the Gemini program. Kennedy had a press conference scheduled for Thursday evening, and most of the morning was spent preparing. After signing a bill extending federal protection to the Point Reyes seashore in northern California, Kennedy met for a few minutes alone with Secretary of State Dean Rusk before heading into a longer meeting with Rusk and a group of key advisers to review what might be discussed at the press conference. While Kennedy was on tour, the Soviets had issued a strong response to the President’s September 4 statement on Cuba and the administration’s announced intention to call up 150,000 Reserves. The Soviet Union raised the alert status of its forces and warned that it would protect Cuban sovereignty. President Kennedy had every reason to expect questions about this in the evening. Walter Heller then came into the Oval Office for about half an hour, presumably to help with any domestic economic questions. Finally, before going to a luncheon in honor of U Thant, the acting secretary-general of the United Nations, the President welcomed the members of the U.S. delegation to the 17th U.N. General Assembly. Senator Albert Gore of Tennessee, who had been named to the delegation, brought along his daughter, Nancy, and his son Al, a future vice president. After lunch, just before dropping in on a group of Jewish leaders meet- 150 T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 13, 1962 ing in the Fish Room, the President called Speaker McCormack, whom he had seen at the leadership breakfast, to discuss the congressional resolution on standby authority for calling up the Reserves. In McCormack’s office were Congressmen Carl Vinson of Georgia and Thomas Morgan of Pennsylvania. 4:55 P.M. [T]he quicker we dispose of it, probably the better. Conversation with John McCormack, Thomas Morgan, and Carl Vinson1 The President talked with Carl Vinson, a Democratic representative from Georgia and chairman of the Armed Services Committee; John McCormack, a Democratic representative from Massachusetts and the Speaker of the House; and Thomas “Doc” Morgan, a Democratic representative from Pennsylvania and the chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The four discussed strategies for winning support of a House resolution to grant the President special limited power to call up to 150,000 reservists for one year and to extend active duty tours without declaring a state of emergency. The House passed the resolution on September 24, 1962. President Kennedy: Mr. Speaker. John McCormack: Hello, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Hi. McCormack: I have Carl Vinson with me and Tom Morgan was here a little while ago and coming back. President Kennedy: Right. McCormack: On this resolution on Cuba. President Kennedy: Right. McCormack: Tom Morgan’s going to introduce it today and Carl Vinson’s going to introduce, both of them are going to introduce, the same resolution. 1. Dictabelt 3B.1, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Conversation with McCormack, Morgan, and Vinson 151 President Kennedy: Right, fine. McCormack: Now you have seen it? President Kennedy: Yes, that’s correct. McCormack: That starts our, “Where, whereas President James Monroe,” and so forth. President Kennedy: Right. McCormack: That right? Then down there, “Now therefore be it resolved.” President Kennedy: Right. McCormack: We’re trying to see if we can get it up to suspension on Monday. How would that hit you? President Kennedy: That’s fine. I think the quicker we dispose of it, probably the better. McCormack: Yes, because the Senate isn’t going to . . . they’re going to refer to the Joint Committee on Armed Services and Foreign Relations and report back next Thursday. President Kennedy: Right, right. McCormack: Now if we can work it out. Ah, that is . . . [off the phone to someone else] Will you get Chairman Morgan, will you? [back to President Kennedy] Oh, here’s Chairman Morgan. I’ll have you talk with Tom Morgan, if I may, and also Carl Vinson. President Kennedy: Right, right. McCormack: [to Morgan] I’ve got the President, Tom, and the President said if we can get it up to suspension Monday that would be fine. [back to President Kennedy] Now here’s Tom Morgan, Mr. President. Thomas Morgan: Yes, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Yes, Doc, why I think the quicker, the better and I think the closer we get to that language the better off we are. It’s the only way to head off their giving us something much worse. Morgan: Do you think this language is OK then? President Kennedy: Yes, that’s the language that . . . we sent up, I think, to the Senate— Morgan: Yeah. President Kennedy: Isn’t that the same language that Mike had? Morgan: It’s the same language that Chairman Vinson had. President Kennedy: Is that 1958? It mentions 1958?2 Morgan: Pardon? 2. President Kennedy wants to be sure this resolution mentions the congressional resolution that helped a Republican president, Dwight Eisenhower, deal with foreign crises in 1958. 152 T H U R S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 13, 1962 President Kennedy: Does it mention the year 1958? Morgan: Just a minute, Mr. President. [to someone in the room with him] Is it here? 1958? [back to the President] Yes. President Kennedy: Yeah, that’s the one. Right. Good. That’s fine. Well, that’s good because that puts it back on them. Morgan: Yeah. President Kennedy: Good, Doc. Morgan: OK. President Kennedy: Thank you. Morgan: Wait a minute, Mr. President. Mr. Vinson wants to talk to you. Carl Vinson: Mr. President? President Kennedy: Yes, sir, Mr.— Vinson: This is the resolution that was just sent me up from your office down there— President Kennedy: That’s correct. Vinson: That I used when the Secretary of Defense was before the committee to tell the committee that this was what we would consider, and we do not have jurisdiction and so Mr. Morgan’s committee has jurisdiction. President Kennedy: Right. Vinson: But I am going to get the sense of my committee, “do they endorse it.” And then I’ll bring out the . . . authorization for 150,000 reservists under suspension, past that Monday— President Kennedy: Oh, terrific. Vinson: And then, Mr. Morgan will call up . . . on the recommendation by the Speaker for suspension of the rule and bring up the concurrent resolution. President Kennedy: Very good. Vinson: Now it’s all right to introduce them? President Kennedy: That’s fine, Mr. Chairman. Yes, because I think that’s the only way to head off their introducing a much more objectionable amendment—3 3. The New York Times that morning reported attempts by three Republican senators to add inflammatory language to the administration’s reserve mobilization bill. One of them, Senator Prescott Bush of Connecticut, proposed that it “put the Soviet Union on notice that the Monroe Doctrine was not dead.” However, by the end of the day the Senate had passed the resolution unanimously, without any amendments. The failed Republican amendments were Conversation with McCormack, Morgan, and Vinson 153 Vinson: Uh-huh. President Kennedy: —language. Vinson: That’s right, because I’ve got to keep down some very objectionable amendments— President Kennedy: That’s correct. Vinson: . . . in my committee and this is the only way I can do it. President Kennedy: That’s fine, Mr. Chairman. Vinson: Thank you, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Thanks a lot. Right. At the President’s 6:00 P.M. press conference, Kennedy reiterated a desire for calm regarding Soviet activities in the Caribbean. He stressed that he believed that “these new shipments do not constitute a serious threat to any other part of this hemisphere.” And he called for a stop to “loose talk” about invading Cuba for it gave “a thin color of legitimacy to the Communist pretense that such a threat exists.” Kennedy, however, did not deny his administration’s concerns about what the future might hold. On September 11, the Soviets had responded to his September 4 statement with a stiff public pledge of their own to defend Cuba. But the Soviets had added that they had no intention of sending any nuclear missiles to Cuba. Thus both provoked and encouraged, Kennedy reinforced his earlier warning to the Soviets. If Cuba, he said, “should become an offensive military base of significant capacity for the Soviet Union, then this country will do whatever must be done to protect its own security and that of its allies.”4 Returning to the White House at 6:34 P.M., the President had another warning to present. On the advice of Clark Clifford and the other members of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB), the President had invited Orvil Dryfoos, the publisher of the New York Times, to a meeting to discuss Hanson Baldwin and the problem of leaks of classified information.5 Kennedy and Dryfoos met for nearly an hour. To dramatize the value of the information Baldwin had described in the Times, Kennedy handed referred to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for possible incorporation in another resolution (New York Times, 13 and 14 September 1962). 4. The President’s News Conference of 13 September 1962, in The Kennedy Presidential Press Conferences (New York: Coleman, 1978). 5. On the Baldwin case, see Volume 1, “Meeting with PFIAB,” 1 August 1962; Introduction to 16 August 1962; and “Meeting on Intelligence Matters,” 22 August 1962. 154 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 Dryfoos a top secret report, codeword Keyhole, that identified Soviet missile launch sites on the basis of satellite information. Then he briefly left the Oval Office while Dryfoos read. Having returned to his office, President Kennedy explained to Dryfoos that he intended to implement a new system to guard against harmful leaks once the director of Central Intelligence, John McCone, returned from his honeymoon. He wanted to work out a system with McCone and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara so that the CIA would receive reports on any conversations that Pentagon officials had with journalists. Dryfoos was impressed by the Keyhole document and said that Hanson Baldwin would not have submitted his story had he understood the sensitivity of his information. Nevertheless he argued strongly against the President’s idea of using the CIA as a watchdog, citing the First Amendment and the importance of an informed electorate in a democracy. President Kennedy, however, kept coming back to the importance of his CIA plan. Finally, Dryfoos asked whether the President planned to announce this plan publicly. When Kennedy said no, Dryfoos cautioned him that this was the type of plan that Hanson Baldwin would be the first to find out about and it would make great front-page material.6 Following this meeting, the President went to the pool. Tuesday, September 25, 1962 President Kennedy took some time off in mid-September 1962 despite the crush of events in the Caribbean and Central Europe and his active participation in the midterm elections. An avid sailor, Kennedy spent as much time watching the America’s Cup Challenge off Newport, Rhode Island, as possible. Leaving the Oval Office on Friday afternoon, September 14, the Kennedys spent until Wednesday afternoon, September 19, in Newport. President Kennedy invited his good friend British ambassador David 6. “Meeting of Orvil E. Dryfoos with John F. Kennedy, September 13, 1962,” 14 September 1962, Dryfoos Papers, New York Times Archives, New York, NY. Kennedy started the meeting by saying that he was much less worried about Cuba than he was about the situation in Berlin. He thought people exaggerated the threat posed by Cuba. He expected the situation to get very bad in Berlin in December. The editors are grateful to the New York Times for the use of its archives. T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 155 Ormsby-Gore and Mrs. Ormsby-Gore to join his family on board the USS destroyer Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. to watch the races. The Australian sloop Gretel was challenging the American sloop Weatherly. President Kennedy returned to the White House for meetings on Wednesday evening and Thursday. Thursday evening, September 20, he left for a quick visit to a Democratic fund-raiser in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, before flying back to Newport that night for the next round of races. The Kennedys did not leave Newport again until Monday evening, September 24. The President and Mrs. Kennedy hosted a lunch for Mohammed Ayub Khan and his delegation at Hammersmith Farm in Newport before leaving for Washington, D.C. Tuesday, September 25, was President Kennedy’s first full day in the Oval Office since Thursday, September 13, the date of the previous taped conversation. Much of the President’s schedule this day involved Asia and the Pacific. In the morning the President met with the coordinating secretary of state for security of South Vietnam, Nguyen Dinh Thuan. Then he was reunited with Benjamin Kevu, the man from the Solomon Islands who had saved his life during World War II by delivering a coconut with information about the location of Kennedy and the other survivors of his destroyed PT boat. Next to enter the Oval Office was the prime minister of Australia, Robert G. Menzies. A non-Asian event, the swearing in of Willard Wirtz as secretary of labor, also happened just before lunch. So, too, did a meeting with George Ball, George McGhee, and Carl Kaysen, perhaps on the progress of negotiations with the Europeans on a modified gold standstill agreement.1 Following his midday break, the President returned to his office for two meetings with his brother. At the first meeting, the Attorney General was joined by John McCone of the CIA and Carl Kaysen. In the second meeting Robert Kennedy was alone with the President. None of these meetings was taped. The only meeting the President taped came at the end of the day and involved a discussion of incoming Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Maxwell Taylor’s fact-finding trip to East Asia. 1. For the development of this policy see Volume 1, “Meeting on the Gold and Dollar Crisis,” 10 August 1962; “Meeting on the Gold and Dollar Crisis,” 16 August 1962; and “Meeting on Gold and Dollar Policy,” 20 August 1962. 156 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 5:00 –5:56 P.M. I would think the more likely thing would be . . . is they would move there [South Korea] having moved against Quemoy and Matsu and our having trouble in Berlin; it would be part of a worldwide expansion rather than just a single action there. Meeting with Maxwell Taylor on His Far Eastern Trip2 President Kennedy announced on July 19, 1962, that General Maxwell Taylor would replace Lyman Lemnitzer as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, effective October 1. Before assuming his post, Taylor decided he needed a refresher trip to the Far East. He left the country amid disturbing reports of Soviet military aid arriving in Cuba. Taylor departed on August 31, stopping first in Japan and following an arc down to Indonesia. The newly appointed Chairman focused on U.S. policy in the region, especially as it concerned Communist China. He also examined the status of U.S. military assistance programs in the Far East, looking for ways to use U.S. aid more effectively, including substituting nuclear for conventional forces. The short period of time did not allow for much more than a whistlestop tour, but Taylor did meet with heads of state in many countries, including Thanarat Sarit in Thailand, Norodom Sihanouk in Cambodia, and Achmed Sukarno in Indonesia. Taylor’s visit to Indonesia came soon after the United States had helped negotiate an end to a Dutch-Indonesian dispute over West Irian, also 2. Including President Kennedy, William Bundy, Mike Forrestal, Averell Harriman, U. Alexis Johnson, Carl Kaysen, Robert Komer, Lyman Lemnitzer, Robert McNamara, William Sullivan, and Maxwell Taylor. President Kennedy’s daily appointment’s diary lists George Ball and a Commander Bagley as also having attended the meeting, but they were not identified on the tape. Tape 23, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Initially, the Kennedy Library dated this conversation as 28 September 1962; however, internal evidence and the existence of an Asian foreign policy meeting on Tape 25, which could not have occurred any other day but 28 September, argues for this being the Taylor briefing meeting of 25 September 1962. This tape begins with a few minutes of a fragmented conversation. The quality of the recording is so poor that only a few words can be heard. Civil rights and the President’s intention to initiate a housing bill for the District of Columbia are mentioned. A “Ken,” possibly Kenneth O’Donnell, and a “Tom” greet each other. Given that Tape 22 contained a conversation on September 10 and the next conversation on Tape 23 occurred in the late afternoon of 25 September, it is impossible to provide an exact date for this fragment. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 157 known as West New Guinea. The Dutch, who had colonized Indonesia and controlled it until 1948, refused to turn over West New Guinea to the Indonesians in 1949. The colony comprised 150,000 square miles of the most primitive territory left in the world. The United States maintained a hands-off policy until 1960, when the Eisenhower administration proposed to create a U.N. trusteeship for the territory. The negotiations quickly failed. The Dutch sent an aircraft carrier and troops to the region, to which Sukarno responded by infiltrating troops, contracting for $500 million of Soviet military aid, and issuing belligerent statements. The Kennedy administration pursued Eisenhower’s policy, but little progress was made until mid-1962, when Kennedy’s negotiator, Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, worked to bring the two sides together. He proposed a two-year transition plan, with West Irian remaining a U.N. trustee for the transitional period. President Kennedy had to intervene to save the negotiations, but he did save them and a compromise agreement was reached in early August 1962. The Dutch agreed to turn over the region to a U.N. Temporary Executive Authority, which could begin the transfer of authority to the Indonesians as early as May 1963. Taylor returned on September 21. At this meeting, Taylor provided essentially a long briefing of his trip. Kennedy did not tape the entire meeting. He turned on the tape recorder after Taylor began speaking. Maxwell Taylor: . . . my first orientation, and also updating of my knowledge of some of these countries. However, one can’t go through an area like this even though it’s sometimes reasonably familiar without being hit by certain things which seem worth reporting. I might say that, in general, that one reflects in going to the Far East . . . seeing the analogies and the lack of analogies between our military problem there and the problem in Europe. There is an analogy in the sense that we have the problem of deterrence of war out there just as we have a problem of deterrence in the NATO area. The enemy, however, is different. It’s Red China in one form or another. And the assets of Red China and the weaknesses of Red China are quite different from the assets and weaknesses of the Soviet Union. And in military terms, and I looked at this primarily in a military way, and I realize the one-eyed aspect of that, but the military threat from Red China of course is manpower on the ground. They have the largest army in the world. But secondly, and perhaps more critically from our point of view, they also have the fourth-largest air force, and a pretty good air 158 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 force. We don’t think they fly as well as our Chinat [Chinese Nationalist] friends, but if you look at the inventory of aircraft that have been built up in recent years, it ends up in [being] quite a formidable threat. So much so that our air people in each one of the areas, say, in Korea, or in Taiwan, or in Southeast Asia, can build a picture which is quite graphic and quite realistic, I think, of a 1,000-plane attack say against every important target in South Korea in a very short period of time. Now what we’ve done over the years is that we have built up in Korea particularly and Taiwan very sizable ground forces, but we have lagged in the air defense aspect. So that now we’re being hit almost at one time, in a short period of time, at least, with the requirements for moreadvanced interceptors and also for a modernized air control and warning circuits. So we’re having this in South Korean, Taiwan, and also— President Kennedy: OK. Now, do we have Hawk missiles in— Taylor: —and in Korea. President Kennedy: Do we have them on Formosa? Taylor: We have them planned in Formosa. Lyman Lemnitzer: None of them have Hawks yet but we have a Nike-Hercules Battery there. President Kennedy: Is that a pretty good missile? Lemnitzer: Yes sir, it’s the best up to about 80,000 feet. It’s a very, very accurate— President Kennedy: As good as a SAM 2? Taylor: It’s also a surface-to-air missile, Mr. President, something we don’t give her credit for, a surface-to-surface missile. A credit we don’t give to ourselves, but it has a very good accuracy up to about 90 miles. Lemnitzer: It was moved in there at the time of the bombardment of the offshore islands of 1958, and it’s the best missile in the world of its kind. President Kennedy: Can this pick up? This . . . it could be against an ocean target. The Nike— Unidentified: Yes, sir. Taylor: If you could locate the target with binoculars— President Kennedy: Radar? Do you have a firing? Do you have a radar apparatus? Lemnitzer: Indeed, that’s how it . . . President Kennedy: We don’t have any Nike-Zeus on Quemoy and Matsu, do we? Lemnitzer: No missiles, no surface-to-air missiles on Matsu. President Kennedy: Now, is our, [is] the number of our missiles on Formosa inadequate? Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 159 Taylor: I would say it is inadequate. That is really the point, sir, that the air defense aspect has lagged in terms of other kinds of forces. And unfortunately, when you look at the MAP program, as I told the senators this morning, that’s where the money is going.3 We’re planning now to close this gap, but most of the money in the military aid programs are simply for the maintenance of current forces plus this additional money for the modernization of air defense. That’s not entirely true, but it’s generally so. So that’s one of the unfortunate things about any serious cut in the aid program at this time is that it does hold back an area in which we are critically weak.4 Another very interesting and I think important point militarily, Mr. President, as you go down each country. Take Korea, which is a big money user in that area. I looked that program over, hoping as I have in previous years to find some way, from a military point of view, to reduce, to recommend a reduction. This is a burden which we don’t like. It’s been looked at year after year. But I would have to report that as long as we keep the present assumptions in Korea, I don’t think, from a military point of view, we’re justified in reducing our forces. In fact, we should be putting more money, as I’ve said, into air defense. Now, one of the reasons however, for that is that the assumption now . . . the objective given to our forces . . . the indigenous forces in Korea . . . is to be able, with South Korean forces, to check and hold off a massive attack mounted not only by the North Koreans but also by the Red Chinese. In other words, we’re setting a very high level of effort as the goal for our, for the indigenous forces. And we’re assuming that atomic weapons would not be used. Now, I’ve discussed this with the Secretary and the Joint Chiefs. I think that we should really come to you and get with a study of . . . an analyzing of pros and cons of the use of atomic weapons in the Far East. Those pros and cons are quite different from the situation in Europe. Sometimes the advantages are greater; sometimes perhaps less. But I think that if we could assume that in case of [a] massive Chinese attack at any point in Asia, whether in Korea or in Southeast Asia, we could certainly recast then some of our military requirements, and I would think reorient some of our programs. So I think that’s a capital point, and we should bring you a recommendation. 3. The acronym MAP stands for the Military Assistance Program. 4. The Kennedy administration was in the midst of a struggle with Congress over the size of the following year’s foreign aid budget. 160 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 President Kennedy: On whether we ought to agree to the use of tactical nuclear weapons in case the Chinese should join the North Koreans? Taylor: That is correct, sir. Take in Korea: If they came across the Yalu [River], we’d use them in North Korea at once. We would not, we’d reserve judgment on whether we’d attack targets elsewhere. But if your military people could have that assumption, I would think there’s a pretty good chance of recasting some of our deployments. William Bundy: May I just comment on that, if I may General? This essentially . . . such a study was made on a political-military basis by a group headed by General Cary of the Air Force, retired Air Force officer under our auspices—5 Lemnitzer: That’s right. Bundy: —with very close joint staff cooperation, and it came up with exactly the same conclusion: that if you made this strategic assumption, then you could safely reduce; but pointed out the pros and cons of making that assumption. In other words if you decide to use nukes sooner, in effect you’re moving your strategy in Asia in the opposite direction of what you are in Europe, and so on. And we can see all the pros and cons of that. I merely say I think the studies exist for this kind of examination now. The Joint Chiefs went into it at the same time. Lemnitzer: We went into it in great detail. If you are in fact lowering the threshold to the Chinese crossing the river, you’re going to use nuclear weapons. Now that’s quite inconsistent with a policy which we’ve expressed on, certainly in the European area, and generally throughout the world. [Five seconds excised as classified information] and apply the same terms that you would apply in NATO, the strength that you have there on the ground is going to determine the threshold at which you employ nuclear weapons. Well, I think, [the] lower the forces, the sooner you’re going to be required to use nuclear weapons. Taylor: I think the only thing required now would be to tell us that you would like to have a study, that . . . assuming that we’re allowed to plan on the use of nuclear weapons whenever the Chinese come in force into North Korea. Then what effect would it have on force structure, then see what came out of it. Robert McNamara: Mr. President, may I say that that kind of a study has been made in connection with the fiscal ’64 budget. The Chiefs 5. General Cary is unidentified. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 161 haven’t had a chance to review it. A General Cary, who’s a retired Air Force General. President Kennedy mumbles something, probably related to the fact that Bill Bundy has already made the same point while McNamara was out of the room. McNamara: But this ought to be reviewed formally by the Chiefs and reported to you, and I asked the Chiefs yesterday to— President Kennedy: The point he was making, Mr. Secretary, while you were absent, [was] that this would in a sense be a reverse of what we were attempting to do in Europe. McNamara: But I think the conditions are reversed. In Europe the reason our strategy [is] as it is, [is] because we’re faced with a nuclear force and a very strong one. In China we have no nuclear force opposing us. And it seems to me this is enough of a difference to warrant at least consideration of a different strategy. And I think— President Kennedy: Whether you’d say that you would use nuclear weapons . . . on crossing, coming into North Korea, which would not be very overt, because they could be coming in and out of there in peacetime conditions or whether you’d wait until they cross the cease-fire line?6 Taylor: Well the intent would be a massive invasion. If it’s not massive, it has no great military significance. President Kennedy: I would think that if they came en masse, the Chinese down, then of course it would be a . . . I would think the more likely thing would be . . . is they would move there [South Korea] having moved against Quemoy and Matsu and our having trouble in Berlin; it would be part of a worldwide expansion rather than just a single action there. That’s the least likely kind of military action for them to take. Taylor: Well, I think that’s true, that there’s no great feeling that that is a likely contingency now, but the whole situation in Red China can change drastically. If, for example, the situation would break in Southeast Asia, we ourselves might want to put pressure on that part of world. McNamara: Well, we’re right in an untenable position, I think, at the present time. We’re supplying forces which are more than enough to support a strategy based on nuclear weapons, but less than enough to counter a large-scale conventional onslaught. So we don’t have any— Taylor: We’re not bound by that position. McNamara: And this is why we started these studies, Mr. President. 6. President Kennedy is referring to a military offensive by the People’s Republic of China. 162 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 President Kennedy: I would think that the nuclear, you changed to using nuclear, I don’t know whether it’s the Yalu River or whether you say it’s once they cross the cease-fire line in any force. The reason that we’re so slow about using nuclear weapons in Europe is, first, because we’re against a nuclear force, and second, because of Berlin. Well, you see, if you didn’t have the Berlin problem, you just had a clean line, you would use nuclear weapons almost from the beginning if they came across in force. That would be a signal [without] [unclear]. Well, we know it isn’t going to come that way; it’s going to come with difficulty in Berlin, but we might have to take the first action. So I would think that we could say that you would use nuclear weapons . . . I don’t think you could say if they came across the Yalu River, but you could say that we certainly [would] use it if they attack in force across the [Korean] cease-fire line. That’s— Taylor: I think that’s the point sir, that we would not be prepared to hold them back by conventional methods if they came en masse. How they got there wouldn’t particularly matter. President Kennedy: What would that free? That might free, what one or two [divisions] . . . we’ve got two divisions there? Taylor: Well, we—[unclear]. Lemnitzer: I don’t think it would free very much because the divisions we’ve got in Korea are not the new U.S. divisions. They are the divisions General Taylor, when he was commander of the Eighth Army, organized specifically for the requirements of Korea. They aren’t very heavy in artillery and transportation, and they aren’t very heavy in strength. They’re smaller than our divisions. President Kennedy: But we have two divisions there? Do we? Taylor: We have two forward . . . two divisions. President Kennedy: The question is whether they really, is that the place for them to be, is it? Lemntizer: Well I think it’s the greatest deterrent to the resumption of hostilities in Korea. President Kennedy: Our two divisions? Lemnitzer: That’s right, and I also think that that representation of our image in the United Nations command also gives us control of that situation, which might otherwise . . . it would pass to some other nationality. McNamara: I think it would free this, Mr. President: In the long run it would free substantial Korean forces. I say [in] the long run because in the short run they have such a serious unemployment problem; you couldn’t reduce the military force in Korea today without adverse effects Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 163 in the civilian economy. But in the long run it would free substantial forces, maybe a couple hundred thousand men. In the long run it would greatly reduce our military assistance program because we’re supplying air power to Korea and to Taiwan, and we will have to supply it to Thailand if we continue the present policy, which wouldn’t be required if we understood that we could use nuclear weapons, particularly nuclear weapons delivered by U.S. aircraft. So I think both of those effects would take place. Taylor: That’s correct. The present strength of the armed forces of South Korea [is] about 600,000 as opposed to about 380,000, I think, in North Korea. So if you really were setting up your military structure in South Korea simply to offset North Korea, manpower-wise, you would certainly think [that] you could make a reduction. But it would have to go with some arrangement that you wouldn’t fear a sudden rush from the Chinese across the Yalu. And that would be the response by nuclear weapons. President Kennedy: The next place was Japan. As a result of your wire, I sent a memorandum to the secretary of defense about our capital expenditures in Japan, our dollar expenditures, which I seem to recall are 350 million? McNamara: Over 300 [million]; 330, something like that. President Kennedy: Yeah. The limitations which are described . . . you can’t use it, we certainly couldn’t even use Japan if you really wanted to use it. . . . Doesn’t seem to me they’d probably let you use it, would they?7 Taylor: I think it is a question, sir. I’m afraid [in] my cable . . . I noticed in the State summary which I didn’t think quite did [unclear] really to my thoughts. [It] is not that the bases aren’t useful—they’re very useful. In fact the Navy and the Air Force would say they’re virtually indispensable, at this time, in time of peace. But if you get into time of war, then it becomes more and more unfit. And when you look at the, we have some 680 combat aircraft in the Far East to face the Chinese 2,800 [planes]. About two-thirds of those are on Japanese bases. Now if we start to have war with Red China, it’s very likely, as we’ve indicated here, it would be a nuclear war, and whether we could use those . . . the concerns of the air forces being neutralized, so to speak, by the Japanese limitations, I don’t know. But it’s certainly a possibility. But I wouldn’t 7. Kennedy is referring to the Japanese government’s prohibition on the storage of nuclear weapons in Japan. 164 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 suggest for a moment that we should close up these bases. But they are necessary now, but they are not so important that they should really be the controlling factor in all our foreign policy toward Japan. William Sullivan:8 Under the present rules, Japan is committed to permit us the use of bases in Japan for the use of our forces against any resumption of hostilities in Korea. This is a United Nations commitment which the Japanese made. They have made efforts to evade that commitment when they entered the United Nations, and we were going to move our Far East command out of there, but when it was put up on the basis that their first action would be to deny the U.N. the use of Japanese bases as their first act upon joining the United Nations, it looked a little bit off-key. They withdrew their proposal. Now the principal objection, the principal handicap at the present time is the question of nuclear weapons in Japan. Japan is emotionally, well they’re fanatical about nuclear weapons for understandable reasons. Forty-two seconds excised as classified information. Taylor: One other broad question, Mr. President, is the proper mix or the proper balance between indigenous forces and our own forces when we consider them packages for military purposes. Years ago, when the military aid program started in the Far East, the thought was that primarily we’d be supporting ground forces. We were going to always have a small army. We would need the training of oriental manpower to help us hold the line in any given sensitive area. Meanwhile our Navy and our Air Force would utilize their mobility and their striking power and their sophisticated weapons to back up the ground forces, largely indigenous. In the course of the years, that’s changed, rather surprisingly. At least I was surprised at the extent now we are planning to give sophisticated weapons, advanced interceptors, some naval craft of some sophistication to these indigenous forces. And I think it’s very timely for us to reexamine this whole question of what is the proper mix, what should be the objective of these forces. Now really, it’s saying in Pentagon language, to reexamine the MAP objectives which we have country by country. In countries such as Korea and Taiwan, for example, we use such broad language as to say these forces are to assist U.S. forces extensively in the event of general war. Well, that is so broad it could mean almost anything. And I personally have the feeling that we should really sharpen our objectives so that they state more specifically what are the 8. A sample of William Sullivan’s voice was not available. This identification is based on an analysis of the statements made by this voice in the meeting. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 165 common-sense reasonable objectives at this time. That’s something for DOD, for the JCS and State to work out. In Southeast Asia, Mr. President, of course the threat is quite different. You’re impressed always that the diversity of insurgency is really the open enemy in the four countries that we’re most concerned with. I had a very interesting stop in South Vietnam. It was only one of these short ones, two and a half days, and I saw many people and did a certain amount of traveling. One of my most interesting experiences was calling in eight junior officers, who were attached to . . . American officers attached to the South Vietnamese units, to try to get a grassroots feeling of how these young officers felt about their job, how they were getting along with the local officials, and so on. I’m sure you would get a great deal of encouragement out of hearing these young officers. They’re keen as they can be. They like what they’re doing. They realize the importance of their mission, and none of them would say they [have] had any real difficulties in their personal relationships with the South Vietnamese officers. I asked that question because the press, just shortly before my arrival, carried some such statement, and I would say based upon my observations and many discussions it just isn’t so. How are we doing there? Of course I’ve read the reports as all of us have over the last 10 or 11 months, but really you have to be on the ground to sense a lift in the national morale. It was right on the ground last October when I was there. The hamlet program is indicative I would think of the greater public popular support. They have either fortified or [are] in [the] course of fortification [of] some 5,000 hamlets out of the total 16,000. This is done very largely by voluntary work on the part of the local people with very little government guidance. They’re getting some, but the programmer, they ran away from the government plan. Also, it’s something to see, the over 100,000 mountaineers, the Montagnards, who’ve come out of the mountains, left their fields, left the areas in which they want to live in order to escape communism. [Seven seconds excised as classified information.] Cleaning up the villages, getting adequate defenses for them, and also bringing in new and improved agricultural methods, so that the whole life of the Montagnards for the first time is showing some signs of promise. President Kennedy: We saw the minister this morning.9 He dis- 9. A reference to Nguyen Dinh Thuan, the coordinating secretary of state for security of South Vietnam. He met with President Kennedy that morning to discuss, among other matters, the crop destruction program. 166 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 cussed with us this question of using pesticides against their food, and I told him we’d give them an answer one way or another by the end of the week. They wanted to try some test runs up in areas which are clearly Vietcong. Taylor: They are very anxious to do that. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] All the pluses and minuses about it. What’s our judgment about it? I thought we ought to answer him one way or the other. Taylor: Well, this has been talked back and forth between State and Defense for some time. And most people are unanimous in saying that this rather modest initial effort should be tried. President Kennedy: What about [Lieutenant General Paul D.] Harkins? What does he think? Taylor: He’s all for it. Also, Diem is for it. President Kennedy: Can they tell, do you think, which are which— Robert Komer:10 This has been the problem in our mind, Mr. President, as to whether or not you can identify the Vietcong–held fields from the Montagnard fields. And— President Kennedy: They say [unclear] rice is planted in a straighter line. Is there any other way? They say that in the areas which they are talking about, they say they can. I don’t know whether— Taylor: Well they know areas that are denied to the government forces [where] you have to fight your way in. And the assumption is that any rice in there is going to be used by the enemy, regardless of what the political coloration of the man who actually planted the rice. Unidentified: Yes. McNamara: Mr. President, I don’t think any of us here can say for sure whether they can tell. But what we can say is that the ambassador is wholeheartedly in support of it, our military planners are wholeheartedly in support of it, and I believe that the risk of a trial is low. And I would strongly urge therefore we try it. President Kennedy: What can we do about keeping it from becoming an American enterprise which would be surfaced with poisoning food?11 McNamara: I think we’ll be charged with that. Taylor: We can’t avoid it. McNamara: We can do quite a bit to avoid it. 10. A tentative voice identification. A sample of Robert Komer’s voice was not available. This identification is based on an analysis of the statements made by this voice in the meeting. 11. The President is using surfaced to mean “revealed to be involved.” Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 167 President Kennedy: Should we have Vietnamese— Taylor: They will put it down. McNamara: They will put it down. It would be done in their aircraft. Komer: How about the season? Is it? President Kennedy: Yes, [can we do it] now? Unidentified: Is it the time in the season? [Unclear exchange.] McNamara: There’s about eight weeks left. Unidentified: There are. Unidentified: Well, let’s try it then. Taylor: There is some experience with this in Malaya, isn’t that right? One of those two groups there. Komer: I don’t know that they used— President Kennedy: I think that’d be worth having if the British did it. That would be pretty . . . Lemnitzer: The British did do it in Malaya, Mr. President, yes. Unidentified: They used . . . Komer: Well, I think psychologically, Mr. President, there’s something different between a man going in with it and spraying it on the ground and doing it from a plane or from a helicopter. I’m not arguing against it on this ground but I do point out that there is this— President Kennedy: The British did it on the ground? Komer: No, they did it both, and of course we’re now doing it, we’re now using napalm. The British used napalm. In many ways napalm is much nastier than the— Unidentified: Nastier . . . President Kennedy: To burn up food, we’re doing that? Komer: Yes. Yes, and napalm destroys the use of the soil also. Very simple, whereas the insecticides, or these—what do you call them?— herbicides do not. Bundy: I think the British also did this at the very end of, towards the end, at any rate, of their campaign in Malaya when they had the Chinese Communists boxed in small jungle areas fairly well identified. Unidentified: Well identified. There was no question— Bundy: There was no question that there was any mixture of friendly people in those areas. President Kennedy: Well, why don’t we send out the word, and let’s take a look at what the instructions are so they understand all the . . . Averell Harriman: It’s too late. [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] No, they say— McNamara: No, it’s definitely not too late. There are about eight weeks left. 168 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 Harriman: No, I don’t know, our people think that basically the peasant, whoever he is, is the one who eats the food. Two, 3 percent, or 5 percent, or 6 percent or 8 percent of Vietcong get around and that food is taken away from whoever the peasant may be. That’s the argument that our people make very strongly. There’s no such thing as fields, that we know of, fields that have been grown for Vietcong. They are grown for the villagers themselves, and that’s the argument against it, and that this would not be depriving the Vietcong of a grain of food. President Kennedy: Well, couldn’t we have some . . . ? It seems to me there would have to be some proposal made that food would be supplied to these areas by the government. Then the government would be able to distribute— Taylor: Once they get in, sir. But at this time these are closed areas, no one— Komer: Part of the problem is, if you destroy the crops, the Montagnards come out. . . . Then being prepared to take care of them when they do come out. Well, now this is fairly well along [unclear], as I understand it. Unidentified: That’s right. McNamara: This, we have a program to do. Komer: Yes, that’s . . . Harriman: Our people have been through it, in China and elsewhere. The loss will far, the losses among the peasants will far outweigh such a relatively small gain in taking away the food from the Vietcong. But that’s the amount of judgment which our people [feel] very strong, for [whatever it’s worth]. President Kennedy: Who’s that? Who would that be, Governor? Harriman: Huh? President Kennedy: Who are those people? Harriman: Well, Rice, who has been through it in China and seen what happened when you prejudice the peasants against you, and he thinks the whole thing is going to be won on the basis of whether the peasants are with you or not.12 Come in and destroy their crops. . . . Why it builds up an antagonism which is very hard to break. Bundy: I think that Roger Hilsman’s theory on this is somewhat similar, for what it’s worth. It’s mainly that if you can identify the enemy very precisely and be sure that you’re not getting possibly friendly peasants hurt too, then . . . it’s good to do it if it can be done in a rather large 12. E. E. Rice was a Foreign Service officer assigned to the Policy Planning Staff. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 169 scale because then you really want to get real military advantage commensurate with the political risk. There’s some worry that doing it just in a few very small areas, we might take an awful political whacking and not really get— President Kennedy: The job done. Bundy: The big military job done. Harriman: And then it makes the local population ready to join the Vietcong and changes the whole atmosphere. [Unclear.] Taylor: Well this is another form of bombing. I think it’s the same problem. We have the . . . Harriman: It’s a very strong political argument against it from those people who have had experience in this. President Kennedy: Well, why don’t we . . . without putting an impossible burden on them, why don’t we say that we are now leaning, or inclining towards permitting this program, and that we would like to . . . First, is there sufficient time to make it effective? Number two, can it be done on a wide enough scale and yet with accuracy to make it worthwhile? And three, what is the technique they’re going to use to detect what areas they are going to do and what is the system they are going to use to determine what is Vietcong and what isn’t? And then what procedure would they make to take care adequately of the people who are not Vietcong, but who are damaged or find themselves short of food? And then if we get an answer back, in 48 hours or so, then we can make a final judgment on it. Try to tell them we’ll give them a final answer when we get back. There may be some other questions we ought to ask them. Komer: Those are the principal ones. Taylor: Those are the principal ones, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Well, then, we ought to try to tell them we’ll give them a final answer by the weekend. I’m sure they don’t want to screw around any longer. Taylor: One of the things, Mr. President, we need to look at with a little more, greater attention, is the best method of reporting our progress. In other words, how are we doing? We’re always asking ourselves that. We have never had a very good way to answer except by feel. I found that General Harkins has anticipated this to a certain degree, and now puts out a questionnaire, a rather heavy questionnaire, to all the military people in the field, so that once a month they report back indicators such as ability to go in certain villages where they hadn’t been before, and so on. My comment to the ambassador was that I thought that this should be a country team affair so that all the questions, the political questions, 170 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 [would] get injected into the same kind of questionnaire, and that once a month we get a complete poll across the board in those areas that we’re interested in. Komer: As you know we suggested to the ambassador, and I think he’s accepted this, that we send a group of Vietnamese-speaking foreign service officers out. To station one in each of these important areas to maintain contact with the [unclear] people to maintain contact with the local officials and the people and try to be [the] eyes and ears of the ambassador and the country team to help answer this question. This would be supplementary to— Taylor: All these things should be done. But now we have literally hundreds of Americans all through Vietnam who are qualified observers and they should be passing in— Komer: That’s great. And it’s a problem of getting the information from them really. They’re all busy people. Unidentified: Three are being established outside of Saigon, and they will serve as sort of vacuum cleaners to pick this stuff [out] . . . Komer: Yes. Taylor: Elsewhere in Southeast Asia, Mr. President, I stopped in Cambodia and had the first insight into the [Prince Norodom] Sihanouk personality.13 [Laughter.]. He couldn’t have been nicer, and I told him I don’t know why you have troubles with this man. [Laughter.] In both Thailand and Cambodia we have a real problem of emotionalism on the question of who to support. President Kennedy: It’s like India and Pakistan. Taylor: Sir? President Kennedy: It’s like India and Pakistan. Taylor: Yes, and perhaps even more so right now. Sihanouk is a wild man, as you know, and he really believes that both of his neighbors on the right and the left are his enemies, mortal enemies, historical enemies.14 These invasions are just feeling him out, that someday they’d like to come over and stay. He believes that. I don’t think there’s anything phony about it. Then you get over and talk to [Marshal Thanarat] Sarit, and he is of course a wise old pro and a tough old cookie, but he gives us a pretty good beating now.15 Oh, I think he really doesn’t mean it. He smiles when 13. Sihanouk was the Cambodian chief of state. 14. Sihanouk viewed both South Vietnam, on the right, and Thailand, to his left, as enemies. 15. Sarit was the Thai prime minister. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 171 he calls us these names, but he has behind him his people worried about Cambodia because of the very modest military aid. They are painting the picture of attacks by Cambodia. I said I had more confidence in the Thai armed forces than Sarit did, and he really thought that was a possibility. President Kennedy: How much are we giving them in our aid program? To Cambodia? McNamara: Eleven million. Taylor: Eleven million and change to Cambodia. Yeah. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] And what are we giving Thailand? A group of voices says, “Eighty million,” then, “About eighty million.” Taylor: The real issue now is not the basic Cambodia program, but a little increment which represented the equipment for three infantry battalions and one so-called frontier battalion which Sihanouk would undertake to put in the northeast frontier to help stop the infiltration: Something we’re all for. It makes all the sense in the world. And now that we’ve had to pay this price in Thai relations, I would say we ought to go ahead and do it. It’s about 1.7 million as I recall some [unclear]. Unidentified: That’s right U. Alexis Johnson (?): Part of this problem, Mr. President, is also a problem of diplomacy here, if you will. The problem of the Thais reading this in the newspapers first—of course, anything that comes out in Phnom Penh leaks, and it leaks to the Thais through the newspapers— instead of our being able to tell them directly. To the degree that we can tell the Thai about these things before they read them in the newspapers, of course we can help. But then there’s the problem of the Thai then talking and Sihanouk reading it. [Some laughter.] Komer: Well, the Cambodians deliberately did this once so the Thais . . . Johnson: They deliberately did this. The Cambodians deliberately did this to— Unidentified: Yes. Johnson: We couldn’t stop it. Unidentified: We couldn’t stop it. Lemnitzer: This has an impact on the Vietnamese situation because the only way that that border is going to be properly policed is for these battalions or other Cambodian battalions to get up there and prevent the Vietcong from circulating back and forth. Taylor: Well they’re trying to get us also to have some of the U.N. presence that’s been talked about, or some device like that. Perhaps a joint military commission with the Vietnamese. Because these border incidents are going to continue by the very nature of that frontier, and they’re going to be a source of constant disturbance in our relations. 172 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 Unidentified: That’s right. Johnson: The problem here is that it’s very difficult to establish a U.N. presence between Cambodia and South Vietnam because [of] South Vietnam not being a member of the U.N. You can establish a U.N. presence, if both sides have agreed in principle, between Thailand and Cambodia. Again here, Mr. President, the problem is one of diplomacy. The lack of any effective real communication between the Cambodians and the Thai. And if you can put a U.N. man in there to act as a gobetween and a communicator, then this will . . . President Kennedy: What is the status of that? Johnson: The status of that is now that U Thant is going to talk to both the Thai and the Cambodians at New York; now is my understanding. Harriman: Yes. And they were going to select, they hoped to select a Burmese. Johnson: I’m very . . . I question the selection of a Burmese, anyway. Let them work that out. Harriman: They want to do it, but they’ve both agreed to this. Johnson: They have agreed to a Burmese? Harriman: Yes. Johnson: All right, fine. Taylor: I would like to pick up the comment by Mr. Johnson with regard to the partition nature of Southeast Asia. To us it’s one strategic area. We have a common problem there, and we are succeeding reasonably well in unifying our efforts. It’s been a real step forward, I think, on the military side to have General Harkins. That ties together the two principal programs. I must say we’re still partitioned, though, in other ways. Our countries are partitioned. I think our people stationed in these countries get “localitis.” I found that the people over in South Vietnam were fighting [President Ngo dinh] Diem’s battle versus the Cambodians. But in Cambodia they are fighting Sihanouk’s battle versus Diem. Now, the thought may not be worth much, but I would think that to have our ambassadors and our heads of MAAG get together once a quarter, just to break down these barriers and frontiers which have certain psychological disadvantages to our own operations, would be good.16 Whether you’d ever get Sarit, and Sihanouk and some of those people in a summit, southeast summit, I don’t know. 16. The acronym MAAG stands for Military Assistance Advisory Group. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 173 Johnson: Now, that would blow up. Taylor: Well it might. Johnson: But I entirely agree, Max, on our ambassadors. I think it’s very important. When I was out there, we used to meet once every four to five months. Laos, our own people, we always used to get together in Vientiane, Bangkok, Phnom Penh, and Saigon. And we’ve encouraged that again. It’s a problem of finding the time for them to do it. That was a most useful device. In the MAAG case, too, we used to get together. Taylor: Well, they all have common problems now. President Kennedy: Why don’t we get a report of when they last all met, [can we] get the report when they last met? Unidentified: They last all met in Baguio, I think. Kennedy asks a question apparently about the date of that meeting and an unclear exchange follows. McNamara: Well the last three were there with us in Honolulu. We had the MAAG chiefs and the three ambassadors there on July 24th. Unidentified: Yes, we did in Honolulu, that’s right. [Unclear] stayed over a day. Taylor: But moving from capital to capital within the area I would think would have some symbolic effect of stressing the neighborhood quality of this whole problem. Unidentified: Very much so. Taylor: Just a couple of other questions, Mr. President . . . comments rather. One is Thailand. I would say that Ambassador [Kenneth T.] Young has a very tough problem there, a very complex problem, in pulling together all the resources in the way that you’ve been stressing across the board: military, economic, and so on.17 He’s had trouble in getting his plans in because they are complex. I think he may be short of people. I’m not sure. I know he personally feels he ought to have [unclear] assist him, and I reported this to Johnson. President Kennedy: Yes. Taylor: But he’s got a real problem. Of all the ambassadors, I think he has more of a problem perhaps even than [Frederick E.] Nolting, [Jr.] does.18 Because Nolting’s job is pretty well laid out in front of him now. My final stop was Indonesia where I had a very good— President Kennedy: Did you make a suggestion in your cable about some internal security system being appointed to Young? 17. Kenneth Young was U.S. ambassador to Thailand, 29 March 1961 to 19 August 1963. 18. Frederick Nolting was U.S. ambassador in South Vietnam, 10 May 1961 to 15 August 1963. 174 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 Taylor: Yes, sir, I did. Bundy: We are going ahead with that here. Taylor: In Indonesia I had an inconsequential meeting with Sukarno,19 but a very, very useful contact with the military, particularly with [Lieutenant General Abdul] Nasution and the army chief of staff, Yani.20 Nasution, was very frank, indeed, with describing the internal problems. Of course he knows the military forces are popular with us, and he obviously wants to keep before us the fact they are the balance wheel or the stabilizing influence vis-à-vis the Communist element in the country. He has started a civic action program in his armed forces very much along the model which we had in Korea, one which I think should have long-term benefits. Of course the whole country is burdened and will be burdened for [an] indefinite number of years in the future by the saddle of debt to the Soviet Union. As you know they have received credits and actually drawn down credits of almost a billion dollars in military equipment. They have some 500 million in economic credits. How far they’ve been drawn down, I don’t know. But you really can visualize a country mortgaged for the indefinite future to the Soviets. Yet on the military side the military men now [are] regretting it, saying, “Yes of course we thought we were going to war over West Irian. Now we’d like to turn back; we would like to give back some of this equipment and turn to the West.” But they can’t do it. My own feeling is we should give some aid to Indonesia, a small amount. In the military field they need very little, LSTs, things of that sort, plus some support for this civic action program, which really, I think, holds real promise largely in the political field.21 President Kennedy: Have we got any Indonesian officers training here? Taylor: Yes, sir, we’ve always had. That program has never stopped. We ought to give them just as many spaces as they can use. Sullivan: This was reviewed by, you were there Averell, I think, in New York with the Secretary and [Indonesian foreign minister] Subandrio? 19. Taylor notes in his memoirs that Sukarno talked at length “on the charms of his favorite stars of Hollywood.” 20. Lieutenant General Abdul Nasution was chief of staff of the Indonesian armed forces and minister of defense. 21. The abbreviation LST stands for landing ship, tank. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 175 Harriman: Yes, I met Subandrio for lunch, met three hours with him. He made it very plain that they wanted to get out from under the Russian influence. That’s going to be a tough thing to do, until they get this loan paid off. Taylor: Yes, it will be a long time. Harriman: But I think we ought to continue. . . . I told him I thought we ought to give him preliminary assistance and then study out their program. But they’ll have to work something out with the IMF, and they’re not very keen to do it, and I think we ought to hold back a longer-range program until they develop a program which the IMF approves. But in the meantime, given that industry is down 30 percent some of it, give them little spare parts and raw materials which should help them off base. Indicate that we are ready to help them when they put their house in order. President Kennedy: The main purpose of this buildup was West Irian, was it? Taylor: Yes, sir. Unidentified: Have they delivered . . . ? Unidentified: I think. Taylor: Most of it’s either delivered or in the pipeline. Apparently Sukarno and Khrushchev got together and agreed they’d put all the steam into this thing they could. And they really, really have accomplished it. I asked couldn’t they cancel or turn back anything, and they said most of the high-money-value articles have been delivered or are on the way. President Kennedy: Are they pleased there was a peaceful settlement of West Irian or they’d rather . . . ? Taylor: Sir? President Kennedy: Are they pleased that there was a peaceful settlement? Taylor: Oh, yes. Very happy about it. Very happy about our activities in [unclear] that . . . President Kennedy: How much did the . . . Did we ever find out how much the Dutch put in there as far as troops? Five thousand was it or what? I noticed this story Marquis Childs had yesterday about all this . . .22 Unidentified: They were building up to 10,000 but I don’t think they ever got there, sir. It was around 6[,000] or 7,000. [Unclear.] 22. Childs wrote a syndicated column that the President often read. 176 T U E S DAY, S E P T E M B E R 25, 1962 President Kennedy: That’s all they put into all of West Irian? Unidentified: I don’t think they ever got higher than that. Unidentified: It was very low. President Kennedy: What do the Indonesians have under arms, do we know? Unidentified: Maybe 350,000 now under arms, but they got about 1,200 men on the island. That’s all they have. Taylor: They infiltrated about 2,000 into West Irian. Unidentified: I think we’ve got it at around 1,200. Taylor: Well, those are the principal points, Mr. President. President Kennedy: What about . . . we were going to talk about whether we withdraw, what we do about the withdrawal of the MAAG from Laos.23 Michael Forrestal:24 Sir, we’re having a meeting for you on that on Friday if that would be all right with you.25 We haven’t quite gotten that, the program . . . President Kennedy: Governor, do you think? Carl Kaysen: I think we were waiting on the [Central Intelligence] agency— President Kennedy: SNIE?26 Kaysen: —[to] get an estimate, round up all the intelligence material so we had the latest agreed statement on what’s happening, and that’s due as I understand it, Thursday. We have a meeting then. President Kennedy: I talked to the minister, I guess you may . . . on this question of, this morning, [unclear] this question of this. We’ll just have to wait and see what they do on that. Kaysen: South Vietnam. Unidentified: South Vietnam’s representation [on Laos]. Unidentified: South Vietnam’s representation, yes. Unidentified: They seem to be drawing back slightly on that, don’t they? Unidentified: Yes, there’s hope. There appears to be hope in the cable. President Kennedy: OK. All right. Is that all? 23. The Geneva Declaration on Laos required U.S. military personnel to leave the country by 7 October. 24. A tentative voice identification. A sample of Michael Forrestal’s voice was not available. This identification is based on an analysis of the statements made by this voice in the meeting. 25. See “Meeting on Laos,” 28 September 1962. 26. Special National Intelligence Estimate. Meeting with Maxw ell Ta ylor on His Far Easter n Trip 177 McNamara: Mr. President, I can report to you that we met with President Ayub this morning for an hour and a quarter on the MAP program.27 [Laughter.] President Kennedy: He said he had a lot to take up with you. [More laughter.] McNamara: More with you than with me, I think. We said yes and no in the appropriate places and gave firm answers. He said he’d rather have no than maybe. So we gave no in the places where it seemed suitable, and then we broke up on, I thought, very friendly terms. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] McNamara: Yes, sir. And [Walter P.] McConaughy has since reported to me Ayub was pleased with the results.28 We didn’t increase the military assistance program above the amounts we had previously decided upon. [Laughter.] McNamara: I think it is fair to say we performed poorly last year. We didn’t deliver nearly as much as we could have or should have. So we, in effect, told him that, and that we have a plan for increasing our deliveries for next year. Unidentified: Is John McCone going to see him? President Kennedy: Yes, Thursday. McNamara: Thursday. I talked to McCone after I talked to Ayub this morning. Papers rustle; people get up and talk over each other. This indistinct chatting continues for over five minutes; then there is silence until the tape runs out. This was the last formal meeting of the day. Kennedy’s movements afterward are not clear from the official record. At 10:15 P.M. he departed the White House for the National Theater to meet up with the First Lady and his mother, Rose Kennedy, to catch the second act of Mr. President. Afterward, the presidential party attended an after-theater supper party at the British Embassy. 27. Ayub Khan was president of Pakistan. 28. Walter P. McConaughy was U.S. ambassador to Pakistan and formerly the assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern affairs, 24 April to 3 December 1961. 178 F R I DAY, S E P T E M B E R 28, 1962 Friday, September 28, 1962 The President had ahead of him a busy morning of varied engagements. He was due to meet with George Meany of the AFL-CIO and a young staffer in the Department of Labor, Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Then he would turn to an off-the-record discussion of New York State politics with the two main Democratic nominees for governor and the U.S. Senate repectively, Robert Morgenthau and James B. Donovan. Donovan carried another hat around the U.S. government these days. In the midst of campaigning for the Senate, he was the central figure in the administration’s secret negotiations with Fidel Castro over the release of the 1,105 men captured during the Bay of Pigs fiasco in April 1961. Finally, after the presentation of the report of the President’s Committee to Appraise Employment and Unemployment Statistics, Kennedy would have a short talk with the prime minister of New Zealand before heading into a high-level meeting on handling policy in Southeast Asia. 11:30 A.M.–12:03 P.M. The Communists will almost certainly seek to retain as many of their North Vietnamese forces and military advisers in Laos as they can do with safety. Meeting on Laos1 President Kennedy had few achievements to show for his efforts to improve U.S.-Soviet relations. The one exception was an agreement to neutralize tiny Laos. Lying athwart the Mekong River, it bridged Thailand and Cambodia in the east and the two Vietnams in the west. Signed in July 1962, the Geneva Accords provided for the withdrawal of 1. George Ball, William Bundy, Ray Cline, Roswell Gilpatric, Averell Harriman, Roger Hilsman, Lyman Lemnitzer, Robert McNamara, and Maxwell Taylor attended the meeting. Tape 25, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Meeting on Laos 179 all foreign advisers and troops from this strategic real estate.2 This represented a possible improvement of the situation from the U.S. perspective. The military position of the Royal Lao government had so deteriorated in the spring that in early June the Kennedy administration seriously considered sending some 40,000 U.S. troops to occupy the southern portion of the country. Before a decision had to be made in Washington, the situation stabilized. In mid-June, the Lao elite formed a national coalition government and the Geneva agreement was reached. With only a week to go before the first major test of the uneasy peace, Kennedy gathered his Laos team to discuss the progress of the Communist compliance. As of October 7, all foreign military advisers were to have left the country. In materials distributed before the meeting, Kennedy’s advisers made clear their assumption that the Communists would violate the Geneva agreement. The North Vietnamese, in particular, were expected to maintain a military presence in the country, to backstop the Communist Pathet Lao forces. Kennedy faced the decision of whether the United States would adhere to the letter of the agreement and pull out all U.S. military assistance teams. Unidentified: [starts in midsentence] . . . later Secretary Ball and Governor Harriman will run through for you the . . . their planning and then perhaps after that the Defense Department, Secretary McNamara, [and] Generals [Maxwell] Taylor and [unclear] might wish to comment on the military aspects of it. Ray Cline:3 Sir, the United States Intelligence Board [USIB] approved a paper on Laos on Wednesday.4 I have advance copies of it here, which I will distribute to those who are interested. With respect to the problems that we are primarily concerned with— the implementation of the Geneva accords—some major conclusions were reached which I’d just like to read. Conclusion on the Communist intentions is as follows: [reading] “The Communists will seek to expand their influence and power in Laos with the ultimate aim of achieving effective control over all of the country. To 2. These were the “Declaration on the Neutrality of Laos” and a 20-article protocol. They are printed in American Foreign Policy: Current Documents (Washington, DC: Department of State, 1962), pp. 1075–83. 3. Ray Cline was deputy director for intelligence at the Central Intelligence Agency. 4. The USIB was a interagency organization, under the chairmanship of the CIA, that oversaw the production of national intelligence estimates. 180 F R I DAY, S E P T E M B E R 28, 1962 this end they will nominally support the Souvanna-led government proceeding toward their goal mainly through political and subversive means. “The Communists”—the next conclusion that is relevant to this is— “The Communists will almost certainly seek to retain as many of their North Vietnamese forces and military advisers in Laos as they can do with safety. Souvanna [Phouma] will almost certainly be unable to prevent Communist use of southern Laos as a corridor for assisting the Vietcong effort into South Vietnam.” I think the . . . those are the conclusions relevant to the Geneva Accords. In addition, they reached a number of conclusions on the fragility of the political coalition in Vientiane. Unless there are specific questions, I [unclear] the facts . . . if you want to read them. They are available here. We have no evidence of an intention to withdraw all of the Vietminh troops before October the 7th. Our own working estimate is that probably about 7,500, 7,000 to 8,000, Vietminh troops and advisers are still in Laos. And there is very solid evidence of their intention to conceal at least a considerable part of those troops by disguising them as Pathet Lao or Lao troops. I think that’s the general picture. We have a great deal of data on what is actually going on in different parts of the country. President Kennedy: What do we think is their—Did Secretary Rusk have any success with his conversation with Gromyko in regard to Soviet resupply? [Cline begins to speak but Kennedy cuts him off.] Or are they blaming him because, they say, we’re doing the Meo business, the Soviet Union—5 Cline: Yes, sir. I would say that the conversation with Gromyko was not very satisfactory. That he indicated it was all our fault and said that— President Kennedy: For what reason? What have we done wrong? Cline: He specifically spoke about the supply of the Meo. But Hanoi— he also referred to propaganda statements which the Communists are now making which say that we are not intending to withdraw our troops at all, either, that we are disguising them in— Kennedy turns off the machine. The meeting continued for another 25 minutes. At this meeting Kennedy decided to proceed with strict adherence to the terms of the Geneva Accords. However, the United States would make a 5. The Meo were anti-Communist mountain people who were U.S. allies. S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 181 substantial payment to the coalition government in Vientiane. Moreover, in order to prepare for the expected Communist violations, Kennedy instructed his team to develop the necessary intelligence sources so that the world, especially the International Control Commission responsible for supervising the accord, could be made aware of the violations in good order. Finally, as insurance against any further deterioration of the U.S. position in the region, Kennedy ordered the retention of U.S. troops in neighboring Thailand.6 Ironically, the most likely use of U.S. forces in the near future was not in far-off Asia but at home in the Deep South. Two of the men at the Laos meeting had just come from a meeting at the Pentagon War Room with Attorney General Robert Kennedy. The Governor of Mississippi was resisting a court order to allow an African American James Meredith—to register at the main campus of the University of Mississippi system. The President had no meetings scheduled this day to discuss the progress of negotiations between Mississippi governor Ross Barnett and the Attorney General. But he was certainly kept informed of his brother’s efforts to avoid a military showdown like that which had happened in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. Saturday, September 29, 1962 The President was supposed to be in Newport, Rhode Island, for the weekend. However, he delayed his departure and went into the office at 9:55 A.M. His first visitors were the incoming Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Maxwell Taylor, who stayed about half an hour, and Michael V. Forrestal, son of legendary Secretary of Defense James Forrestal and a key member of the President’s National Security Council staff, particularly on issues dealing with Southeast Asia. Twenty minutes after Forrestal’s departure, the President welcomed his two closest Kremlin watchers for a seminar on Nikita Khrushchev. 6. See National Security Action Memorandum No. 189, 28 September 1962, FRUS, 24: 904. 182 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 11:00 A.M.–12:27 P.M. Generally speaking, I think, Khrushchev has felt, at least up until recently, that things are going his way and he needn’t take any risks, that he is playing for the big stakes and not the small. Meeting on the Soviet Union1 President Kennedy had just received a letter from Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev by way of their top secret back channel. One of the dangers of the President’s back-channel diplomacy with the Russians through Robert Kennedy was that a careless remark might lead to serious misunderstanding. It appeared from the letter that the Soviet leadership understood Robert Kennedy to have said in a private meeting with Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin that Washington would accept a long-term moratorium on underground testing following the signing of an atmospheric test ban. It was a Soviet objective to halt testing underground. Given U.S. insistence on a strict verification system to strengthen any comprehensive test ban, it seemed most likely that the superpowers would only manage to agree on a partial test ban. Nevertheless, the Soviets hoped to make a moratorium on underground testing a precondition to any partial test ban. Kennedy knew what his answer would be to this Soviet misunderstanding. Kennedy made sporadic use of the administration’s top Soviet experts.2 Between them, Llewellyn Thompson and Charles Bohlen had nine years’ experience as U.S. ambassador in the Soviet Union and had witnessed Khrushchev’s rise to power.3 The President knew Bohlen much better than Thompson but had not even consulted Bohlen before he sent the Attorney General to see Dobrynin. On this Saturday, he called them in to help shape his response to Khrushchev. The U.S. congressional elections were only five weeks away, after which, Kennedy assumed, the 1. Including President Kennedy, Charles Bohlen, Llewellyn Thompson, and later Jerome Wiesner. President Kennedy also has a telephone conversation with Senator Henry Jackson during the latter part of the meeting. Tape 25, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 2. Timothy Naftali Interview with McGeorge Bundy, 16 November 1995. 3. Charles “Chip” E. Bohlen was U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1957. Thompson succeeded him and stayed until his return in August. Meeting on the Soviet Union 183 Soviets would initiate a new, more dangerous challenge to the status quo in West Berlin—a warning Khrushchev repeated in his letter. Later the President’s science adviser, Jerome Wiesner, would join the conversation. Wiesner would not be told that Khrushchev had written directly to the President. Instead, in another demonstration of how information could be compartmentalized even among the President’s closest advisers, President Kennedy would ask Wiesner to suggest responses to certain Soviet attacks on the U.S. negotiating position at the test ban talks, never letting on where these allegations had come from. Kennedy started taping as Bohlen was reminiscing about his experiences with Khrushchev. Thompson can be heard deferring somewhat to Bohlen, a better linguist and more-experienced, though not necessarily better, Kremlinologist. Charles Bohlen: [tape fades in] . . . other than that [unclear] he continues—his wife was the one that’s—but she’s crippled. Llewellyn Thompson: Yeah. Bohlen: And after the breakup of the Summit in Paris [in 1960], she rushed down to the airport when Khrushchev was leaving and presented him with a big bunch of roses. Thompson: Yeah, that’s right. President Kennedy: But [unclear] . . . that is assuming he wants to talk to [unclear] but at least I would [unclear] that part of it. [Unclear.] Thompson: And this letter, Chip says, is— Bohlen: This letter is clearly an appeal [unclear] to a meeting, perhaps. This letter . . . I don’t know if this . . . [unclear] is worse. President Kennedy: Oh, it’s not worse. It’s just the transparency of it is less [unclear] are the Russians. Well, I’d like to have him be a little less . . . [reading aloud from the most recent letter from Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev] “I would like to note with satisfaction that you now seem to agree in principle that along with the conclusion of the treaty with . . . a moratorium.”4 Bohlen: We had never agreed to that, at all. 4. The exact line runs: “I would like to note with satisfaction that now you seem to agree in principle that along with the conclusion of a treaty on the ban of nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere, in outer space and under water a moratorium with regard to underground explosions be accepted” (Nikita S. Khrushchev to John F. Kennedy, 28 September 1962, FRUS, 6: 152–61). 184 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 President Kennedy: That’s right. [continuing to read] “If this is so, then it opens certain prospects.” Bohlen: Do you think that’s anything that Bobby might have told him? President Kennedy: No, but Bobby would. . . . Well, I think Bobby did—5 Bohlen: Did say something. President Kennedy: Bobby did say maybe for a period of six months— Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: —but not an indefinite one. It seemed to me there was nothing wrong with . . . just not quite in that form. In a legal thing . . . that there should be no unlimited moratorium. . . . Yeah, I [unclear] to say something. But we never put the question that way. We are not proposing [unclear] unlimited, we [unclear] just for a certain period of time. Of course I always knew they would do that the first time it’s needed for . . . But then it seems to me we could follow that up quickly. Bohlen: Yes, if it . . . what he’s saying is that after the period of moratorium, he proposes five years, which is nonsense, of course, but . . . He says that if at the end of that time you haven’t reached an agreement on a treaty for [the] underground thing, then you agree to reexamine the whole thing. In other words, any treaty that you might sign for the atmosphere or something like that, would be conditional. President Kennedy: Well, I think Bobby used the six-months phrase; obviously five years . . . What is your judgment as to why they won’t take an atmospheric test?6 Because they can’t underground . . . they can’t test underground as well as we can? Is that the reason? Bohlen: This might be the reason; but I also think there probably is some element of principle in their, in the . . . Tommy, would you? . . . They may fear that we’ve got some tricks or scientific gimmick that’s going to increase our . . . He says it, in essence, he’s not going to make a [unclear]. President Kennedy: [reading] “If, however, even during that term . . . then the whole question of a ban will have to be reconsidered anew. And if . . . insists . . . I want to say this already now and in plain terms—the Soviet Union will consider itself free from . . . ” 5. Robert Kennedy met with Anatoly Dobrynin on 18 September 1962. 6. Atmospheric test ban. Meeting on the Soviet Union 185 Thompson: I think they’d agree to a three-year moratorium; but not much . . . and I doubt if you could get anything less than a two and a half period. [Unclear] The others that could support five, that’s a bargaining— President Kennedy: But I don’t see much advantage to us. We propose six months; they propose five years. I don’t see much advantage to us in that proposition. It would be an unpoliced moratorium for three years. Thompson: Well, if this included those automatic stations—? Bohlen: Well, he mentioned these automatic stations in here. Tommy, is this the first time he has ever come forward with—? Thompson: As far as I’m— Bohlen: Yeah. And I don’t know whether— President Kennedy: He says it’s national. Isn’t this in line with his traditional position? That if he— Thompson: Well, if you had a radio readout out on those stations, that you are constantly monitoring—if they ceased to work, then you’d obviously have—the whole thing would be up in the air. I don’t know how effective they’d be; but I— President Kennedy: [Unclear] we look at this part of it? I was wondering what [unclear] at Pugwash— Thompson: Seems to me this is up to you. But there would be added assurance because we would get reports from other stations that know if they weren’t—if this thing wasn’t working or wasn’t reporting. Bohlen: Yeah, but the difference between this and the on-site inspection is that I gather that there is absolutely no way no matter what readings you get where you can tell the difference between certain kinds of natural explosion and a nuclear one. And then the idea was that when you got readings of this kind, you would go to the spot to measure. [Pause.] Well, Mr. President, I think this letter gives you a vehicle to make a response, speaking now of the Berlin section of it, which can I say, I feel quite strongly is necessary in some form or other. Now, there are three or four different ways that you can get this over that the regularity with which he [Khrushchev] has been telling everybody that the United States is too liberal, et cetera, et cetera, to fight.7 And I must say the general feeling, I think is that, among the demonologists, is chances are he believes this. And now the question is how can you convey— President Kennedy: Why would he say it? What is the argument for his saying it? 7. On Khrushchev’s statement, see the editors’ introduction, 10 September 1962. 186 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Bohlen: Well, he believes—if you take it from his own military point of view—that the local military situation [that] makes the correlation of forces is all in their favor and he probably thinks that in view of public opinion and [unclear] of the horrors of a nuclear war that the United States would not . . . would back away from that point. Therefore he’s got a situation with all the advantage on his side where he can proceed. And there’ll be a great whooping and yelling around but that nothing will happen. But the thing he’s interested in, which is the only thing you worry about, is a nuclear war. And this is cockeyed, I think. Although, I don’t know, if you read some of Joe’s articles, [unclear] old Alsop’s articles about de Gaulle’s view and all this other stuff. President Kennedy: But de Gaulle . . . that’s why I think de Gaulle . . . I think de Gaulle would like to start to get out of Berlin and [unclear] blame the United States. Because, if they could only get Berlin eliminated, then they could really have a . . . Europe which would be in pretty good shape. Bohlen: Well, I’m not so sure. But I think that de Gaulle’s basic feeling, and I’ve talked to Joe about this, and I’ve told him [that] whoever his informant was, who I believe was [French foreign minister] Couve de Murville. President Kennedy: [Unclear question.] Well, he said it was [French diplomat Jean] Laloy; he talked to Laloy. Bohlen: Laloy? President Kennedy: Yeah. Apparently de Gaulle asked about contingency planning. Then de Gaulle said, “Why, my dear fellow, don’t worry—the Americans aren’t going to fight anyway. [Unclear.] Don’t worry about it.” Bohlen: This is de Gaulle’s, sort of, method of presentation. But I think de Gaulle’s thought runs differently. I don’t believe that he thinks there’s going to be a real crisis over Berlin, or what Joe would call a crunch, in other words. President Kennedy: Hopefully. Bohlen: And he thinks that the thing is going to—the French have always thought that Berlin was going to die on the vine. Couve de Murville told me that last June. President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: He just said . . . President Kennedy: They don’t really care, do they? Bohlen: “[Unclear] just stay away” and that they don’t give a damn. No. Because if they don’t . . . they want Germany divided which is essentially their whole policy. And I think that de Gaulle’s chief mistake about the Russian thing is Meeting on the Soviet Union 187 that he attributes the present structure of Russian power to be identical with the time of Stalin. And he never can forget that he stood up to Stalin and said, “Nuts to you,” and Stalin came around. And he doesn’t realize that this guy, and I think Tommy would—I’d like to know what Tommy thinks about this—operates in a very different power circumstance from Stalin.8 Stalin could change anything like that himself, whereas this guy has pressures and tendencies that he has to take cognizance of, if he . . . and this limits his personal sphere of maneuver. But the question is, Mr. President, and this obviously is a subject we’re not supposed to ask you. [He laughs.] But . . . this is your business and not ours. That it seems to me very important to halt this sort of progress that the Russians are doing in Berlin, building up this enormous record of saying that the West is not going to do it. You and Macmillan and de Gaulle really agree with him that Adenauer gets the big picture. And it’s very difficult to know why he’s doing it, unless it’s in preparation for another dialogue which he talks about— Thompson: That’s what I think is the— Bohlen: But I think this is the likelihood; but on the other hand— Thompson: The other thing it might be is that— Bohlen: —what in God’s name—? Thompson: The other reason why he might make these remarks is that he wants to, he wants to— Bohlen: To show those to some of the others. Thompson: Yeah, to provoke us into a strong reply, which he can use to ease [unclear] policy. In either case it would argue for going back at him. President Kennedy: I mean for us to, for us to—do you want some orange juice? Thompson: No, thanks. President Kennedy: For us to . . . for him to tell Americans and other people that the Americans aren’t going to fight . . . that doesn’t seem to me to . . . what would be the log[ic] . . . as you say unless he wants us to, [unclear] first [unclear] to fight but I don’t ever—if that’s his opinion you don’t really announce it, because that’s really rubbing our face in it. Do you think therefore—it could be—He doesn’t have to have a reason for everything. If he’s telling what he actually thinks— Thompson: Yeah. Bohlen: Agreed. Thompson: He’s capable of doing it. 8. Referring to Khrushchev. 188 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Bohlen: The trouble is, that this circulates, and it’s already circulating around Western Europe and you’re getting a sense of panic [unclear] European countries. De Gaulle doesn’t necessarily help it at all, you know. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Are you saying this keeps downgrading our changes? Bohlen: Yeah. Definitely. Thompson: I don’t know, I think— Bohlen: There are three or four different ways in which this particular aspect of the problem can be [unclear]. One, by you being direct. I think you’ve seen that draft of the— President Kennedy: Yeah, I saw yours and then Bundy did another one. Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: Bundy’s was satisfactory . . . [unclear] be yours or [unclear]. Bohlen: [speaks over the President] Well, it seems to me that this, in a sense . . . part of this could be tacked on, if you’re proposing to answer this letter of his. Some of this stuff in this draft could be a [unclear]. That would be one way of doing it, the other way would be by a public statement, which I think everybody believes would not be either convincing or very desirable at this time. The third way would be to use a diplomatic channel, possibly you to [Anatoly] Dobrynin or Foy [Kohler] right to Khrushchev.9 My feeling about this is negotiating a substance as serious as this, I really think that the direct communication thing would carry more conviction, if you did it to Dobrynin, you had no certainty how he would— President Kennedy: Yeah. I don’t see these . . . anybody . . . these fellows having any more of these conversations for a while. I’ll try to— Bohlen: And I think that also if you sent your ambassador in Moscow to talk to Khrushchev along these lines, we’re still working on the same thing. President Kennedy: Maybe we should get just a . . . get awfully belligerent to Kohler. Bohlen: And the third way, Mr. President, is one that I must say that I’ve always been inclining to [unclear] is in the field of action. These fellows have been buzzing our planes in the corridors—running these MiGs within 2[00] or 300 yards of a passenger-loaded Pan Am plane, which just contains all the ingredients of an accident. Because these things go so fast, you know, 2[00] or 300 yards is just nothing. And that if you would 9. Anatoly Dobrynin was the Soviet ambassador to the United States. Meeting on the Soviet Union 189 consider with your allies the possibility of the next time they do this, of putting in fighter escorts for these planes and running them until they seem to be calling it off and then call it off and then be prepared to start again. I have a feeling that the Russians in situations of this kind pay much more attention to action than they do to words. [to Thompson] So what would you think of that? Thompson: Yeah. As I was saying earlier, I think this may . . . buzzing may be related to their annoyance at our buzzing their ships.10 It’s the prestige factor [unclear]. Bohlen: But you have a decided difference in there, is that the buzzing of the planes in the corridor could at any point produce a terrible accident, whereas the buzzing of a ship has got very little chances to bring about that. President Kennedy: We . . . How much [of the] buzzing has there been? Remember last year there was . . . [in the] spring there was a big argument with [Lucius] Clay wanting us to put in fighters and [General Lauris] Norstad against it. And I thought Norstad’s judgment was right. Because fighting . . . well, it just struck me . . I would think you ought to wait on fighters. That is one of the things we can do without [unclear] shooting . . . put fighters in there. And I . . . It seems to me we ought to wait until this thing gets a little higher before we do that? Bohlen: Well— President Kennedy: So they’re doing [unclear] we did say we’d knock it down, then . . . at least then they’ve taken an action which is . . . Bohlen: Yeah. But then you’ll have an accident which will create an enormous amount of excitement in this country and you will have the loss of life with the passengers on the plane. And I think this will force your hand into action which will be a little beyond what should be proposed to do now. Now the other possibility of action, which perhaps might be put in this letter as a, sort of, a warning, but one which, I think, many of us in the Department of State have been thinking of for a long time. And that is the question of making West Berlin a Land of the Federal Republic. This would mean complete recognition that you were through with East Berlin. Well, we are de facto. But you will have a hell of a time, I think, with the French in getting any agreement and the British to include that, and it 10. In his 28 September letter, Khrushchev makes direct reference to a conversation he had with Llewellyn Thompson where he had complained to the U.S. ambassador about the buzzing of Soviet ships on the high seas. 190 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 would require that agreement. I don’t know what the West German attitude would be. Thompson: They’d be for it. Bohlen: They’d be for it, I think. And the West Berliners would surely be for it. It would have the advantage of—you’d have to have a whole series of new agreements. That is to say, you’d have the West German government requesting the presence of the Western troops with the agreement of the Federal Republic. The only problem would be how this would affect your right of access through their territory. I just have a very strong feeling that the trend is being manipulated by Khrushchev very much to our detriment. Thompson: You’d certainly have to study that one carefully because on your access . . . one of our main points now is [that] we hold the Soviets responsible. I mean . . . they haven’t recorded that . . . but once you make . . . do it just by agreement, the Soviets say, “Well, we have nothing to do with this agreement; why talk to us?” You get a— President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: Well, you might even do it in a too [unclear] sort of way but you would leave your occupation rights there completely, but that you’d also just change the status of the . . . West Berlin as a Land of the Republic. Thompson: Going back to the buzzing, it seems the one thing you could do is to put in some rather vague language in the reply, just raising this problem instead of [unclear] our planes. [Unclear] could be coming at it rather than just doing it. Bohlen: A great deal of the language he uses on Cuba could be [unclear] directly to Berlin because he’s talking about disregarding the normal conventions, [unclear]—assigning to ourselves the right to this, that, and the other, and this is exactly what he’s trying to do in Berlin. President Kennedy: [reading aloud from Khrushchev’s letter] “[Unclear] this occupation is here to stay . . . [unclear] . . . put it to the U.N.” Did you get a report on Grewe’s last conversation with me before he left,11 about how he thinks the Hallstein Doctrine is dated and that they’re going to [unclear]?12 11. Wilheim Grewe was West German ambassador to the United States until September 1962. His resignation came about because the Kennedy administration lost confidence in his effectiveness as a liaison after Rusk accused him of leaking to the press in April 1962 a Department of State draft of an allied agreement on Berlin. 12. This doctrine, named for Adenauer’s foreign policy adviser, Walter Hallstein, held that Bonn would refuse to maintain diplomatic relations with all countries, excluding the Soviet Union, that recognized the German Democratic Republic. Meeting on the Soviet Union 191 Bohlen: We picked up some [unclear] when we were in Bonn this June. . . . But, it hasn’t got . . . a lot of the private interests in Germany are very keen to have the Hallstein Doctrine eliminated and some of the people in the Foreign Office. But I think old Adenauer is clearly hooked on it. He did something recently that . . . well, the reaffirmation of the Hallstein Doctrine. President Kennedy turns to the section in Khrushchev’s letter about U.S. policy toward Cuba. President Kennedy: [reading aloud] “We haven’t done anything to give you a pretext for that.”[Kennedy jumps ahead in the text.] “I must tell you straightforward [ly] . . . that your statement with threats against Cuba is just an inconceivable step.” Straightforward? He doesn’t say whether existing . . . [Kennedy resumes reading aloud] “Your request for an authority . . . by the way is a step . . . apt to get red hot . . . pour oil in the flame . . . to extinguish that red-hot glow.”13 His metaphors are a little mixed in that. Why would he blame someone who wants to pour oil on the flames to extinguish that red-hot glow? [Laughter.] Thompson: [Unclear.] Bohlen: Who writes these damn things for him? Thompson: Does Foy know about this thing?14 Bohlen: I don’t think so. This only came in yesterday, didn’t it? Thompson: I assume Foy will be seeing . . . calling on Khrushchev [unclear]. President Kennedy: [reading from Khrushchev’s letter, sometimes mumbling] “to qualify . . . to remind you of the norms . . . naturally . . . would not say anything on West Berlin. . . . For example, what is going on, for example, in the U.S. [Congress]?”15 [The President is quite amused.] People in the Congress? 13. Kennedy is paraphrasing as he reads. The sentence goes: “Under present circumstances, when there exist thermonuclear weapons, your request to the Congress for an authority to call up 150,000 reservists is not only a step making the atmosphere red-hot, it is already a dangerous sign that you want to pour oil in the flame, to extinguish that red-hot glow by mobilizing new military contingents.” 14. Foy Kohler was the newly appointed U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union. 15. FRUS, 6: 159. The full quote reads: That is what made us to come out with the TASS statement and later at the session of the UN General Assembly to qualify your act, to remind of the norms of international law and to say about West Berlin. If there were no statement by you on Cuba, we, naturally, as Ambassador 192 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Bohlen: These are all such— President Kennedy: What? Bohlen: —stilted translations from the Russian. If you can see what the Russians said, this [unclear]— President Kennedy: [reading aloud] “How can one, for example, fail to notice the decision of the House [of Representatives] to stop giving U.S. aid to anybody that trades with Cuba. . . . Isn’t that an act of impermissible arbitrariness against freedom of, freedom of [movement]?” They have the resolution. [He continues reading.] “Very serious consequences may have the resolution adopted by the U.S. Senate . . . ready to assume responsibility for unleashing [thermo]nuclear war.” What do you think is the reason that they are going ahead with Cuba in this massive way? They must know that it . . . I thought one reason why they [unclear] Berlin because we’d take a reprisal against Cuba . . . they want to make it as difficult as possible. What other reason can there be? Because they began this buildup in June. In late June there was no indication of an invasion by the United States at this time, so [unclear]. Thompson: Well, I would suspect that Castro is nervous about what might be going on and the pressure has been pretty— President Kennedy: Sorry? Thompson: —within the bloc, the Communist bloc, this is a good step for him; he’s helping this country defend itself against U.S. imperialism and . . . Bohlen: This is the satellite bond that you get. The Poles and stuff like that . . . President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: They think that Castro was planning it. They sent a guy over there, Che Guevara, you know, to try and persuade the Russians to let them join the Warsaw Pact, to give them formal coverage and Soviet protection.16 And the Russians refused to do this. And then this is what Thompson and Mr. Udall were told, would not say anything on West Berlin. Your statement forced us to do so. We regret that this dangerous line is being continued in the United States now. What is going on, for example, in the U.S. Congress? 16. One of Fidel Castro’s closest associates, Ernesto “Che” Guevara, visited moscow in August to discuss the conclusion of a Soviet-Cuban defense agreement. Khrushchev, however, refused to sign the proposed agreement. Meeting on the Soviet Union 193 they did. And also, as Tommy mentioned, he said from the point of view of the Communist world, it is very important for him to be out in front, showing that he is militant, pushing for the great cause. President Kennedy: Why do you think they refused to put him in the Warsaw Pact? Bohlen: Oh, because this is too much for the Russians because then they’re not sure what the United States might do— President Kennedy: Right. Bohlen: —and they don’t want to be committed to go to war over Cuba, [Kennedy mumbles assent] if there is an American attack. Oh, I think this has been very clear all the way going back to ’60 when he first began to rattle the rockets about Cuba, then he made a statement before anyone would call him on that thing, he made a statement saying, “It’s just symbolic.” And they haven’t gone beyond that and this latest one, which he refers to here; the September 11th one seems to me to have been primarily issued in order to tack on the rider about not doing anything about Berlin. Thompson: I think, in general, he’s, he has very much in mind that meeting you and that, I think, if he can settle Berlin, then— Bohlen: Well this is what bothers me . . . the hell out of me. He’s coming over here in the end of November and this letter is really pitched to the . . . twice he refers to the resumption of the dialogue . . . and then in the last paragraph he talks about the: “Of great importance for finding the ways to solve both this problem . . . are personal contacts of statesmen on the highest level.” Well that means between you and him. But, the question is: What in God’s name could be the best solution to the Berlin thing if you did meet? President Kennedy: [Unclear] I don’t—unless he wants to demonstrate that he’s doing every possible— Bohlen: Well, I mean, this still leaves the situation as it was. I think, from your point of view, [unclear] don’t see that [there’s] anything very much to negotiate about as long as he is insisting on the removal of certain troops. Thompson: Well, I think, Chip [Bohlen], that if he, I think he’s, first of all, that he is in a position where he has . . . he feels he has got to go ahead and sign this treaty. Bohlen: Yes, I think everybody— Thompson: And I don’t think he wants to play Russian roulette with that and just toss a coin and see whether there’s war or not. If he wants to . . . he could get us to accept the East German . . . Solution C approach, where we would accept East Germans deployed at the check- 194 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 point.17 Each of us maintain a [unclear] position [unclear] would be acceptable [unclear] his treaty. President Kennedy: What’s that again? That sounded [unclear]. Thompson: Well, each of us would say, we would say, we would still hold the Russians responsible but in a practical way we will let the . . . accept [the] East Germans on the checkpoints as long as they don’t interfere with our access. And they would make the statement that they were treated as was a sovereign country. But, in fact, they are not. Then he could go ahead and sign his treaty, and you wouldn’t be then gambling on whether there’s war or not. And, I think, that’s about the most that you could hope to come out with. He would hope for more, and try for more, but in the end might settle for something like that. As long as he can sign his treaty and then maintain the position that East Germany is sovereign. We say it’s not. They, in the meantime, practically control the access but don’t interfere. Bohlen: Wouldn’t that be buying an awful lot of future trouble with that sort of a solution because of the East Germans’ not being bound by any agreement, anything like that; wouldn’t they go in for the harassment that the Russians are now, sort of, semidoing in a much more intensive [unclear]? Thompson: [Unclear] would be very dangerous, I think. But if the Russians say then they’re out of it except that they are allies of East Germany. The East Germans start doing something and we take some forceful action. . . . Then, we’ve always got the sanctions against them, of cutting off trade and all that sort of thing. So for the immediate period, a few years, I should think that it probably would buckle them in pretty quietly. In the meantime they would be pressuring others to recognize East Germany and gradually, I think, time would solve the thing, which in a way, it might. It might not be too bad. Certainly, it’s going to go along the way it is for a long time. There could be no solution— President Kennedy: Could he claim that he had solved this problem by this means? Thompson: I think so. I think he’s off the hook then. And once he’s signed this treaty, that’s the main thing. 17. Solution C was a term thrown around during the Kennedy administration as it tried to devise a negotiating position on the German and Berlin problems. Solution C was to seek negotiations aimed toward an informal, interim agreement to preserve the status quo in Berlin despite a G.D.R.-U.S.S.R. peace treaty. It appeared to offer the most likely chance of success with the least fuss. It was a view favored by State’s old Berlin hands. Meeting on the Soviet Union 195 President Kennedy: Why don’t you think he signed it before? On that basis he could have signed at any time in the last two years. Why don’t you think he signed it? Thompson: Well, we’ve never let him know that we’d accept [the] East Germans on the checkpoints. That’s the thing that would make the issue. Bohlen: Well, then that international authority just is tantamount to saying that it would be international, whether the East Germans would be in it. We’ve never presented them a formal draft of that thing. I think that they could . . . I think it’s a . . . He’s coming over here . . . [Someone sighs.] President Kennedy: He said, didn’t he? I mean, he just writes that he’s coming, doesn’t he? [Kennedy reads] “After the election, especially in the second half of November, it would be necessary . . . to continue the dialogue.” Bohlen: Yeah. He says that twice in there; there’s another. [Unclear interjection by Kennedy.] That and coupled with the last point makes it perfectly clear that his idea of a dialogue is between you and him. President Kennedy: Of course that’s not very advantageous to us, is it? Just to have he [and I] . . . And then no matter what happens it looks like . . . we become even more obvious as the chief defender of Berlin. Which is just what de Gaulle wants to do to us. Because he doesn’t want to fight a war; he wants to make it all [unclear]. Bohlen: A sellout. Thompson: Yes. Bohlen: And I don’t know what the British attitude would be on this sort of thing. I think [that] this will cause a great deal of ruckus and furor. President Kennedy: What . . . de Gaulle and [unclear]? Bohlen: A meeting between you and Khrushchev. I mean, I think, the British and the Germans . . . President Kennedy: Why would the British care? They’ve mucked it up—[unclear]. Bohlen: Well, the British wouldn’t mind, I mean if they thought that . . . they could be worried that the thing would come to a deadlock and a big impasse and that you would be nearer the danger of war than you were before. And the West Germans, I think, they’d probably follow more or less the line of the French and be ready to fill the air with denunciations of duty. President Kennedy: And the weakness of the . . . Bohlen: Of course this question as to why the Russians are pushing this thing so hard is one that I have [unclear] almost four years and I don’t think that anybody [is] clear why. . . . And de Gaulle may not care 196 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 if the United States takes the blame for any sort of a sellout, or whatever you want to call it, in Berlin. But on the other hand most of the fellows in the French Foreign Office particularly feel that Khrushchev is doing this because of the whole effect on West Germany and on the alliance. In other words, he is seeking larger aims than just Berlin. I must say, I don’t think that. I think that Berlin is a . . . these are the kind of repercussions and results [on] which he would naturally capitalize if they happened. But I don’t think he’s playing these moves on Berlin with this in view. I don’t know what you feel about the alliance. Thompson: Well, I think he’s hooked personally on . . . He’s always boasted that this was his solution that he dreamed this whole thing up. Bohlen: Yeah. Thompson: He got way out and he’s gotten further out since. Bohlen: Well, what I mean is that [unclear] Berlin as a thing in itself. That if he settled this, would he then quiet down? And consider that Europe is all tidied up? Or would it be just a move to disrupt the Alliance, to stop progress—? Thompson: I think it’s mainly the former. I think he— Bohlen: I think so, too, myself; but on the other hand you can’t separate the fact that these might be the consequences which he would then immediately try and exploit. Thompson: He can exploit any of the— Bohlen: Well, the thing that mystifies me about this thing is that he himself nearly has a success on his terms which would be an enormous humiliation and defeat for us, which I don’t think is going to happen, but assuming that it does, still if he knows anything about history, this is the way of bringing war very much sooner— [Someone agrees indistinctly.] Bohlen: —because you don’t inflict what would be a very humiliating defeat upon a power like the United States when you don’t affect his power 1 inch by . . . .Berlin wouldn’t affect our power at all. President Kennedy: Right. Bohlen: And almost all throughout history a Munich has sort of been followed by— President Kennedy: Yeah Bohlen: —the war. President Kennedy: Right. Bohlen: So, I can’t see that if he is thinking straight, and in historical terms, that he could have very much happiness out of either result of this thing. Meeting on the Soviet Union 197 President Kennedy: Well, why would they build up Cuba? Why would . . . I mean he must . . . if he calculates correctly, he must realize that what’s happened in Cuba this summer makes it much more difficult for us to accept any, to engage ourselves now to have a deal over Berlin. I mean, that’s just not been— Bohlen: [Unclear.] This is one thing that I’m convinced of, is that the Russian mind does not have the foggiest comprehension of the American political process. They really believe that you are sort of the dictator of the United States and can do any damn thing you want, and that . . . This just comes through the doctrine. You see, they consider that the capitalist system, that democracy in a capitalist system is just a part of flimflam and [is] a disguise for the control by Wall Street and all this other . . . Look at the way he keeps talking about Dean Rusk being a tool of the Rockefellers because he was head of the thing.18 I think he genuinely believes in it. So that all this stuff that you— Thompson: The Pentagon and Wall Street. [Unclear.] Bohlen: Yeah. It’s a very complicated sort of process. But I think the conclusion that they reach is that public opinion doesn’t— President Kennedy: Really count. Bohlen: —really have any real effect and [unclear] enormous pressure this can put on a presidency. President Kennedy: And I suppose we don’t . . . we over . . . we underestimate the pressures that go on him, not from public opinion but from other [unclear]. Bohlen: Well, I think you can describe public opinion in the Soviet Union the same way that a good general pays great attention to the morale of his troops. In other words, he doesn’t let troop morale dictate his course of action, because then he wouldn’t be worth a damn as a general. He is very conscious of the fact that they rely on the morale. I mean this just . . . but this doesn’t mean any— President Kennedy: But you don’t think that he would calculate what they’re doing in Cuba as a broad sort of traditional position and so on would [unclear] really intensify the feeling here greatly, and make it much more difficult to do anything about Berlin? Bohlen: No, sir, I think this is probably something that’s just a complete blank page in his mind. I think that—what Tommy said—I think he did Berlin because here it was something they had engaged in about this regime, and then the Cubans got very scared and panicky for fear 18. Dean Rusk was president of the Rockefeller Foundation. 198 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 there was going to be another, sort of, Bay of Pigs, something like this. Which they would probably have lost. President Kennedy: [Comments indistinctly.] Bohlen: And went to the Russians and said, “My goodness, my goodness, you’ve got to help us.” Their first idea was to put them in a treaty, and then the Russians put these arms in there; and then also the effect of his standing in the Communist world because the Chinese have been constantly attacking Khrushchev from the left, which is the first time in Bolshevik history that this has ever happened. Heretofore they have always been the extreme left—denouncing yellow Soviet so-and-so as the opportunist and everything like it. The Chinese now come and say, “You are scared of the thing.” Now there is one factor that underlies [unclear] that I don’t know anything about. Tommy may have some ideas about it. Thompson: History [unclear] points their way [unclear] move is to keep the Chinese from doing it— Bohlen: This is what I mean. Thompson: —[taking] the Chinese with it. Bohlen: Well, the Chinese are not in much shape to give very much help. Thompson: [Unclear] I think it doesn’t. Bohlen: Yeah, I think it is more in the psychological field, of his leadership in there, [Thompson murmurs assent] the other factor may be in there. But the one question that perhaps may underlie this is that we know now that all this flap about the missile gap is just for the birds because they didn’t put their main effort on ICBMs and our estimate now of the correlation of military forces is heavily in our favor [someone mumbles assent] and not in their[s]. Now, if you go back to the history of the Sino-Soviet dispute, you will see the Chinese undoubtedly believe, completely literally, the Soviet claims which they were making in ’57 and ’58 of having . . . the balance having shifted in their . . . point. And I just wonder whether or not in the Soviet hierarchy how much real understanding there is of the actual correlation of military force or whether they are not operating on their previous, sort of, at least, announced estimate that they had sort of passed us. And their policy would be much more intelligible if they believed that; because if they believed that they had the nuclear, sort of, equality, or even superiority, then their lines of action would be quite continuous, I mean, quite consistent. But it is not consistent if it’s viewed in the light of what our estimate of the two forces are. President Kennedy: We are taking a look at a contingency plan for Meeting on the Soviet Union 199 sort of building up a staging area in Florida for . . . in case we ever have to go into Cuba. This would be impossible, I suppose, to keep this completely—we’ll look at this next week—to keep it completely submerged. But obviously there is no sense in having about a four months’ gap between the time we’ve decided to do something about Cuba and have to wait. So, we want to begin to build up down there. Now, I suppose that will surface. . . . What effect does that have? Bohlen: Well, they’ll pick it up with all of this stuff, [unclear] calling up this . . . Getting the authorization to call up 150,000 reservists and state this in Congress. They’ll make a big thing out of it. And I think this inevitably will . . . President Kennedy: Do you see any reason not to do it? Bohlen: I don’t. Although the question is—I’ll tell you one thing, Mr. President, that I do think is that if you ever come to do any action against Cuba, it would almost have to be on the basis of a declaration of war. I mean serious action, that is— President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: —U.S. forces and all. Because this will give you the legal basis for a blockade and everything of this kind. If you try a blockade without a declaration of war, then I think you get into a mess of complications with your friends and allies, as well as with the Russians. Now, if the Cubans would make some move that would establish a reasonable justification for a declaration of war, I think this is the only way you could do it, if you are going to use United States forces. I don’t know what’s being done in the sense of infiltration of people into Cuba— President Kennedy: Well, we’ve warned them that we’ve been trying to do that. . . . We’ve been doing that for nine months— Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: —under General [Edward] Lansdale but he hasn’t had much success. We’ve got these intelligence teams in there. But, I saw the Washington Post suggested that we’d given up on internal revolt. You [unclear] that editorial this morning? Bohlen: I saw that. But that’s very curious [unclear]— President Kennedy: It sounds like some guy got in there late at night, and he wrote . . . [unclear] from the Pentagon staff. Bohlen: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: What? Bohlen: That has not been the Washington Post’s general line— President Kennedy: Oh, no. Bohlen: —on the Cuban thing at all this year. President Kennedy: Suddenly, a complete [unclear] operation. 200 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Bohlen: Some guy must have gotten a bright idea and sold it to Phil Graham.19 President Kennedy: Yes, you’re probably [right]. Bohlen: But the . . . Thompson: I think . . . I had the impression, that at the start of the Cuban thing, that the Russians thought it wasn’t going to last and they were very reluctant to get too committed, to put too much in there. President Kennedy: Of course, if we had gone in a year ago—and it was much easier in April after the Bay of Pigs—and you had that become the regular United States invasion . . . I have always thought that they would—of course you can’t tell what they would do, a year ago. Now . . . but it always seemed to me they would just grab West Berlin, don’t you think? Bohlen: Well, they might have, Mr. President, and this might have led to general war. But I think the situation is getting to the point where there are so many places, there are many instances where if we take certain kinds of forcible actions, the Russians can retaliate. I think we tend [unclear] to let the Berlin situation dominate our whole action [unclear]. But this is what the Russians are clearly trying to do. [Unclear.] Thompson: I would have thought a move against Iran would have been more likely than for Berlin. President Kennedy: Except they could grab Berlin in two hours. Iran, they would have to really— Bohlen: Yeah, but any one of these things [unclear]— Thompson: Grabbing would have meant direct fighting with U.S. troops— President Kennedy: What? What? Thompson: Grabbing Berlin. And that’s, I think, much more dangerous than a move in Iran. Bohlen: Their play is . . . the Russian game has always traditionally been this way with the non-Communist power . . . is to push, pull, to feel around and then judge, make their next move based upon their estimate of the reaction to what people do. There is a phrase of Lenin in which he said there are certain situations which you control with bayonets: if you run into mush, you go forward; if you run into steel, you withdraw. And since anything that Lenin said is enshrined in letters— President Kennedy: That’s right. Bohlen: —in gold and scarlet, I still think that Khrushchev’s attitude 19. Philip Graham was the publisher of the Washington Post. Meeting on the Soviet Union 201 on Berlin is in one sense to test us. Now, I don’t know; but Joe Alsop wrote about this . . . saw him the other day and I think you saw him, didn’t you? President Kennedy: Yeah, I saw him. Bohlen: Joe has a new theory about the [Berlin] Wall, did he tell you that? President Kennedy: This was to cover up the . . . Bohlen: This was to . . . The Wall was not to stop the refugees but to provide the necessary circumstances where they could make a major buildup of East German forces. And I said, “Well, I think that these issues are one of the consequences but not necessarily the cause”—but you know Joe when he gets on an idea— President Kennedy: Then he’s got the idea that the solution to the strategy is that the United States [unclear] our contingency planning, he knows that the allies won’t do anything and therefore— Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: —it [unclear] the United States to indicate it’s going ahead. Bohlen: Well, I must say, Mr. President, it depends on how your analysis of this whole situation is. But, I think, that if we are going to do anything, we’re going to have to do it— President Kennedy: Quickly. Bohlen: —unilaterally. President Kennedy: Yeah. I just yesterday, or the day before, sent a memorandum over to the Pentagon to ask them how long it takes to move in. You remember that time we sent up that battle group into West Berlin; then it turned out it took 28 hours to reach the autobahn. Well, so now I asked whether they’ve got. . . . They’re still a long way away from the autobahn, so we’ve got a camp there that they can make into a barracks. So I asked them to— Bohlen: McNamara was very much impressed with the state of training and the morale of the forces that he saw— President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: —in Germany [in] the last two or three days. I don’t think the strategy is worth a damn; but at least [he chuckles] the troops are in good shape. President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: But . . . because you might have an awful lot of pulling and hauling with your allies, you see. For instance, suppose Khrushchev when he signs the treaty does the following things: that he just turns over to the East Germans the access rights to the military on the road 202 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 and the [East] Germans say, “Well, we haven’t got any agreement with you; they can’t go through,” leaving the air alone, because the air is a place where we have much more freedom of maneuver. Then what’ll you do? You will have consultations with your allies. The British, undoubtedly, will call for a conference, [Thompson or Kennedy laughs] and the French will just sort of stay out of it totally. [Bohlen chuckles.] You know them. And [unclear]. So you could lose an awful lot of time on this thing. If they’re foolish enough to announce that the air corridors are closed, then, I think, you have a very clearly indicated action which is to send your fighters in. [President Kennedy speaks indistinctly.] But send them in, in force. Anything you do on a subject like that, the danger is that you send in too few forces and that this doesn’t create the impression. You ought to send in double the number of fighters that people think would be adequate for the purpose. And in the air, I think, this is the place where the thing is going to come to a real . . . the crunch will happen there. Wouldn’t you think so, Tommy? Thompson: Generally speaking, I think, Khrushchev has felt, at least up until recently, that things are going his way and he needn’t take any risks, that he is playing for the big stakes and not the small. In places like Iran and others, where he could have done a lot of things, but if he did, he’d [unclear] make it more difficult to spread further later on. And he’s been . . . in Laos the same way and there are other complicating factors there, but. . . . In general, I don’t think he wants to really run a real risk of war at this time. Bohlen: I wouldn’t think so. Thompson: [Unclear.] Bohlen: But then you come back to what is their estimate of the general correlation of military forces? Thompson: Well, it certainly isn’t something that can be deliberately calculated in this period. A wise thing to do . . . Bohlen: Whatever happened to this idea that at one point was being kicked around [unclear] of showing Khrushchev some— President Kennedy: Pictures? Bohlen: Pictures. It was leaked, I mean, it was deliberately let out of NATO. And I think that [unclear] the probability is that they’ve got it. The only question is do they realize to what extent we cover their installations and therefore we know what ICBM rockets they have and what we have, which is growing every month here, I think? President Kennedy: I think he thinks they’ve got enough to cause such damage to us, that we wouldn’t want to accept that damage unless the provocation was extreme. But, of course, those are all calculations he Meeting on the Soviet Union 203 has to make about what we are going to do, and what the French will do and what the British will do. And I suppose it just comes back to what you . . . we were originally saying, that it’s just a question of how do we convince him that the risk is there. And that raises whether we ought to go with this letter or not. Or whether we just choose to ignore this and just let this thing drop until he comes over here in November. So McNamara had some statement this morning about the [unclear]— Bohlen: Yes, I saw that. In fact, that got the headlines in all the papers about the fact that we had nuclear weapons there and that in certain circumstances we were prepared to use them. President Kennedy: Whether we ought to let it drop at that or whether these words get to be, as you suggested . . . They begin to have less and less effect. Because I don’t know whether [unclear]. Bohlen: And the one thing about this channel, Mr. President, so far, thank God, is it [has been] kept completely confidential— President Kennedy: Yes. Bohlen: —thoroughly. One of the few things— President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: —in the United States government operations which there is not the slightest leak on. And this fact, I think, would lend a little more weight to the words which you send back on it. The danger of not answering this and letting him come over here would be he’d come over with some positions which had obviously been agreed to in the hierarchy of the Soviet government and that they may be completely based on a miscalculation, on a misjudgment of the whole situation. And then he comes over here and you meet, and you have just a complete confrontation with no formal agreement, or anything like this, and this sets off its own chain of events. What would you think, Tommy? Thompson: Oh, I think, if . . . if by chance, he is, he did say these things in order to get a positive response from us that he could use with his colleagues, or with the East Germans . . . then it would be too bad, if we didn’t . . . Bohlen: Well, let’s put it this way. What would you lose by having in the Berlin part of this letter, something along this line, which you take to be daring?20 I can’t see that you would lose anything. The only danger that it might involve would be that it would bring it to a head; but I 20. Bohlen seems to be referring to a draft response from President Kennedy. The actual response, as sent from Washington on 8 October 1962 did not include any reference to the Berlin question (see Kennedy to Khrushchev, 8 October 1962, FRUS, 6: 163–64). 204 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 don’t think the way this is worded it would have very much of this, if it’s sufficiently general. And if he doesn’t believe it, well, you’ve wasted some time in writing a letter, but I don’t think the consequences would be any worse than they are. I am very much afraid of his coming over here filled with these impressions, that our silence in the face of his—there were four occasions now, one to [Secretary of the Interior Stewart] Udall, one to [poet Robert] Frost—did he say it to you, Tommy, too, that we’re not fighting on the . . . ?21 Thompson: No. Bohlen: No. And [to] the Belgian and the Finn. And he has repeated the same damn thing to them. And he hasn’t had any reaction whatsoever. Now that— President Kennedy: It’s another . . . I don’t know whether I ought to do anything about Frost about supposedly this secret Frost [unclear], Macmillan sent these up . . . a civilized remark. But . . . I was just wondering whether there’s . . . have you talked to Frost? Thompson: No. And I haven’t been near the [State] department, so I don’t know . . . for the last two months, so I [unclear] . . . uninformed [unclear]. President Kennedy: I’ll call [unclear] on the phone so he can’t say he wasn’t asked. What about this? Would you go along with this thought about responding to this letter and in it, including in it . . . ? Thompson: I agree with Chip. I think, if the letter is to have a . . . President Kennedy: Would you get that letter you [unclear]? Unidentified: Yes. Bohlen: I think it’s in your [unclear]. Unidentified: I think it’s [on] the chair. Thompson: I think now . . . You cut it down a bit, Chip. Bohlen: Yeah. Unidentified: [Unclear.] [Rustling of paper, then silence.] Bohlen: You’ve got to change the first [clears his throat]. [Silence while they read.] President Kennedy: I think when he says that people over here agree with him, I think he may in that case be meaning just the division of Western Germany, which everybody does agree with him on in Europe. Not this question of our rights and troops in West Berlin, because he’s 21. The Udall and Frost discussions on 6 and 7 September are described in the editors’ introduction, 10 September 1962. Meeting on the Soviet Union 205 been told that so many times. He knows we don’t agree with that. But I think he knows that de Gaulle and Macmillan and, possibly, I don’t really care about the unification of Germany. Bohlen: Yeah, well, except that in one of these things, I think it was to the Belgian, he was more explicit than that, in which he said that President Kennedy and Macmillan and de Gaulle really agree with my solution to the Berlin thing, and it’s only Adenauer who just wants trouble, pulling the spokes from the wheel. I don’t know which is— President Kennedy: Of course that may be just a way to [unclear] to Germany and . . . but . . . I wish if the Germans were ever going to do anything about the division of Germany or recognition of East Germany . . . what kind of [unclear], they would go ahead and do it and not try to do it when it becomes useless as a . . . when they can’t sell that position for anything. Actually that last conversation that Adenauer had with Norstad and [NATO general secretary Dirk] Stikker, I don’t . . . he didn’t even mention Berlin. [Unclear] George Ball, et cetera. But he doesn’t get around to Berlin when he talks. I don’t think he wants to see Germany reunified. Bohlen: Hell, no. President Kennedy: So what are we all doing? Thompson: Khrushchev— Bohlen: [Unclear] with the Germans [unclear] nothing in the German ethos because one of the things that you always run into is this deeply felt thing, blah, blah, blah [unclear] take any action [unclear], is put off, you’ll really disrupt Germany. I must say I never totally believed it because Germany is a [unclear] country. And I think also— President Kennedy: We don’t want any— Bohlen: —that the French fear of the Germans turning East, under the present circumstances, is very illusory because Khrushchev cannot give them Eastern Germany. He told me this and I am sure he said it to you, but he used to use one expression to me in the last two months: “I was there but you must understand that we are not in a position to make any agreement with you affecting East Germany.” What he meant by that was that they were hooked with this Soviet invasion of East Germany, and, therefore, the only bait that he could offer to the West Germans would be the reunification of the country in return for their neutrality. Well if you had that possibility, my God, we would have had that out on the table informally years ago. Don’t you think so, Tommy? Thompson: Uh, huh. Since we’ve got the bigger half, the bigger part, any unification even in neutrality would eventually be [unclear]— 206 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Bohlen: Yes, I mean, that is why I think that this would have been if he had not Sovietized, if the Russians had not Sovietized Eastern Germany, they would have an enormous diplomatic card that they could play to wreck NATO, wreck the German involvement in it. But since this is not one that they could play, I don’t really see much real danger of the Germans turning to the East, particularly as this process with France and the Common Market is going [Kennedy can be heard indistinctly] very far now. President Kennedy: Well, Chip, what do you think is the . . . how pleased with . . . I suppose anything that the West Germans did about East Germany now would be regarded as indicating that Khrushchev was right, and we really don’t care about West Berlin. West Berlin seems to have less and less importance once you, if you give up the idea of unification. And then . . . what are we doing then in West Berlin . . . except for the people that are involved— Bohlen: Well, you’ve got two and a half million people— President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Thompson: The symbol and [unclear]. President Kennedy: What’s the symbol got—? Thompson: They’ll never give up the idea that eventually reunion will be the case. It’s one thing [unclear]. Bohlen: But, of course, one of the, I think, major arguments against doing anything formally such as recognition of East Germany is that it’s extremely doubtful as to whether that East Germany setup is a viable thing. I think that Khrushchev’s attitude may be primarily motivated by a desire to do something which will increase the viability of East Germany. He may have thought that this Wall was going to do it and this hasn’t done it. He may think that if you could get his arrangement on Berlin this would fix Ulbricht up. For God’s sake, all of this seems to be very much founded on wishful thinking. Thompson: Yeah. Perhaps on the basis that the other solution would be to go in with a lot of money and build up East Germany to where it would be viable and as [first deputy Soviet foreign minister Vasiliy] Kuznetsov once told somebody, he said, “We can’t do that because that would mean that the Germans would live better than we do and—” Bohlen: Yes, and this is a factor, but another thing is— Thompson: —“and that would be immoral,” he said. Bohlen: Being a divided country, and given the temperament of the Germans while they haven’t been unified for so damn long historically, they nevertheless, which is a great thing for them, and I just don’t think that even building it up would necessarily make it into a satellite country comparable to say Poland or [unclear interjection by Thompson] Meeting on the Soviet Union 207 Czechoslovakia because it’s [unclear]. These other ones that are divided such as North Korea and Vietnam are new countries which haven’t got any tradition of unity. President Kennedy: What do you think about this letter of Chip’s? Thompson: I think that the line is sound. I think it could be . . . you know, this would be a long thing anyway, given the testing, if this could be maybe boiled down a little more, not quite so— Bohlen: And you could add this part onto the thing. Of course you’ll want to discuss this with the Secretary. President Kennedy: Yes. Thompson: When he is coming back? President Kennedy: He’s coming back this Wednesday, isn’t he? Coming back Tuesday [unclear]? Bohlen: Mac gets back on Wednesday, doesn’t he? President Kennedy: Yeah. So why don’t we see what, on this [unclear] come Wednesday? Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: But I have. . . . Why don’t we get somebody working on a draft response to this? Bohlen: On the Cuban [part]? President Kennedy: To the whole thing. Bohlen: All right, sir. Now the only question is [that] there are very few people in the Department who know about this correspondence at all [Kennedy is mumbling in the background], and I don’t know if, for example, that anybody who is knowledgeable on the Cuban thing would be . . . is in on the general knowledge of— President Kennedy: Actually what we say on Cuba, I think, almost anybody would know more or less the general position on Cuba as to— Bohlen: What would you want to say on that, then? President Kennedy: Well, I think we ought to say that this decision of the Soviet Union to so greatly increase the military power of the . . . of Cuba constitutes, I don’t know, an unfriendly act or whatever the diplomatic term is and that had increased tensions and made . . . reaching an accord on matters of Berlin far more difficult and that because of the many treaties of the United States in this hemisphere and the special position, the historic position of the relationship of the United States with countries surrounding it, this represents a very serious assault on our position—something like that. Without sort of saying that we would [unclear]— Thompson:[Unclear] get in something about the two things that concern us about the buildup in Cuba is: one, our own vital interest; and 208 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 the other is the possible use of Cuba as a threat to other countries in this hemisphere. Bohlen: And you might point out, if you want to mark a difference between let’s say our assistance to Iran, where we have no bases, of course—we just concluded an arrangement—is that Cuba was a member of the American defense establishment. It is just as though, it would be more comparable if the United States had acted in the case of Hungary— President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Bohlen: —to give military support to the Hungarian government which declared its—to the Soviet Union—its neutrality from the Warsaw Pact. We can do that and what about— President Kennedy: What about saying [that] a Cuba friendly to the hemisphere is as significant to [us] . . . that we believe, inasmuch as you had believed that a Hungary friendly to the Soviet Union is in your vital interest? So that he doesn’t get off on Turkey and Iran. Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: Then on the testing, we’re pretty . . . We know— Bohlen: And our position— President Kennedy: —We just can’t buy . . . on the other hand, it seems to me, we just ought to say, “Well, in this case there’s just no . . .” I mean he’s offering us five years and then if there is not an agreement by then, that’s just unpoliced. I think we ought to, I’ll get Jerry Wiesner. I’ll have to give Jerry Wiesner these two pages and tell him that this is . . . and see if there is anything he can do about them. Let me tap Wiesner. I think this ought to be just paraphrased. And I can give this . . . these two pages to Wiesner and ask him for comments at least and [unclear] [Sir Edward] Bullard and [Sir William] Penney, et cetera. What it is they did say that is significant, whether he is accurately restating it.22 Bohlen: Of course a great deal depends on what [unclear]. Jerry Wiesner enters the Oval Office. President Kennedy: Oh, hi Jerry. Bohlen: Hello, Jerry. Jerry Wiesner: Hi. Bohlen: What the value of these— 22. In his letter of 28 September, Khrushchev alleged that Sir William Penney, the chairman of the U.K. Atomic Energy Authority, and Sir Edward Bullard had argued at the tenth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs, held in London 3 to 7 September 1962, that unmanned seismic stations would suffice to verify a comprehensive test ban. Meeting on the Soviet Union 209 President Kennedy: Could you just take this down? I’ll give you this notation, if you have a piece of paper. “The Russian scientists have said that according to the British scientists Bullard and Penney, at Pugwash concerning the use of automatic seismic stations.” [Unclear.] Wiesner: Actually I have the statement that they issued. I don’t know whether you want to read it. President Kennedy: What exactly did they say? Who are Bullard and Penney? Are they very good? Wiesner: Yeah, they are two top British scientists. President Kennedy: What did they say? Wiesner: Thursday’s statement . . . the group . . . this doesn’t quote either Bullard or Penney. That’s the group that signed the document but apparently Bullard and Penney and a number of other people worked on it. What they’re proposing are some unmanned seismic stations in undefined number, including— Bohlen: Two or three, he said. Wiesner: Oh, it has to be hundreds. It has to be large numbers. President Kennedy: Would it? Have they [unclear]? Wiesner: They don’t say that. They say “enough.” Actually I have had a study going since I got this document to try to find out just what the right number is without us shooting past— Bohlen: He mentions two or three in this letter. Wiesner: Oh, that won’t do any good. Bohlen: Right. President Kennedy: Other than that we ought to . . . I’ll tell you what we ought to do: just take these points down then you could respond to them like we’re going to write a letter to these scientists. Wiesner: Oh. Who is this letter from? President Kennedy: Oh, this is from one of their people that came to us. Wiesner: Uh, huh [possibly skeptical]. President Kennedy: [reading from the secret letter from Khrushchev] “As we understood the idea, the suggestion is that automatic seismic stations help with their records to determine what is the cause of this or that underground tremor—underground nuclear blasts or ordinary earthquakes. It would be sort of a mechanical control without men. After thinking this suggestion over we came to the conclusion that it can be accepted if this would make it easier to reach [an] agreement. In this case, it could be provided in a treaty banning all nuclear weapons tests that automatic seismic stations be set up both near the borders of the nuclear state and two to three such stations directly on the territory of the states possessing nuclear weapons—in the areas most frequently 210 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 subjected to earthquaking. The Soviet government agrees to this . . . agrees to this perhaps only because it seeks a mutually acceptable basis for an agreement.” Wiesner: Uh, huh. President Kennedy: Well, I think that that sort of violates the agreement, but we also want to . . . And then it says that [he resumes reading from the text] “The American scientists who took part in the Pugwash Conference . . . approved of the suggestion about the use of automatic seismic stations for the purposes of control. Soviet scientists approved the suggestion . . . so, it appears the scientists were already in agreement and there’s a possibility to move ahead . . . ” I think we ought to move [unclear]. Wiesner: What they say is in the document that I have given you, is that in principle they think this should work and it should be considered by the governments and— President Kennedy: [reading] “They need to be sealed in such a way that they cannot be tampered with; they may be self-contained. The instruments would be installed by the host government and periodically returned to the international commission for inspection, replacement and repair, and such.”23 See . . . Wiesner: My basic reaction is that I would like these things to have regular communication. I’m not sure it’s necessary, and I don’t want to insist on it until I can prove it because [unclear]. President Kennedy: [reading further] “All the records would be turned over to the Commission for analysis.” Could they bug these instruments? Wiesner: It would be pretty hard because you have, see if you have your external seismic stations, which we still would have, you can get calibrations on this signal. President Kennedy: How long do you [unclear]? Wiesner: You could— Bohlen: But Jerry, what would happen if you had an explosion that was suspicious, you weren’t sure? Wiesner: Well, here’s what you’re hoping for— Bohlen: Are these things are so good that they can detect the difference between an earthquake and a nuclear explosion? Wiesner: Well, the thing you want, Chip, is a large number of seis- 23. Once again President Kennedy appears to be reading from a text, although these sentences do not appear in the 28 September letter from Khrushchev. Meeting on the Soviet Union 211 mic stations so that some of them are always close to the events. If they’re close, you can usually tell the difference. Bohlen: Hmmm. Wiesner: I don’t believe that any such system would get us out of the necessity for some mandatory inspection of the seismic areas. It would reduce . . . Anything of this kind that you do reduces the number. But it’s technically— President Kennedy: I’ll tell you what you do. Would you then prepare for the . . . by Tuesday or so a response to this argument that it needs only two or three— Wiesner: Yeah. President Kennedy: —agreed upon at Pugwash by first going back to what they really said at Pugwash and the subsequent . . . Wiesner: OK. President Kennedy: . . . and then say what the seismic— Wiesner: Can I get your reaction to one other idea— President Kennedy: Fine. Wiesner: —that I have been playing with . . . that I have actually been trying to understand this to prepare a memo? As you know, I have been impressed for the last year with the fact that the earthquakes—now I think I have talked to both of you about this—[muttered assent] in the Soviet Union occur in a very few remote places. Unidentified: Yes. Wiesner: And here are some maps that I’ve had made [unclear]. [Wiesner flips maps. Kennedy leaves the room?] Wiesner: This is 1957. They’re in there. They’re in here and they’re down here, an occasional one out there. They’re in the same place down here. In fact, I’ve drawn an area in which I can’t find any record of seismic— Bohlen: [Unclear.] Wiesner: Maybe one a year in here. So, I’ve been wondering whether if we went into this direction we would be willing to do another trick; and that is to say, we’d accept [unclear], we would accept invitational inspections in a defined a seismic area [Bohlen mumbling in the background] and mandatory in the seismic areas and this would probably be mandatory in a quarter— Bohlen: The only trouble is that these areas of where they are, they have the big complexes. Wiesner: I know [unclear] but one. But they’re not where your missile bases are. These are [unclear] complexes [unclear]. Bohlen: Yeah but your [unclear] bases are all in here. 212 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Now where is this . . . Where is . . . this place, Semipalatinsk in all of this? Wiesner: Semipalatinsk is in here. It’s [unclear]. Bohlen: [Unclear] for all that testing area— Wiesner: All their testing and all their missile bases, with the exception of their Kamchatka— Bohlen: Yeah. Wiesner: —Terminal. Now I’ve talked to a Russian about this in Geneva and he said, “Well, the only trouble is that these are on the borders where our intelligence complexes are.” And I said— Bohlen: Yeah. Wiesner: —“Sure but who cares about that anyway.” You see. Hey, 60 percent of them are out here underwater on these damn Kuril Isles. So when you finally find out about these things, I’m ready to concede that they probably have some basis for their suspicions of what we are trying to do, but two or three stations would make no difference. There was a very thorough study that was made of this a couple of years ago: if they were willing to put in 100 or 200 of them, or maybe 50 I am not sure what the number is, it would make a very substantial difference because what would happen—I think you’d then go in the following way, Chip: you’d first . . . Your external system would say there was something in here that can’t be resolved. The next thing you’d do is call for these unmanned stations. Either that or look at your radio records. I would suspect in a large fraction of the cases, the unmanned stations would then give you enough data so you could resolve it and say, “This was probably an earthquake.” There is no question that there would always be a residue— Bohlen: Well, the only things you’re really interested in are precisely the ones which would not be resolved by mechanical [unclear] . . . In other words— Wiesner: Yeah. But suppose you start with the assumption that they are not going to cheat. Bohlen: Yeah. Wiesner: You just . . . and then what you are looking for in both cases is a system of assurance. Because if they’re going to cheat, I think they can always cheat. I could always cheat on one or two [unclear] explosions and get away with it. I don’t think they could cheat on a large test series. . . . In fact, at present, they’ve never gotten away with it now. We know when they’re testing— Bohlen: Listen Jerry, tell me one thing: how valuable are underground explosions? Wiesner: I don’t think they are terribly valuable. And I think this is Meeting on the Soviet Union 213 the boss’s impression.24 But the fact is that we’ve got a political problem here at home— Bohlen: Yeah. Wiesner: —but I think the Russians have got one, too, now, because . . . What I’d like to see is whether you could invent a system in which [Door closes. Kennedy comes back in the room?] we made a compromise, in which we accepted invitation in the aseismic area and mandatory inspection in the seismic area. Bohlen: Yeah. Wiesner: Do you think we would get in trouble politically, Mr. President, with a— President Kennedy: What? Wiesner: —proposal that said that we would accept invitational inspection in that part of the Soviet Union where there normally aren’t earthquakes if they would accept mandatory inspection in the seismic area? Here’s a map, a series of maps that show what’s going on. This is year by year and you see it. Most of— President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Wiesner: —that great big bulk of the Soviet Union probably doesn’t have an earthquake a year. Thompson: [Unclear] that? Wiesner: And [unclear] here [pointing to map] 60 percent are over here in the Kuril Islands. So, we have been asking, you see, for the right to—of course if they were smart, they would say, “Well, if there are no earthquakes, you can’t go there, because there’s no record.” But they say, “We’ll fake them.” President Kennedy: What? Wiesner: But they . . . when we say, “Well if there’s no earthquake, we won’t go because we won’t have a basis for going.” They say, “Well, you can fake the record.” So that they worry about the other side of . . . [points out places on the map]. You see, all of their factories and missile bases, and so on, are in this part of the country there. There is a little bit over here: at Kamchatka the terminal guidance for their ballistic missile tests is there. But I think— President Kennedy: Well, I think if there was a chance that they [unclear], we might try— Wiesner: You see, I think they’ve got . . . Khrushchev’s got [unclear 24. President Kennedy. 214 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 interjection by Kennedy] the clear advantage of your political problem by now. People are saying you don’t want it, if you [unclear] . . . Bohlen: I think this is one of the things . . . that Khrushchev has the most distorted picture of the way American democracy or any democracy operates. I think this is one of the great inefficiencies in his whole complex. President Kennedy: Do you think that Khrushchev says all this business about him finding inexplicable congressional action and the de jure power and all the rest because he really does . . . astonished at that or is it because this is this . . . What? Bohlen: He probably thinks in the bottom of his heart that you put them up to it. President Kennedy: Put the Congress . . . ? [Laughter.] Bohlen: Well, I’m kidding—actually, I’ve always . . . Well, you see, up to very recently, I don’t know whether it’s changed so much now, no Soviet Embassy in this town even bothered to read the Constitution of the United States. I’ve talked to some of them, and they said, “We don’t want [unclear] to read that.” And they literally didn’t understand anything about the operation of our own system and any democratic system because of the main thesis that this is just a flimflam to delude the people. Thompson: Or they’ll say a different thing. I’ve argued with a lot of them and they’ll say, “Well, the President can’t help with these pressures on him; they’ll force him to do things, even if he doesn’t want to.” So that you get both these images [unclear]— Bohlen: Yeah, I have simplified it a lot in there. [Thompson agrees.] And it may be with a man like Dobrynin, that they are getting a little more understanding of how the thing works because some of his . . . except for . . . on the basis of the fundamental Bolshevik thought, some of this stuff, you see, that he says in public speeches and all this sort of stuff is just a lot of nonsense. President Kennedy shifts the discussion to the issue of providing nuclear aid to France. Bohlen has recently been named to replace General James Gavin as ambassador to France. Gavin announced his resignation in early August and left Paris the week of September 20, ostensibly for personal financial reasons but actually amidst controversy over his ongoing proposals to provide nuclear aid to France. Gavin had encouraged the sale of missile technology, enriched uranium, and compressors for gaseous diffusion plants that separated radioactive isotopes. President Kennedy’s opening statement to Bohlen is a sarcastic reference to Gavin’s downfall. Gavin had not been a lone voice in the wilderness. In March 1962, Meeting on the Soviet Union 215 Kennedy had opened debate within the administration over the question by asking for a “new appraisal of our atomic policy in regard to France.”25 Broadly speaking, the Department of Defense and Joint Chiefs of Staff favored nuclear sharing while the Department of State adamantly opposed it. President Kennedy entertained the idea of providing some form of nuclear assistance because of U.S. balance of payments worries and fear of Franco-German nuclear collaboration. By selling missile technology and other information up to the level of fission weapons, he hoped to offset U.S. military outlays. He also thought it would prevent de Gaulle from pressuring West Germany to cooperate in a nuclear program. Throughout the spring and summer, the Department of State had gotten the upper hand, and the administration maintained its official unequivocal opposition to nuclear sharing with France. Behind the scenes, however, Department of Defense officials continued to discuss the issue with French officials. On September 5, Deputy Secretary of Defense Roswell Gilpatric left for Europe to discuss allied contributions to help redress U.S. balance of payments deficits arising from military expenditures on the continent. From September 7 to 9, he met with French defense minister Pierre Messmer and used their talks to explore U.S.-French cooperation in research and development, procurement and production, and logistic support. When this meeting of September 29 occurs, the administration is seeking congressional authorization for the sale to the French government of the Skipjack nuclear submarine, which was the Nautilus rather than the Polaris missile-firing type. The McMahon Act of 1958, of course, prohibited assistance relating to nuclear weapons. Advocates of nuclear sharing within the administration argued, however, that the McMahon Act had been extrapolated into other technical areas such as missile technology. During the meeting, Kennedy takes an important call from Senator Henry “Scoop” Jackson, head of the Joint Atomic Energy Committee. President Kennedy: How long do you think it will be before we get our first cable from you suggesting we give atomic weapons to France? [Laughter.] 25. C. V. Clifton, “Memorandum of Conference with the President,” 7 March 1962, “Conference with President and JCS, 10/61–11/62” folder, Chester Clifton Files, National Security Files, Box 345, John F. Kennedy Library. 216 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Bohlen: Mr. President, I think it will probably take at least— Thompson: Two weeks. [More laughter.] Bohlen: Two years. Three years. [Unclear] two years.26 Thompson: That’s all it takes? Bohlen: Now I have been through all that drill, and I think the arguments are very solid on this. [Unclear exchange.] President Kennedy: [Gilpatric] was told by [unclear] that this Brosio has just bought the French position completely and that he’s followed—27 Bohlen: It seems to have a . . . Paris is a very seductive town— President Kennedy: Is it? Bohlen: —Mr. President. [Chuckles.]28 Wiesner: I often thought that we may be of a lot of help to them with nuclear submarines because— Bohlen: Well, my God. [Chuckles again.]29 Wiesner: But [unclear]. Bohlen: Listen, we could [unclear]. Unidentified: Come in [unclear] construction. As we— Thompson: The only thing they’d settle for—our technology. Wiesner: I understand that. Bohlen: The technology. Wiesner: After two years of being sore at us because we wouldn’t help them build one. Now you’re going to sell them one! [Laughs.] President Kennedy: [Unclear] sell you one, don’t you think? Bohlen: Oh yeah. I think so. The French . . . to hell with the . . . the French strategy with its . . . is not exactly the most generous [unclear].30 Thompson: Well, look, I don’t know how much this— 26. Bohlen is being flippant because he had received stern written and oral instructions from the Secretary of State to pursue the official administration line of opposing nuclear sharing. 27. Manlio Brosio was the Italian ambassador to France. From 17 to 19 September, Gilpatric met with Italian defense minister Giulio Andreotti in Rome to discuss defense cooperation and Italian contributions for offsetting U.S. military expenditures. Brosio had apparently reported to his government that de Gaulle sought greater Franco-Italian defense collaboration. 28. The Kennedy administration had adopted what former secretary-general of NATO PaulHenri Spaak said was a running joke among the West Europeans: “Italy is always looking for a compromise. Italy’s position is to say yes to France, no to the U.K., and do what the U.S. tells her to do.” 29. He is laughing at Wiesner’s heretical suggestion to provide some form of nuclear aid to France. There had been acrimonious debate throughout the spring and summer over the issue. 30. Reference to their perception that both France’s force de frappe and conventional forces were for the defense of France. De Gaulle had declared that a force de frappe would not be integrated with NATO’s nuclear forces. Meeting on the Soviet Union 217 Bohlen: This nuclear submarine thing, I hope to God that this goes through.31 President Kennedy: Where is it now? Bohlen: Well, I don’t know. Gilpatric told me yesterday that he talked to Scoop Jackson and he talked to [Admiral George W.] Anderson. President Kennedy: And they bullied? Bohlen: Thought that there would be a considerable amount of concern at the Department of State. Gilpatric went over there and sort of made a conditional offer and this has produced a great sort of feeling in the French: “Oh, boy, here the logjam is broken and this is wonderful” and they’ve all expressed great pleasure and delight. But the only thing is, if there’s a hitch in the congressional thing and we have to call it off, then . . . [Unclear exchange.] President Kennedy: Oh no, I thought Anderson had that? Bohlen: Did you see that letter from Jim Gavin to the Secretary [of State]? President Kennedy: A letter, no.32 Bohlen: On this subject? President Kennedy: No. Maybe you can send it over to me? But I think that, as I recall Anderson was in favor, or maybe Jackson, I think, was in favor of our doing something with the French. Bohlen: I don’t think so. President Kennedy: What? You know giving them some— Bohlen: Yeah. President Kennedy: —nuclear assistance—some of them were . . . Wiesner: I always thought we were making a mistake in not helping them with things that weren’t bombs. Because this made them particularly bitter. They’d say, well this is not nuclear explosives, and confront us on . . . President Kennedy: Well, I think it is possible that we’ll just have to . . . The fact is the Soviet Union in all these things recognizes France as a nuclear power, so that it wouldn’t be a question of diffusing anymore.33 Bohlen: Now, this is one of the things in this diffusion angle that has really bothered me. 31. Reference to its going through the Joint Atomic Energy Committee. 32. No record of this letter has been found. 33. This was a concern because of President Kennedy’s hope for a test ban treaty. 218 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Wiesner: But at the bottom of this is the faster you . . . the more you help the French, the more incentive you give other people to get to that stage, too, you see. So, I think you have to be very careful on the bomb. Bohlen: As I’ve always understood, Mr. President, your thought on the things you told Malraux,34 was that this is surely, but in particular when Adenauer leaves, is going to produce a comparable German effort to get one. President Kennedy: Uh, huh. Bohlen: And I would say that this is one of the places where I think de Gaulle shuts his mind and is focusing on his needs, ready to bring Germany into the European Community. He doesn’t seem to be paying very much attention to the old talk about the WEU treaties.35 And you recall what Adenauer said to Rusk when we were there in June; he talked about the atomic [unclear]. He said, “Well, of course [unclear] when we signed the WEU agreement because it is based on the doctrine of rebus sic standibus.36 President Kennedy: Yeah. Yeah. Bohlen: —which gives the impression which was [unclear] rebus sic standibus is a hell of a lot and that the situation is quite different than it was then. I think the main thing on this thing is whether or not the French— de Gaulle—really believes that this independent nuclear capability . . . President Kennedy: [to Evelyn Lincoln] Is he calling me? Jackson’s calling? [to gentlemen in room] Jackson’s calling me. So [unclear]. [to Evelyn Lincoln] Can I get Senator Jackson please? [to gentlemen] Yeah, let’s put that away for a little . . . [unclear] and then let’s come back to it. Unidentified: Uh, huh. President Kennedy: [to Wiesner] Well, would you see if you can get me a response [to Khrushchev’s test ban letter]? Wiesner: Well, who’s this to? Can’t you . . . President Kennedy: I just want a paper. Wiesner: You want a paper? 34. André Malraux, French minister of state for cultural affairs, visited the United States from 10 to 16 May 1962 at President Kennedy’s personal invitation. 35. Western European Union. 36. Rebus sic standibus is the legal doctrine that treaties can be terminated on the ground of a change in circumstances that defeats the treaty’s purpose. Bohlen is telling the President that Adenauer admits to relying on this document as a possible escape hatch from the WEU agreement that bars West Germany from acquiring nuclear weapons. Meeting on the Soviet Union 219 President Kennedy: —a paper with an explanation of it. Wiesner: All right. President Kennedy: I just want to know what the Pugwash scientists did say and what, particularly about this question, of their being quoted— Wiesner: Right. President Kennedy: —as having only said two or three. Hello. Can you get Senator Jackson? Door closes. Kennedy speaks on the telephone to Senator Jackson. President Kennedy: Hello, Scoop, how are you? Good. Henry Jackson: I’ll see if I can’t find out about [unclear]. President Kennedy: Yeah, fine, then why don’t you come and see— why don’t you come down next week, Monday or Tuesday? Jackson: All right. President Kennedy: Can I . . . I’ll call your office Monday morning and then— Jackson: I’ll be in a meeting [unclear]. President Kennedy: Good. Did Ros Gilpatric talk to you about— Yeah, what is the feeling up there? Jackson: On the [unclear], I think [unclear] used to be [unclear]. In the meantime, [unclear]. President Kennedy: Oh. It seems to me that he accepted. Jackson: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Yeah . . . right. I think. Go on. Yeah but that; but do they think there is some stuff there that the other people don’t have? Oh, I see. Good. OK. Jackson: [Unclear.] Bohlen and Thompson begin to talk while President Kennedy is on the telephone to Jackson. Thompson: I would say, West Berlin. I’m not sure we’re done. Bohlen: [Unclear] consider very carefully. This is the . . . sort of an amendment to the original resolution [unclear] much more. But it is, as you notice, he speaks of the continued exercise of their rights in Berlin which means, in effect, West Berlin. President Kennedy: Oh, I see, I see. I understand what you mean. Well, I’ll talk to you about it next, the first part of the week. Have you told all this to Gilpatric? Right, to Gilpatric. Look, I’ll see you Monday or Tuesday.37 37. On Wednesday, 3 October, Senator Jackson met with the President at the White House from 11:10 to 11:30 A.M. 220 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Jackson: I’ll brief him. President Kennedy: Thank you. Telephone conversation ends. President Kennedy turns to Bohlen. President Kennedy: He says [unclear] the Soviets—evidently there’s some material there, information there, [which] could be valuable to the Soviets.38 Bohlen: This is Rickover’s position. 39 President Kennedy: That’s Rickover. And he says the suggestion, therefore, is that the training program might be adjusted so that this information could be available at the very end. By that time the information would not be useful—evidently they assume the Russians will have it by then. Bohlen: The main thing I’ll be interested in, and Gavin in this letter said to me, if this is called off after Gilpatric’s thing. He said this would make it very difficult for Ambassador Bohlen. In other words, this is the kind of thing the French would consider we did. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Bohlen: —double-crossed them. President Kennedy: Oh, I think we can—we’ll just indicate that we’ll stay at it. I think we might as well . . . Bohlen: Again, I see no objection to the thing, this resort, to the question of this leakage of secrecy that it be handled that way. That’s all right. I think the feeling is that in the French scientific community there are some people who are very doubtful as to their former connection to the Soviet Union, apart from their actual connections. But I think that if this could do it, then . . . But first, there’s one thing, you know this business of the nuclear diffusion that the Secretary has been talking to [Soviet foreign minister Andrei] Gromyko about, that . . . If you put France in the category, as the agreement does, as a nuclear possessing power— President Kennedy: I am very reluctant [unclear]. Bohlen: —then you really— President Kennedy: That’s right. Bohlen: —just knock the ground out from under your feet about helping them, except on the grounds of unfriendliness to France. Now, I’ve told this to the Secretary, and I think he is well aware of it. And it’ll be worth it 38. Summarizing his telephone conversation with Jackson, Kennedy tells them that there is fear of compromising U.S. nuclear reactor technology by allowing the possibility of secrets passing to the Soviets by sharing the Skipjack submarine with the French. 39. Admiral Hyman G. Rickover. Meeting on the Soviet Union 221 if you really have a good tight nuclear diffusion agreement; but if you don’t . . . That’s why I was worried about sending it on to the allies to consider and you ought to have a lot more clarity with the Russians as to whether they’d really need—[reference to conflict between a nuclear nonproliferation or nondiffusion agreement and any U.S. nuclear assistance to France]. President Kennedy: That’s what I thought. We don’t want to go through one of these terrible allied [unclear]— Bohlen: —allied performances on a hypothetical situation. President Kennedy: Right. Bohlen: And, Mr. President, one more thing, you know this resolution on Berlin? President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: —that Zablocki has sponsored.40 President Kennedy: Yeah. Bohlen: Well, I’m going up there on Monday at ten— President Kennedy: OK. Bohlen: —to talk to him. And you’ve seen this draft? President Kennedy: And I asked him to take out this question of German . . . The government . . . the conclusion, the final. Secondly— Bohlen: And that isn’t accurate either because the agreements don’t provide for that. President Kennedy: That’s right. Bohlen: I mean, the agreements are not based on until— President Kennedy: I think that I see no particular disadvantage. [reading text] I don’t see any advantage of it, I don’t see it’s a great disadvantage. Bohlen: No, it’s just that we’ve been trying to get Zablocki to lay off it, but he’s just hot on it. You know, he feels that since we’ve asked [unclear] reservists, he asked that you mention Cuba and Berlin that . . . President Kennedy: Yeah, but I think . . . I just think— Bohlen: If you have one on Cuba, you ought to have one on Berlin. He really wants to pick up some political capital for being the— President Kennedy: With the Germans? Bohlen: No, with his election cam—41 President Kennedy: What [unclear] is German? Tape spools out. 40. Clement J. Zablocki (D-Wisconsin) was on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. 41. Zablocki was up for reelection in November 1962. 222 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 The secretary of the army, Cyrus Vance; the U.S. Army chief of staff, General Earl Wheeler; and the incoming Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Maxwell Taylor, entered the Oval Office next to discuss the possible use of the Army in Mississippi. Kennedy may have wished to tape this conversation; but he only successfully pulls the switch at the end of the conversation, leaving the machine on to catch the strategy session with Attorney General Robert Kennedy and Assistant Attorney General Burke Marshall. 1:18–1:30 P.M. The question still will remain . . . as to whether we call out the guard today, federalize the guard today, put it on an alert . . . Meeting on the Crisis at the University of Mississippi42 The struggle to integrate the University of Mississippi (“Ole Miss”) began quietly in January 1961, just after the inauguration of John Kennedy. Inspired by the words of Kennedy’s inaugural address, James H. Meredith, a 28-year-old Air Force veteran, decided to apply to the leading institution of higher learning in Mississippi. Requesting an application, Meredith described himself as an “American-Mississippi-Negro citizen,” who had been moved by all the changes “in our educational system taking place in the country in this new age.” He noted that the application would probably not come as a surprise to the university and hoped the matter would be “handled in a manner that [would] be complimentary to the University and to the State of Mississippi. Of course, I am the one that will, no doubt, suffer the greatest consequences of this event.” Convinced that his goal of ending segregation at the university was but one part of the great struggle for racial justice, Meredith would later write of his “Divine Responsibility” for ending “White Supremacy” in Mississippi, observing that desegregating Ole Miss was “only the start.” Over the next two years, as Meredith’s case moved through the courts and finally exploded on the grounds of the Mississippi campus, it received national and even international attention, and Kennedy admin- 42. Including President Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Burke Marshall. Tape 24, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Meeting on the Crisis at the University of Mississippi 223 istration officials, including the President and the Attorney General, devoted a great deal of time to managing the crisis. Before the episode ended with the registration and matriculation of Meredith at Ole Miss in the fall of 1962, tense standoffs, rioting, and death would come to the university, and President Kennedy would order thousands of U.S. Army troops to the campus in order to protect Meredith and enforce the rule of law. Meredith’s determination to attend Ole Miss, Mississippi’s steadfast efforts to prevent him from doing so, and the conviction of the President and his aides that it was essential to allow Meredith to enter the university combined to make the episode one of the most celebrated in the history of the civil rights movement. Having decided to transfer from all-black Jackson State to all-white Ole Miss, Meredith recognized that he would need legal assistance, which led him to contact Medgar Evers, Mississippi field secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Evers put him in touch with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, where his case would be handled by Constance Baker Motley, one of the defense fund’s talented young attorneys. With the nation’s leading civil rights organization behind him, Meredith embarked on what would become a tortuous legal battle to enter the segregated institution. After Ole Miss had denied him admission on clearly specious grounds, the struggle moved to the courts, and over the next several months, Meredith continued to seek admission to the university. In September 1962, the federal courts established Meredith’s legal right to attend the institution. But the struggle was far from over, as white Mississippians—politicians, Ole Miss students, local journalists, and ordinary citizens—united to block the young black man from entering their beloved university. Spearheading the movement against the integration of the university was Governor Ross Barnett, who combined the soft-spoken demeanor of the southern planter with the overheated rhetoric of the southern populist. Barnett’s performance during the crisis is not easy to characterize: in speaking to the Kennedys, he was generally conciliatory, searching, or so it seemed, for a way out of the legal and political morass. But the governor was equally capable of appealing to the basest instincts of those who would stand in Meredith’s path. In one of the most highly charged moments of the crisis, Barnett declared to a crowd of 46,000 football fans attending an Ole Miss game: “I love Mississippi. I love our people. I love our customs.” The throng laughed, cried, and roared its approval; the moment, a spectator recalled, resembled “a big Nazi rally.” In showdowns that saw Barnett and his colleagues confront U.S. marshals and Justice Department officials, many Mississippians came to perceive the crisis as pitting the federal Goliath 224 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 against the southern David—or perhaps more aptly, as providing a second chance to fight for the honor of the south against the northern invader. The U.S. Department of Justice was interested in the case from the start, with Burke Marshall, assistant attorney general for civil rights, telling Meredith that the Civil Rights Division was following his efforts and was prepared to do everything it could to assist him. In August 1962, one month before the federal courts had established Meredith’s right to enter the University, the Justice Department had become officially involved in the case, filing an amicus curiae brief, which argued that several delays issued by Judge Ben Cameron of the Fifth Circuit were improper. On September 10 Justice Hugo Black of the U.S. Supreme Court concurred, thus paving the way for the federal order that Meredith be admitted to Ole Miss. While by August 1962 the Justice Department had become an active participant in the case, its role in the person of the Attorney General and others would increase markedly in the days ahead. During the latter part of September, Robert Kennedy would engage in some twenty conversations with Governor Barnett in an effort to work out a plan to register Meredith at Ole Miss, an eventuality the Mississippi politician seemed determined to prevent. Meredith was scheduled to start classes at the university, after registering on September 25. But Governor Ross Barnett prevented Meredith from registering, blocking his entry into the trustee’s room in a state office building in Jackson, where the registration was scheduled to take place. Accompanied by John Doar of the U.S. Justice Department and James McShane, chief U.S. marshal, Meredith was forced to leave after Barnett willfully refused a court order to admit him, declaring he did “hereby finally deny you admission to the University of Mississippi.” The large crowd roared its approval, an onlooker cried “Three cheers for the governor,” and Meredith departed, along with his federal escorts. The following day, September 26, Meredith, again accompanied by Doar and McShane, headed to the Ole Miss campus in Oxford to register for classes. The car carrying the three men, escorted by the highway patrol, was forced to stop a few blocks from the entrance to the campus. Backed up by state troopers, county sheriffs, and a line of patrol cars, Lieutenant Governor Paul Johnson approached Meredith, Doar, and McShane. Filling in for Governor Barnett (low clouds had prevented him from flying up from Jackson to Oxford), Johnson said, “I would like to read this proclamation,” which stated that Mississippi was “interposing” its powers and would deny Meredith admission to the university. Meeting on the Crisis at the University of Mississippi 225 After some gentle pushing between McShane and Johnson, it was apparent the Mississippian would not yield. After they exchanged some words, McShane turned in retreat, and Meredith, Doar, and a retinue of federal marshals departed the scene, prevented once more from fulfilling their court-ordered task. On September 27, the group again tried to register Meredith. This time an elaborate plan had been worked out in discussions between Attorney General Robert Kennedy and Governor Barnett and his friend Tom Watkins, by which the U.S. marshals would draw their guns on Barnett and Paul Johnson in a “show of force.” Once this symbolic act had been completed, the Mississippi politicians would stand aside and allow Meredith to pass (with his escorts) and register for classes. But the plan was thwarted, as some 2,000 people, including students, farmers, and self-styled vigilantes, converged that day on Oxford from all over Mississippi, determined to stop Meredith from registering at the university. A worried Barnett telephoned the Attorney General late in the day to report that he was uncertain if he could maintain order and claimed he had been unable to disperse the crowd. The Attorney General, never comfortable with the planned “show of force,” ordered Meredith’s convoy, which was heading from Memphis to Oxford, to turn back. Less than 50 miles from Oxford, the group turned around, recrossed the Tennessee border, and returned to Memphis. On Friday September 28, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals found Governor Barnett guilty of contempt. Barnett, who did not appear in court, was found guilty in absentia and given until the following Tuesday to clear himself by retracting his proclamation and allowing Meredith to register. In the event he failed to do so, the Court declared Barnett would face arrest and a fine of $10,000 a day for each day he remained in Meredith’s path. On September 29, President Kennedy would become more directly involved in the crisis, having previously allowed the Attorney General to assume primary responsibility in the affair. That morning Robert Kennedy had been on the telephone with Ross Barnett and his chosen intermediary, Thomas Watkins, an attorney from Jackson, Mississippi. The deal reached the day before had fallen through. Now the Mississippians wanted an even larger show of federal force before giving in and letting Meredith register at Ole Miss. The President had to decide whether the U.S. Army or a federalized Mississippi National Guard would be needed to cope with the increasingly tense situation. 226 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Unidentified: . . . the witness is on the telephone, so you know that he says, “I can’t do it any longer.” Second point of it is that even if you have the problem of, on Sunday if you call the guard on Sunday, this is the quietest time in those towns, and you will look like you’re calling the guard when there’s nothing happening. Sunday is the psychologically quiet time, unless they incite somebody to meet. And so it ought, even in Little Rock, there’s no doubt we read about Sunday always looks like everybody was going to church, and the Life magazine pictures will look like the very devil. 43 On the other hand, it’s the easiest time to mobilize, when there’s nobody around. And that’s an advantage. A third critical point, I guess, is, what if the governor chooses, in effect, to call out the guard before you do and again, if he says you’re challenging him on keeping law and order. And he said, “All right, I’ll keep law and order.” For one thing, he’ll tell you if you’d call off Meredith, why there won’t be any disturbance. President Kennedy: But I can’t call off Meredith for that. Unidentified: No. No. I agree with you. President Kennedy: I don’t have the power to call off Meredith. Unidentified: But he’ll put it in the conversation that you’re the one inciting the trouble. President Kennedy: I understand that. Unidentified: But the other point is, do you want him to call the guard? If he says, “Well I could keep law and order, I guess, if I call out the guard,” you have to think of whether he might preempt you on that. President Kennedy: Well, let him do it. Let him do it. I don’t mind that. That’d be all right. Unidentified: You can always federalize the guard [unclear] or even get the chance to. President Kennedy: So now the question really is . . . I think we ought to go ahead [with] my contacts, and your conversation and telegram, with Barnett, number one. Now the question therefore, we know what the result of that’s going to be. The question still will remain with us today as to whether we call out the guard today, federalize the guard today, put it 43. The reference is to the autumn 1957 Little Rock crisis in which the governor of Arkansas, Orval Faubus, defied a federal court order to desegregate Little Rock’s Central High School. Faubus used the National Guard, ostensibly to prevent violence but in reality to block nine African American students from enrolling in the all-white high school. After scenes of hatefilled mobs harassing the students appeared on national television, President Eisenhower called in 1,000 federal troops and 10,000 federalized National Guardsmen in order to protect the young African Americans. Meeting on the Crisis at the University of Mississippi 227 on an alert, start an intermediate step in the guard, or do we wait till Monday and do it? Or do we wait till Barnett sent me an answer? I think I’ll . . . Well, in any case, I’ll wait for Barnett’s answer, I guess. Then I would think unless he sends me such a vague . . . I don’t know what kind of wire he’ll send me. What’ll he say to me, or send me? Robert Kennedy: Maybe he’ll attack Meredith, I suppose. President Kennedy: But he won’t say whether he can keep order, will he? Robert Kennedy: No, I think he’s . . . President Kennedy: He’ll give me an answer saying, “If you will just call off that thing, we can keep order.” So it won’t be a clean answer to me. So we still have to . . . Robert Kennedy: Yeah, but you can of course, you can phrase the telegram in such a way that’s going to make it look difficult. President Kennedy: All right, let’s get this wire written. Let’s get something, Burke [Marshall], as to what I’m supposed to ask him in two or three questions. Burke Marshall: All right. President Kennedy: Now, what about the guard? In other words, if we decide in the next hour or so, after I’ve talked to Barnett, et cetera, getting them there, how would a proclamation be handled . . . [trails off as the President walks away] . . . It will take . . . It will require a federal proclamation to that effect. Unidentified: Right. President Kennedy: I don’t know whether this requires a television speech or not [unclear]. Unidentified: That’s what I hoped [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [Unclear] the purpose and then [unclear]. Unclear exchanges. The voices get distant. Kennedy is heard saying, “The one tomorrow night to the country.” President Kennedy: Evelyn? Burke, do you want to dictate a memorandum for this conversation, guidance, what is it I want to say to Barnett? Robert Kennedy: Well, why don’t we, just the three of us go and . . . President Kennedy: And a telegram? To follow? Unidentified: If we do that [unclear], yes. President Kennedy: OK, then I’ll call . . . If we’ve got to go with the guard, it seems to me we ought to call out [unclear] regiment should go. Unidentified: What’s the word, sir? If you call [unclear]. President Kennedy: Yeah. Unidentified: . . . federalizing the guard . . . 228 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Unidentified: . . . put them in the armories, just about, I’d say that’d be [unclear] use, and I would say the first battle group of the [unclear] the Cavalry Regiment under Colonel Martin. Now, I would suggest that we go ahead and move General Billingslea of the Second Infantry Division Headquarters in there and put him in command . . .44 Unidentified: Under Vance?45 Unidentified: Right, under Vance. Unidentified: None of the others . . . President Kennedy: To do what? To do what? Unidentified: Well, Billingslea would be the Army officer in overall charge. Put him into Memphis right now. President Kennedy: Where is he now? Unidentified: He’s down at Benning now. 46 President Kennedy: I see. Several unclear exchanges follow. Unidentified: No, I agree. We were going to use, first, two M.P. battalions . . . President Kennedy: How many would there be in one? Unidentified: Well, there would be 800 men, all told. And we’d also bring in the battle group from the Second Infantry Division at Fort Benning to give [unclear]. President Kennedy: How about the map of the town and so on? Is there somebody around who knows which way and can direct the guard to go . . . ? Unidentified: Oh, yes. [Unclear] military [unclear] set of maps [unclear]. President Kennedy: Will you have a regular Army fellow with them or will it be Billingslea? Unidentified: You have regular Army. [Several speakers at once.] President Kennedy: Has Billingslea [unclear] made an analysis of what he would do with the various forces? Unidentified: People have been working on . . . Unidentified: Right. And Creighton Abrams will be down . . .47 Unidentified: Maybe he should talk to [unclear]. 44. Colonel Martin is not further identified. General Billingslea is Brigadier General Charles Billingslea. 45. Cyrus R. Vance, secretary of the Army. 46. Fort Benning, Georgia. 47. Major General W. Creighton Abrams was assistant deputy Army chief of staff for military operations. Meeting on the Crisis at the University of Mississippi 229 Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] Unidentified: I can talk to Senator Stennis, if you like, Mr. President, on this thing, but I do think it would be wise to at least bring it up.48 President Kennedy: You or [unclear]? Unidentified: I’d be very happy to do it . . . President Kennedy: I could see him. He’s in Washington, is he? Unidentified: Yes, he’s in Washington. President Kennedy: Well, I’ll see him about five or six. He’s talked to me personally about [unclear] our problem. So [unclear] by that time, I’ll have had my conversation with Barnett, and we’ll send Barnett a wire and hopefully, I’ll get a hold of him. [Unclear.] Unidentified: Maybe you’d better go through an ambassador, instead of yourself. [Lengthy unclear discussion about Barnett follows.] Leaving the machine running, the President walks over to the family quarters at approximately 1:25 P.M. Evelyn Lincoln: Did he go over to the Mansion? Unidentified: He’s in the pool with [unclear]. Lincoln: Oh. [Then about five minutes of distant conversation during which someone says, “Is he coming back?”] President Kennedy apparently decides against a swim. Instead he returns to the Oval Office with the Attorney General. President Kennedy has still not decided whether he will stay in Washington overnight. Slated to meet his friends Lem Billings and Congressman Torbert MacDonald in Newport, Rhode Island, Kennedy is still holding out the option of flying out after he speaks to Ross Barnett. Robert Kennedy: Jack? President Kennedy: I think I’m going to go up there after we give [unclear] depending on when we . . . [Unclear] don’t want some Micks in Newport, Rhode Island [unclear]. [Unclear] going to make a speech tomorrow night. What about getting Sorensen to work? 49 Does he say Arthur’s been working on it?50 Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Can I talk . . . can I get Arthur? Do you want to get Arthur? 48. Senator John Stennis of Mississippi. 49. For the past week, White House counsel Sorensen had been hospitalized with an ulcer. On Friday, Sorensen had sent a memorandum to the White House with his suggestions for handling the crisis. Evidently the President hadn’t yet seen it. Theodore C. Sorensen, Kennedy (New York: Harper & Row, 1965), p. 484. 50. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., was a presidential special assistant. 230 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Unclear discussion. The President walks over to Evelyn Lincoln’s office and has an unclear discussion with her. President Kennedy: Yes, you just have to get him. I just want to speak to him at home. Where is he? At home? Lincoln: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Mr. President? President Kennedy: Yeah. A brief unclear discussion follows. Then the Attorney General launches into a discussion of a new spy case. Approximately 1:30 –1:35 P.M. If you’re caught spying as a diplomat . . . [y]ou can’t try them? Meeting with Robert Kennedy on the Drummond Spy Case51 On September 28, the FBI arrested Yeoman First Class Nelson Cornelius Drummond of the U.S. Navy and charged him with conspiring to pass defense secrets to the Soviet Union. Drummond was apprehended while sitting in a car in Larchmont, New York, with two officials from the Soviet delegation to the United Nations. The FBI agents found eight classified naval documents on the car seat between Drummond and the Soviet officials. Drummond had been under surveillance for some time and had apparently shown unusual signs of wealth for an enlisted man whose monthly salary was $318. Given their diplomatic status, the Soviet officials were not liable to arrest, although they were detained briefly before their identity was established. Shortly after the Russians were apprehended, the U.S. government demanded their expulsion. Robert Kennedy: They called [unclear] give those guys as much time as he can. Tell him, you can’t believe the Russians would do this. You 51. Tape 24, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Meeting with Robert Kennedy on the Drummond Spy Case 231 can’t, you must be . . . You know they brought out the card thing, the Russians are diplomats . . . Unidentified: The Russians would do that. Ughhhh!!! Unidentified: [Unclear] that they’ve misunderstood. They . . . Robert Kennedy: It’s all about getting those two men. President Kennedy: What? Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: What were they doing? Robert Kennedy: We got the chief petty officer [unclear] who gave them a lot of valuable information. [Unclear] since 1958. President Kennedy: Why, was he stationed in Moscow, was he for awhile? Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] And he’s been living way above his means. [Unclear.] So they got on him. President Kennedy: How did they catch him? Robert Kennedy: They started following him. He spent a lot of money and then he [unclear] couldn’t get any good stuff on the documents. So when he was short of money, they would watch him [unclear]. And they followed . . . thought he was going to go last week, so they followed all the way out [unclear]. Sometimes he’d drive at [unclear] miles an hour. But they had cars stationed all the way. And then they went finally chasing him to Westchester. [Unclear] he was with the third secretary of the delegation of the Soviet Union. President Kennedy: At the U.N. or here? Robert Kennedy: The U.N. President Kennedy: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: They were sitting in the car, with the documents, with the dough. President Kennedy: They just arrested them? Robert Kennedy: So, they called me at once because they thought that [unclear] speak Russian [unclear]. They asked for diplomatic immunity. President Kennedy: Yes. Robert Kennedy: Said [unclear] could not believe that the Soviet Union would be involved. You would think you must be personally [unclear] the Russians. We can’t let you go. So they took him down. [Unclear] had to wait until someone came down. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] United Nations delegation about 4:30 this morning. President Kennedy: Did what? Robert Kennedy: [Unclear] and then they just let them go. 232 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 President Kennedy: They let them go? Why? Robert Kennedy: Because they got diplomatic immunity. President Kennedy: If you’re caught spying as a diplomat, all you do is expel them? You can’t try them? Robert Kennedy: [Unclear] cause the guy confessed. President Kennedy: There isn’t anything you can do under law to a guy at an embassy who is caught spying? Have any of our people been imprisoned? Robert Kennedy: No. They only get expelled. [Unclear] at the United Nations. That’s the way we do it all [unclear] now. Being stationed here in the United States. You know, those other two fellows have been complaining. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: What about . . . what’s Kenny O’Donnell [say] about this? The President turned off the machine at about 1:35. He then called Mrs. Kennedy, perhaps to discuss the prospects of his joining her in Newport, Rhode Island, at the end of the day. A few minutes later, Arthur Schlesinger reached the White House. He was just in time to witness the President’s next telephone conversation with the Governor of Mississippi. An air of unreal humor pervaded the Oval Office. When he was told that Ross Barnett was on the phone Kennedy affected the manner of a ring announcer: “And now—Governor Ross Barnett.” “Go get him, Johnny Boy,” replied the Attorney General.52 52. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., recounted this scene in Robert Kennedy and His Times (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1978), p. 344. Soon afterward the U.S. government demanded the expulsion of the two Russians. On July 19, 1963, Drummond was convicted of conspiring to commit espionage for the Soviet Union, and on August 15, 1963, he was sentenced to life imprisonment. The judge, who spoke of Drummond’s “heinous” crime, could have imposed the death penalty, but said he decided on a life sentence out of compassion for the ex-sailor’s wife and parents. Conversation with Ross Barnett 233 2:00 P.M. [T]he problem is, Governor, that I got my responsibility, just like you have yours . . . Conversation with Ross Barnett53 President Kennedy: . . . Mississippi. Unidentified: Yes, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Thank you. Unidentified: Hello. Hello. President Kennedy: . . . calling, if they want to know who’s calling. Unidentified: All right. Fine, Mr. President. [Long pause.] President Kennedy: Hello. Unidentified: All right. President Kennedy: Hello? Hello, Governor? Ross Barnett: All right. Yes. President Kennedy: How are you? Barnett: Is this . . . President Kennedy: This is the President, uh . . . Barnett: Oh. Well, Mr. President [unclear]. President Kennedy: Well, I’m glad to talk to you, Governor. I am concerned about this situation down there, as I know . . . Barnett: Oh, I should say I am concerned about it, Mr. President. It’s a horrible situation. President Kennedy: Well, now, here’s my problem, Governor. Barnett: [Unclear.] Yes. President Kennedy: Listen, I didn’t put him in the university, but on the other hand, under the Constitution . . . I have to carry out the orders, carry that order out, and I don’t, I don’t want to do it in any way that causes difficulty to you or to anyone else. But I’ve go to do it. Now, I’d like to get your help in doing that. Barnett: Yes. Well, uh, have you talked with Attorney General this morning? President Kennedy: Yeah. I talked to him and in fact, I just met with him for about an hour, and we went over the situation. 53. Dictabelt 4A1, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 234 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Barnett: Did he and Mr. Watkins have a talk this morning, Tom Watkins, the lawyer from Jackson, or not?54 President Kennedy: Yes, he talked to Tom Watkins, he told me. Barnett: Yes, sir. Well, I don’t know what . . . I haven’t had a chance to talk with him . . . President Kennedy: Now just wait . . . just one minute because I got the Attorney General in the outer office, and I’ll just speak to him. Barnett: All right. [Long pause.] President Kennedy: Hello, Governor? Barnett: Yes. Hold on. President Kennedy: I just talked to the Attorney General. Now, he said that he talked to Mr. Watkins . . . Barnett: Yes. President Kennedy: . . . and the problem is as to whether we can get some help in getting this fellow in this week. Barnett: Yes. President Kennedy: Now, evidently we couldn’t, the Attorney General didn’t feel that he and Mr. Watkins had reached any final agreement on that. Barnett: Well, Mr. President, Mr. Watkins is going to fly up there early tomorrow morning. President Kennedy: Right. Barnett: And could you gentlemen talk with him tomorrow? You . . . President Kennedy: Yes, I will have the Attorney General talk to him and then . . . Barnett: Yes. President Kennedy: . . . after they’ve finished talking I’ll talk to the Attorney General . . . Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: . . . on the phone and then if he feels it’s useful for me to meet with him . . . Barnett: I thought . . . President Kennedy: . . . I’ll do that. Barnett: I thought they were making some progress. I didn’t know. President Kennedy: Well, now . . . Barnett: I couldn’t say, you know. President Kennedy: . . . he and Mr. Watkins, they can meet tomorrow. Now, the difficulty is, we got two or three problems. In the first 54. Thomas H. Watkins was the Mississippi lawyer and Barnett aide who served as an intermediary in the crisis. Conversation with Ross Barnett 235 place, what can we do to . . . First place is the court’s order to you, which I guess is, you’re given until Tuesday. What is your feeling on that? Barnett: Well, I want . . . President Kennedy: What’s your position on that? Barnett: . . . to think it over, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Right. Barnett: It’s a serious matter, now that I want to think it over a few days. Until Tuesday, anyway. President Kennedy: All right. Well, now let me say this . . . Barnett: You know what I am up against, Mr. President. I took an oath, you know, to abide by the laws of this state— President Kennedy: That’s right. Barnett: —and our constitution here and the Constitution of the United States. I’m, I’m on the spot here, you know. President Kennedy: Well, now you’ve got . . . Barnett: I, I’ve taken an oath to do that, and you know what our laws are with reference to . . . President Kennedy: Yes, I understand that. Well, now we’ve got the . . . Barnett: . . . and we have a statute that was enacted a couple of weeks ago stating positively that no one who had been convicted of a crime or, uh, whether the criminal action pending against them would not be eligible for any of the institutions of higher learning. And that’s our law, and it seemed like the Court of Appeal didn’t pay any attention to that.55 President Kennedy: Right. Well, of course . . . Barnett: And . . . President Kennedy: . . . the problem is, Governor, that I got my responsibility, just like you have yours . . . Barnett: Well, that’s true. I . . . President Kennedy: . . . and my responsibility, of course, is to the . . . Barnett: . . . I realize that, and I appreciate that so much. President Kennedy: Well, now here’s the thing, Governor. I will, the Attorney General can talk to Mr. Watkins tomorrow. What I want, would like to do is to try to work this out in an amicable way. We don’t want a lot of people down there getting hurt . . . 55. On September 20, Meredith was found guilty in absentia of false voter registration and was fined $100 and costs and sentenced to one year in the Hinds County jail. The conviction on this clearly specious charge occurred the same day that Mississippi Senate Bill 1501 passed the legislature. The bill barred persons guilty of a criminal offense from attending state institutions of higher learning. In addition, on 20 September, Governor Barnett was appointed registrar of the university. Five days later, the Board of Trustees rescinded the appointment. 236 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Barnett: Oh, that’s right . . . President Kennedy: . . . and we don’t want to have a . . . You know it’s very easy to . . . Barnett: Mr. President, let me say this. They’re calling, calling me and others from all over the state, wanting to bring a thousand, wanting to bring 500, and 200, and all such as that, you know. We don’t want such as that. President Kennedy: I know. Well, we don’t want to have a, we don’t want to have a lot of people getting hurt or killed down there. Barnett: Why, that’s, that’s correct. Mr. President, let me say this. Mr. Watkins is really an A-1 lawyer, an honorable man, has the respect and the confidence of every lawyer in America who knows him. He’s of the law firm of Watkins and Eager. They’ve had an “A” rating for many, many years, and I believe this, that he can help solve this problem. President Kennedy: Well, I will, the Attorney General will see Mr. Watkins tomorrow, and then I, after the Attorney General and Mr. Watkins are finished then, I will be back in touch with you. Barnett: All right. All right. I’ll appreciate it so much, now, and there . . . Watkins’ll leave here in the morning, and I’ll have him to get into touch with the Attorney General as to when he can see him tomorrow. President Kennedy: Yeah, he’ll see him and . . . Barnett: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: . . . .we will, then you and I’ll be back and talk again. Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: Thank you. Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: OK. Barnett: I appreciate your interest in our poultry program and all those things. President Kennedy: Well, we’re . . . [laughs softly]. Barnett: Thank you so much. President Kennedy: OK, Governor. Thank you. Barnett: Yes, sir. All right now. President Kennedy: Bye now. Barnett: Thank you. Bye. Conversation with Theodore Sorensen 237 2:25 P.M. [G]ive me some thoughts . . . the speech, is that right? Conversation with Theodore Sorensen56 Theodore Sorensen had been hospitalized with an ulcer earlier in the week. Kennedy telephoned him at the hospital, requesting that he provide some suggestions for a televised speech on the Mississippi crisis that Kennedy thought he might have to deliver Sunday night. Sorensen noted that Republicans were taking a segregationist line, which would help the President avoid a partisan attack. (He would be criticized by both sides.) With some irony, Kennedy himself remarked that this strict Republican line was not one Eisenhower had followed in the Little Rock crisis (when the Republican President intervened with federal troops). Sorensen clarified his point, noting that he meant the Republicans in Alabama. President Kennedy: . . . sort of a South Caro— Theodore Sorensen: . . . [word unintelligible] campaign going on in Alabama, and the Republicans are taking the straight Ross Barnett line and so forth. President Kennedy: Well, except Eisenhower, they . . . [laughs]. Eisenhower’s taking a little away from them. Sorensen: No, I mean the Republicans in Alabama. President Kennedy: Yeah, but I mean, well I, you, and Burke can talk, because the legal . . . our legal obligations on Tuesday affect when we go with this guard; that’s the point.57 Sorensen: Yeah. President Kennedy: OK, and you’re thinking about, give me some thoughts . . . the speech, is that right? Sorensen: Right. With the Mississippi situation very much unresolved, the President’s hopes to salvage what was left of his Newport weekend were dimming. 56. Dictabelt 4A2, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 57. Burke Marshall was assistant attorney general for the Civil Rights Division. 238 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 LeMoyne Billings, Kennedy’s roommate at Choate and a Kennedy family intimate since 1934, called during the afternoon Mississippi discussions to learn that he probably wouldn’t be seeing his friend up in Newport.58 Billings was having his own difficulties getting there. 2:30 P.M. I guess it’s not going too well . . . [f]or you because of the Mississippi deal. Conversation with LeMoyne Billings59 Unidentified: Mrs. Lincoln? Lincoln: Um-hm. Unidentified: Mr. Lem Billings. Lincoln: Could you hold just one minute? Unidentified: Sure. [Short pause.] President Kennedy: Lem? Hello. Unidentified: There you are. President Kennedy: Lem? LeMoyne Billings: Hello. President Kennedy: Where are you? Billings: Oh. Hi. I’m a . . . I’ve missed my damn plane, so I’m going to have to shoot up to Boston and back to Providence. President Kennedy: Oh, I see. Well, I’m still . . . doesn’t look like I may be able to go there. Billings: Oh, go at all? President Kennedy: That’s right. Billings: Oh, I better not go until . . . until you know. President Kennedy: OK. You’re in a . . . Just leave your message where we can— Billings: I’m at LaGuardia now. When do you think you’d know? Or you don’t know? 58. Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and his Times, p. 13. 59. Dictabelt 4B1, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Conversation with Ross Barnett 239 President Kennedy: Well, it looks like it will be sometime . . . Why don’t you go back into New York? Billings: All right. President Kennedy: And then I will be in touch with you. Billings: OK. Good. President Kennedy: Because I . . . because you can always come up later. Billings: OK. As I said, I guess it’s not going too well, huh? President Kennedy: Where? Billings: For you, because of the Mississippi deal. President Kennedy: Yeah. Billings: OK. I’ll see you later. President Kennedy: OK. Bye. 2:50 P.M. Well . . . as I understand it, Governor, you would do everything you can to maintain law and order. Conversation with Ross Barnett60 The President and the Attorney General speak to Governor Barnett, making clear that their primary objective is to maintain order and that they expect the governor to work to that end. Barnett hopes his friend, Tom Watkins, will be able to help hammer out a solution to the problem caused by Meredith’s determination to register. The Attorney General tells Barnett that his conversations with Watkins (they had spoken twice that day) have been unhelpful, noting Watkins’s suggestion that Meredith register secretly at Jackson on Monday, instead of at the Oxford campus. As Barnett had actually initiated the plan through Watkins, he finds it attractive, noting an earlier ruling had ordered it. In addition, the plan would permit him to demonstrate his unyielding opposition to desegregation (he almost certainly planned a 60. President Kennedy and Governor Barnett were later joined by Robert Kennedy. Dictabelt 4C, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 240 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 public stand to prevent Meredith’s registration), and also because he could claim the federal government had decided by stealth to enroll Meredith anyway. President Kennedy: Hello. Ross Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: Governor. Barnett: Mr. President. Yes, sir. President Kennedy: Oh, will you talk to Mr. Watkins? The Attorney General did. Barnett: No, I haven’t talked with him now in a couple of hours . . . President Kennedy: Oh. Well, now . . . Barnett: . . . I talked with him though about two hours ago, Mr. President, and he said he was going to talk with the Attorney General and go see him tomorrow morning. President Kennedy: Oh. Well, in the meanwhile, then, the Attorney General talked to Mr. Watkins to see whether there was some . . . Wait just a second. The Attorney General’s right here. He’ll tell you what he talked to Watkins and Watkins was going to talk to you. Wait a minute. Barnett: All right. All right. President Kennedy: He’ll come right on the other phone. Barnett: Yeah, sure. President Kennedy: Wait just a [unclear]. Barnett: All right. All right. Robert Kennedy: Hello? Barnett: Yes, sir, General. How are you? Robert Kennedy: Fine, Governor. How are you? Barnett: Fine, fine. Robert Kennedy: I talked to Mr. Watkins, you know, earlier this morning. Barnett: Oh, yes? Robert Kennedy: And he really did not have much of a suggestion. He had mentioned yesterday the possibility of our coming in tomorrow Monday with marshals, and . . . Barnett: Yes. Robert Kennedy: . . . that under our understanding for Thursday that the marshals would show up and that you and the others would step aside and Mr. Meredith would come into the university. Well, he felt that when he mentioned he talked to me today, he said that he thought that would create some problems, which they could not over- Conversation with Ross Barnett 241 come. And he suggested at that time, some alternatives which were not very satisfactory. Barnett: Well . . . Robert Kennedy: And then he mentioned the fact that he might come up early tomorrow morning. Barnett: Well . . . Robert Kennedy: I called him back after I heard the President’s conversation with you . . . Barnett: Yes. Robert Kennedy: . . . and said that I thought I’d be glad to see him, but I thought that unless we had some real basis for some understanding and working out this very very difficult problem that really he was wasting his time; and that one of the basic requirements, in my judgment, was the maintenance of law and order, and that would require some very strong and vocal action by you, yourself. . . . Barnett: Well, I’m certainly going to try to maintain law and order, Mr . . . Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: . . . General, just the very best way that I can. Robert Kennedy: But in the . . . Barnett: I, I talked with the student body the other day and told them to really, to have control of the physical and mental faculties. But it didn’t do much good it seemed like. Robert Kennedy: Well . . . Barnett: They cheered and carried on, but then they just started raving and carrying on, you know. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. I think, Governor, that if we . . . as a very minimum and as a start, an order by you and the state that people could not congregate in Oxford now in groups of three or five, larger than groups of three or five; the second, to get the school authorities to issue instructions to the students that if they congregate in groups that they are liable for expulsion. If that was done this afternoon, I think that would be a big step forward. And that anybody carrying an arm or a, arms or a club, or anything like that would be liable to punishment. Barnett: Well . . . Robert Kennedy: Those kind of steps by you . . . Barnett: Yes. Robert Kennedy: . . . would indicate an interest in maintaining law and order. Barnett: Well, General, I certainly, I’ll tell the chancellor to announce to all the students to keep law and order and to keep cool 242 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 heads. But the trouble is not only the students, but it’s so many thousands of outsiders will be there. Robert Kennedy: Yes, but I think, if you said, Governor, not just to . . . Barnett: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: . . . keep cool heads, but that they couldn’t congregate. Barnett: How many do you figure on sending down? Robert Kennedy: Well, that’s a . . . I think that the President had some questions for you that he thought that maybe if we could get some answers to them that . . . Barnett: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: . . . that would be what [it would] depend [on]. [speaking to President Kennedy in the room] Mr. President . . . Barnett: Mr. General, why don’t you . . . I believe that if you and Tom Watkins could get together it would help a lot. He’s a very reasonable man, and, and he’s, he knows, he knows the situation down here as well as anybody living. If you all could get together tomorrow morning, I really think that it would pay. I think it would help. Robert Kennedy: Well, he doesn’t have any suggestions, he just told me, Mr. Governor. Barnett: Yes. Well, I . . . Robert Kennedy: So I don’t know what . . . Barnett: . . . I thought he did have. Robert Kennedy: Well, he didn’t. I mean he said something about sending Meredith, sneaking him into Jackson and getting him registered while all of you were up at . . . Barnett: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: . . . at Oxford. But that doesn’t make much sense, does it? Barnett: Well, I don’t know. Why? Why doesn’t it? That’s where they’d ordered him to go at first, you know. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: You see, there’s an order on the minutes, Mr. General, for him to register . . . Robert Kennedy: Well, would you . . . Barnett: . . . [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: . . . you’d get . . . As I understand it, you’d get everybody up at Oxford, and then we’d, and then . . . Barnett: Oh, well, that’s exactly what Tom Watkins must have had in mind, you know. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: Let me talk with Tom and call you back in a little while. Conversation with Ross Barnett 243 He’s not but a block from me. That’s what he had in mind, I think. And, of course, you know how it is in Jackson. Monday they, no school’s going on here, you know, and . . . Uh, of course nobody would be anticipating anyone coming here, you know. Robert Kennedy: Are you going up to Oxford on Monday? Is that your plan? Barnett: Well, that’s what I planned to do, yes, sir. The lieutenant governor and I, both, I guess, we’ll have to be up there to try to keep order, you know. And, we’re to be up there pretty early Monday morning. Robert Kennedy: Will you? Barnett: We’ll be up there, unless you ask us not to. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: Well, like, you see, we’ll be up there and that’s where all the people will be. Yeah. I thought you and Watkins were going to talk about that kind of a situation, then what’d be the best thing to do under those conditions, you know. Robert Kennedy: Yeah, I think, Governor, that the President has some, uh, questions that he wanted some answers to . . . Barnett: Well . . . Robert Kennedy: . . . make his own determination. Barnett: . . . that’s right. He wanted to know if I would obey the orders of the court, and I told him I, I’d have to do some . . . study that over. That’s a serious thing. I’ve taken an oath to abide by the laws of this state and our state constitution and the Constitution of the United States. And, General, how can I violate my oath of office? How can I do that and live with the people of Mississippi? You know, they’re expecting me to keep my word. That’s what I’m up against, and I don’t understand why the court, why the court wouldn’t understand that. President Kennedy: Oh, Governor, this is the President speaking. Barnett: Yes, sir, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Now it’s, I know that . . . your feeling about the law of Mississippi and the fact that you don’t want to carry out that court order. What we really want to have from you, though, is some understanding about whether the state police will maintain law and order. We understand your feeling about the court order . . . Barnett: Yes. President Kennedy: . . . and your disagreement with it. But what we’re concerned about is how much violence [there] is going to be and what kind of action we’ll have to take to prevent it. And I’d like to get assurances from you that the state police down there will take positive action to maintain law and order. 244 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Barnett: Oh, they’ll do that. President Kennedy: Then we’ll know what we have to do. Barnett: They’ll, they’ll take positive action, Mr. President, to maintain law and order as best we can. President Kennedy: And now, how good is . . . Barnett: We’ll have 220 highway patrolmen . . . President Kennedy: Right. Barnett: . . . and they’ll absolutely be unarmed. President Kennedy: I understa— Barnett: Not a one of them’ll be armed. President Kennedy: Well, no, but the problem is, well, what can they do to maintain law and order and prevent the gathering of a mob and action taken by the mob? What can they do? Can they stop that? Barnett: Well, they’ll do their best to. They’ll do everything in their power to stop it. President Kennedy: Now, what about the suggestions made by the Attorney General in regard to not permitting people to congregate and start a mob? Barnett: Well, we’ll do our best to, to keep them from congregating, but that’s hard to do, you know. President Kennedy: Well, they just tell them to move along. Barnett: When they start moving up on the sidewalks and different sides of the streets, what are you going to do about it? President Kennedy: Well, now, as I understand it, Governor, you would do everything you can to maintain law and order. Barnett: I, I, I’ll do everything in my power to maintain order . . . President Kennedy: Right. Now . . . Barnett: . . . and peace. We don’t want any shooting down here. President Kennedy: I understand. Now, Governor, what about, can you maintain this order? Barnett: Well, I don’t know. President Kennedy: Yes. Barnett: That’s what I’m worried about, you see. I don’t know whether I can or not. President Kennedy: Right. Barnett: I couldn’t have the other afternoon.61 61. Barnett is undoubtedly referring to 27 September, when some 2,000 people, including students, farmers, and self-styled vigilantes, converged on Oxford from all over Mississippi, intent on stopping Meredith from registering. A worried Barnett telephoned the Attorney Conversation with Ross Barnett 245 President Kennedy: You couldn’t have? Barnett: There was such a mob there, it would have been impossible. President Kennedy: I see. Barnett: There were men in there with trucks and shotguns, and all such as that. Not a lot of them, but some, we saw, and certain people were just, they were just enraged. President Kennedy: Well, now, will you talk . . . Barnett: You just don’t understand the situation down here. President Kennedy: Well, the only thing is I got my responsibility. Barnett: I know you do. President Kennedy: This is not my order; I just have to carry it out. So I want to get together and try to do it with you in a way which is the most satisfactory and causes the least chance of damage to people in Mississippi. That’s my interest. Barnett: That’s right. Would you be willing to wait awhile and let the people cool off on the whole thing? President Kennedy: Till how long? Barnett: Couldn’t you make a statement to the effect, Mr. President, Mr. General, that under the circumstances existing in Mississippi, that, uh, there’ll be bloodshed; you want to protect the life of, of, of James Meredith and all other people? And under the circumstances at this time, it just wouldn’t be fair to him or others to try to register him at this time. President Kennedy: Well, then at what time would it be fair? Barnett: Well, we, we could wait a, I don’t know. President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: It might be in, uh, two or three weeks, it might cool off a little. President Kennedy: Well, would you undertake to register him in two weeks? Barnett: Well, I, you know I can’t undertake to register him myself . . . President Kennedy: I see. Barnett: . . . but you all might make some progress that way, you know. President Kennedy: [Laughs.] Yeah. Well, we’d be faced with, unless we had your support . . . Barnett: You see . . . President Kennedy: . . . and assurance, we’d be . . . General that day to report that he was uncertain if he could maintain order, claiming he could not disperse the crowd. 246 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 Barnett: . . . I say I’m going to, I’m going to cooperate. I might not know when you’re going to register him, you know. President Kennedy: I see. Well, now, Governor, why don’t, do you want to talk to Mr. Watkins? Barnett: I might not know that, what your plans were, you see. President Kennedy: Do you want to, do you want to talk to Mr. Watkins then . . . Barnett: I’ll be delighted to talk to him, we’ll call you back. President Kennedy: OK, good. Barnett: Call the General back. President Kennedy: Yeah, call the General, and then I’ll be around. Barnett: All right. I appreciate it so much . . . President Kennedy: Thanks, Governor. Barnett: . . . and I thank you for this call. President Kennedy: Thank you, Governor. Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: Right. Barnett: Bye. President Kennedy finally goes to the swimming pool. Burke Marshall and the Attorney General returned to the Justice Department, where they put finishing touches to two important telegrams, one to Louis Oberdorfer and the Justice Department’s team in Oxford and the other on behalf of the President to Governor Barnett. The Justice Department ordered 300 deputy marshals to move to the campus at Oxford at 3:00 P.M., September 30, by helicopter.62 The plan was to lay the groundwork so that Meredith could peacefully register at the Lyceum administration building on Monday. The gist of the President’s wire was quite different. The White House was prepared to accept the plan for Meredith’s sneak registration at the university’s Jackson, Mississippi, campus on Monday while the Governor and the Lieutenant Governor made their public stand in Oxford. A little after 7:12 P.M. on September 29, Barnett and the President spoke again, their third conversation of the day.63 Beyond discussing the 62. Angie Novello to Evelyn Lincoln, 29 September 1962, with attachment, Robert F. Kennedy, Personal Correspondence, Civil Rights, Mississippi, Box 11. 63. Due to a technical error with the recording system, this third conversation was not recorded. An approximate time for this conversation comes from a memo written by Robert Conversation with Torbert MacDonald 247 Monday plan for Meredith’s sneak registration, Barnett assured Kennedy that the highway patrol would maintain law and order and guarantee Meredith’s safety. The Kennedy administration, it seemed, had worked out a deal. Robert Kennedy was with his brother in the White House at the time of the call and then left for the night. Although a political solution now seemed likely, Kennedy knew he wouldn’t be going to Newport this weekend. He called an old friend, Congressman Torbert MacDonald of Massachusetts, who he hoped would substitute for him at a political event there. 7:36 P.M. [Y]ou have to make a judgment about whether these trips are worthwhile or those speeches are worthwhile. Conversation with Torbert MacDonald64 Evelyn Lincoln: Hello? Unidentified: I have Congressman MacDonald for the President, in Malden. [Pause.] President Kennedy: Hello. Hello? Torbert MacDonald: Hello, Mr. President. President Kennedy: How are you doing? MacDonald: Oh, all right. How are you? President Kennedy: Where are you? Up at York? MacDonald: Oh, no. No, I’m in Malden, Jack. President Kennedy: Oh, I see. MacDonald: Yeah. President Kennedy: Listen. Bill was down here this weekend. I didn’t know whether you’d be able to come down. Kennedy’s secretary Angela Novello in February 1963 (see Novello to Burke Marshall, 19 February 1963, Robert Kennedy, Mississippi File). At 7:12 Barnett called the Justice Department to alert Robert Kennedy that he would be in his office for the next 10 to 15 minutes. Burke Marshall relayed this message to the Attorney General, who was with his brother at the White House. Robert Kennedy responded that Barnett should be told that “he was out of the office for a few minutes and to find out if this call was in answer to the wire sent by the President.” 64. Dictabelt 4D2, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 248 S AT U R DAY, S E P T E M B E R 29, 1962 MacDonald: Oh. President Kennedy: And get Sam Atkinson. MacDonald: Well, not until the first of the week. President Kennedy: Oh, you can’t? MacDonald: No. President Kennedy: You can’t get away there tomorrow? MacDonald: No. President Kennedy: Oh. OK. MacDonald: How long is he going— President Kennedy: Well, he’s got to go back to . . . work tomorrow night, late. What do you got tomorrow? MacDonald: Well, you know, it’s been a full week. President Kennedy: I know. Oh, I know you’ve had . . . I agree with that. MacDonald: And, uh— President Kennedy: You have to speak tomorrow? MacDonald: Yeah. President Kennedy: Oh. MacDonald: And . . . they’ve sent some stuff up for me that has been postponed during the week, you know. President Kennedy: Yeah, yeah. MacDonald: And so . . . I’d love to . . . not until . . . What time is . . . he going back? President Kennedy: Well, he’d probably go back . . . I don’t know. You know, in time to get there at class Monday morning. But I didn’t know whether you could sort of arrange your schedule, because it seems to me this is going to be one of those things that you wouldn’t want to miss. MacDonald: I’d certainly . . . I’d certainly try to do it— President Kennedy: Well, why don’t you check on it and then give me a call in the morning? MacDonald: All right. I will. President Kennedy: Will you be home in the morning? MacDonald: Yes. President Kennedy: Well, I . . . My judgment would be . . . based on long years of . . . Bill’s been down here today. I’ve just talked to him. And my judgment would be that it . . . it’s worth the trip. MacDonald: Well, it’s worth the trip if I can do the trip. President Kennedy: Yeah, but, well, you have to make a judgment about whether these trips are worthwhile or those speeches are worthwhile. MacDonald: Well, it’s— President Kennedy: [laughing] OK. Conversation with Torbert MacDonald 249 MacDonald: It isn’t just that, Mr. President. President Kennedy: I understand. Oh, I understand. But I just wanted to be sure that you knew about it. MacDonald: The spirit is willing— President Kennedy: OK. MacDonald: —and of course— President Kennedy: Yeah, I know. MacDonald: I think this will be nice. President Kennedy: OK. Well, in any case— MacDonald: You really want me to call you tomorrow? President Kennedy: Well, no. But I think it would be worth doing. MacDonald: Well, how about in the afternoon or night tomorrow? President Kennedy: Yeah. Can you come down tomorrow? MacDonald: Well, late afternoon, maybe. Yes. President Kennedy: You mean when you get finished? MacDonald: Well, I figure that I could get out of here by about four, five o’clock in the afternoon— President Kennedy: Yeah. That’s fine. Good. MacDonald: All right. President Kennedy: OK. I’ll call you. I’ll give you a call in the morning. You can get a hold of [unclear] Atkinson. MacDonald: All right. President Kennedy: OK. Bye now. The President went to the Mansion and had some ice cream sent up. He was settling into his evening’s activities when his brother called with bad news. The deal with Barnett was off. For the next two hours, he was on the telephone with Robert Kennedy and deputy press secretary, Andrew Hatcher. At one point the President even roused Theodore Sorensen from his hospital bed to draft a speech he could use if he decided to call in troops. Ultimately, the President decided to federalize the National Guard, an eventuality already under consideration. At 11:50 P.M., he sent word to the Secret Service that he wanted to be notified when the Justice Department had sent over the proclamation, which he intended to sign that night. At 11:58 P.M., Kennedy sat down with Norbert Schlei, head of the Office of Legal Counsel, in the Oval Room of the family quarters and signed Proclamation 3497, which ordered those who were obstructing justice in Mississippi “to cease and desist therefrom and to retire peaceably forthwith.” He then signed an executive order placing the Mississippi National Guard units under federal control. Kennedy inquired whether these docu- 250 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 ments were the same as those Eisenhower had signed in 1957 in the Little Rock case. Schlei said they were, noting the wording had been improved. As Schlei prepared to leave, Kennedy tapped the table, pointing out that it had belonged to General Ulysses S. Grant. Not wanting to antagonize the South, Kennedy advised Schlei not to mention Grant’s table to the press. The South was already agitated. As Kennedy directed the drawing up of the proclamation, Governor Barnett attended an Ole Miss football game at Jackson Memorial Stadium, where 46,000 fans cheered not only for their beloved university against the Kentucky Wildcats but also for their Governor. It was then that Barnett, responding to the chant of “We want Ross,” strode onto the floodlit field, stepped to the microphone, and declared, “I love Mississippi. I love her people. I love our customs.” Just after midnight, President Kennedy went to sleep. The crisis he had predicted that fall was starting, but it was starting in Oxford, Mississippi, not West Berlin. Sunday, September 30–Monday, October 1, 1962 After attending mass at St. Stephen’s Church, the President hosted a lunch for the British foreign secretary, Lord Home, at the White House. The Anglo-American agenda was full. But Berlin, the Congo, and Cuba dominated the conversation. The discussion continued for a while after lunch. For the moment, Mississippi was the most dangerous place in the world for the federal government. After the British delegation left, Kennedy turned his principal attention to the problem of safely registering an African American, James Meredith, at the all-white University of Mississippi in Oxford. Governor Barnett had come up with a new plan for ending this stalemate peacefully. He proposed that Meredith be brought to the campus surrounded by a large group of federal agents. Barnett was looking for a dramatic way to save face. The defenders of a white Ole Miss would attempt to stare down Meredith but would then retreat in the face of a much larger force. The Attorney General, to whom the Governor had suggested the “show of force” scheme, turned it down. Robert Kennedy then threatened Barnett with making public that the Governor had been negotiating with the Kennedy brothers behind the backs of the segregationists. The Attorney General’s threat resulted in a new Barnett scheme. He suggested that the federal government sneak Meredith onto the campus that afternoon. Barnett would then announce in a speech that he had Meeting on Civil Rights 251 been tricked and Meredith was on campus. The President and Robert Kennedy preferred this plan. At 6:00 P.M., James Meredith flew into Oxford accompanied by some Justice Department officials. Before his arrival, a force of 300 U.S. marshals had assembled around the Lyceum, the main administration building on campus. The deputy attorney general, Nicholas Katzenbach, who was in charge of operations on the campus, had expected that Meredith would be able to register that day. But this was impossible. So, as Governor Barnett issued a press release that Meredith was on campus, U.S. marshals remained posted around the Lyceum, while some distance away, in the dormitory Baxter Hall, Meredith was under federal protective guard for the night. The goal was to keep him safe so that he could register the next morning. At 10:00 P.M., the President spoke to the nation. He had delayed his speech two hours to await word that Meredith was safely on campus. From that moment on, the unexpected displaced the expected. Approximately 10:40 P.M.–1:00 A.M. I haven’t had such an interesting time since the Bay of Pigs. Meeting on Civil Rights1 “Let us preserve both the law and the peace, and then, healing those wounds that are within we can turn to the greater crises that are without and stand united as one people in our pledge to man’s freedom.” With those words, President Kennedy ended his televised address to the nation on the situation in Mississippi. The speech was intended to signal a victory in James Meredith’s struggle to be the first African American to register at the University of Mississippi. Yet words less relevant to a crisis have seldom been spoken by a U.S. president. As the President began his speech at 10:00 P.M., Eastern Standard Time, the situation was already unraveling in Oxford, Mississippi. James Meredith had arrived on campus with a large escort of U.S. marshals two hours earlier. According to an arrangement fixed earlier in 1. Including President Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Burke Marshall, Lawrence O’Brien, Kenneth O’Donnell, and Theodore Sorensen. Tapes 26 and 26A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 252 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 the day, Kennedy called Mississippi governor Ross Barnett, who was expected to announce ruefully that the state of Mississippi had been “physically overpowered” and Meredith was on campus. Kennedy was then supposed to give a conciliatory speech that stressed the victory of the rule of law. The rule of law was not winning where it counted this night, on the streets of Oxford. In the interval between the Governor’s concession speech and Kennedy’s address, all hell broke out at the university. A crowd of 2,500 surged toward the Lyceum, the university’s central administrative center. With 300 federalized U.S. marshals and handpicked border patrol officers now on campus and ringing the Lyceum, the Governor’s representatives on campus decided to withdraw the Mississippi highway patrol officers who had given a semblance of calm to the campus in the tense days since the appeals court had ordered Barnett to admit Meredith. Sensing a shift in the balance of power, the crowd surged forward, and in self-defense the federal marshals launched a volley of tear gas canisters. “I would like to take this occasion to express the thanks of this nation to those southerners who have contributed to the progress of our democratic development. . . . ” A cloud of tear gas was rising from the campus and Kennedy gave this discordant speech. Aides had tried to stop him as news of the growing riot reached the White House. But the telecast had begun. In the half-hour following the speech, the news from Mississippi has gotten progressively worse. A jerry-built communications set-up relayed information from the campus to the White House. A series of walkietalkies carried by the marshals and Justice Department aides in and around the Lyceum kept Nicholas Katzenbach, Attorney General Robert Kennedy’s field commander, informed. Using a pay telephone in the basement of the building, Katzenbach or the Attorney General’s press secretary, Ed Guthman, conveyed this information to Robert Kennedy or his assistant Burke Marshall in the White House. Meanwhile down the mall at the Justice Department another Kennedy aide, Ramsey Clark, the assistant attorney general, maintained a direct line to the Justice Department’s makeshift Oxford headquarters, which was in a post office building a few minutes from campus. Periodically, Clark called the Attorney General at the White House with updates. President Kennedy started taping as the impromptu domestic crisis team was absorbing news that the mob had turned violent. Burke Marshall was handling the telephone in the Cabinet Room for the Attorney General, with the President a worried observer. Meeting on Civil Rights 253 Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Now don’t you have to . . . Do you have some other men? Yeah. Did you get all the marshals there now?2 President Kennedy: State police or . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] How many you’ve got? And they’re all there? Yeah. How are the state police? Is the crowd getting bigger? Unidentified: [talking to Robert Kennedy in the room] [Unclear] wants you? Robert Kennedy: That’s fine. [on the phone] OK, well I’ll get back. I’ll let you know. [off the phone] Well, I think that— President Kennedy: What? Robert Kennedy: They think they have it in pretty good shape. [Puts down the receiver.] President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: Did one marshal get his arm broken? President Kennedy: His arm broken? Robert Kennedy: The lousy, I mean, there you are appointed, some politician gets you appointed deputy marshal and you’re sitting in the courtroom . . . [telephone rings] moving . . . close to the judge . . . and suddenly . . . Burke Marshall: [on the phone] Hello. Yes, he is. President Kennedy: His arm broken, what, by a bottle? Unidentified: No, but he said they’re throwing [unclear]. It’s Ed. President Kennedy: Who? Unidentified: Ed. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Oh, Ed.3 Well, how’s it look to you? Kenneth O’Donnell: Yeah, there might not be quite as much rush for those bumps they’re handing out right after . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Is it under control? Would you bring the guard in?4 Theodore Sorensen: Yeah, but tomorrow’s going to be worse than today. Marshall: Yeah, I was . . . even tonight. Unidentified: [Unclear.] 2. The civilian contingent of U.S. marshals, border police, and federalized prison guards arrived in stages between 7:00 and 9:00 P.M. Washington time (5:00 and 7:00 P.M. Mississippi time). 3. Probably Edwin Guthman, director of public information, Department of Justice. 4. Earlier in the day President Kennedy federalized the Mississippi National Guard. There were units in Oxford and Jackson, Mississippi, that could be deployed if necessary. 254 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Marshall: . . . where the [unclear] keep up with him tonight. President Kennedy: Yeah. You can’t help but get at it. O’Donnell: That was the last [unclear] from the outside of the campus [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Sorensen: Most people like to— Unidentified: [Unclear.] Sorensen: Most people like [unclear] and then [unclear]. Lawrence O’Brien: I wish they were. Got to keep them in line though. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Are they mad at the marshals? O’Brien: . . . otherwise [unclear]. Sorensen: As I say [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Evidently they just . . . President Kennedy: [Unclear] from Alabama, who’s come to think a lot of them are [unclear]. Unidentified: Get the judge to say that [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: I [unclear] . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] OK, well, I’m going to see if I can get these troops started anyway.5 We can see. Well, I think if they, I think it’s better that we can control the situation. I don’t think it’s worth screwing around. The weekend.6 President Kennedy: It’s going to be a long fall in Oxford, I think. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] I’ll see if I can’t get them going anyway. OK. While Robert Kennedy is speaking on the telephone, in the background an unidentified man says, “Kermit’s having trouble with his homework.” Unidentified: What’s the story now? Robert Kennedy: Well, he thinks the situation’s under control now, but you know— President Kennedy: —I think we ought to get the guard within, you know, shouting distance outside of town. I think it’s probably [unclear]. Unidentified: Blocked off those roads? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. There’s enough people coming in from . . . They got the . . . 5. The crisis has entered a new phase. It is about 10:45 P.M. in Washington, two hours earlier in Mississippi, and the Kennedy administration is preparing to deploy the U.S. Army in Oxford. 6. Task Force Alpha is waiting for orders in Memphis. Organized in the last 24 hours, it includes the 503rd Military Police Battalion, the 31st Light Helicopter Company, the 138th Truck Company, a medical detachment, and two tear gas experts. The Attorney General is pressing the introduction of these troops on his men in Oxford. Meeting on Civil Rights 255 Unidentified: That’s [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Well, [unclear] they got the people on the roads, just to keep them informed about it. Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? Robert Kennedy: Then we get all around the city so as to [unclear]. Marshall: [on the phone] This is Burke Marshall. Robert Kennedy: . . . came in and get control of . . . and then we have control over the air. But if you have gas, you’ve got a pretty good operation going. They got 500 marshals . . .7 [Laughter in the background.] Marshall: [on the phone] [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: You see, they’re sitting there and they’re throwing iron . . . President Kennedy: Spikes? Robert Kennedy: . . . spikes, and they’re throwing Coke bottles, and they’re throwing rocks. Unidentified: I gather they’re [unclear]— Robert Kennedy: Well, you tell that guy that just came out of Cleveland from . . . just appointed by . . . Marshall: [on the phone] Dean?8 President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: Miller. Marshall: [on the phone] I know that [unclear]. President Kennedy: But Bobby [unclear]’s a bookie from [unclear]— Sorensen: [Unclear.] O’Brien: That isn’t the way the American people envision marshals [unclear]. Marshall: [talking to people in the room] Is it Johnny Vaught?9 Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: Yeah, the coach. What’s the good coach’s name? Unidentified: Johnny Vaught. Robert Kennedy: Let’s see if we can get him. Unidentified: He won’t believe it. Robert Kennedy: He might . . . President Kennedy: What’s Barnett doing? Marshall: [on the phone] . . . TCU or . . . 7. Apparently there were only 300. See Taylor Branch, Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954–63 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988), pp. 662–63. 8. Dean P. Markham. 9. John H. Vaught was a University of Mississippi coach. 256 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] Marshall: Did he come from Tennessee? TCU, wasn’t it? President Kennedy: Texas Christian University then. Robert Kennedy: Where he came from originally? Unidentified: Yeah. President Kennedy: I think he was out of Texas. Yeah. Unidentified: He was. Marshall: [on the phone] Dean [Markham]? President Kennedy: What are we waiting for . . . Cy Vance to tell us how long it will take? The U.S. Army had forces on standby in Memphis, Tennessee, to calm the situation in Oxford, Mississippi, and there was supposed to be a local Mississippi National Guard unit available for reinforcing the federal marshals on campus. Marshall: [on the phone] Do you think you could find him and talk to him? President Kennedy: Why don’t we just tell him to get on and tell him to take them out [unclear]. Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah. Vaught saw the [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah. President Kennedy: Let’s see this article. Marshall: [on the phone] See if he talks to the kids, yeah. President Kennedy: [reading] “Ross Barnett, Jr., son of the Mississippi governor [unclear].”10 Marshall: [on the phone] Well, did Vaught talk to them tonight? President Kennedy: [reading] “[Unclear] National Guard Patrol [unclear].” [Laughter.] Marshall: [on the phone] Why don’t you do it, and then if you think it would do any good to have some. Unidentified: Did he get called up? Robert Kennedy: Do we have any other phone system other than that, this we’re using here? Marshall: No. Unidentified: We don’t have anything else? President Kennedy: You want to get [unclear] and Secretary on it. 10. Ironically, the Governor’s son was called up with his Mississippi National Guard unit to fight against his father’s segregationism. Meeting on Civil Rights 257 Marshall: All right. Unidentified: Do you want in or out? Marshall: [on the phone] All right. [Pause.] Marshall: [to people in the room] He said he wants to keep all the football squad out of it if there were any demonstrations. O’Brien: That would have been a hell of a squad. [Unclear] a couple of hundred [unclear]. Unidentified: They want [unclear]. Unidentified: Yeah. Unidentified: This reminds me a little bit of the Bay of Pigs.11 Unidentified: Yech! [Laughter.] O’Brien: [Unclear], I will say that . . . Sorensen: Well, especially when Bobby said we’d provide air cover.12 [Laughter.] O’Brien: Yeah [unclear] they know [unclear]. Sorensen: We could control the air . . . Unidentified: Except on one of the [unclear]. [Laughter.] O’Brien: Ed described [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Donnell: What do you think [of] the response to Jim McShane’s men without the President protecting them?13 As you say, they [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Donnell: What about Jim? [Laughter.] Unidentified: One of the two places. Sorensen: My guess is, Bobby, that we’ll have the control of outsiders down pretty good.14 You may be able to introduce— Marshall: —Well, we don’t have . . . Robert Kennedy: Well, the only thing is to keep . . . Marshall: . . . control of outsiders, I don’t think [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Yeah, we haven’t had any trouble from outsiders 11. In April 1961, the United States backed an invasion force composed of Cuban exiles that sought to overthrow the Castro regime in Cuba. The invasion, marred by a series of errors in planning and execution, failed miserably, much to the chagrin of the new administration. 12. The reference here is to the U.S. decision not to provide air cover to support the invasion force during the Bay of Pigs landing. Some claimed the administration’s failure to do so doomed the operation. 13. James McShane was chief of the federal marshals. 14. Outsiders was the codeword for Ku Klux Klansmen, John Birchers, and other extremists who had been threatening to descend on Oxford from across the Deep South to keep Ole Miss white. 258 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 yet. I suppose you’ll always have the difficulty of people storming onto the campus. They have a lot of gates. It’s a hell of a big campus, you know. So you have a few marshals and a few people at each gate, and I suppose you can stick a car in [unclear] . . . Marshall: [on the phone]15 Hello [unclear]. Yeah. All right. Robert Kennedy: . . . we can always storm in there at eight tomorrow morning or ten tomorrow morning. The problem is, you see, when you don’t have anybody there that’s really interested in maintaining law and order, and where their primary interest is to get us to bring troops in.16 You can imagine what would have happened if we’d gone through with what he wanted to do tomorrow morning. Marshall: [on the phone] It’s now against them. Sorensen: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: Walk in there and try to get through and he’s there with all his . . . That’s what his plan was. That he’d be there with his state police and sheriffs, and then assistant sheriffs and then volunteers behind him, four lanes. And then we were to push our way through. Unidentified: His agreement was they wouldn’t fire. Marshall: [on the phone] [Unclear] the state troopers. Unidentified: . . . tend to resist them anyhow. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. With nobody else knowing the plot but him and me. Evelyn Lincoln: Peter Lawford is on the phone.17 Marshall: [on the phone] Well, he called on the students to act as responsible citizens. President Kennedy: That’s slightly ironic. I wish we’d taken that part out. Marshall: [on the phone with Joseph Dolan] Yeah. All right, Joe. [to the people in the room] He says that the state police are against us. President Kennedy: Who does? Marshall: [on the phone] Hello. Yeah. Robert Kennedy: Of course, filled with all this poison. Unidentified: This way we’ll now [unclear]. 15. Marshall is monitoring a continuously open phone line to Justice Department officials in Mississippi. 16. Robert Kennedy is referring to his failed negotiations with Ross Barnett. The Mississippi Governor’s primary concern seemed to be to maneuver the Kennedy White House so that it would overplay its hand in Oxford and make political martyrs out of the Governor and his defenders. 17. According to a White House telephone memorandum, Peter Lawford called the President at 10:50 P.M. (Evelyn Lincoln Collection, Box 5, John F. Kennedy Library). Meeting on Civil Rights 259 Unidentified: Feel a [unclear]. Marshall: [on the phone] Well, he could probably do that [unclear]. Unidentified: Jack [unclear] here in the Cabinet Room, would there be [unclear]. Marshall: [on the phone] He may be trying to avoid that. Robert Kennedy: And he just got word they ran him . . . [Laughter.] Unidentified: And you said [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] [Laughter.] Unidentified: They court-martialed every last one of them. Marshall: [to the people in the room] Dean [Markham] tried to call the coach and his wife says he’s out. Unidentified: You should have thought of that quote during the election. I would . . . Unidentified: That’s how I get the coach. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] Why don’t I try [unclear]? Marshall: [on the phone] Well, Bob will try to call him. Dean? Robert Kennedy: Get the number. Marshall: [on the phone] Dean? Oh, Dean. Dean? Listen, why don’t we get Bob to try to call him from here? Well, he may . . . His wife may be lying to you. Sorensen: What do you think the chances are that Barnett is being honest with you and he’s not . . . Marshall: [on the phone] All right. Well, we’ll see what happens. Sorensen: [unclear] . . . the state police? He’s just . . . Robert Kennedy: I don’t think he would. Marshall: [on the phone] All right. Robert Kennedy: I don’t think he’s telling them to lay off, but I don’t think they’re enjoying this. You know, it’s one thing to get in for the wrong reason and not have a problem, and they see we’re having problems and then, might have a sense of greater problems. Sorensen: He said he didn’t want to get anyone killed, though, or does he mind that?18 Marshall: [on the phone] Sounds like it’s out of the country. Robert Kennedy: The only thing, like he said the other day to me, if fifty people get killed down here, it might be embarrassing for the two of us.19 [Laughter.] It might hurt us, and then he went on to say that [unclear]. 18. Referring to Ross Barnett. 19. Again referring to Ross Barnett. 260 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Marshall: [Unclear] two, three, four. Lincoln: Secretary Vance. Marshall: [on the phone] See, now, we’ll give that a try. Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] It appears that Robert Kennedy goes to speak with the secretary of the Army, Cyrus Vance, who briefs him on the readiness of the forces in Memphis to intervene. Marshall: [on the phone] Well, no, I’ll stay here. Unidentified: Bobby’s had [unclear]. Unidentified: Huh? Unidentified: Bobby’s had a tough one. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Really a battle plan. Unidentified: The Teamsters in Mississippi. Unidentified: [Unclear]. Unidentified: They’re just fighting the law. Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah. Unintelligible side conversation while Marshall listens on the telephone. Marshall: [on the phone] No, you mean our marshal? Unidentified: [in a side conversation] You’re just saying [unclear]. Marshall: [on the phone] Gee whiz. Well, can’t we get them some food? Unidentified: Hear that? Robert Kennedy: So they go to the armory in Oxford. And there’ll be someone there within an hour.20 Marshall: [on the phone] I know, but I mean, can’t we get . . . Robert Kennedy: . . . company. President Kennedy: They’ll be at . . . Robert Kennedy: And they’ll be . . . President Kennedy: . . . they’ll be at the armory in Oxford? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Well, in four hours they’ll have about 800, 900. President Kennedy: In Oxford? But that’s not in the, that’s not at . . . Robert Kennedy: Well, that’s the armory there, so they’re not at the university. President Kennedy: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: I think that’s the . . . 20. The Attorney General had been given inaccurate information. The first contingent of U.S. troops would not reach the airport at Oxford for another four hours. Meeting on Civil Rights 261 President Kennedy: That’s the best. I think that’s fine. The problem is really the time lapse, isn’t it? Robert Kennedy: Well, I think that it’s in the . . . They’re going to be . . . I mean, if you can tell, from what they say, they’re going to be all right for an hour. Marshall: [on the phone] Well, I know, but I . . . President Kennedy: Then what happens after that? Robert Kennedy: Well, then you could . . . We have [a] company of . . . President Kennedy: Oh, you’re, so they’re flying them in? Robert Kennedy: . . . couple of hundred. No, we’ll have a couple of . . . They’ll be a couple of hundred there within an hour. The President is relying on the Attorney General for information about the troop movements. The order went out to Memphis at 11 P.M. to load the first contingent of 200 men aboard helicopters for the one-hour flight to Oxford. The White House assumes that the military operation is already in progress. In fact, it hasn’t even started. President Kennedy: Oh, I see. The others . . . Robert Kennedy: And there’ll be eight within four hours if he needs them. President Kennedy: Oh, I see. Unidentified: [Unclear] said there’d be 200 within . . . Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah. President Kennedy: Where will they go? Robert Kennedy: They’d all go into the armory. President Kennedy: I see. Robert Kennedy: And they’re all Mississippians. Unidentified: They’re dying in there. Robert Kennedy: And they got gas masks. Marshall: [may be on the phone] How long are they going out to . . . Unidentified: Yes. Robert Kennedy: And the General’s getting in touch with Nick, and he can use them any time he wants.21 I’ll tell Nick or you can. President Kennedy: So there’ll be 200 there within an hour? [Unclear exchange.] Marshall: [on the phone] Oh, Dean? Can we get Nick? Robert Kennedy: He did a hell of a job on the narcotics thing. President Kennedy: Who? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. 21. Nick was Nicholas Katzenbach, the deputy attorney general. 262 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 President Kennedy: Was it a success? The conference?22 Robert Kennedy: Certainly. It really was. President Kennedy: Background. Marshall: How long will it take? Robert Kennedy: They’ll have a company there within an hour. Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: And 800 within four hours. Marshall: Oh, I see, a company. [Unclear] uniforms [unclear] Mississippians. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: Well, I think that what we at least show that the marshals couldn’t do it by themselves, so. President Kennedy: Are we showing him or are they showing us? [Laughter.] Unidentified: Don’t you think that this . . . [Unclear exchange involving the President.] Marshall: [talking on the phone] Hello, Nick? Unidentified: [Unclear] southerners on [unclear]. Marshall: [talking on the phone] Just a minute, Bob wants to tell you about these, and . . . President Kennedy: [Unclear] news at eleven. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello, Nick? Well, there’ll be a company there at the armory within an hour. And there’ll be 800 there, as I understand it, within four hours.23 Now, General Billingslea is going to get in touch with you.24 Blakerslee or whatever the hell he’s named. Marshall: Billingslea. Robert Kennedy: So, how does that sound? President Kennedy: Need any more marshals or some equipment? Are the marshals holding up for some tear gas? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Is the gas coming in there? Unidentified: Now, what is next? Marshall: They gassed some of our own marshals. 22. The White House Conference on Narcotics and Drug Abuse, organized by Dean Markham, was held 27–28 September 1962. 23. This is Task Force Alpha, a 687-man team stationed at Millington Naval Air Station in Memphis. The advance group of 170 was supposed to have left by helicopter already. The rest was to travel by Interstate 55 to reach Oxford in the early morning. At this point, no troops from the Task Force had yet left Millington. 24. Brigadier General Charles Billingslea was commander of the 82nd Infantry Division, Fort Benning, Georgia. Meeting on Civil Rights 263 President Kennedy: Did they? Marshall: Dean says it’s bad for their morale. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] [Unclear.] Unidentified: What? Unidentified: Which isn’t too high, anyway. Marshall: Well, they’re doing a good job. O’Brien: You’re not kidding. Marshall: They haven’t had anything to eat. Unidentified: They’ll manage it. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] I don’t mind that. Unidentified: It’s [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] And they should be home watching the President on television. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Listen, Nick. You got enough gas there now? OK, you’re in pretty good shape now, though? Marshall: [whispering] We’ll make these decisions tomorrow. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well, is anybody trying to get . . . With Robert Kennedy on the telephone and another conversation going on simultaneously in the Cabinet Room, the recording becomes very difficult to understand. The President is apparently distracted by word that James Reston has just filed a story for the New York Times alleging that Nikita Khrushchev was inviting Kennedy to a summit meeting. Unidentified: What is Reston [unclear] knock it down anyway. [Unclear] ought to knock it down. Unidentified: Do you have an explanation for [unclear]? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Is that enough time for you? President Kennedy: . . . see now I can get [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Did anybody else get any [unclear]? Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: When we visit Vienna, you . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. Unidentified: . . . the chairman extended an invitation to you and Mrs. Kennedy.25 Basically it’s a standing invitation. President Kennedy: Yeah. That’s right. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well, should we try to find out if they . . . 25. Nikita Khrushchev, the general secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, also held the title of chairman of the Council of Ministers of the U.S.S.R. 264 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Unidentified: [Unclear] the American embassies. I hope your president comes over. Unidentified: [Unclear] for a long time. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] That’s exactly it. That’s why Reston’s words [unclear].26 Unidentified: [Unclear] do you see it? What did you say? Robert Kennedy: Is there any other way we can get gas? President Kennedy: At the appropriate time. Unidentified: At the appropriate time. Well, see Reston’s hitting the West Coast tomorrow and he wants a story. That’s his story.27 President Kennedy: We ought to knock it down tonight; that’s just kicking that Reston right in the balls, isn’t it? Unidentified: What’s that? Unidentified: It is aimed at that. Unclear speakers. Unidentified: [Unclear] Udall.28 President Kennedy: That’s for Udall. Unidentified: That’s right. Three columns. Head. President Kennedy: Front page? Unidentified: Front page. President Kennedy: It’s just an inaccurate story. Sorensen: Sure. Well, it’s an irresponsible story. President Kennedy: I’m surprised Reston would do it. He said we got an invitation? Unidentified: Well, I haven’t seen the text. President Kennedy: It depends how he words it. Our answer would be that on many occasions, Mr. Khrushchev has said that he would be glad to welcome—he’s told visitors—to welcome President and Mrs. Kennedy when conditions would permit, but unfortunately because of the . . . Sorensen: And Adzhubei told you that.29 And Dobrynin has said that.30 President Kennedy: He told you . . . yeah. I mean we’ve all on many occasions have stated that we’d be glad to have President and Mrs. 26. James Reston was chief Washington correspondent for the New York Times. 27. In a front-page story that appeared in the New York Times on 1 October, James Reston wrote that Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev had sent a private invitation to Kennedy to visit the Soviet Union. According to Reston, the message was delivered to Kennedy by Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, who had recently returned from the Soviet Union. 28. Stewart L. Udall was secretary of the interior. 29. Aleksei I. Adzhubei was editor of Izvestia and Khrushchev’s son-in-law. 30. Anatoly Dobrynin was Soviet ambassador to the United States. Meeting on Civil Rights 265 Kennedy when the situation was such, but of course with the difficulty we have in Berlin and other areas, it’s been generally agreed in both Moscow and the United States that the situation would not have been appropriate to [unclear]. That’s our position. Unidentified: [Unclear] outcome. President Kennedy: I don’t think we ought to at night knock down Reston, ought we? Do you want to call him up? Or is that just going to make him mad? Sorensen: Well, you can’t . . . Don’t bother calling him up. President Kennedy: But if he knocks it down? Sorensen: He can’t. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: What? Sorensen: It’s probably too late anyway. President Kennedy: What? Sorensen: And his story is gone. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [Unclear.] I just think he’d be embarrassed about that. This one. Unidentified: Yeah, but I don’t think . . . Why don’t you just in your morning briefing tomorrow give a routine answer? [Unclear voices.] The President’s attention returns to the more immediate problem in Oxford, Mississippi. Marshall: I think that General Abrams and General Billingslea are working on it. 31 Do you want to send those women down there? Robert Kennedy: I guess I better not. Marshall: What about the others? The lawyers? President Kennedy: What women are these? Marshall: Secretaries. Robert Kennedy: Secretaries. President Kennedy: Down to where, Oxford? Marshall: Yeah. President Kennedy: Oh, you mean Nick’s secretaries? Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Well, why don’t I put a hold on it and I’ll talk to him later on tonight. Marshall: Hold on [unclear]. President Kennedy: You don’t have any men secretaries? Marshall: [Unclear] could probably find them. I would think [unclear]. 31. Major General Creighton Abrams was assistant deputy Army chief of staff for military operations. 266 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 President Kennedy: The FBI must have them. Sorensen: At least one or two here in the correspondence section. Marshall: They must have one. Unidentified: [Unclear.] The conversation becomes unclear and appears to be winding down. Only a few fragments are understandable before there is a break in the tape. When taping resumes, Robert Kennedy is on the telephone while an indistinct conversation goes on beside him involving Evelyn Lincoln. Robert Kennedy: [fades in] Yes [unclear]. Unidentified: Who’s writing these speeches? Unidentified:[Unclear] the numbers you got. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yes, he did. Well, the Governor’s announced it. The President’s announced it. Yeah. [Another phone rings.] Unidentified: Yeah. Lincoln: [Unclear] be back? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. What do they think of it? Lincoln: [answering the second phone] Hello? President Kennedy and Theodore Sorensen are having a separate conversation. President Kennedy: [Unclear] says the debates didn’t do any good. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] No. Sorensen: I just knew that’s a crock. I just can’t believe that. I know that [unclear]. President Kennedy: I know it didn’t change Republican votes, but the point is, my trouble was to keep the Democrats. Sorensen: I know. [Evelyn Lincoln can be heard in the background.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Does it look under control? Yeah. Where are you going to get the guards to? Well, we’ve got a couple of hundred in the beginning and eight, seven or eight [unclear]. Sorensen: And then the undecided on this, well, that’s a major part, the undecided. [Unclear] poll shows that you . . . the effect of a campaign is to move the undecided into your camp. President Kennedy: Yeah. Sorensen: . . . and that included the debates and the Houston speech. I’m sure the call had a lot [unclear].32 Robert Kennedy: [continues on the phone] Do you? [Pause.] Well, would you favor that I had troops coming in there? Yeah. Well, they’re 32. Sorensen is reminiscing about the key moments in the 1960 campaign. “The call” probably refers to then Senator Kennedy’s telephone call to Coretta Scott King in October 1960 when her husband, the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., was in a Georgia jail. Meeting on Civil Rights 267 on their way. [Pause.] OK. No. [Pause.] Well, you can just stay there. What about . . . Is Nick there? Well, I’d just like to find out what he’s heard on getting that gas in there. Marshall: Do you want to talk to Cy [Vance]? Cy would know. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. Well. President Kennedy: Can we get, what’s his name? The Governor’s man?33 Marshall: [starts speaking on the phone] Hello? Robert Kennedy: He’s getting him. Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? Oh, listen, he went off and I’m on. Unidentified: [in the background] What about gas? Marshall: [on the phone] Well, are they on their way, do you know? [A telephone rings.] President Kennedy: [faintly in the background] Should I talk with the General directly?34 Lincoln: Jim, did you want your girl to stay? Unidentified: If she could do me one last favor, which is to bring me a glass of milk Marshall: [on the phone] All right. Where were they, at the airport? Lincoln: A glass of milk? [Unintelligible exchange.] Robert Kennedy: [Unclear] from now? Marshall: [on the phone] [Unclear] well that’s something to . . . Unidentified: Evelyn’s got some beers in the refrigerator. Marshall: [on the phone] Well, they’re coming in. Well, have they walked out on you? They don’t have any gas masks. It appears that Sorensen and the President have reentered the room. Sorensen: [Unclear] matter, did we like [unclear] the troops on the ground? President Kennedy: It seems to me [unclear]. Sorensen: Yeah. President Kennedy: The governor has said the troops withdrew. The marshals were . . . with nothing to do. Sorensen: We’ll announce that. Yeah, but . . . Marshall: [on the phone] The gas should be in there in a few minutes.35 Robert Kennedy: Is that Nick? Marshall: [to Robert Kennedy] This is Ed. 33. Apparently a reference to Tom Watkins, the intermediary in the Barnett-Kennedy negotiations. 34. Up to now, the White House team has relied on Secretary Vance’s descriptions of the movements of Task Force Alpha in Memphis. 35. The federal force protecting the Lyceum ran out of tear gas. Because the Mississippi National Guard lacked their own supply, canisters of tear gas had to be flown in from Memphis. 268 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 President Kennedy: How do we get the gas in and out of there? Robert Kennedy: [apparently speaking to someone else] I guess you can come in. Unidentified: I know, but one of us. [Chuckles.] Marshall: [on the phone] They have? Unidentified: Students [unclear] when they have a riot like this one, do they? President Kennedy: Well, that’s what I said. [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: You what? President Kennedy: There weren’t any riots like this at Harvard just because some guy yells . . . [Chuckling.] Unidentified: What’s that? Unidentified: That’s the only thing that [unclear]. Unidentified: Um huh. Unidentified: Move [unclear]. President Kennedy: What? Robert Kennedy: [could be on phone] Well, you ought to leave it to the [unclear]. Sorensen: [Unclear] have student riots like this and it is [unclear] you ought to be prepared for the worst, but . . . President Kennedy: That’s it. That’s what we’re preparing for. [Laughter.] Unidentified: Yeah, and evidently we got it. President Kennedy: Where is Nick? Is he up in the attic or just . . . [Laughter.] Sorensen: He’s in the pillbox. President Kennedy: He’s a candidate [unclear]. Get him out of there. O’Donnell: Nick might see that this is a job that he was [unclear] every year. Unidentified: And almost died [unclear]. [Unclear exchange.] O’Brien: You know, with the marshals, Bobby, at least they were out booking numbers or something . . . [unclear] in Chicago. Marshall: [possibly on the phone] No one saw it [down there]. [Laughter.] Marshall: [on the phone] No, no. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Soon the White House would face the problem of arranging a convoy to bring the gas from the airport in Oxford to the campus. Meeting on Civil Rights 269 Marshall: [possibly on the phone] No. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: There are no Boston marshals, are there? Marshall: [to the President] The coach is going to go out and talk to them. President Kennedy: Perhaps, perhaps . . . Marshall: [to the people in the room] Perhaps? Unidentified: Yeah [unclear]. President Kennedy: That’s why the . . . police . . . I remember in a riot at Harvard, these guys go around and start asking for your identity card. Unidentified: University police. President Kennedy: Yeah. That’s the only one that scared the shit out of me. While Marshall continues on the phone, some voices can be heard. Someone says, “If you could only ask her about . . . ” And Evelyn Lincoln says, “That would be fine.” Unidentified: We just got three points in the [unclear] match. President Kennedy: This [unclear] department. Marshall: [on the phone] He wants . . . Well, here’s Bob. He’ll talk to you himself. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? Yeah. Right. Okay. Now, the question I think we have to decide, and Nick’s going to have to talk to that general, if 200 fellows walking up there in uniforms, whether that’s going to help or whether it’s going to really make it a . . . They’re all Mississippians. No, I don’t know. They all have tear gas. But I think he should talk to the military fellow there and see whether that would be of . . . Well, they said he’d been in touch with them. [Pause.] All right. Have we got the gas in there yet? [Pause.] Yeah. Could you if you had your uniform on? President Kennedy: Are we going to get this every night? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? Unidentified: [responding to the President] Huh? President Kennedy: Are we going to get this every night? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Are you in touch with the military? Sorensen: [to the President] I think that may well be Barnett’s strategy. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Sorensen: You know it’s what happened to Autherine Lucy.36 She had some trouble— 36. In February 1956, an African American woman, Autherine Lucy, entered the University of Alabama under a court order. Rioting ensued, and university officials suspended Lucy for her 270 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well now, is the gas on the way?37 Unidentified: What did she do, withdraw? Unidentified: Yeah, personally [unclear]. Isn’t that right? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Will you? Do you want these troops in there?38 Yeah. OK. [Pause.] He got hit by what? Yeah. Unidentified: Who? Robert Kennedy: Is he going to live? The state police have left? [Unclear] put them in? Marshall: I [unclear] talk with the Governor. President Kennedy: What’d he say? Marshall: He said they can’t have pulled them out. Sorensen: What? Marshall: Watkins. Robert Kennedy: [having heard Marshall’s exchange with the President] And he said, Watkins says, “They can’t have pulled out of there.” Yeah. They have, though? President Kennedy: What’s Watkins say otherwise? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Six what? Marshall: [to the President] He said it’s dead. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] [Unclear.] Marshall: He just talked to the Governor and the Governor had just talked to the highway patrol [and] that everything was under control. Concern rises in the Cabinet Room as news arrives that General Edwin Walker is in Oxford to rally extremists in defense of a segregated University of Mississippi. The President and the Attorney General begin to take more seriously the need to deploy the U.S. Army on campus. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Oh why? There’s going to be a fight in the infirm[ary] . . . Have the marshals done pretty well? Marshall: The Bureau says there are people coming in from out of town. Unidentified: There are, huh? Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [to the people in the room] General Walker’s been out downtown getting people stirred up.39 [on the phone] Can we get it arranged to get him arrested? own protection. When she criticized the decision, she was expelled from the university, a ruling upheld by a federal judge. 37. The Mississippi National Guard stationed at the Lyceum had run out of tear gas and were waiting for a new supply. It wouldn’t reach them until much later. 38. At this point Katzenbach tells the Attorney General that he doesn’t need any troops. 39. Major General Edwin A. Walker, retired. For additional information on Walker, see “Conversation with Archibald Cox,” 1 October 1962, note 5. Meeting on Civil Rights 271 President Kennedy: By the FBI. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] [Unclear.] Well, let’s see if we can arrest him. Will you tell the FBI that we need an arrest warrant. President Kennedy: What’s his crime? Robert Kennedy: [to the people in the room] He’s been stirring people up. Sorensen: Incitement. President Kennedy: Inciting. Sorensen: Inciting insurrection. Robert Kennedy: Obstruction of justice. President Kennedy: [Grunts.] Would the FBI have trouble arresting him on . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. President Kennedy: How many agents do you have down there? I think you ought to get those MPs into there and over near the airport. I don’t see what you’ve got to lose, if they’re at the airport. You can always send them back. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. OK. All right. I’ll do that. Now, will you clear it with Nick? He said we didn’t need them a minute ago. O’Brien: As far as [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear] is no longer . . . O’Brien: . . . it depends on which is, you know, but I think that the thing is, you have less risk [unclear] they do and bring ’em in. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. All right. Oh, can somebody sit on this? That’s it. [Hangs up the phone.] [to the people in the room] He said that if they get the gas, they don’t have a problem. 40 President Kennedy: When do they think they are going to get it? Robert Kennedy: Well, they think a couple of minutes, at least.41 Unidentified: Somebody’s injured? [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Who got hurt? Robert Kennedy: They’re going to have . . . Unidentified: No way, I tell you. Marshall: [on the phone] [Unclear] terrible [unclear]. President Kennedy: Imagine them coming in there with gas masks and beginning again. Unidentified: Yeah. President Kennedy: That’s what happens to all of these wonderful operations. War. 40. Referring to Katzenbach. 41. A new supply of tear gas was about ten minutes away. 272 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 O’Brien: They haven’t [unclear] some of the gas in those gas masks so they all be [sound of sniffling]. Unidentified: And the next group. [Laughter.] Unidentified: Well do you have . . . President Kennedy: General Walker. Imagine that son of a bitch having been commander of a division up till last year. And the Army promoting him. Unidentified: You’re right. Unidentified: Yes. Sorensen: Have you read Seven Days in May? 42 President Kennedy: Yeah. Unidentified: Damned good book. President Kennedy: I thought that . . . Sorensen: It’s pretty interesting. Unidentified: Yeah. Sorensen: I read it straight through. It’s interesting. Unidentified: I didn’t really like it. O’Brien: Unrealistic? [Laughter.] Sorensen: And you thought it was too far-fetched, then? President Kennedy: No, I thought this [had a] sort of awful amateur’s dialogue. Unidentified: Yeah, it was a [unclear]. Unidentified: No, it’s not great writing, but I mean— President Kennedy: It’s not even good. . . . The only character that came out at all was the general. The president was awfully vague. But I thought the general was a pretty good character. [Extended pause.] Robert Kennedy: . . . well, then General Walker starts bringing those fellows, you know . . . President Kennedy: What? Robert Kennedy: If General Walker starts bringing in fellows from [unclear] and that— Marshall: There are rumors all over the place. President Kennedy: He’s bringing in what? Robert Kennedy: He’s getting them all stirred up. If he has them march down there with guns, we could have a hell of a battle. Unidentified: Thugs. Sorensen: Did the FBI say Walker’s there [unclear]? 42. Popular novel of 1962, written by Fletcher Knebel, about a military plot to overthrow the U.S. government. Meeting on Civil Rights 273 Robert Kennedy: No. No. Walker’s baiting them. Marshall: [on the phone] John?43 Robert Kennedy: They need to keep an eye on him. Marshall: [on the phone] Is that football coach doing any good? Lincoln: Tom Watkins is calling you. Robert Kennedy: Why don’t you get it? Two simultaneous phone conversations proceed. Marshall: [on the phone] Oh, just a minute, I’m going to go and talk to this fellow, Watkins. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? Oh yeah. How’s it going? Marshall: [on a different phone] Hello? Yes? [Unclear.] Unidentified: . . . which isn’t based on just anything. We certainly do want it to go as far as ever. We’ll just about [unclear] work hard [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well, I get the picture. What about getting the . . . Is Nick there? Would you ask him what the story is with the gas?44 Unidentified: [possibly on the phone] What route is it going to be? Sorensen: We talk about [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] You just, yeah . . . Sorensen: [Unclear] be a shame to [unclear]. Unidentified: [in the background] John, do you want some milk? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah, well, I think they got a report from them five minutes ago. [Unclear.] John said he’s stirring people up. It’s a long way from Wisconsin. Yeah, I know. Oh, Nick? Oh, what’s the story? Well, I think I’m . . . Won’t you be able to get it? How far away is it? Can these students see that? Is it covered all right? How much more . . . You’d guess about how much longer? Yeah. OK. [to Marshall] How was Watkins? Marshall: He says [unclear] can’t send anything, can’t do anything. President Kennedy: What are they saying? He’s there now? Robert Kennedy: They’re saying . . . President Kennedy: Where are they? Up around the third floor? Where are they? Are they in the administration building with Meredith? Robert Kennedy: No. Meredith is in another building.45 President Kennedy: Nobody knows where he is? 43. Probably John Doar, on the staff of the Civil Rights Division, Department of Justice. 44. The car bringing tear gas from the airport got lost on its way from the airport. 45. Meredith was in a dorm room in Baxter Hall. Evidently the President was unfamiliar with the geography of the campus or the plan to protect Meredith. 274 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Sorensen: How many are guarding the administration building? Robert Kennedy: He’s got forty or fifty marshals. The gas is a quarter of a mile. President Kennedy: But they can’t get it through the . . . Robert Kennedy: Well they just . . . Yeah. You know. Marshall: They’re not guarding anything there. Sorensen: Then why don’t . . . Marshall: . . . the students. Sorensen: . . . why don’t they just let . . . The marshals just left? Marshall: What do you mean? Sorensen: [Unclear] spend the night . . . Unidentified: Where are the marshals? President Kennedy: Why don’t they go inside the building? I think they would. I haven’t had such an interesting time since the Bay of Pigs. [Chuckling.] Unidentified: Cuba [unclear]? Robert Kennedy: Since the day what? President Kennedy: Bay of Pigs. Unidentified: Does Tom Watkins sound like he’s— Robert Kennedy: The Attorney General announced today, he’s joining Allen Dulles at Princeton University. 46 [Laughter.] Marshall: He sounds . . . Unidentified: You might take up this [unclear]. Marshall: So he is. He’s a very reliable fellow. President Kennedy: What? Marshall: He’s been a very reliable fellow. But he sounds—every time . . . every time there’s a suggestion that that conversation would get out, he sounds concerned. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? No, I’m just wondering if you heard. No. Unidentified: Do you want to hold that? Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] When they say he’s sending more gas, we’ll know we’re in. Marshall: Sending what? Robert Kennedy: More gas. Marshall: [on the phone] Oh, I’m just holding it. Who? 46. Dulles was the retired director of Central Intelligence. Meeting on Civil Rights 275 Unidentified: [Unclear] is loose as a goose. [Laughter.] Marshall: [on the phone] That’s all right. This is Burke Marshall. A what? A priest. Oh. O’Brien: That’s the best shot they could take. That’ll [unclear] in Mississippi. Unidentified: Tell him to get that collar on quick. Marshall: [on the phone] Do you know if the football coach has talked to the students? O’Brien: More appropriately [unclear] if his sweatshirt’s on. President Kennedy: Yeah. [Unclear] He may be down there [unclear]. Unidentified: He’s coming. Unidentified: Well the football coach would make a, get him, pretty good [unclear]. [Laughter.] Unidentified: Is that it? Unidentified: It’s got to be better [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Training. Marshall: Where was that company?47 Robert Kennedy: Right there. It’s just forming up. Marshall: Oh, it’s just forming? Robert Kennedy: The only question is, you want them there now? That’s up to Nick. Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: All you’re going to have up to assist is 150 –200 fellows. Marshall: Yes, it’s all there.48 Robert Kennedy: I think it’s all there. It’s within the hour, and that was fifty minutes ago. I am [unclear]. President Kennedy: Yeah, I think we ought to, I wouldn’t hesitate to put them there. I don’t think that’s where we’re going to have the difficulty. Not way beyond it. The problem is looking as if we’re not doing enough rather than too much right now. Marshall: Yeah. President Kennedy: Good. O’Brien: Oh, I agree. President Kennedy: Better get them over there. 47. This is apparently a reference to a local unit of the federalized Mississippi National Guard. 48. This advance contingent was still three hours away from Oxford. 276 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Marshall: I wonder if we shouldn’t just put them over there? Robert Kennedy: Yeah, but if it’s forming up and we can’t put— Marshall: Because it might discourage some of these people from . . . Robert Kennedy: Throwing? Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: That’s why, he’s in a . . . They’re just guessing. [Pause.] Robert Kennedy: If they get the gas, it’s not really a— President Kennedy: Problem? Robert Kennedy: . . . problem because they’re going to get the . . . Marshall: Unless the Bureau . . . See the Bureau says that their people are moving in. Unidentified: From outside? Marshall: Yeah. And they might be armed. President Kennedy: You see, once some one fellow starts firing, everybody starts firing. That’s what concerns me.49 Marshall: Yeah. President Kennedy: If one person fires . . . O’Brien: How are they getting in? Marshall: What? O’Brien: How are these people coming into the campus? Marshall: How? O’Brien: Yeah. Why don’t they have the, I thought . . . Marshall: Well, you see . . . O’Brien: . . . they had the entrances wired off. Marshall: . . . that would be state police. O’Brien: The state police which means that the city’s gone back. Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah? Well, that’s good. All right. Well, that’s good.50 President Kennedy: What’s that? Marshall: [to the President] They got the gas. They just got a gas truck. Lincoln: Geoghegan for you.51 Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? [Unclear.] President Kennedy: They got a gas truck. 49. Robert Kennedy seems to be supporting his team’s view that once the tear gas arrives, the marshals under Katzenbach’s command can stabilize the situation. 50. At 11:44 P.M. this news was reported to Ramsey Clark, assistant attorney general, Lands Division, who was overseeing the war room at the Justice Department during this crisis. 51. William Geoghegan, assistant deputy attorney general, legislative program, Department of Justice. He was manning the command center at the Justice Department with Ramsey Clark. Meeting on Civil Rights 277 Marshall: Yeah. Well, just hang on; I’ve got to go to another phone for a minute. Unidentified: I’ll hold this one. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] All right, can we get the answer to that? Unidentified: Which? Marshall: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Or I can . . . Evelyn Lincoln: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Do you have a switchboard? How do you handle that? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. I’m going to get direct lines in . . . President Kennedy: From that building? Robert Kennedy: Well, not this. We just kept an open line. But our various installations around there, we have direct line that we put in last week.52 [on the phone] Hello. Is Nick there? Let me speak to him, please. [on the phone with Katzenbach] Yeah. Oh, you’re all set? Do you? I think we should move that army up anyway, don’t you?53 Well, yeah. Up to you? Yeah. I don’t want to make it appear that we didn’t do enough. Let me ask Ed what he thinks, being there and talking. All right. [to the people in the room] But he doesn’t think but, of course, the problem is that they can’t . . . If we can get that Walker. Marshall: That state trooper was seriously hurt. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] The kid’s arm? President Kennedy: That’s too bad. What happened? Did one of those pellets hit him? Marshall: Yeah. But we’re flying him to Memphis to the hospital. President Kennedy: Did he break his back? Did it break his back? Marshall: I don’t know. But they’re putting him on a border patrol plane and flying him up to the hospital in Memphis. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Ed, did the coach come?54 [to the people in the room] Well, he said, this is completely under control. 52. This is presumably the direct line between Louis Oberdorfer at the Justice command center in the Oxford Post Office and Ramsey Clark at the Justice Department. 53. Robert Kennedy, who has accepted the President’s suggestion, may still be operating under the assumption that the advance contingent from Memphis had already reached the armory in Oxford, a short distance from the campus. In fact, this group was still in Tennessee. 54. Apparently Guthman spoke to John Vaught, the Ole Miss coach, who assured him that there was only a small group of troublemakers. 278 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 President Kennedy: What does he say about the students, what they want? Robert Kennedy: Ed just said that, they say that because it’s a relatively—compared to what a big campus it is, and there are so many students—it’s a relatively . . . President Kennedy: Small group? Robert Kennedy: . . . small number. Because, you know . . . President Kennedy: Too bad that fellow getting hurt. Unidentified: [Unclear] pitchfork. Unidentified: Just . . . Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Mrs. Lincoln? Lincoln: Yes. President Kennedy: Do you want us to put on the TV? Listen [unclear]. Ask him to send it over some [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Oh, yeah. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well, do you think that they’re going to move in there with some guns, though, from out of town? Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Uh-huh. Unidentified: Now here’s how you get errors [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] How do the marshals feel? Is that where the . . . OK? Did they do anything about that? Unidentified: It’s still [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] So that’s all right? Unidentified: [Unclear] soldiers. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] I mean if anything . . . Is there anything you can do to send, you can’t send anybody in and arrest that Walker, can we?55 Sorensen: She started a [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Suicide. Sorensen: I wouldn’t hesitate to [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Are these kids breaking up at all? Sorensen: [Unclear] haven’t used the [unclear] since I was a kid. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Can’t arrest any of them? Well, I don’t know whether it would break it up or what. 55. About a half hour earlier (11:32 P.M.), Clark at Justice had instructed the FBI to arrest General Walker, if possible. Meeting on Civil Rights 279 Marshall: My guess is it won’t matter. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Would not. But you think the situation’s under control? How long will this ammunition last? Yeah, about that. But better plan for two hours. All right. Well, Nick, I think we just . . . we should . . . it’s got to be up to you, being on the scene, as to whether you need these fellows, but I think it’s gone beyond the stage that . . . What’s Millington?56 Well, they’re going to form in the armory there. Isn’t that pretty close? Well, why don’t they go over to the armory? Are you in touch with them, Nick?57 Well, I can’t send them right away. Well, did he get it up there? [Pause.] Well, they can’t hurt you, though, can they? Marshall: Did the guard unit seal off the campus? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah, but they keep telling me that you’re in touch with the military, and that this . . . So are you in touch with them? Well, I mean, have they told you how many they’re coming and . . . Well, can you ask them what the hell they’re doing?58 And will you let me know? Right. [Pause.] Hello? [to the people in the room] Oh, I’m just trying to get the operator. [on the phone] Oh, would you hold? [He puts the phone down.] Marshall: Wouldn’t that be just the thing for the guard to do? Robert Kennedy: What? Marshall: Seal off the campus. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Marshall: And they’ll fight it? President Kennedy: What’s the problem now? Robert Kennedy: Well, it’s not a problem. It’s the same problem . . . of getting the people in there. They think that they have it under control. President Kennedy: Are you questioning whether to bring the guard in? Robert Kennedy: No, I’m just questioning . . . I’m just trying to figure the fact that they don’t know when they are going to get there, and all the rest of it. That is what I’ve been thinking about. And when you’re dealing with, sort of, unknowns . . . [on the phone] Hello? Marshall: He can’t communicate with the guard? 56. Millington, Tennessee, site of the Memphis Naval Air Station. 57. The Attorney General wants to know whether Katzenbach had spoken with Lieutenant Colonel John Flanagan, the chief of Task Force Alpha. 58. Ramsey Clark has apparently told the Attorney General that Katzenbach is fully informed about the movements of the Memphis force. 280 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Robert Kennedy: Yeah, he can through my office.59 President Kennedy: Who is Vance in touch with? Memphis? Robert Kennedy: That’s where the General is.60 And he’s going to get on this plane and come down? Marshall: Who’s the general? Is it General Abrams? Robert Kennedy: Billingslea. Marshall: Billingslea. Robert Kennedy: Have you seen him? Sorensen: Is he a National Guard general? Or . . . Robert Kennedy: I think regular. Sorensen: Huh? Marshall: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Regular. Sorensen: Brought down in the National Guard under his [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Yeah, he’s the theater commander. [Pause.] President Kennedy: This is what they must do every night in Teheran and these places. Unidentified: That’s a hell of a job, don’t you think? President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Taking care of mobs and so forth. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [Unclear] beginnings. Robert Kennedy: Yeah, because we say you don’t have to use too much force. President Kennedy: The margin of force is . . . Lincoln: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Yeah. Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? Hello? Lincoln: Ramsey Clark calling in. 61 President Kennedy: Who? Robert Kennedy: Ramsey Clark. President Kennedy: Where is Nick? And where’s his command center? Is it right in the administration building? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. President Kennedy: He can see all that’s going on? 59. Only Robert Kennedy’s aide at Justice, Ramsey Clark, is able to communicate with the U.S. Army or the National Guard. Katzenbach or Oberdorfer can only reach them through Washington. 60. Referring to General Billingslea. 61. Clark was overseeing the war room at the Justice Department during this crisis. Meeting on Civil Rights 281 Robert Kennedy: Yeah. And then, Jim McShane’s head of the marshals. And, Joe Dolan . . .62 President Kennedy: What’s Joe doing there? Marshall: He’s sort of . . . Robert Kennedy: Lou Oberdorfer.63 Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: McShane enjoy this? Robert Kennedy: No, but I think they all like him. President Kennedy: He’s pretty tough. Robert Kennedy: He knows what he’s doing. I don’t think anybody’s going to push him around much. Let’s see, we’ve got some other good ones that they have. And then we’ve got three . . . We’ve got also about 150— Marshall: Bob, are you sure Nick’s in touch with the guard? He just told Ramsey that he wasn’t and that he’d like to know when they’re on their way.64 Robert Kennedy: Yeah, well, that’s what I gave . . . He said the only way through is through the office. Of course, Cy keeps saying that they’re talking to one another. Let’s get Cy. You want to get Cy Vance for me? Marshall: [in the background, on the phone] Hello, Ramsey? [Unclear.] You’re not in touch with . . . Unidentified: Sure is a great day. President Kennedy: What? Unidentified: It’s been a great day. O’Brien: Well, in substance, they’re defending this administration building and keeping students out of that one building where these students— Robert Kennedy: Yeah; then they have a student that’s— O’Brien: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: —named Meredith in another building. O’Brien: Yeah. They don’t know where [unclear], do they? Robert Kennedy: Yeah, I suppose they do. I don’t know if they know. Marshall: Right. Robert Kennedy: And they’ve got 35, 40 marshals there. Actually, 62. Joseph P. Dolan was assistant deputy attorney general in the Justice Department. 63. Louis F. Oberdorfer was assistant attorney general in the Tax Division of the Justice Department. He is running the command center in the Oxford Post Office. 64. Nick Katzenbach told Ramsey Clark at 12:05 A.M. (10:05 P.M. Mississippi time) that the situation had reached a point where he needed reinforcements. He wondered when the local National Guard unit would arrive. 282 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 out of the 500 that we have, about 330 or so are border patrolmen—the Immigration and Naturalization Service and about 150 marshals. O’Brien: They’re a little tougher, aren’t they? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. The border patrol . . . But they haven’t been through this, when we sent our marshals through a long special training. They haven’t been through that, but they’re very well disciplined. They were the best [unclear]. Unidentified: Were they? Marshall: That’s an impossible situation. No one’s in touch with the guard unit, as far as I can see. President Kennedy: Is it from Cy? Lincoln: Secretary Vance. President Kennedy: Yeah. [Pause.] O’Brien: Maybe it’s by design. The guard unit is in touch with no one. O’Donnell: [Unclear] to call the Attorney General’s office to call them back to Memphis. Marshall: Well, they have to call the Attorney General’s office to get the Attorney General’s office to call the Secretary of the Army. The Secretary of the Army to call to Memphis, and then back to the Secretary of the Army to . . . O’Donnell: They’re not really in Memphis but they’re supposedly there on the road now. Aren’t they? Marshall: They’re forming at the armory. O’Donnell: They formed this afternoon. I saw them form on television.65 Marshall: But they’re forming . . . Sorensen: Again. Marshall: —again at the armory in Oxford. You see, it’s a local unit. O’Brien: Well, where were they forming when you saw them? Sorensen: That’s what I’m talking about, that’s . . . Marshall: But that’s that company.66 Sorensen: That’s just the Oxford units, you mean? Marshall: Yeah. Unidentified: Well, who are the [unclear]? 65. There is confusion in the room between Task Force Alpha and the local Mississippi National Guard’s units shown getting prepared on television that afternoon. 66. Again, as stated in note 65, there appears to be some confusion among the men as to whether they are discussing the movements of Task Force Alpha from Memphis or another local Mississippi National Guard unit in the Oxford area. Meeting on Civil Rights 283 Sorensen: Well, we [unclear] students. Huh? Unidentified: Who were the [unclear]? O’Donnell: You ought to include the student members. Marshall: Yeah. O’Donnell: Well, how about the ones that formed in Jackson this afternoon? Unidentified: Oh, but they . . . Marshall: See, Jackson is 180 miles away. O’Donnell: But aren’t they supposed to be on their way now? Marshall: Yes. Uh. huh. Four hours away means about three. O’Donnell: Then there’s a couple of thousand on their way, aren’t they? Sorensen: [Unclear.] Marshall: Fifteen hundred. Twenty-five. O’Donnell: The question is who’s in touch with their commander [unclear] will carry out. Marshall: Well, the one they would want to get in touch with right now are the ones that . . . There’s a company in Oxford. Sorensen: That are right there in the armory. Marshall: Yeah. Sorensen: The ones that are right there. Marshall: Well, a company could do a lot of good. Sorensen: Maybe there’s a phone in the armory. Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? If they what? [Laughter in background.] Sorensen: [Unclear.] Lincoln: Ramsey [unclear]. O’Donnell: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Yeah. Marshall: Well, after dark. [Unclear.] Unidentified: The hours are [unclear]. They’ll probably charge the telephone. [Unclear.] O’Brien: I just put that together. I thought it was valid. Sorensen: It isn’t quite clear yet what our [unclear] administration building is. Unidentified: You know, I can’t think what [unclear]. O’Brien: [Unclear] I assume the students think he is there or why would they keep [unclear]? Marshall: Well, the marshal stood there. Unidentified: Let’s say the marshal [unclear]. O’Brien: [Unclear] near a pay phone. 284 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Unidentified: [Unclear] the phones in there. [Laughter.] Unidentified: Phones. Unidentified: I think maybe you’re right. That’s what it is. Marshall: [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear] tough when you’re fighting the bastards. Unidentified: Is there any fight with [unclear]? O’Brien: They got a very good [unclear]. O’Donnell: Yeah. Well, if the [unclear] injured, they . . . Then you could get their [unclear] to [unclear] the students. Unidentified: I can’t help, my impression was that the National Guard unit was on its way to Oxford from their outlying [unclear]. Sorensen: Well some are, apparently, four hours away, but the one at Oxford is being called to the armory in Oxford.67 O’Brien: By whom? Unidentified: Cy. [Laughter.] Unidentified: What’s the problem? Unidentified: Well, it’s a rather vague one, I think. I don’t think I could normally get in touch with them, the National Guard. Sorensen: A bicycle could go to the armory faster. Unidentified: Somebody ought to go down there. Unidentified: Well, the general will be [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Yeah, [unclear] starting to fire . . . President Kennedy: Want to call the Governor on that? Sorensen: Unless they get rid of the . . . Unidentified: [Unclear] fire marshals. President Kennedy: [Unclear] marshals. President Kennedy: Did you talk to Barnett? Marshall: [Unclear.] Unidentified: Students riot? Robert Kennedy: Well, I don’t [unclear] Walker’s crowd. Sorensen: He’s arrived on campus? [Unclear] changes from outsiders. Robert Kennedy: What? Sorensen: I think there’s really a good justification for [unclear] students. President Kennedy: Well, [unclear] I would not . . . Robert Kennedy: Not now. 67. Evidently, because of the delay in getting Task Force Alpha down, the Secretary of the Army has located some National Guard reinforcements closer to the campus. Meeting on Civil Rights 285 President Kennedy: The only way that [unclear]. Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? Yeah. President Kennedy: They can keep their options open because [unclear] the MPs have left yet. Marshall: [on the phone] They need the Guard [unclear]. O’Brien: [Unclear.] Walker’s intent. Unidentified: Huh? O’Brien: General Walker’s plan. Unidentified: [Unclear] Walker’s military career? Sorensen: I hear it was pretty good. Unidentified: It used to be in somebody . . . Sorensen: [Unclear] beachhead. Unidentified: We should . . . O’Donnell: Better get Cy Vance. The General [unclear] he used to shove messages over to the Germans [about] what area they were going into. He would himself lead a company of guys no matter, and slit the throats coming back on the way out. I tried to [unclear] they always had a message that they were coming. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: I asked Lemnitzer, one day, I said, gee, I just couldn’t believe that any guy . . . That I saw him on television, I couldn’t believe that such a stupid . . . could become a general because [unclear].68 O’Brien: [Unclear.] Unidentified: You have exams or anything like that? Unidentified: [Unclear] demonstrate conduct so . . . Unidentified: Yeah. Sorensen: According to [unclear]. In [unclear] and approach you on question [unclear]. Unidentified: Yeah. O’Brien: I saw them. Unidentified: Yeah. Unidentified: [Unclear.] The President could take [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] We’ll do it in the House. Unidentified: Why, I hear those guys won’t mind their trucks. They’re watching too much television. He saw the [unclear]. Unidentified: He thought they needed mobilizing. See all of them, they all had to go down and organize that, plus TV. They watch themselves on TV. 68. General Lyman Lemnitzer was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 286 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Unidentified: Would they like to be sworn in the federal service? [Laughter.] Unidentified: No. Sorensen: I guess that’s the most we get now. President Kennedy: [Unclear] to Cy Vance right here. [Unclear.] Unidentified: Where is he? Unidentified: Vance is [unclear]. Unidentified: Say listen, we’re contributing a lot to this. Unidentified: Yeah. O’Brien: Makes it kind of fascinating. It’s getting like an election night or something. That door opens, I went for the next bulletin. Unidentified: Bob asked me to stay and sleep good and then watch the . . . President Kennedy: Now look, you ought to do [unclear], as soon as Vance calls us back. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? Hello? Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: He’s been shot.69 Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Oh, can you get them back? Unidentified: Walker isn’t . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Oh, hello. Is Nick there? Marshall: [Whispers.] [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [to someone in the room] [Unclear.] The thing is [unclear] about the military . . . He can’t tell me, can’t tell you anything. Unidentified: Is there any word from Cy or [unclear]? President Kennedy: I suppose he could get in the [unclear]. The problem really is from there to here, not from . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Oh, Ed? Yeah, what’s bad again? [Pause.] What can you do, though, you see those guards can’t get in there for awhile. [to the people in the room] An AP man got shot.70 [on the phone] Well, I can’t find out from the military. [Pause.] He says what? Where does he get that word from? How does Ramsey Clark know in 15 minutes, do you know? 69. Marshal Graham E. Same of Indianapolis was shot in the neck and in critical condition. “How a Secret Deal Prevented a Massacre at Ole Miss,” Look, 31 December 1962. 70. William Crider of the Associated Press. Meeting on Civil Rights 287 Marshall: What’s that [unclear]? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well, how long can you hold there? [Sound of door opening.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Lincoln: Ramsey Clark. Marshall: [on the phone in the distant background] Hello? Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah. [putting down the phone and speaking to the people in the room] They’re storming where Meredith is.71 President Kennedy: Oh. The students are or the . . . Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] They’re storming where Meredith is. Marshall: [in the background] They’re outside. [Unclear.] Yes. Yes. President Kennedy: Well, are the other marshals going? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hey, Nick? President Kennedy: [Unclear] necessary . . . You better try to stick them, all the marshals in. . . . I suppose get in the cars. . . . I don’t see how they can . . . They may not be able to move him out, I suppose. Unidentified: Because they’re in . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Well, you better move them all out and see if we can’t get them. You go ahead and do it. All right. [Puts the receiver down.] Marshall: Bob, do we have any word on the MPs?72 Robert Kennedy: Yeah, they’re on their way. You want to get Nick? President Kennedy: What? Robert Kennedy: You want to get Nick? President Kennedy: All right. Telephone rings. Lincoln: Hello? Unidentified: Hello, [unclear]. O’Donnell: You don’t want to have a lynching. O’Brien: Yeah. [Long pause.] Good. [Long pause.] O’Donnell: [on the phone] Hello? Oh, you want Bob? Yeah. Who is this? Ken O’Donnell. Yes. Yeah. Unidentified: [Unclear.] 71. Fortunately, this was only a false rumor. Throughout the riot the lightly guarded Baxter Hall escaped any serious harassment. There were only 24 marshals guarding Meredith in his dormitory. 72. Task Force Alpha. It is still in Memphis. 288 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 O’Donnell: [on the phone] Were they after him, or what? Are they after him now? [Pause.] Yeah. OK. [Replaces the receiver.] [to Robert Kennedy] Bobby, it was the [unclear] that [unclear] firing. Sounds of people coming into the room. An indistinct conversation is overheard where someone says “side arms.” Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? Hello? Well, I think they have to protect Meredith now. Well, that’s what I mean. They better fire, I suppose. They got to protect Meredith. What? [Pause.] [Unclear] can’t do anything. Is Meredith all right? Unidentified: Well, I don’t know. If they can. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] They better protect Meredith now. Well, can you make sure that he’s protected, Dean? [Pause.] While Robert Kennedy hastened to react to the possibility that Baxter Hall might be stormed, the President was in the Oval Office trying to pressure Governor Ross Barnett to help restore order to the campus. Kennedy was especially concerned that the injured man receive medical attention. This conversation was taped. 12:14 A.M. We couldn’t consider moving Meredith if we haven’t been able to restore order outside. That’s the problem, Governor. Conversation with Ross Barnett73 Ross Barnett: . . . the Commissioner of the highway patrol to order every man he’s got. President Kennedy: Yeah. Well, now, how long’s that going to take? We don’t want somebody . . . Barnett: Well, I haven’t been able to locate him. President Kennedy: You can’t locate . . . Barnett: He went to the . . . Here’s what happened. He went to the doctor’s office with this man that was hurt. 73. Dictabelts 4E and 4F, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Conversation with Ross Bar nett 289 President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: And I finally located him there after you’d told me to get, have him to get more people, don’t you see, if . . . President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: You needed ’em. President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: And he thought then that fifty he had would be sufficient. President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: But I told him by all means to order out every one he had if he needed it. President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: And I’m certainly trying in every way . . . President Kennedy: Well, we can’t consider moving Meredith as long as, you know, there’s a riot outside because he wouldn’t be safe. Barnett: Sir? President Kennedy: We couldn’t consider moving Meredith if we haven’t been able to restore order outside. That’s the problem, Governor. Barnett: Well, I’ll tell you what I’ll do, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: I’ll go up there myself . . . President Kennedy: Well, now, how long will it take you to get there? Barnett: . . . and I’ll get a microphone and tell them that you have agreed to re—, to, for ’em to be removed . . . President Kennedy: No. No. Now, wait a minute. How long . . . Barnett: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Wait a minute, Governor. Barnett: Yes? President Kennedy: Now, how long is it going to take you to get up there? Barnett: About an hour. President Kennedy: Now, I’ll tell you what, if you want to go up there and then you call me from up there. Then we’ll decide what we’re going to do before you make any speeches about it. Barnett: Well, all right. Well . . . President Kennedy: No sense in . . . Barnett: . . . I mean, whatever you, if you’d authorize . . . President Kennedy: You see, if we don’t, we got an hour to go, and we may not have an hour. Barnett: This, this man . . . President Kennedy: It won’t take you an hour to get up there. Barnett: . . . this man has just died. 290 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 President Kennedy: Did he die? Barnett: Yes. President Kennedy: Which one? State police? Barnett: A state policeman. President Kennedy: Yeah, well, you see, we got to get order up there, and that’s what we thought we’re going to have. Barnett: Mr. President, please. Why don’t you, can’t you give an order up there to remove Meredith? President Kennedy: How can I remove him, Governor, when there’s a riot in the street, and he may step out of that building and something happen to him? I can’t remove him under those conditions. You . . . Barnett: Uh, but, but . . . President Kennedy: Let’s get order up there; then we can do something about Meredith. Barnett: . . . we can surround him with plenty of officials. President Kennedy: Well, we’ve got to get somebody up there now to get order and stop the firing and the shooting. Then when you and I will talk on the phone about Meredith . . . Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: . . . but first we got to get order. Barnett: I’ll, I’ll call and tell them to get every official they can. President Kennedy: That’s right and then you and I will talk when they get order there, then you and I will talk about what’s the best thing to do with Meredith. Barnett: All right then. President Kennedy: Well thank you. Barnett: All right. President Kennedy hangs up. Meeting on Civil Rights, Continued President Kennedy returns to the Cabinet Room to report on his conversation with the Mississippi Governor. President Kennedy: He wants us to move him again. And I say, “Well, we can’t move him if the situation’s like this.” And he says, “Well, we’ll take care of the situation if you move him.” Robert Kennedy: I can’t get him out. How am I going to get him out? President Kennedy: That’s what I said to him. Now, the problem is, if he can get law and order restored, . . . OK, we’ll move him out of there if he can get order restored. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 291 Unidentified: I don’t see how we can . . . Long pause. Sounds of doors opening and closing. Evelyn Lincoln can be indistinctly heard talking in the background. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Now we’d better get this . . . Now, they might not recognize the kids today. Get him . . . get him up there and get him out or something. I don’t know what the exit is. Yeah, yeah, they’re shooting at other . . . Unidentified:. [Unclear.] He said [unclear] to you immediately. Robert Kennedy: I’m glad to see that . . . They always make sure of everything, even if they don’t know what time it is. [on the phone] Can we be all right? Will they be all right? Have they gotten into the room? I think we just have to protect him no matter what it is. O’Donnell: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] All right. Would you get that, Ed? See if we can get Barnett to get [the] highway patrol to bring doctors in. [Door opens.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Nick? I’ll hold. O’Brien: Doctor. Sorensen: From the inside of the arm[ory] or wherever [unclear]. O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello. President Kennedy: What about removing him if Barnett says that he can restore law and order? Robert Kennedy: Well, that’s not what they, they’re firing at the marshals. Unidentified: I’d sure as hell put all those bastards in the can. Unidentified: Yeah. That’s for sure. O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello. What’s it look like? O’Donnell: [Edwin] Guthman’s so scared he can’t talk. Helpless feelings on the other end of that phone. You have to [unclear]. O’Brien: [on the phone] This is Larry O’Brien. [Pause.] O’Donnell: [in the background] I hate to say it, but I [unclear]. Unidentified: Well, we ought to do that [unclear] to Barnett. [Indistinct exchange.] O’Brien: [on the phone] Yes. Yes. Hello? Yes. Hello? [to the people in the room] Two marshals have been shot. [on the phone] Yes, we’re on this line down there. We’re on this line. Well, we’re talking down there. This is Larry O’Brien in the Cabinet Room. Hello? Yeah. So I understand. Yeah. Yeah. Are you able to move them out of the administration building to where the boy is? 292 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Marshall: Have they got authority to return, Bobby? O’Brien: They know it. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: First. I thought they said [they] haven’t eaten since this morning. [Unclear.] [Unclear] in the field, probably didn’t spend a lot of time on the campus. Evelyn Lincoln: [Heard faintly in the background.] Unidentified: [Unclear] people [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear] one reason was that the people [unclear]. O’Brien: They say they can’t determine just what his next move is. Let’s see what’s going to happen. He says these students are getting ready with a flying wedge to hit the dormitory and [face] these guys. He says, “No, they just have to face us, and somebody’s going to get it.” Unidentified: Have they not shot back yet? The marshals? O’Brien: Apparently not. Said some of them were hit with buckshot. But there are two of them seriously hurt. They really don’t know how badly yet. The problem . . . One’s bleeding in the throat. [Possible door sound.] President Kennedy: Well, can I talk to them directly and on . . . Robert Kennedy: Do you want to get Nick for me? O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello? Is Nick there? All right. Robert Kennedy: The problem is, if we move him, they’re liable to [unclear]. Sorensen: About two hours. President Kennedy: What about the Guard? Robert Kennedy: Well, can’t the 82nd [unclear]. Unidentified: How long before they get any more guards? Robert Kennedy: He told me he’d have several bunches in an hour. President Kennedy: An hour from now? Robert Kennedy: And in a pinch they’d have about [unclear interjection]. They took two hours. Marshall: And they [unclear]. [Continues speaking faintly in the background.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: [on the phone] Yeah? Nick? Hold on, here’s Bobby. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hey, Nick? Oh, I just got, Ramsey just asked me for . . . if they had permission to fire back. Do you have to do that? Well, can’t they just retreat into that building? [Pause.] Is he safe over the other place? Oh, I think that they can fire to save him. But now, can you hold out for an hour there? [Pause.] Can you hold out if you have gas? Is there much firing? Is there any way you could figure a way to scare them off ? [Pause.] I’m sorry for that. I think that if we start a Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 293 battle with . . . Up in the air? Except then it might really start them. . . . Once you start firing, they can forget this . . . Will that help? OK. OK. [Puts down the receiver.] President Kennedy: [on the phone] Will you hold? [to the people in the room] Do you think they can hold for an hour? Robert Kennedy: If they have gas. President Kennedy: And do they?74 Robert Kennedy: I think it really depends on how much firing. [Phone rings in the background.] Unidentified: Pardon. Lincoln: [answering phone] Hello? Hello? Unidentified: How much firing? Robert Kennedy: The guards have arrived since you . . . Lincoln: [on the phone] This is Evelyn Lincoln. [calls out] Cy— Robert Kennedy: Cy Vance. . . . The President can take it. O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello. [Long pause.] Hello. [to the people in the room] Pretty damn hard once firing takes place, to shut it off. Unidentified: Yeah, I know. Operator: Hello? O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello. Operator: Yes, do you want a line? O’Brien: [on the phone] Just leave it open. Hello. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, we’ll leave this line open. All right. Right. [Puts the receiver down.] [to the people in the room] Well, they can’t even get the injured guy to the college dispensary. They’re trying to get a wedge to get him through. O’Donnell: Trying to get him through the crowd? [Long pause.] Sounds of a door opening and closing can be heard as Robert Kennedy returns to the room, probably after a conversation with Cyrus Vance, the secretary of the Army. Robert Kennedy: Damn Army! They can’t even tell if [unclear] the MPs have left [yet].75 The Attorney General now realizes that he hasn’t any federal reinforcements in town. And Vance at the Pentagon cannot even tell him when the advance contingent of Task Force Alpha will arrive at the Oxford armory. 74. No. The embattled federal forces at the Lyceum are still without tear gas. 75. It is about 12:17 A.M., over ninety minutes since the Attorney General ordered the movement of the troops from Memphis. 294 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello? O’Donnell: Whether they’ve left yet? Robert Kennedy: Won’t even attempt to tell us. O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello? Yeah. All right. Sorensen: You mean they’re not in contact with anyone . . . Robert Kennedy: Well, who knows what the reason is? Cy Vance doesn’t know yet. [Pause.] [Robert Kennedy leaves the room again.] Lincoln: [Unclear.] Pause. Sound of door opening. It appears that a midnight snack is being served. Unidentified: Cheese on this? Unidentified: Yes. O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello? Unidentified: [referring to the snack] And a roll. O’Brien: [on the phone] Nothing, huh? Right. Unclear voice in the background. O’Brien: [on the phone] Huh? Yes. O’Donnell: [Unclear.] O’Brien: Well, where were they? O’Donnell: [Unclear.] Out of the way. [Unclear.] I’ll be a son of a bitch if the President of the United States calls up and says, “Get your ass down there.” Yeah, I would think they’d be on that fucking plane in about five minutes. Unidentified: They sort of roped them in. O’Brien: So, where they are afraid the problem is the . . . now this flying wedge of students that’s going to tackle the dormitory.76 Half these guys, you know, they’ve about had it. O’Donnell: But what’s the point of it . . . these guys . . . burning and looting. I suppose they are going to kill us when they get here. O’Brien: Yeah. O’Donnell: You start firing at a bunch of students? O’Brien: They’re afraid it’s going to happen. O’Donnell: Uh? O’Brien: That’s what they’re afraid is going to happen.77 . . . marshal 76. Baxter Hall, where Meredith is located. 77. Tape 26 ends. There appears to have been some conversation lost before the Secret Service replaced the tape reel. Tape 26A begins, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 295 seriously hurt; the others, some others got buckshot. Well, this must have been done under the premise that something’s going to happen [unclear]. [on the phone] Hello? Pause. An indistinct conversation can be heard in the background. O’Brien: [puts down the receiver] If necessary, is there any way that we could get an ambulance? Sorensen: The police ought to be able to get an ambulance to the [unclear]. Unidentified: The Governor said, “Make sure and take that boy out of there, and everything will be all right.” O’Brien: That’s the main thing. Unidentified: I’d take him out. By tomorrow, with those 5,000 bayonets. Unidentified: Certain that there be no repercussions whether you choose to bring troops in or not. Unidentified: No. No. I agree. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: . . . write this thing off now. Obviously, the townies [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: They had in mind. [Doors open.] Sorensen: One that was hit by the gas? Unidentified: Yeah. [Unclear.] [Unclear exchange.] Robert Kennedy: Well, we can’t last that long. [Doors close.] O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello. Yeah. Hmm. Don’t worry. Oh yeah. Robert Kennedy: The son of a bitch. He knows [unclear]. [Door opens and closes.] President Kennedy: What? Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] It’s not about the policemen. It’s about other people being shot. If you get Barnett to get Meredith off the campus . . . President Kennedy: What? Robert Kennedy: Just to get Meredith off the campus. That’s what he wants. Unidentified: Well he can [unclear]. [Sound of water being poured.] Robert Kennedy: That’s what he said. President Kennedy: Well, he wants to be able to say that he asked me to get him off. And that I refused. Robert Kennedy: Now, he’s too . . . President Kennedy: You’ve got to get law and order and then you can discuss what to do about Meredith. But he can’t do anything. He doesn’t even get ahold of the head of the state police. 296 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Robert Kennedy: What do they say? O’Brien: They don’t know. Nothing at the moment. Robert Kennedy: We’ll have to stick it to that Walker.78 [Door opens and closes.] Sorensen: Can’t you get him arrested? Robert Kennedy: Well, I can’t do it now. Sorensen: Why not? Robert Kennedy: Well, he’s out there in the field. Unidentified: You mean there’s nobody that can go out and arrest him? Robert Kennedy: Yeah. O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello? Robert Kennedy: Is he still being shot at, Larry? O’Brien: [talking on the phone] No. Any shooting? Things quiet now? Quiet. Yeah. Yeah. [talking to people in the room] Everything’s quiet around there, but he doesn’t know . . . they’re trying to check the dormitory. Robert Kennedy: The what? O’Brien: Trying to check around as to what’s going on in the dormitories. He says it’s quiet around the area. One fellow’s seriously hurt and they’re trying to get an ambulance. Marshall: There’s supposed to be an ambulance going in, too. [Door sounds.] Unidentified: Jesus! Sorensen: Sad day in our country. No conversation as they wait for information to come in. Doors open and close. Sorensen: Any word yet on the military? Marshall: Well, they’re just leaving Memphis.79 Sorensen: Can they handle that [unclear]? [Unclear exchange.] Robert Kennedy: Hey, Burke? Marshall: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: Want to talk to Watkins?80 You put the call in? Marshall: What? Robert Kennedy: Watkins. Marshall: Should we call him? 78. Major General Edwin A. Walker, retired. 79. At 12:26 P.M., the departure of Task Force Alpha was still about ninety minutes away. 80. Thomas A. Watkins. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 297 Robert Kennedy: Yes. Doors open and close followed by silence. Then again there are sounds of doors opening and closing, with Evelyn Lincoln’s voice in the background and an unclear exchange in the foreground ending with “Jesus Christ.” The President enters the room. President Kennedy: [Unclear] casualties [unclear] unless we’re lucky. O’Brien: The state policeman died. It’s too bad. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello? Yeah. Yeah. All right. Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Shotgun wound in his back. O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello? [Pause.] Right. No. All right. [talking to people in the room] He told me they ought to get [unclear] the fighting was [unclear] the campus [unclear] the assistant dean [unclear]. Unidentified: I understand it was [unclear]. [Voices can be heard murmuring in the background.] O’Brien: Yeah. The Attorney General enters the room. Robert Kennedy: What’s he say, Larry? O’Brien: Nothing at the moment. He just said that we’ve got a stretcher. [on the phone] Hello? Maybe he . . . Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hello? Well, how does it look now? O’Brien: So they sent 18 men out to the dormitory.81 They weren’t sure if they were receiving fire or not. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] And what about there, they firing at all now? [Pause.] Is Nick there? [Pause.] Well, I’d like to talk to him to see what the . . . Oh, they’re there? Yeah. Who’s this? Marshall: Let the people pick [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [in an aside] Now, they told them they had to land. [Unclear exchange.] Robert Kennedy: They think we shouldn’t do that. Unidentified: Not today. Robert Kennedy: You shouldn’t just, you shouldn’t say things. Unidentified: Why don’t you pick up the phone? That will get them flying. 81. Originally Katzenbach posted 6 men to guard Meredith; as the situation deteriorated on campus, 18 additional men were dispatched from the Lyceum front to reinforce Baxter Hall. 298 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Robert Kennedy: [Unclear] probably shouldn’t say anything [unclear]. These guys have capable fellows there. O’Brien: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: The National Guard. They can [unclear]. O’Brien: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [talking on the phone] Yeah. Oh Nick? How’s it look? The fellow from the London paper was there, was he?82 London paper. [talking to the people in the room] He says the fellow from the London paper died. . . . Yeah. President Kennedy: We ought to get some more troops. I wonder if it takes this long to get people ready around here. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Have the troops, have the National Guard showed up? Did they fire? Are they firing at all down there? Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Is it quieter? Marshall: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Who’ve you got up there at the other place? Yeah, but I mean I think you want to get somebody that’s up there that knows how important it is to keep Meredith alive. Yeah, but I mean it should be somebody that you know. And that should stay right by Meredith and shoot anybody that puts a hand on him. And it has got to be the absolute . . . OK? [The telephone rings in the background.] [speaking to the people in the room] It’s a little quieter. [Unclear.] The Attorney General steps out to call secretary of the Army Cyrus Vance to inquire about the status of the long anticipated Task Force Alpha. Hoping to reduce any further delays, the Attorney General wants to know whether the advance contingent can be flown directly to the campus. Robert Kennedy used his brother’s telephone and the call was taped. 82. At approximately 12:30 A.M., Jack Rosenthal of the Justice Department called the White House to report that a reporter for the London Daily Sketch, Paul Guihard, had been killed in the riot. His body was found next to a women’s dormitory on campus. See Dictabelt 4F2, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 299 Approximately 12:40 A.M. [H]ow long before they’ll be there? Conversation from the Oval Office between Robert Kennedy and Cyrus Vance83 Cyrus Vance: Yeah, see the problem is one of light getting in there, and they’re just going to get in wherever they can on the campus. Robert Kennedy: Yeah, and then they’re, we could use at least a couple hundred right there. Vance: Yeah, well . . . Robert Kennedy: I don’t know how. They don’t have transportation in from the airport. Vance: No. They will land on the campus. These are their instructions. Wherever they can get in, Bob. Robert Kennedy: OK. Vance: Right. Robert Kennedy: But when, how long before they’ll be there? Vance: Uh, well, they left—take a look at my watch—must be about, I would guess 10 or 15 minutes ago. And it was supposed to take about an hour. Bob, I don’t want to guess . . . Robert Kennedy: No. Vance: . . . at the thing because I don’t know precisely. Robert Kennedy: OK. All right. Vance: Right. Robert Kennedy: Thanks. Robert Kennedy hangs up. Meeting on Civil Rights, Continued At approximately the same time that Vance is confirming to Robert Kennedy that the helicopters have taken off, General Charles Billingslea calls the Justice Department (12:42 A.M.) with similar information. The first helicopters actually took off at 2:08 A.M. (12:08 A.M. Mississippi time). O’Donnell:[Unclear.] Somebody shot [unclear] the London paper [unclear]. 83. Dictabelt 4F3, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 300 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Unidentified: Right. Unidentified: It’s going to be a big story over in Europe, don’t you think? Unidentified: Yeah. O’Donnell: I have a hunch that Khrushchev would get those troops in faster. That’s what worries me about this whole thing. Unidentified: Why? O’Donnell: I think that . . . O’Brien: You know, but most of them [unclear] you get them there first [unclear]. O’Donnell: [Unclear.] O’Brien: [Unclear.] O’Donnell: I just don’t quite understand it. I mean, why would [unclear]. O’Brien: [on the phone] Hello? Anything doing? Marshall: Larry, is there any sign of the Guard? O’Brien: [on the phone] Find any Guard there at all? Any arrivals? Any word? Unidentified: I wish those marshals would arrive. No state police guarding them [unclear] troops [unclear]. The state police they can’t find [unclear]. Marshall: That’s what the Governor said. We didn’t find the state police. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: [on the phone] Yeah, I know. National Guard. O’Donnell: The MPs are airborne? At least? Marshall: What? O’Donnell: Are they airborne? Marshall: Yeah. They’re airborne. No, they are. They are in fact airborne. Unidentified: Yeah. Marshall: I mean, unless they’re lying to us. Sorensen: Well, they were not exactly accurate when they told us that they were. Marshall: They were two hours off to begin with. O’Brien: [on the phone] Not at the airport? Marshall: [Unclear] off something like that. Sorensen: It wasn’t two hours? [Unclear] regular Army? Marshall: Yeah. O’Brien: [on the phone] Yeah. Marshall: Or at least one of them. O’Brien: [on the phone] Yeah. Fine. Right. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 301 [talking to people in the room] The current problem is how to get the trucks off the campus back to the airport to bring the troops in. Marshall: Are the troops . . . O’Brien: The MPs. Marshall: They’re going to land on the campus. O’Brien: Well, he said that there’s a question whether they can or not. Marshall: Why? O’Brien: Well, I don’t know. Lights or what have you. O’Donnell: They have a helicopter? Marshall: Yeah. O’Brien: So that’s what they’re checking out now. They were going to have them land in the airport and bring them in by truck, but now . . . ? Marshall: They can’t get the trucks off the campus? O’Brien: Yeah. Door opens. The President and the Attorney General enter. Sorensen: A few hundred students and rednecks have really got the entire U.S. Army [unclear]. Unclear chatter; someone jokes, “Take a cab from the airport.” Unidentified: Think some of the townspeople would drive them in? Marshall: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: What about a baseball field with night lights or anything like that? O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello? Robert Kennedy: Burke, should we [unclear] them? Marshall: We cannot [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Well, they won’t be able to land. Unidentified: Unless they can open it. [Unclear] can get it open. O’Brien: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: But can Ramsey look at the map and see whether, where else there is?84 Marshall: Well, there is a practice field right next to the large [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Well, why don’t they [unclear]. Marshall: That’s where they [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: Well, I don’t know whether they can find it, though. [Unclear.] Marshall: If there’s no lighting. That’s a problem. 84. Ramsey Clark was assistant attorney general in the Lands Division of the Department of Justice. 302 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 O’Donnell: [Unclear] the weather’s all right, we can [unclear]. Unidentified: In the dark? O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Yeah. [Unclear exchange.] [talking on the phone] Yeah. Unidentified: Helicopters. O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Yeah. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: Second time in. O’Brien: [to the people in the room] Maybe they have sixty guardsmen there now. One of them was just wounded, so they know they’re there.85 President Kennedy: One of the guards was wounded? O’Brien: They said they just brought him in. So he says they estimate they’ve [unclear]. He arrived in a group of sixty. Unidentified: You were right about it anyway. President Kennedy: What? Unidentified: That’s good anyway. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: Sixty men . . . sixty men under the command of a Captain Falkner, is the name.86 O’Donnell: That’s Faulkner’s son.87 O’Brien: Yeah. O’Donnell: [Unclear.] Marshall: [talking on the phone] All right. Where did they land? O’Brien: One of the Oxford group, then? O’Donnell: Yeah. Must be. O’Brien: That’s what they have, sixty. Marshall: [Talking on the phone unintelligibly in the background. Unclear exchanges.] O’Brien: [on the phone] Yeah. Yeah. Oh. Yeah. [to the people in the room] Taking care of those sixty guardsmen pretty quick. One of them got hit in the arm with a brick. He’s down. And the other one got a cut across [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Donnell: He won’t like it. 85. The first confirmation for the White House that some National Guard reinforcements, a contingent of some 55, had reached the campus. Ramsey Clark at Justice learned this at 12:48 A.M. 86. Captain Murry Falkner, cousin of William Faulkner. 87. William Faulkner, author. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 303 Unidentified: The corpsman. O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Well, as long as they’re [unclear] backs to the bricks and rocks, that’s a hope. Yeah. Yeah. [Unclear exchange in the background.] O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Is that right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. OK. Right. O’Donnell: [Unclear] the marshal who fired that gas gun . . . O’Brien: [talking on the phone while Marshall is whispering in the background] No shooting, now though, huh? Yeah. Anything going? Yeah. Good. OK. He’s in the next room. I’ll keep this line open. OK. All right. [Meanwhile, an indistinct conversation is going on in the background.] OK, Dean, I’ll tell him.88 He’s in the next room [unclear]. OK. O’Donnell: [Unclear.] [telling a story] He said, “All right.” He said, “Who?” He said, “Governor, this is the Boston Post.” “Who the hell else would it be this time of the night?” “Governor, your daughter’s car has been found cracked up down on the Cape. Do you have any statement?” “Certainly, the thief must be apprehended.” [Laughter.] Sounds of the door opening and closing followed by a pause. O’Brien: You say you’re unsure about that car that’s been showered and hit with bricks. Unidentified: [Unclear.] O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello? Hi Joe. [Pause.] Yeah. [Pause.] Larry O’Brien. Yeah. [Pause.] Yeah. Well, I’ll get on it . . . yeah. OK. [Pause.] Sorensen: They say if you ever made a chronological listing of the reports we’ve gotten over that phone in the last three hours, it wouldn’t make any sense at all. O’Brien: [talking on the phone] Hello. [Pause.] Yeah. You want Bobby? Who’s this? Yeah, hold on a minute. [Puts down receiver.] He wants Bobby. [Sounds of door opening and closing.] Robert Kennedy: [talking on the phone] Hello? Yeah. O’Brien: [Unclear.] Robert Kennedy: [talking on the phone] They tell me the fellow from the London paper was killed. . . . Well, they found him back of some dormitories. Yeah. Yeah, that’s true. What are we going to say about all this, Ed?89 You know, we’re going to have a hell of a problem about why 88. Dean P. Markham. 89. Probably Edwin Guthman, director of public information at the Department of Justice. 304 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 we didn’t handle the situation better. Yeah, yeah. [Pause.] OK. Well, I think we are going to have to figure out what we are going to say. [Pause.] Do you want to? Oh yeah, well you did terrific. I think it’s just a question of the fact that I made the decision to send [pause]. OK. You want to hold on? Marshall: [on the phone] Hello? This is Burke. Yeah. Yeah. Lincoln: Bill Geoghegan calling you. 90 Want to take it? Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah. Oh, Mrs. Lincoln? Oh, Ed? Listen, can you hold on just a minute while I take a call from Bill? Hello? Just hold on. Phone rings. Then there are sounds of a door opening and closing. Operator: What number? Lincoln: One line. [Door opens and closes.] Marshall: [on the phone] Ed? They can’t get the trucks out to them. We’re going to try to land some on the campus. [Pause.] We’re not. [Pause.] Yeah, we ought to do that. It’s really a [pause]. Yeah. Let him know if they’ve gone. . . . Oh, he was there, all right. What he was doing I don’t know. I don’t know, Ed. Robert Kennedy: [Unclear.] Marshall: [on the phone] Yeah. Yeah, they did . . . Yeah. OK. They’ve all been evacuated, I underst—[pause]. Yeah. Real war. No. God, that’s dumb. That’s uh, that Army, you know, they’re just late. Well, they’re in the air.91 Yeah. I don’t think they do. They’ve got pistols. Well, they’re . . . Yes, they do. I mean, they’ll all be there by the morning, Ed. Yeah, I know. Yeah. Robert Kennedy: Is Ed there? Marshall: What? Robert Kennedy: Ed? Marshall: He just said, “Hold on,” and . . . Robert Kennedy: I’d like to speak to him, then. Marshall: Fine. [on the phone] Hello? Who’s this? Oh Dean? Is Ed around? Could—well, when he comes back, Bob wanted to talk to him. [Pause.] [to people in the room] Do they know what they’re going to do with the MPs? Unidentified: Not exactly. Robert Kennedy: Well, I think they [unclear] and maintain law and order, and then they can figure it out. 90. William A. Geoghegan was assistant deputy attorney general in the Department of Justice. He was the number two at the crisis center in the Justice Department. 91. It was about 12:55 A.M. and the helicopters are about to take off. Meeting on Civil Rights , Continued 305 Marshall: Well, I mean, do they know where they’re going to land them? Robert Kennedy: Oh, in another 15 or 20 minutes, I think. They have it pretty much under control, though, in effect. [Unclear.]92 Marshall: Oh, here’s Ed. [on the phone] Just a minute, Ed. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Hey, Ed? I think that probably you should get that crowd together and brief them on all that, when it quiets down and all. [Door opens.] Lincoln: Bill Geoghegan’s calling you. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah, but you see, we’re going to be blamed for not doing enough. And I think that you trace it. First, that we had the agreement with the Governor. Uh—Do you . . . Do you want to hold on? [He puts the receiver down.] Marshall: [on the phone] Hello, Ramsey? Robert Kennedy: [seems to walk to other side of the room] Well, he’s besieged, of course, from behind. . . . But he’s under siege. President Kennedy: So has he agreed with us? Robert Kennedy: Yeah, of course, he just figured that he . . . but I mean uh— [on the phone] Hello. Unidentified: What about? Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] What about the reporters there? Do they see the picture? [Unidentified background conversation.] Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah, I just think that, but the point that we want to get over you know is that the Governor said . . . made this arrangement. We didn’t sneak him in. I think that’s going to be the cry, that we snuck him in unprepared. Well, can I tell you what the . . . Of course, the point is, at first, he said, he came in in [a] helicopter, and of course they know he didn’t, and then the gate was opened to everybody to come through . . . and the state police guided him in. Yeah. Well, I just think that we are going to take a lot of knocks because of people getting killed, the fact that I didn’t get the people up there in time. President Kennedy: [on another phone] Well, now, did Bob Watkins [unclear].93 92. The advance contingent of Task Force Alpha landed at 1:50 A.M. Not only were they about 45 minutes later than the Attorney General had assumed, but these troops had to land at Oxford airport due to the cloud of tear gas that obscured any possible landing areas in or near the campus. The situation on the campus was still far from being under control. 93. Tom Watkins, Governor Barnett’s intermediary. 306 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] I think the fact, then, they promised the state police would stay and then the state police left. And he took responsibility . . . President Kennedy: [on the phone] All right. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] . . . under this arrangement for maintenance of law and order. President Kennedy: [on another phone] Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] I’ll do that, but I just thought you’d cover the points, and OK . . . President Kennedy: [on another phone] All right. Just call me now that it’s going to be important [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Yeah, but I mean, just so you know the facts and so that that we can . . . Yeah. OK. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] Now, how is it down there now? Marshall: OK. I’ll call you [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] OK. Unidentified: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: [on the phone] OK. Would you hold? Marshall: Well, we ought to get . . . Oh, have we called up other Guard units? Robert Kennedy: Well, they were sending them all, I guess. Marshall: They are? Robert Kennedy: Well, I’m not sure. [Unclear.] Doors close and the machine is left running. It is about 1:00 A.M. and the Cabinet Room is empty. Someone enters the room again and turns the machine off. 1:45 A.M. [W]e’ve got to get this situation under control. Conversation with Ross Barnett94 President Kennedy is losing his patience both with the U.S. Army, which has yet to arrive on the scene in Oxford, and with the Mississippi Governor, who has not contributed anything to restoring order at Ole 94. Dictabelt 4F4, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Conversation with Ross Bar nett 307 Miss since the unfortunate decision to remove the state troopers over four hours earlier. The President does not know that Governor Ross Barnett is indeed preparing to speak to the people of Mississippi about the crisis in Oxford. All that is known in Washington is that the FBI in Oxford has just detected a group of 150 state troopers sitting in their cars doing nothing but watching the unfolding tragedy. The conversation begins with unrelated fragments of phone conversation, perhaps on another line; then the recording of the main conversation begins. Unidentified: He treated a number of other people. I asked him how many doctors he had, and how many . . . Recording switches to following conversation. Ross Barnett: [Unclear—] President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: —and I, he said that what we were talking about we wouldn’t have any trouble. Do it tonight, you know. President Kennedy: Yeah. Well, our people say that it’s still a very strange situation. They wouldn’t feel that they could take a chance on taking him outside that building. Now if we, can we get these fellows? I hear they got some high-powered rifles up there that have been shooting sporadically. Can we get that stopped? How many people have you got there? We hear you only got 50. Barnett: Well, I have approximately 200 there now, Mr. President. That’s not that . . . President Kennedy: You got 200? Barnett: Sir, about 200. President Kennedy: Well, now let me get in touch with my people. Barnett: . . . and we don’t have but 210 or [2]12, patrolmen, you see. President Kennedy: I see. Well, now, let me get my people back again. Barnett: I’m doing everything in the world I can. President Kennedy: That’s right. Well, we’ve got to get this situation under control. That’s much more important than anything else. Barnett: Yes. Well, that’s right. President Kennedy: Now, let me talk to my people, and let me find out what the situation is there. Barnett: Yes. President Kennedy: They called me a few minutes ago and said they had some high-powered rifles there. So we don’t want to start moving . . . Barnett: Mr. President . . . President Kennedy: . . . anybody around. Barnett: . . . people are wiring me and calling me saying, “Well, 308 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 you’ve given up.” I said, I had to say, “No, I’m not giving up, not giving up any fight.”95 President Kennedy: Yeah, but we don’t want to . . . Barnett: “I never give up. I, I have courage and faith, and, we’ll win this fight.” You understand. That’s just to Mississippi people. President Kennedy: I understand. But I don’t think anybody, either in Mississippi or anyplace else, wants a lot of people killed. Barnett: Oh, no. No. I . . . President Kennedy: And that’s what, Governor, that’s the most important thing. We want . . . Barnett: . . . I’ll issue any statement, any time about peace and violence. President Kennedy: Well, now here’s what we could do. Let’s get the maximum number of your state police to get that situation so we don’t have sporadic firing. I will then be in touch with my people and then you and I’ll be talking again in a few minutes; see what we got there then. Barnett: All right. President Kennedy: Thank you, Governor. Barnett: All right now. President Kennedy: I’ll be back. President Kennedy hangs up. 1:50 A.M. [C]an you get them so that we stop this rifle shooting? Continuation of Conversation with Ross Barnett96 Kennedy again emphasizes to Barnett the importance of restoring order, while Barnett assures the President that he is doing everything possible to gain control of the situation. 95. Throughout the evening, the Governor was deluged with calls and telegrams urging him not to “sell out” to the Kennedys. In response to such talk, Barnett went on the air shortly before midnight (local time), and declared, “I call on Mississippians to keep the faith and courage. We will never surrender.” 96. Dictabelt 4F5, Cassette A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Continuation of Conversation with Ross Bar nett 309 President Kennedy: Hello. Unidentified: Just one moment, sir. Unidentified: There you are, sir. There’s the President. President Kennedy: Hello. Hello. Ross Barnett: Mr. President? President Kennedy: Yes, Governor. Barnett: I just talked with Colonel Birdsong . . . 97 President Kennedy: Right. Barnett: . . . who is our director of the highway patrol . . . President Kennedy: That’s right. Barnett: . . . and he assures me that he has approximately 150 men there now.98 President Kennedy: Now, we got a report that they’re all in their cars two or three blocks away. Barnett: I told ’em, just like you asked me, to get moving. President Kennedy: I see. Now, can you get them so that we stop this rifle shooting? That’s what we got to stop. Barnett: Well, he says he’s doing all that he can. He says they’re strangers in there. President Kennedy: I know it, well that’s what we hear. Barnett: And he’s calling for 50 more, and that’ll put it up around 200. President Kennedy: Can they get those students to go to bed? Barnett: Well, he says he’s trying to, and I don’t think it’ll be long before he can get them all to bed. President Kennedy: OK. Will you stay at . . . Barnett: Maybe not, I can’t tell. President Kennedy: Well, let’s stay right at it. We ought to be, that’s what we got to do before we can do anything. Barnett: . . . he’s reporting constantly to a gentleman who has control of the activities of the troops there. President Kennedy: Yeah. Barnett: And he understands that he’s doing all he can. President Kennedy: Well, I think that it’s very important, Governor, aside from this issue; we don’t want a lot of people killed just because they, particularly, evidently two or three guardsmen have been shot. And, of course, our marshals and then that state trooper, so we don’t want . . . 97. T. B. Birdsong was head of the Mississippi Highway Patrol. 98. This is presumably the 150 men seen sitting in their cars near campus. 310 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 2:00 A.M. When will they be there? Conversation between Robert Kennedy and Creighton Abrams99 Task Force Alpha finally arrived at the Oxford Airport at 1:50 A.M., after the cloud of tear gas over Ole Miss had prevented a daring landing at the campus. The President and his brother feared new delays. It had taken Captain Murry Falkner’s National Guard Unit well over an hour to move the few miles from downtown Oxford to the Lyceum. With the airport even farther away from the campus, the White House wondered how the U.S. Army could accelerate the deployment of its 200-man advance contingent. The tape begins with General Creighton Abrams’s trying to explain the Army’s plan to move the men. Abrams is monitoring the situation from the Millington Naval Air Station, outside Memphis, Tennessee. Creighton Abrams: Mr. Geoghegan reports to me that there are more than enough trucks at the strip, with 180 men in the helicopters. 100 Robert Kennedy: You got 180 men? Where are the rest of them? Abrams: Moving on the road. Robert Kennedy: When will they be there? Abrams: Uh, about two hours and three-quarters. That would be quarter of three in the morning our time. Robert Kennedy: Quarter of five our time? How many of them are there? Unidentified: [off the phone in the room] Quarter of five. Robert Kennedy: How many of them are there? Abrams: The 500. Robert Kennedy: And when do the rest of . . . 99. Dictabelts 4F7 and 4G1, Cassettes A and B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 100. Geoghegan and Ramsey Clark at the Justice Department War Room have maintained the only continuous contact to the U.S. Army during this crisis. The U.S. Army evidently relies on the Justice Department War Room for information about the battle conditions in Oxford. After this crisis, the Army would be criticized for not having done any preliminary reconnaissance in Oxford. Conversation between Robert Kennedy and Creighton Abrams 311 Abrams: Behind that’s another battalion, marching right behind them, of 680. Robert Kennedy: They’re MPs? Abrams: MPs. Robert Kennedy: What was the delay in getting them out of Memphis? Abrams: They . . . I don’t know the details of it, Mr. Kennedy. They . . . this is the best response they could make, apparently, under the circumstances. Robert Kennedy: Well, who’s in charge of that? Abrams: Each of those battalions has a battalion commander, and both battalions are under the command of General [Charles] Billingslea. They had a meeting over here this afternoon, which I did not attend. But they had a meeting in which they discussed all these plans. Robert Kennedy: Well, didn’t they say they could get off and down there within an hour? Abrams: Yes, they expected a much more rapid response than has occurred. I know General Billingslea did. Robert Kennedy: What happened then? Abrams: I don’t know. Robert Kennedy: Is somebody going to find out? Abrams: Yes, sir. Robert Kennedy: [Sighs.] What about the battle group? Abrams: We have gotten ahold of the battle group and have diverted them. We got ahold of them at [unclear]. Robert Kennedy: When will they be down there? Abrams: . . . Tennessee. I don’t have a new estimate on that, sir. We’ve, it’s only been within the last 15 or 20 minutes that we got ahold of them, and it hasn’t been recast. But I can get it very shortly. Robert Kennedy: Yeah. Will you call me back at the White House? Unidentified: [Unclear.]101 Abrams: I will. Robert Kennedy: OK. Thank you. Abrams: Yes, sir. Robert Kennedy hangs up. 101. This conversation continues on Dictabelt 4G. 312 S U N DAY, S E P T E M B E R 30– M O N DAY, OCTOBER 1, 1962 4:20 A.M. General, you ought to consider what kind of communication you’re going to set up at that airport because you’re going to have people flying in there. Conversation with Creighton Abrams102 Five and one half hours after President Kennedy ordered U.S. troops to the campus at the University of Mississippi, Task Force Alpha reached the riot zone. President Kennedy is frustrated by the delays and misinformation swirling about this entire operation. Once he knows that the troops have arrived, he decides to make a point of stressing the need for better coordination and implementation once daylight returns to Oxford. Evelyn Lincoln: Hello. Unidentified: General Abrams calling the President from Millington, Tennessee.103 Lincoln: [off the phone to President Kennedy] General Abrams is on the line at the other end. President Kennedy: Hello. Hello? Unidentified: Here you are, sir? Creighton Abrams: General Abrams. President Kennedy: Yes, General. Abrams: I have a report from General [Charles] Billingslea. President Kennedy: That’s right. Now, the Attorney General has him on the other phone. [off the phone to Robert Kennedy] Is that General Billingslea you got? [back to Abrams] We got him on the other phone. So we’ll be talk . . . Abrams: The MP company arrived on the campus at 2:15 local time. President Kennedy: Right. OK, now, General, what about the rest of . . . When are these other MPs going to get there? Do you know? Abrams: The 503rd MPs should arrive at approximately zero fourthirty. President Kennedy: That’s local time there? 102. Dictabelt 4G2, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 103. Location of Memphis Naval Air Station. Conversation with Creighton Abrams 313 Abrams: Local time. President Kennedy: That’s, in other words, that’s two hours? Abrams: Local time here. President Kennedy: That’s the group that set out by truck, is it? Abrams: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: So, your addition— Abrams: They’re followed by another MP battalion that should arrive at five. There, there’s just the length of the battalion between them. President Kennedy: In other words, but the next MP group to arrive won’t be for two hours. Is that correct? Abrams: That’s correct, sir. President Kennedy: Then after that there’ll be some more in a half hour. Then what about that battle group? Abrams: They, they . . . Just a moment, sir. [off the phone to someone in the room] The battle group is [unclear]. [back to President Kennedy] Six o’clock, sir. President Kennedy: What? Six o’clock. Abrams: Six o’clock. President Kennedy: Well, now, General, you ought to consider what kind of communication you’re going to set up at that airport because you’re going to have people flying in there. Seems to me you ought to have very good communications with that airport as well as the campus. Abrams: Yes. President Kennedy: With General . . . In other words, General Billingslea ought to have a communication with the airport. You ought to have a communication with the airport and Billingslea because we’re going to have people flying in there all day tomorrow. Abrams: Yes. President Kennedy: And then, of course, we got the problem of transportation and all the rest. So these are all matters that you’ll be dealing with. But I think communication is very important. Abrams: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: OK. Fine, General. Thank you. President Kennedy hangs up. The arrival of U.S. troops calmed the situation immediately on campus. The student mob dispersed and an uneasy peace took hold. The change in the situation in Oxford gave the President an opportunity to get some sleep. The Attorney General and Burke Marshall went to the Justice Department, and Kennedy retired to the Mansion for a nap. 314 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 1, 1962 Monday, October 1, 1962 The President managed to get about three hours’ sleep after the previous night’s vigil. Still in the family quarters, he called Governor Ross Barnett to press for some local assistance in keeping order. Concerned that a large number of outsiders would be in the area, the President believed that local officials would be especially useful in helping to keep the peace. 8:46 A.M. And I think that doesn’t change your position on the issue, but at least it helps maintain order, which is what we’ve got to do today. Conversation with Ross Barnett1 Begins in midconversation. Ross Barnett: . . . let the public know we’ve talked so many times, don’t you think? President Kennedy: That’s correct. Now here’s what I’m going to . . . Barnett: Now, I can tell you . . . I think you said it mighty well last night, that “tried to reach the conclusion and couldn’t,” or words to that effect. President Kennedy: Now, I was very . . . As you know in my speech, I didn’t even mention [unclear] . . . Barnett: “[Unclear] fail,” I believe you said.2 President Kennedy: That’s right, you know, and I didn’t go into . . . Barnett: You made a wonderful statement there. 1. Dictabelt 4G3, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 2. The text of Kennedy’s 30 September 1962 radio and television speech on the situation at the University of Mississippi can be found in the Public Papers of the Presidents: John F. Kennedy, 1962 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963), pp. 726–28. Conversation with Ross Bar nett 315 President Kennedy: Well, now, the thing is, Governor, I want your help in getting these state police to continue to help during the day because they’re their own people. And we are going to have a lot of strange troops in there, and we are going to have paratroopers in and all the rest. And I think the state police should be the key, and that depends on you. Barnett: Oh, I . . . You’ll have, you’ll have the whole force that we have. President Kennedy: Well, now, you tell them . . . Barnett: The [unclear] men are not equipped like yours. President Kennedy: I understand that. But during the daytime they can help keep order on these roads and keep a lot of people from coming in. And I think that doesn’t change your position on the issue, but at least it helps maintain order, which is what we’ve got to do today. Barnett: All right, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Thank you, Governor. Barnett: I’ll stay here now. President Kennedy: Thank you very much. Barnett: Thank you so much. President Kennedy: And keep after your state police now. Barnett: I will. President Kennedy: Thanks. Barnett: I’ll call him as soon as we hang up . . . President Kennedy: Thanks. Barnett: . . . n’ tell him to do all he can to keep peace. President Kennedy: OK, thanks, Governor. Barnett: And when’ll I hear from you again? President Kennedy: I’ll be talking to you about noon, my time. Barnett: OK. Thank you so much. Good-bye. President Kennedy: OK, Governor. President Kennedy hangs up. Still upstairs at the White House, the President called the solicitor general, Archibald Cox, to discuss some legal issues raised by the Oxford riot. In particular, the President was considering seeking the arrest of Governor Barnett and Major General Edwin Walker. The President was due to see Cox at the Supreme Court in less than a half hour at the swearing in of Arthur Goldberg as associate justice. He was giving the Solicitor General some warning as to what was on his mind. 316 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 1, 1962 9:31 A.M. I wonder if we can get more precise information on where we are legally on arresting people, including the Governor if necessary and others? Conversation with Archibald Cox3 Phone rings. Evelyn Lincoln: Hello. Unidentified: I have Mr. Archibald Cox, the solicitor general, returning the President’s call. Lincoln: OK. President Kennedy: Hello. Archibald Cox: Good morning, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Good morning, I’m just on my way up there.4 Now, the only question I had was whether there are any additional proclamations or powers, et cetera, that we might need in the Mississippi matter if it gets worse, for arresting people, and under what charge and what legal penalties they face, and so on. For example, we want to arrest General Walker, and I don’t know whether we just arrest him under disturbing the peace or whether we arrest him for more than that. 5 I wonder if . . . How long are you going to be at the court this morning? Cox: Not beyond half past ten. 3. Dictabelt 4G4, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 4. The President was on his way to the Supreme Court to attend the swearing in of Arthur J. Goldberg as associate justice. 5. Major General Edwin A. Walker, U.S. Army, retired, was on the scene in Oxford and was present in the crowd on the night of the riot. On 1 October, he was arrested on four charges, including insurrection, and was held in lieu of $100,000 bail. After his arrest, Walker asserted, “They don’t have a thing on me.” He also issued a statement to Governor Ross Barnett, claiming his (Walker’s) efforts had been undertaken on behalf of the “stand for freedom everywhere.” While Walker apparently played more of an observer’s role in the melee, prior to the riot, he had issued a call from his home in Dallas, urging “patriotic” Americans to join him in Mississippi to oppose the federal government and the integration of the campus. Worth noting is that in 1957, Walker had commanded federal troops in Little Rock, Arkansas, in a celebrated event in the history of the civil rights movement; in 1962, he observed, he would be on the right side. After resigning from the Army in 1961, Walker had devoted himself to public affairs; his activities often centered on the claim that Communists had infiltrated the U.S. Government and the country generally. On 6 October, Walker was released on $50,000 bail, and returned to Texas the next day, where he was greeted by some 200 supporters. He was never tried. Conversation with Cyrus Vance and Robert McNamara 317 President Kennedy: Yeah, well then I wonder if we can get more precise information on where we are legally on arresting people, including the governor if necessary and others?6 Cox: Right. President Kennedy: And what the penalties are because we might want to announce that on the radio and television that anyone involved in any demonstration or anything would be subject to this penalty, and maybe the General could announce it.7 Cox: Right. Good-bye. President Kennedy: All right. OK. Thank you. Cox: Thank you. After returning from the Supreme Court, the President met with David Bell and Elmer Staats on the federal budget. At 11:30 A.M., the President would be presenting the Distinguished Service Medal to General Lyman Lemnitzer, the outgoing Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Cyrus Vance, the secretary of the Army, was expected to be in attendance. Before Vance came to the White House, Kennedy wanted to be sure that the U.S. Army contingent in Mississippi was going to be large enough for any contingency. 11:12 A.M. Now how are we doing on our schedule? Conversation with Cyrus Vance and Robert McNamara8 President Kennedy: Hello. Cyrus Vance: Yes, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Oh, yeah, I understood they’re having some riot- 6. Barnett was never arrested because the Kennedy administration believed the potential costs outweighed any possible gains that might accrue from his arrest and prosecution. According to a January 1963 White House memorandum [see Victor S. Navasky, Kennedy Justice (pbk. ed.; New York: Atheneum, 1977, pp. 237–38], there was little point in arresting and trying the governor, which would have made him a “hero.” 7. Attorney General Robert Kennedy. 8. Dictabelt H, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 318 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 1, 1962 ing downtown, and so on, and throwing rocks, and so on, at the troops. Now how are we doing on our schedule? Vance: Our schedule is still proceeding as I gave it to you [seems to be sound of hanging up a telephone], sir. President Kennedy: Yeah, well, you don’t know . . . Has anybody arrived this morning? Vance: [speaking off the telephone to someone in the room] Has anybody arrived this morning from those 1,700? [speaking to President Kennedy] Not yet, due in earliest at, what [speaking off the phone to someone in the room], ten o’clock their time is it? Let’s see, what’s their time? President Kennedy: Midnight. That’d be midday. Vance: 11:20. President Kennedy: 11:20 their time? Vance: Yep. President Kennedy: That’s 1:20 our time, isn’t it? Vance: Yes. President Kennedy: Now that is what, 1,700 more? Vance: Yeah. That’s, let’s see, that first increment is 900. Yeah. President Kennedy: And they’re due in at 1:20? What group is that? Vance: 1:20. Yeah, 1:20 our time. President Kennedy: What group is . . . ? Vance: That is the 82nd Airborne. President Kennedy: Right. I see. OK. Fine. All right. Are you going to come over to this ceremony . . . ?9 Vance: No, I thought I’d better stay here, sir. President Kennedy: I see. Well, now I talked to Secretary McNamara; he said something about you might be able to have 20,000 troops by midnight. Is . . . ? Vance: That’s right. We are taking steps to get them in. The orders have been given. The only limiting factor may be the weather, which is closing in. But we’re developing alternates so that we can get them in some way or other. President Kennedy: I see. You mean you might send them to Memphis and then what? Vance: If we can’t get into Memphis, we’ll try Columbus. Now this may add a little bit of time in getting them back, so we may not be able 9. The Distinguished Service Medal was presented to General Lyman Lemnitzer in the White House Rose Garden on 1 October 1962. T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 319 to finally make it by twelve, but we’ll do everything we can to get them in as soon as possible. President Kennedy: I see. OK. Fine. Vance: Just a second; Bob [McNamara] is here. Robert McNamara: Hello, Bobby. President Kennedy: Yes. Oh, this is . . . No, this is the President. McNamara: [Unclear], oh, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Yeah. McNamara: I think that with the priority the Air Force is giving this and we’re diverting all our MATS aircraft and our troop carrier aircraft, we can get them there by midnight.10 President Kennedy: Right. I see. You coming over for this . . . ? McNamara: No, sir. I just gave my citation to Ros and he will read it. I thought I’d stay here . . . President Kennedy: I see. OK. McNamara: . . . and follow this. President Kennedy: Righto. Fine. Thank you. McNamara: Thank you. President Kennedy hangs up. By late in the day, a force of nearly 5,000 National Guardsmen and soldiers were in Oxford, Mississippi. As of the next morning, 8,735 troops would have reached the town. After the ceremony for General Lemnitzer, the same group witnessed the swearing in of Maxwell Taylor as Lemnitzer’s replacement. The President then went for a swim and his lunch. In the afternoon, he had an unrecorded conversation with George Ball, Ralph Dungan, and Carl Kaysen. This brought the President’s official day to an end. Tuesday, October 2, 1962 The legislative tide was turning in the administration’s favor. In July it had seemed President Kennedy would achieve very little of his domestic agenda due to congressional obstruction. But in two months, what was 10. The acronym MATS stands for Military Air Transport Service. 320 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 once called the “Won’t Do” Congress had been somewhat transformed. On Monday the Senate had passed a version of the Foreign Aid Bill that restored 70 percent of the cuts made by the House. And this morning the President was able to sign one more bill that had seemed in trouble earlier in the summer. At a 9:30 A.M. ceremony he signed the U.N. Bond Act, which authorized a substantial U.S. loan to the international organization. This was encouraging too, in light of Kennedy’s concerns in late August that events in the Congo would derail its passage. Kennedy was taping very little at this point. Following a meeting with former U.S. ambassador to France James Gavin, the President received a confidential briefing from military aide Major General Chester V. Clifton. It is possible the President received the results of the September 29 inand-out U-2 flight over Guantánamo and the western tip of Cuba. This mission brought evidence of new SAM sites but no surface-to-surface missile installations. Cuba was certainly the subject of a meeting at 11:12 A.M. with George Ball and Carl Kaysen. Ball presented the President with a series of alternatives for dealing with non–Soviet bloc ships trading with Cuba. As a result of this meeting, the President chose “to close all United States ports to any ship that on the same continuous voyage was used or is being used in Bloc-Cuba trade.”1 Cuba was also the focus of a luncheon given by Kennedy for the foreign ministers of 19 Latin American countries. There he pressed for a joint hemispheric approach to the increasing Soviet presence in Cuba. The one meeting Kennedy taped was a discussion of the 1963 budget in light of its implications for future tax policy. Current budget estimates exceeded the political threshold of $100 billion, a first for the federal budget, with a $6 billion deficit. Would a budget that size kill any possibility of tax cuts in 1963? Already Kennedy had to consider the possible political consequences in 1964 of this level of deficit spending. 1. Memorandum from Acting Secretary of State Ball to President Kennedy, 2 October 1962, FRUS, 11: 3–4. Carl Kaysen noted the President’s reaction to this memorandum in National Security Action Memorandum No. 194, 2 October 1962, ibid., pp. 4–5. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 321 4:20 –5:20 P.M. So, if we go ahead with the idea of a substantial tax cut, we don’t believe in these people who say that they have to cut expenditures equivalently. But we do believe that you have to put on a performance that looks like you’re being careful with the expenditures. Meeting on the Budget and Tax Cut Proposal2 As the 87th Congress struggled to finish its business—adjourning on October 13, 1962—and with the 1962 midterm elections fast approaching, President Kennedy hoped to settle on a budget policy that would enhance the prospects for his party in the midterm election, the passage of pending tax cut legislation to be introduced in 1963, and his own reelection effort in 1964. He would make clear in the following discussion that the kind of policy he desired—a deficit now, produced largely with a tax cut and increased or accelerated public works expenditures—would be exceedingly difficult to sell to either Wilbur Mills or Harry Byrd, respective chairs of the House and Senate committees on which the fate of his tax cut proposal ultimately rested. Rehearsing the economics of gap-closing and full employment, Kennedy and his advisers would discuss both the budget as a whole and specific questions related to individual budget items.3 Should the official budget be changed to reflect trust fund transactions? Would Senate Finance Committee chairman Harry Byrd swallow any budget over the potentially shocking $100 billion mark and still endorse the administration’s tax cut proposal?4 Could committee chairman Wilbur Mills deliver a 2. Including President Kennedy, Gardner Ackley, David E. Bell, C. Douglas Dillon, Walter Heller, Charles Schultze, Theodore Sorensen, and Elmer B. Staats. Tape 27.1, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 3. When Ted Sorensen wondered aloud why raising the employment “score” from 93 to 96 percent, from A-minus to A, deserved such high political priority, Kennedy’s Council of Economic Advisers (and staff economist Arthur Okun in particular) undertook to outline and document the changes in general economic conditions that resulted from small changes in unemployment rates. What came to be called Okun’s law suggested that 3 extra percentage points in unemployment implied a 10 percent gap between actual and potential GNP. This gap was estimated to be approximately $51 billion at the time of Kennedy’s inauguration and had closed to approximately $30 billion at the beginning of 1962. 4. Indeed, when Lyndon Johnson finally convinced Byrd to pass the 1964 Tax Cut bill out of the Senate Finance Committee in January 1964, a budget introduced then under $100 billion assured the success of President Johnson’s lobbying efforts. “Harry,” Johnson announced after 322 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 tax cut from the House Ways and Means Committee with sufficient alacrity to lift the economy before it fell too far behind its full-employment potential? Would a recession be required to force Mill’s hand, or could the administration convince him and others that to wait for a recession would mean failing to exploit the potential of an economy that was growing but growing all too sluggishly? Because the performance of the U.S. economy had most recently fallen short of administration projections—a $555 billion GNP at midyear, when the Council of Economic Advisors had forecast $570 billion—the administration’s full-employment goal, established conservatively at 4 percent, was no longer a realistic target for 1963 but had to be pushed back to the middle of the presidential election year of 1964.5 Slippage in the employment target was a symptom of a larger problem for the President and his economic team. Leading economic indicators were offering only an indistinct picture of current economic trends; the significant durable goods orders category, for example, had reversed its direction every month from May to August. Kennedy needed to know where the economy was heading to make a firm decision on tax cuts. Somehow the White House had to reconcile a certain reluctance to act, in the face of opposition from Congress and much of the U.S. business community, with a growing unease at inaction, produced by an uncertain, perhaps teetering, domestic economy. To find a good economic policy when the best was beyond the political pale, as Kennedy adviser Walter Heller once put it, was the task at hand as the President convened the following meeting. Begins in midconversation. Elmer Staats: . . . well, we’ve thought of that, Mr. President, just to inject . . . one note of optimism is that I think it is very likely that you will not have a deficit on the income . . . the national income basis which, as you know—and nobody else seems to know [unclear] the question— presenting the official budget for fiscal year 1965, “I’ve got the damn thing under $100 billion . . . way under. It’s only $97.9 billion. Now you can tell your friends that you forced the President of the United States to reduce the budget before you let him have his tax cut” [quoted in Richard Goodwin, Remembering America: A Voice From the Sixties (Boston: Little, Brown, 1988), p. 262]. 5. The 1963 target was introduced in Kennedy’s first Economic Report to Congress delivered on 22 January 1962 [see “Message to the Congress Presenting the President’s First Economic Report. 22 January 1962,” Public Papers of the Presidents, John F. Kennedy, 1962 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963), p. 45]. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 323 that the amount of the deficit will be less than the amount of the cut . . . the net reduction in taxes.6 So that you could say that tax reduction is really what’s causing the deficit. You need that for full-range growth because . . . President Kennedy: That is what sustains the argument that the deficit is necessary to counteract [unclear], but you’d have a tough time justifying this tax cut because they’ll say we should reduce expenditures. As much as you have intended to reduce the taxes, we’re going to have to make the argument that the deficit is desired. Douglas Dillon: Yeah, well, also you have the other argument that tax reduction is desirable to take the brakes off growth and provides incentives and that to make reductions equivalent to that would mean that you’d have to cut your defense budget and things like that. And, obviously, either way it’s the— President Kennedy: Well, I don’t, I don’t mind taking on that argument so much. I’m not as— Dillon: Although I find the second one, that’ll pitch everything on the economic angle, that people don’t understand, although I think it’s . . . will have to be made politically. Theodore Sorensen: That’s really my point also, Doug. In other words, we can say that, at least on the income . . . national income basis, we could give you a balanced budget if we’re not thinking a tax cut, but we think the tax cut is needed. David Bell: Well, you can’t, economically, sustain precisely that point . . . if I recall the figures correctly. Because without the tax cut, the economy would not be pushing high enough so that that would be true, you see.7 Sorensen: Because of the feedback on taxes? Bell: Exactly—because of taxes. But, the point, I think, is— President Kennedy: Well, the problem is . . . is ’64. Dillon: Another thing that complicates that, Mr. President, is this idea of what we said we’d do is to make a retroactive tax cut. And, the effect of that really is that, for most of these assumptions, are that you won’t be able to get any of that retroactivity in operation except by refunds which take place in ’64. So in ’64 you have a double deduction: you have the deduction 6. The national income basis is a method of budgetary accounting, unlike the standard federal procedure known as the administrative budget, that includes trust fund receipts and expenditures (Social Security, highway grants-in-aid, unemployment compensation, etc.), omits government transactions in financial assets (e.g., federal loans), and records liabilities when they are incurred (accrual basis) and not when cash changes hands. 7. To produce enough revenue to achieve balance. 324 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 on the income side, not only from tax-rate reduction but also from the refunds for ’63, which are claimed backwards. So it’s—I’ve forgotten what the figure is—about a 3 or 4 billion dollar deficit. Bell: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Deficit? Bell: Yeah. But . . . the assumption is made here that the figures you see there is about 2 billion dollars. The deficit in ’60—fiscal ’64, which represents refunds— Charles Schultze: If— Bell: —to people who paid— Schultze: If you— Bell: —their taxes in ’63. Schultze: If you look on page 7, and look at that fiscal ’64 figure of a 13 billion dollar deficit, if the reductions were not retroactive, that figure would be 9.6 billion. Bell: Yes, you’re right. And— Schultze: And even if the . . . if the corporate rates were retroactive, but we coupled that with the Mills plan, but the personal rates were not retroactive, it would still be 9.6—8 Bell: You’d get— Schultze: You get below your 10 billion figure. This means that a great deal of the . . . we put this into the picture, if we did that, went back to where we left off and we left out the commitment, just on the personal income tax, your 981/2 billion figure would be less than a 100 billion; it would be a substantially less increase than in previous years; you could probably cut your deficit below 10 billion to this 9.6; and you could cite the fact that the tax cut is equal to about three fourths of the deficit. That is, that the tax cut of 7 billion that this is based on is equal to threefourths of the deficit. Now, the argument against that is that the lack of retroactivity would not permit your return to full employment, but would bring it down to about 41/2 percent rather than 4 percent in ’64. Bell: The retroactivity part of it that you really have to be asked to make a decision on, very obviously, is a tricky one, because the time you need the economic boost from a tax cut would probably be next spring, 8. Wilbur D. Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, had suggested in earlier meetings with the President and other administration officials that the Internal Revenue Service could reduce withholding rates, alone or in conjunction with a tax cut, to jump-start the economy. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 325 and that’s not the most likely time to get the tax bill enacted. So, this is going to be a difficult legislative problem. President Kennedy: Unless you have to divide it, I don’t know. We could look for that. Dillon: Even if you do that, if, you see, if it passes very quickly, you . . . there’s no particular feeling that, say if it even became law some time in May, then you probably couldn’t get the refund checks out in time. On the other hand, in ’63 . . . President Kennedy: There’s nothing we can do about the deficit, then, with respect to recession in the winter or spring, is there? As far as a tax cut? Walter Heller: But, do you really think that’s a . . . that’s an inescapable con[clusion] . . . legislative judgment, given the fact that there had been a couple of cases where Congress has whistled through a tax cut? Dillon: Oh, if we could get a tax cut through in March, we could get, oh . . . we could get, definitely, some of the refunds out in time, but not all of them. President Kennedy: Well, John Gerrity called, said in about thirty minutes Kaiser Steel’s going to take the price on it and cut it. 9 Twelve dollars a ton across the board?10 Unidentified: Fools! [A whistle.] Unidentified: A cut! Unidentified: A cut! President Kennedy: Twelve dollars a ton? Unidentified: Gee! [Unclear exchange. Laughter.] Staats: Well, I would . . . Let’s see, It would be . . . Unidentified: Eight percent . . . Staats: One hundred and four dollars . . . 9. John Gerrity was the Washington bureau reporter for the New York–based Daily Bond Buyer. See Walter Heller’s later comments in the transcript. 10. Later that day, Kaiser Steel Company announced cuts on products from its Fontana, California, mill. It changed its price for plates and structural shapes to $108 a ton from $122 a ton; for hot-rolled steel to $104 a ton from $116.50 a ton (compared to the $106 a ton charged by eastern mills); and for cold-rolled steel to $143 a ton from $148 a ton. The price cut on which Kennedy and his advisers are commenting here is the price cut for Kaiser’s hotrolled steel. Chairman Edgar Kaiser noted later that day that the cuts were made to end regional differences, to make the West more competitive domestically, and to “materially assist in combating foreign steel imports to the West coast.” Immediately after the Kaiser cuts, U.S. Steel’s Geneva Steel division in Torrance, California, and Pittsburg, California, announced comparable cuts. 326 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 Unidentified: Twelve dollars . . . Staats: I mean 140 dollars, which is about— Unidentified: Eight percent. Bell: Eight percent. Yeah. Heller: This fellow Gerrity’s very close to the steel industry. . . . President Kennedy: Who is it? Heller: And there’s a good chance that that’s right. He’s a reporter now for the Bond Buyer. He used to be up on the Hill. That’s one Irish Catholic— President Kennedy: What’s the effect going to be of that? On the economy? Sorensen: It ought to be good. President Kennedy: Good? Bell: It’ll stimulate buying of steel. . . . President Kennedy: How would it? Bell: On the other hand, it may be regarded as a symptom of a— President Kennedy: Recession? Bell: —of a recession. Heller: Yes, I think the first reaction will be— Unidentified: Stockholders will— Heller: —the stock market will say— Unidentified: [Unclear.] Heller: —now the squeeze is going to get tighter. Schultze: This may be what this stuff ’s all about, anticipating this. [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Gardner Ackley: That lowers their profit position, too. Schultze: Well, that’ll be the principal thing, I think, the impact on profit. Heller: Of course, steel users will not be entirely unhappy about this. President Kennedy: That’s Roger’s. Roger Blough’s six-dollar increase . . .11 Heller: This is a retroactive— 11. The President is referring here to the $6 a ton across-the-board increase implemented by Roger Blough and U.S. Steel back on 10 April 1962, followed by increases by five other steel companies the next day, and rescinded by all when the President objected publicly, said that he had been double-crossed, and began deploying his government contract, antitrust, and tax law leverage to force the rescission. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 327 President Kennedy: Roger Blough is obviously . . . is just saying that— Heller: —justification for the President’s action.12 Bell: Not long— President Kennedy: Well, he could say, “No, it isn’t a justification,” that if he ignored it, they would have to bring it down anyway. Unidentified: No, I think it’s better than my calling Roger. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Ackley: What Walter’s saying is that this is not [unclear] this enterprise system we have, and so are our foreign competitors. Dillon: And so . . . Unidentified: They have [unclear]. Schultze: I would lay a small bet that this won’t— Unidentified: [Unclear.] Schultze: —involve one, more than one company.13 President Kennedy: Why? Schultze: Why— Heller: One percent of the industry, Mr. President. Staats: And a maverick 1 percent at that. Heller: Yeah. Dillon: They don’t . . . barely sell the Pacific coast. Schultze: This is a market maneuver, not only on the stock market but in order to get Kaiser up a notch or two, you see. Heller: Yeah, that’s right. That’s the competitive system. President Kennedy: They’re all just a bunch anyway, you know. Unidentified: [Unclear], that’s right. Bell: Since the outlook for the economy is not clear . . . Heller: Well, now, Dave, before . . . is it, is this an operating assumption that we can’t possibly get a quick, simple kind of tax reduction, across the board, of some kind? Dillon: When? By March? Bell: I take it that it depends on what the economic situation looks like. President Kennedy: I think it’s . . . I suppose it’s possible that you 12. Heller’s implication is that Kennedy’s effort to achieve a rescission of the April 1962 steel price increases was an effort to force the steel companies to abide by, rather than thumb their noses at, market fundamentals. Able to raise prices in the short run due to oligopoly positions in the U.S. market and lucrative government contracts, the U.S. steel industry’s pricing power was fast being undermined by increasing foreign competition. 13. As noted above, U.S. Steel’s Geneva division did follow suit. 328 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 could always, well, if you had any votes or if you broke even in the congressional election maybe you can justify coming back and doing it if you really thought it was necessary.14 Ackley: The economic conditions, I think, are obvious enough. Dillon: Well, the vote answer is that’s the new Congress. They wouldn’t start doing anything until close to the first of February. Schultze: I would say in answer to your question, Walter, my own judgment would be that if the economy is more or less moving along at the present tide, no. You’ve got to have something that’s recognizable as a recession. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Heller: Is there any, anything approaching a commitment from Wilbur Mills to move fast if—? President Kennedy: Oh, well, you know, it just depends really, on the situation. I think—15 [Unclear exchange.] Dillon: If you get those hearings, if they both have hearings, you know, [unclear] but certainly Byrd would on anything like this. 16 President Kennedy: In June and July, is that the one? Unidentified: In fact there [unclear] the hearings [unclear] month. Bell: Well, in view of the fact, the possibility that, or the fact that we don’t know what the most likely possibility is for the economy at this stage, we are suggesting that the tax bills, in effect, be worked on over the next Monday or two . . . which would be appropriate for either contingency—if the outlook looks very good going on into ’63, or looks as though a recession is going to be breathing down our neck. And that if these questions of the timing and retroactivity and the nature of the tax reduction and all that, on which the Treasury will be working on, be brought back to you later this fall. The presentation here, however, is intended to indicate that whichever way it goes, you . . . it looks as though it’s kind of political to present a deficit in ’64 of the size and magnitude . . . that we may want to be presenting a proposition for economic reasons, which would be . . . make a 14. The President is returning to the idea of the special session of the lame duck Congress, which he discussed with Wilbur Mills on August 6 (see Volume 1, “Meeting with Wilbur Mills,” 6 August 1962). 15. Kennedy had arranged several recent meetings with Mills to discuss this issue (ibid). 16. Harry F. Byrd, Sr., was a U.S. senator from Virginia, 1933 to 1965; chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, 1955 to 1965; and founder of the Joint Committee on Reduction of Federal Expenditures. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 329 pretty, a pretty large deficit indeed. Now, so far as the expenditures are concerned, we do have a need for some instructions on them at this point. If you look at the thing that says “attachment” there, there’s no reason for you to be called. And I’ll tell you in just a minute some other political facts. The key point is that, as indicated there on pages 1 and 2, we find built-in changes of about 5 billion dollars, which means—17 President Kennedy: What will those be . . . the major . . . in space, I suppose? Bell: Yeah. Space. At the bottom you’ll see a billion and a half of it is defense, another billion and a half for NASA.18 President Kennedy: Where’s that? Oh, I see . . . both under five billion. Now, is that the pay increase?19 Bell: No, we do not count the pay increase as built-in, Mr. President; we count that as optional. That’s on top of this. This is simply the increased expenditures associated with the procurement plans and the force plans that you’ve already approved. President Kennedy: Three billion of the five billion is defense and space . . . ? Bell: Right. President Kennedy: And a half a billion, really a half, is HEW?20 Bell: Right. President Kennedy: Now, you’ve got a billion and a half left. Bell: You’ve got a full table on page 5. President Kennedy: I see. Bell: Now, beyond this, we think there is another billion seven, which represents sensible carrying forward of your program, and, indeed, it includes legislative proposals that are not passed this year but which you’ve already recommended to the Congress. And that, the nature of which . . . the amounts of those increases are also indicated in the table on page 5. This is how we get the one being kept forward. 17. Early versions of this item may be found in the Theodore Sorensen Papers, Classified Subject Files, Budget, 1966, Box 44, and Bureau of the Budget, Box 47. 18. National Aeronautical and Space Administration. 19. The reference is to the effects of the “Pay Bill” that Kennedy would sign nine days later on 11 October 1962 granting pay increases to all federal employees [see “Remarks Upon Signing the Postal Service and Federal Employees Salary Act of 1962,” Public Papers of the Presidents, pp. 756–57]. 20. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (later the Departments of Education and of Health and Human Services). 330 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 President Kennedy: Yeah. Bell: And we should warn you that there are a number of the cabinet officers and agency heads that think these figures are too tight. And that is also indicated in the table on page 5. Staats: In other words, that’s [unclear], Mr. President, are in excess of the amounts that we indicated here. President Kennedy: Because [unclear] . . . what is the billion five based on? Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Bell: It is . . . out of the back . . . very detailed statements that includes . . . The biggest single item is the 500 million dollar increase in Navy aircraft . . . Navy aircraft expenditures which . . . let’s see, payments on the planes that are, that are now being ordered or were ordered last year, F4Hs in very large part.21 And another 300 million dollars of shipbuilding, increased expenditures for shipbuilding under the shipbuilding program which has already been embarked on. There, that’s principally the start-up on Polaris submarines.22 There are other elements which add up to close to a billion and a half as [unclear]. President Kennedy: AEC?23 Bell: Now, we would take the AEC down a little bit. This is strongly opposed by Seaborg and it implies that both a tight program on weapons— our advice does—and a tight program on civilian power reactors and that sort of thing.24 The NASA program, if you would draw your attention to the fact that our figures—the figure we have included in the 100.4 billion which is 4 billion dollars of expenditures for NASA—that figure now looks low, not because they are going to add anything in particular but because, well, they’ve got better cost figures and this figure should be, according to them—we haven’t fully reviewed this—about 4.7. We think that that’s unnecessarily high, but it clearly is several hundred million dollars too low unless some change were to be made in the ongoing program. 21. The F4Hs were fighter planes, later renamed F4A, and also known as “Phantoms.” 22. Polaris submarines, nuclear-powered submarines capable of submerged firing of Polaris ballistic missiles, began patrolling the seas in 1960. The third generation of Polaris submarines, typified by the USS Lafayette and the USS Alexander Hamilton and capable of firing the 2,500mile A3 Polaris missile, were, at the time of this meeting, currently under development. 23. The abbreviation AEC stands for Atomic Energy Commission. 24. Glenn T. Seaborg was chairman of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, 1961 to 1971. Recipient of the 1951 Nobel Prize in chemistry and discoverer of many of the known transuranium elements, including plutonium, Seaborg also worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 331 President Kennedy: I don’t like that. I notice aid to impacted school districts and all the rest, built-in increases . . .25 Bell: Yes. President Kennedy: That’s Interior . . . oh, we’re just not going to be able to do all that, except saline water [unclear] less than that, but some of the rest of that Interior, Justice . . .26 Bell: Beginning on page 15, Mr. President, we have indicated what the kind of cutbacks below our figures which would be necessary to reach this alternative target figure of 98.5. Let me get back to that point. President Kennedy: What’s that on? What page? Bell: On 15. Unidentified: I think it’s to some advantage, though, Dave, to know how [unclear] will look at the various increased expenditures. Unidentified: Yeah, and lead up to— President Kennedy: What about our putting in a . . . What effect would it have if we put in the federal budget for the next three years? As you know, the Congress, suddenly, they vote for these programs; nobody realizes where it’s going to go. We have to take all this. I don’t know whether we would gain or lose if we put in some of the next three years’ expenditures, and income, and estimates already put in this year. Bell: Well, they would show . . . and a steadily improving relationship between receipts and expenditures.27 I’m sure they would be sharply attacked as “pie in the sky,” as just making the situation look good. They would be perfectly honest figures, but any figures that far ahead are necessarily fairly shaky. We would have to—in defending them—we would need to not to unveil any news . . . that wouldn’t be hard to defend under those carrying forward existing programs. President Kennedy: What about when the FAA does a supersonic string of jet transports?28 I see the French and the British have joined together on that. I’m interested in that, because that’s a . . . an area where we’ve got to maintain our position. There also is a dollar in it . . . sale of aircraft abroad. Bell: Well, it’s an item that thus far we do not have in— President Kennedy: Yeah. 25. Additional federal aid to school districts in areas of prominent federal installations, justified on the basis of diminished property tax base in the affected areas, was $229 million in the final education appropriations bill for FY 1963. 26. “Saline water” refers to pilot desalinization projects. 27. Not, perhaps, what President Kennedy expected to be forecast. 28. The abbreviation FAA stands for the Federal Aviation Administration. 332 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 Bell: —the 100.4. So that would mean— President Kennedy: I’d like to see if we could get a breakdown of what he’s going to do with that 100 million, and then the arguments as to why you don’t think they put it in. Bell: [Volume fades several times during Bell’s comments.] Yes, well, we have at our request, he has been making these contractors with special studies. That’s not our concern. It’s difficult to separate the figures by the first of December. Bob McNamara, as you may know, Mr. President, has expressed some skepticism about this supersonic transport, whether we ever get an urgency in terms of the market for it. 29 There’s also the question of why we don’t do this with the British and the French. Why do we insist on being competitive? It’s going to cost us a hell of a lot of money to develop it, and it’s going to cost them a hell of a lot of money to develop it; maybe we ought to do it together. How much of a revolutionary notion that would be— Staats: Doesn’t he have a feeling it’s more of a prestige item—? Bell: Yes. Staats: —than it would be commercially profitable in that program, for a long, long time? Bell: This is a very high [unclear] for this fall’s budget consideration. Do you want a special memorandum early in this—? President Kennedy: Well, I don’t mean to put it in there, but I, anyway . . . I was just sort of interested in itself . . . Whatever the proper time would be. Bell: Well, in any event, it’s not in our . . . [sound fades and returns] . . . at this point, Mr. President. Ten-second pause. President Kennedy: Cancel the Skybolt?30 Well, you can’t do that; there’s a commitment with the British, I think.31 Can’t cancel Skybolt. Mobile Minuteman and [unclear] in all services.32 And a big Fall 29. Robert S. McNamara was secretary of defense. 30. The transport was an air-launched missile system on which Britain had relied to prolong its manned-bomber nuclear deterrent. An American commitment to share Skybolt with the British had been initiated in the Eisenhower administration, most likely at Camp David in March 1960. Early in November 1962, according to Richard Neustadt’s “Top Secret” report to the President on “Skybolt and Nassau,” “the Secretary of Defense put to the President and to the Secretary of State the likelihood that we would terminate our Skybolt program” [Richard Neustadt, Report to JFK: The Skybolt Crisis in Perspective (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1999), p. 27]. 31. “They can’t cancel Skybolt on us,” one Air Force General told a budget bureau aide in 1962. “The British are in with us” (Neustadt, Report to JFK, p. 30). 32. The FY 1963 budget proposal included funding for 200 additional Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missiles (surface-to-surface). Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 333 increase in equipment modernization. Proposed pay legislation. Well, he’s going to have . . . they have . . . . Are they due as much as the other federal employees?33 Bell: We had thought so, and therefore we had . . . our figures include a pay increase as of January 1 in ’64, one year after this Spring. President Kennedy: Well, I’m inclined to think we’d have difficulty avoiding increasing their pay. Staats: You’d have difficulty letting it start earlier than that, and they had difficulty, as you may recall, Mr. President, in getting them to postpone it because— President Kennedy: Yeah. Well, I think we’ve got to go on that. Bell: Well, these aren’t the only things you could do, but they are illustrative of the fact that anything you did to try to knock this $100 billion figure down is going to run you into budgets like this. Ten-second pause. Bell: I would think, for instance, that it would be quite difficult to eliminate all new starts for public works.34 President Kennedy: NASA. We got a pretty good . . . have you got a good budget group that goes with . . . looking at all these NASA expenditures? Bell: Yes, we do. It’s handled by the same people that handle the military budget: Veatch35 and Shapley,36 and then about four able, younger guys who have been watching the program the last two or three years. We have a pretty good feeling about the work, in so far as the budget side of it is concerned . . . on the NASA program. But it’s a big program; . . . it’s jumping up every day. President Kennedy: It’s a question of whether we’re doing too many things [unclear]. Bell: Well, this will be coming to you in about three weeks with a special study and report on that. But, it does not look to me as though you are going to want to trim it back to the extent it would be necessary to— Ackley: Does your report read that, Defense and NASA, we’re deal- 33. Due to the “Pay Bill,” signed into law by President Kennedy nine days later (11 October 1962). 34. See “Cabinet Meeting on the Federal Budget for Fiscal Year 1964,” 18 October 1962, in which Bell advises against a policy of “no new starts.” 35. Ellis H. Veatch, chief of the Military Division, Bureau of the Budget. Though this division would be renamed on several occasions, Veatch remained its chief until 1974. 36. Willis Shapley, deputy to Ellis Veatch and budget analyst for NASA and other scienceoriented agencies and programs. 334 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 ing with both space, both military and space just thrown together. . . . Can your report [unclear]? President Kennedy: I’m going to look here for some of the . . . What’s your thought, Mr. Secretary? Dillon: Well, the basic problem, where we see it, is that it’s probably based on the extensive experience up until tax time of this year— February, March, and quite a little bit—but we feel that instead it would just be impossible to go up and get a tax reduction if our spending . . . our increase in spending next year is larger than the increase in spending that we’ve had in any year so far. And that’s what the 100.4 is. But the increase in spending in fiscal ’62 over ’61 was 6.2 billion [unclear], and ’61 over ’60, rather, ’62 over ’61 it was 6 billion. And the proposed increase here is 6.7 billion . . . increase in expenditures. And . . . which is a larger increase than we’ve had before, so we just really, we have to somehow get that down a respectable amount below the 6.2 and 6 billion increases, which were the previous ones, if we’re going to justify a tax reduction. Now the exact amount below is a difficult thing to judge. We said 981/2, which would put the increase at 4.8 compared with, with the 6 and 6.2. But the bulk of the real increase is that we think it has to be substantially below what we think [unclear]. It might be you would hold on the debt limit thing which you came mighty close to veto, which could be quite a . . . be very difficult. Of course, we’ll know better, we’ll be able to measure this better after we see what happens in November, but— President Kennedy: Obviously, if we get . . . set back seriously in November, we will— Dillon: Well, on the debt limit case, we seem to have the Republican vote.37 Increasingly, they all decide they want to vote against the increase so that when . . . This is just not responsible, but it is just symptomatic of a— President Kennedy: Yeah. I’m sure it’s going to— Dillon: So, if we go ahead with the idea of a substantial tax cut, we don’t believe in these people who say that they have to cut expenditures equivalently.38 But we do believe that you have to put on a performance that looks like you’re being careful with the expenditures. 37. The administration had already lobbied successfully for a prior debt limit increase in March 1962. 38. Harry F. Byrd, for example. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 335 Unidentified: I would turn around and [unclear] your spending increasing faster than you ever have— Dillon: [Unclear] certain [unclear]. Well, right across the board for a total figure of 6.7 increase, which is about 15 percent or 10 percent bigger than you’ve ever done before. Bell: Aren’t the . . . but the bulk of the increase under our . . . more than two-thirds of the increase that we projected here would be in the national security and international field, and so on. So it could not be attacked on the grounds it was letting loose of the strings on the civilian side. I know that Aikman is not party to the increase with something at West Point, but I guess he is. Now, it’s difficult to make an accurate estimate—along the lines Doug is talking about—because we don’t know how firm this 93.7 figure’s going to be. It’ll be another three or four weeks before we have a really . . . a good solid figure for ’63 expenditures, now that the Congress is completing action. Remember last year when we had our midyear budget review, we suddenly came up with a billion dollar agricultural expenditure that we hadn’t expected. Now we hope we’ve guarded against any unexpected finds this year, but we shouldn’t think of the 93.7 as too precise, as yet. Think of it as being— President Kennedy: Of course, Ken Galbraith, though, thinks we’re not going to get the tax cut at all while we run a deficit. 39 It might be you’d do better for the economy if you have the expenditures for those . . . [unclear] and Berlin, that you get them and . . . tax . . . but, however, that’s a viewpoint we’re just not going to be able to get. 40 Economic education has not proceeded enough to let you . . . to think of the Congress, as tough as this is going to be—next one probably—to get that kind of a tax cut through. Bell: This is about the proper position to take. This is hammereddown-type figure in the program that you’ve— President Kennedy: Except I will say everybody wants to increase these expenditures. I know how desirable all these programs are, but I just . . . Bell: Remember, sir, that this is . . . the figure they gave us originally was 108 billion. Sorensen: More than the [unclear], Mr. President, it seems. What 39. John Kenneth Galbraith was ambassador to India and a Harvard economist. Galbraith had argued, quite prominently, that increased expenditures were a preferred alternative to tax cuts if the administration sought a fiscal stimulus. 40. Military buildup and added expenditures related to the ongoing Berlin crisis. 336 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 the Budget Bureau has done in their [unclear] submissions, and it worries me that some of it we’ve already cut too far to get down to the 100.4. Bell: The third and fourth columns there. President Kennedy: As far as 1964, the agency— Bell: Yeah. Unidentified: Yeah. Ten-second pause. Sorensen: So that while I’m sympathetic to Doug’s point, I don’t know where the $2 billion can be cut out. Twenty-second pause. President Kennedy: About this goal in three years. Has that got the . . . where do you think . . . or are we just suggesting what these expenditures are going to be? Heller: I like the idea. Sorensen: I don’t think it . . . I’m trying to think of . . . you’d just, you’d just be taking on that and many more enemies unnecessarily. Bell: Maybe because it would show the expenditures rising. Sorensen: Yes. President Kennedy: Well, It doesn’t rise so much, though, except in space. So far I’ve gotten space. They got NASA. That’s the big rise. Bell: Well, these figures would have to be revised a lot— President Kennedy: Yeah. Bell: —further than they have been. President Kennedy: That’s right. Bell: My guess is— President Kennedy: I don’t see any enormous— Bell: —if you tightened them up, they would probably look like— President Kennedy: HEW’s the biggest. Bell: —105, 109. President Kennedy: And HEW went from 4.2 in ’62 up to 9.3. Dillon: Well, economic aid— President Kennedy: Well, we’ll have to just cut that back. But, I see nothing else except for HEW with a really big rise. Treasury interest, but the— Sorensen: Housing and Home Finance. Bell: It would be comforting to a lot of people to see those NASA figures, because it would show that they’re going to taper off after another year or more of a rapid rise.41 HEW would be the big issue, that’s right. 41. Figures are in the form of multiyear projections, discussed here. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 337 President Kennedy: What is that increase for? Bell: Well, it’s a— President Kennedy: Population increases? Bell: No, there’s a big increase in education, which is connected with the bill, the elementary and secondary bills you’ve had up there now. President Kennedy: Well, they’re not going to pass that.42 That’s just a . . . start off with that realization. Bell: What do you mean? You— President Kennedy: Starting off, we ought to talk about whether we’re going to go again with that. Bell: Oh, yes, I see what you mean. Well, that’s . . . that’s a . . . well, that’s at least a billion dollars and maybe more, but the increase that shows here between ’64 and ’69 . . . Another substantial increase is in the higher education field. There is some increase in welfare, which is natural. You know, they go up every year—by 2[00], 3[00], or 400 million dollars. And— Staats: NIH goes up over a billion dollars. 43 Bell: NIH keeps on rising—I’ve forgotten the precise rate we’ve assumed in here, but 2 or 3, say $250 million a year, something like that— increase.44 Dillon: Regularly. Bell: The people who are in favor of health research have their eyes set on $2 billion by 1970. This would be . . . to take it there this is less of a rapid rate of increase than they have proposed. I believe those are the principal increases in HEW, I don’t— President Kennedy: HHFA.45 That would be . . . what’s the reason for that hike? Bell: Well, that’s mostly built-in. That’s the steady rise in the Urban Renewal program which was financed a year ago, with the Housing Act of ’61. And it would be showing quite substantial increases in outlays as the cities get their Urban Renewal projects to the point at which payments made to those cities— President Kennedy: What about mass transit? Bell: Mass transit’s in here, also. I’ve forgotten the precise figures 42. These bills, for additional aid to schools, were defeated in the 87th Congress. 43. The abbreviation NIH stands for National Institutes of Health. 44. The original budget proposal for NIH for FY 1963 was $741 million, an increase of $113 million over FY 1962. 45. Housing and Home Finance Agency. 338 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 that are here. If you want to think seriously about this, Mr. President, we can very readily put together a memo to show you the kinds of figures connected to programs that would be implicit in— President Kennedy: Well, it would only be if it were not going to be a rapid increase which would look like we’re inundating them. And the only advantage would be if you’re going to give an impression that this is [unclear]. Dillon: This is [unclear] increase. Bell: Well, and if it does give that impression . . . I mean it logically does. Whether it would look that way and be politically vulnerable, I— Heller: Dave, I doubt that it would look that way, and I’m not sure that we want them all saying that it’s—[Unclear exchange.] Dillon: —things way ahead of us and not too [unclear]. Unidentified: Umm . . . Unidentified: That’s true. Dillon: That’s very ostentatious. Bell: Well, it’s up in the air with 3 more billion dollars than we said we’d [unclear]. Heller: Well, not only that, when you’ve got the economy going full tilt, you’d probably want to hold back some programs. Bell: That wouldn’t be so hard. Unidentified: Yeah. Unidentified: On the other hand, you might take some [unclear]. Dillon: I think on the expenditures thing, while 981/2 seems a good figure, providing you freeze inflation, but, the basic essence of the thing is that you just have to come back, so that your increase in expenditures is something clearly less than it has been. And I would say that this shows you’ve done the best you possibly can on expenditures at the same time you— Schultze: This would . . . I would say, Doug, that in the eight years I was up there, I never heard anyone use that as a measuring stick.46 Dillon: What? Schultze: Whether expenditures increased more this year than they increased last year or the year before that. And, secondly . . . and my guess is that this increase, percentage-wise, is smaller than those previous increases. Dillon: Probably about the same. 46. From 1952 to 1959, Schultze served as a staff economist with the Council of Economic Advisers. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 339 President Kennedy: Well, I don’t think the . . . you know, I think it’s just really a question of whether it’ll be a 100 billion figure and so on, plus the fact you’re asking for a tax cut of 6 or 7 million dollars; and then have . . . maybe you can’t do anything about it.47 If you ask for a tax cut with a $4 billion deficit, it’s probably just as hard a political struggle if you ask for it with 6 billion . . . probably. We don’t know how many people who . . . all of the Republicans are going to be against us unless we get a tax bill which is so designed to take care, in a sense disproportionately, of their constituency.48 Dillon: Because one thing is, too, is that this figure is a higher figure than anyone has contemplated anywhere. It’s gonna be a shock. But there’s not much you can do about it. I think everyone, I think, expects a 4 or 5 billion dollar increase in expenditures, but I don’t think any of them think it should be moved this high next year. Even Mr. Byrd hasn’t mentioned that [unclear]. Heller: Well, the Senate bill is high. Sorensen: We’re probably going to go this high this year. Dillon: Huh? Sorensen: Yes, he [unclear]— Unidentified: Well . . . Sorensen: —in one of his speeches. Dillon: Hmm. Bell: If we can . . . one of the things that you’re suggesting, implicitly, is that if you estimate a little generously on the ’63 expenditures, which we’re about to put out a release on, that you’re likely— Unidentified: Yeah. Bell: —if that were 95 billion dollars instead of 93.7 . . . The Congress, after all, has added a number of things. They moved forward the date of the pay increase, and added money for health research and military perks, and so on. Then, the big jump in ’63 to ’64, would fit your description even of these figures. 47. Speaking rapidly here, President Kennedy said “million dollars” when he meant to say “billion dollars.” 48. Convinced that aggregate demand was the linchpin to greater private investment and to the growth of the economy, both President Kennedy and Chairman Heller of the CEA originally sought a tax cut proposal under which the lion’s share of the decreases would go to individuals and to the less well-off. Other cuts and incentives for wealthier individuals and for corporations were gradually added in as the political obstacles became clearer and the necessary amendments were considered. This was true in the area of tax reform as well, where even more compromises had to be made to secure only a few somewhat modest changes. 340 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 Dillon: Uh-huh . . . uh-huh. [Unclear.] Bell: I don’t know but— Schultze: One way of looking at it, in capsule form in terms of fiscal policy, is that the first two years we’ve tried to get the economy going by increasing expenditures and the budget deficits. Now if we go to a sharp increase in expenditures and tax cuts on top of it, we leapfrog over the intermediate step which is tax cuts, withholding expenditure increases— down, which is a— Bell: The budget that was presented to them— Schultze: —kind of an intermediate step. Bell: —in January of this year, because the budget will show a relatively small expenditure increase—under 21/2 billion dollars—and a balance if the economy would perform as we hoped it would. Now, the reason there isn’t a 31/2 billion increase in expenditures, but 6, is because ’62 expenditures were lower than we thought they would be, by about $2 billion, a little over. And ’63 is going to be higher than we thought in January. But the budget policy was a very conservative one in January.49 It wasn’t a . . . it wasn’t a deficit policy to lift the economy; it was deliberately a balanced-budget policy. Schultze: No, I’m speaking in terms of results, so— Bell: Yeah. Schultze: But what we—[Unclear exchange.] Bell: Well—[Unclear exchange.] Bell: The result is that the economy has not moved forward as it should and we’re stuck with a deficit. It isn’t because we planned it that way. Dillon: No. Schultze: Oh, no. No, we haven’t planned it . . . yeah. Heller: We need to remember that on the . . . on the basis that makes economic sense—the income and product account—we went into balance . . . second quarter of this year, virtually.50 President Kennedy: What about the change in our method of budget-keeping as far as the repayable loans, and so on?51 Has anybody got any thoughts on that? 49. Revenues, from lower-than-expected levels of economic growth, also trailed most forecasts for this period. 50. Income account is national income accounts basis. See note 3. 51. Prepared on the national income accounts basis, the federal budget would not include federal repayable loan outlays or proceeds. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 341 Bell: We’ve been working with the council.52 We had some brief discussion earlier on this. We have a staff paper that everybody is looking at. If you take out repayable loans, it doesn’t take out very much, around $3 billion or 3 plus, in this particular series of budget years. If you just take it out and say the budget should be regarded as the figures exclusive of this, you don’t gain enough to make much impact on the deficit figures, and you pick up a fight for yourself without much benefit. In consequence, and third . . . secondly, we looked at the questions of . . . President Kennedy: Three billion dollars might be of use to us. Bell: Well, yes . . . in the sense that it would reduce the budget deficit, apparent deficit. We’ve assumed that we should present a set of budget figures that represent the federal financial transactions in some kind of total sense. And then we say, and alongside of it, here are the income and product account figures which are a more accurate indicator of the economic effects of the federal budget. And, of course, the repayable loans are excluded from that so that the income and product account deficit will presumably look that much better than the cash figures that we use. And, accordingly, we get that benefit . . . we expect we will have that benefit by using the income and product account figures. And our question, therefore, is what about the overall budget figure? Do we also take it out of there? You can, of course, ask, “Should we take more out?” We could take out repayable loans plus capital items of various kinds. Go to a quasi-capital budget. We’ve had some preliminary discussion with Walter and his boys on this. There’s a little disagreement among us, and I think it might be better if we brought the question to you a little later rather than today. Heller: I agree. Bell: I think there’s some majority sentiment against rather than for this point, but it isn’t a matter that’s closed up, nor . . . one on which we’re ready to ask you to sign off. Take the Chamber of Commerce committee. You’ve seen the preliminary draft of their report that you asked Mallon53 to set up, I mean, Plumley.54 Mallon’s the chairman of the committee. . . . 52. The President’s Council of Economic Advisers, Walter Heller, James Tobin, Kermit Gordon, and staff. 53. Henry Neil Mallon was chairman and director of Dresser Industries. 54. H. Ladd Plumley was chairman and president of State Mutual Life Assurance Company of America and president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. President Kennedy asked Plumley 342 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 President Kennedy: Have they been through much of this with you about what the expenditures are? Bell: We met with them, yes. There are on the committee two or three quite able people—Frank Pace55 is a member, and Norman Ness56 is a member—who really know what they’re talking about. They’re . . . we’ve been working with them all along. And one of them showed us a draft of the report in an early stage, and what it was, if they carry through as it is now drafted, it’s going to recommend, implicitly, abandonment of the administrative budget, but the use of the cash statement—consolidated cash statement—as the main presentation of federal receipts and expenditures.57 Now, this is not necessarily a bad idea. This would show a total which next year would be around 116 billion dollars of expenditures and around a hundred and— Schultze: About three and a half lower in deficit. Bell: Yeah. Now, that includes all the trust fund receipts. It includes the trust funds, and since the trust funds are gonna be running some small surplus next year, that will help the overall . . . would help the overall appearance of the budget . . . cut the deficit. You could say this is the overall summary of the federal receipts and expenditures. Within this, there are the following categories— President Kennedy: What’d be the advantage of having this? Bell: Well . . . President Kennedy: Why do they think it’s a good idea, this group? Bell: Well, they have different ideas. Some of them think it’s good simply because it would produce a bigger figure than the one we’re now using. President Kennedy: And they want to— Bell: Make a horror story . . . say that the budget is obviously getting out of hand. Others simply say that this is a better representation of the transactions in the federal government, and a better figure to have in people’s minds is how big the federal government’s financial transactions actually are in relation to anything you want to measure it against—total national income or product or what not. and others at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to study both government budgeting and the administration’s tax cut proposal. 55. Frank Pace, Jr., was chairman and director of General Dynamics Corporation. 56. Norman Ness was vice president and director of the International Milling Company, Minneapolis, and director of the Minneapolis Grain Exchange. 57. Like the national income budget, the consolidated cash basis includes trust fund receipts. Unlike the national income budget, it records transactions on a cash, rather than accrual, basis and includes net loans and other credit transactions. In FY 1967 the federal government would begin reporting its official budget in this form. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 343 President Kennedy: There’s no doubt that all these programs are desirable. I mean, like mass transit, I can go explain things that ought to be done. The question really . . . I mean even in defense . . . I mean in these other countries, nobody else is spending this kind of [unclear] are even cutting their defense expenditures and all these other people. We’ve got space and AEC in addition to defense, and foreign assistance which none of the rest have. It’s really a question of whether we’re spending and figuring and thinking about a tax cut, whether these agencies, I don’t think we have confidence in their [outlook] . . . because they’re only considering their own agency and not the overall . . . We really have to worry about— Bell: Their figures are 108; ours are 100. We’ve taken a big discount from their figures already. We think that these both represent a reasonable program to carry forward the kind of things that you . . . all of us have considered are desirable for the growth and security of the country. Furthermore, we think that this is a . . . these are figures which are easily sustainable by the economy. There isn’t the slightest doubt that this is a sensible program in terms of the use of resources. On any real grounds, this is a good program; however, what it is that the [unclear] that Doug talks about and other political considerations are obviously very important. Sorensen: As you know, Mr. President, this is one kind of meeting we have where we all agree about what we’ve done. When we have a meeting on, let’s say, on military assistance, and somebody else on how a dam will save that state, and so on, and it’s a . . . it gets pretty tough to . . . I think the Budget Bureau has cut hard. Now, and we . . . I think we really need a decision from you today as to whether we want a budget in the neighborhood of 100.4 or in the neighborhood of 98.4, so they can go ahead and make their tax, economic, and budget decisions on that basis. If you find on pages 15 to 19— President Kennedy: I think we ought to— Sorensen: [Unclear] that those things ought to be cut out, then. President Kennedy: Well, I think we probably ought to try to get it under a 100 billion just for . . . if we can do that, then we have the political argument of the tax thing. So I suppose we’d better try to put it ninety . . . I know that nobody doesn’t like to go the 99.3 route, but . . . Sorensen: Because it just means for sure that you bust the 100 maybe the year after, which is a worse year to do it. Bell: Well . . . President Kennedy: They’re going to say a 100 billion budget anyway, but why don’t we say—[Obscuring noise.] Unidentified: Keep it below a 100 . . . half a billion of leeway. 344 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 President Kennedy: That’s right. Bell: Well . . . Heller: If we shift emphasis to the other budget, they’re going to be well above a 100 billion anyway. Unidentified: Well, this is, again, the— President Kennedy: This is the advantage of the cash—58 [Unclear exchange.] Bell: That’s true, Mr. President. That would be one advantage to following the Chamber of Commerce suggestion . . . cash total. President Kennedy: Well, here’s what I’d like us to do with all . . . to make this decision with a little more light than I have now. I think the Treasury, if the Secretary thinks that that’s what we ought to do. But I think we ought to get from the Treasury, after a consultation with the Budget [Bureau], what it is we would take out in order to reach that figure. Then we can tell whether we ought to do it, whether it’s worth . . . whether the advantage we gain in the way we sell it, whether it’s worth taking out 2 billion dollars. I don’t know. . . . That’s what we have to decide. It may not well be, and I don’t know enough about what we’d be taking out. Have you got down what we’d be taking out of it? Unidentified: Right. That’s what [unclear]. Dillon: Well, that’s . . . there’s a lot of things together there; I don’t know whether they’re the only things to be taken out or not. Unidentified: That’ll take a little longer than it’s worth? Bell: We definitely tried to take the marginal items. Dillon: What you considered really marginal? Bell: [Unclear] not only [unclear]. President Kennedy: Those are the ones that we all want to take . . . from 16 to 19? Bell: That’s right. These are the ones which we think would be the— President Kennedy: Well, we can’t . . . we can’t postpone the pay thing.59 Dillon: Well, I just never figured that we could do anything about the Skybolt. We’ve got an international commitment on that. [Unclear.] President Kennedy: [Unclear] into Skybolt? Bell: Skybolt is . . . it’s pretty close to being up for consideration for 58. Consolidated cash budget. 59. Federal pay raises instituted by the “Pay Bill” signed nine days later (11 October 1962). Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 345 cancellation on its own merits. If it weren’t for the British commitment, we might very well be recommending it as a normal part of—60 President Kennedy: Let me ask how much the British are putting into the development of Skybolt compared to us? Bell: Oh, damn little . . . damn little. It’s practically all ours. Schultze: Mr. President, we haven’t really looked at the expenditure figures since July. We made an estimate in July. Since that time we haven’t a program to counter . . . a different mix or different selection and then on . . . we haven’t attempted to do that today. Bell: One thing that might be interesting, Mr. President . . . President Kennedy: I think you ought to do that though, if you’re gonna give— Bell: We could pretty well, if you wanted us to, we could go shoot at an increase—if that made any sense—an increase of less than $6 billion from whatever the ’63 figure turns out to be when we know. I don’t think that makes much difference in terms of bill consultations, but Doug said he’d work with the Ways and Means Committee. . . . It may mean something to them. President Kennedy: Do you think that if they’re given 100.4 is . . . This is aside from what the increase is. Is it just the percent of the increase that disturbs you, or is it the 100 billion? Dillon: Well, it’s everything all added together. I mean it’s the fact that it’s a 100 billion; that’s more than anybody expects. Now, if we’d been at 96, and everybody had known that we’re coming up to 100, that’s one thing. But Byrd and all these other people who think that we just spend money much too fast, they’ll make their own estimates and say, “Well, next year it’ll be another 4 or 5 billion and we’d be approaching 100 billion dollars.” None of them are dreaming that you’re going to go over it, and so it would be a shock to them. And, again, I think that’s a fact that we have to recognize. It’s very important. For that reason, the 100 billion figure does mean something to them. And I think it’d be better if the . . . 99.3, that much out of 100.4, because it’d look like you’ve at least tried. 60. Days later, on 26 October 1962, after receiving confidential information from Roswell Gilpatric that Secretary McNamara would seek to cancel the Skybolt program, Dave Bell sent a memorandum to McGeorge Bundy, intended originally from the President, that noted a “firm recommendation by the Secretary [McNamara] that the SKYBOLT missile be cancelled” (Neustadt, Report to JFK, p. 33). 346 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 Schultze: Well, the simplest line to take, which is a very difficult line to take budgetwise, but the simplest line to take from the standpoint of accuracy, is that in this year in which we’re trying to reduce taxes and get the economy moving to this prescription, we’re going to live with our built-in increases, the things we have to live with, and we’re not going to authorize any new programs. This is a price we’re going to have to pay. Now, this is the only kind of simple, political logic, I think, that you can make, rather than a . . . than a pick and choose. And, I guess— President Kennedy: Now, I’ll tell you what; let’s get on with it. Unidentified: About the consulting . . . President Kennedy: Why don’t we get the Treasury with the Bureau of the Budget to tell us what they would take out of that, in order to save that which— Dillon: We could do that, but [unclear] moot point is [unclear]. President Kennedy: [Unclear] we’ll have alternatives for what we choose or not choose. Dillon: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Well, that’s one question. Now, those will have to wait until we see what you’re suggesting we omit in order to cut this thing down. Sorensen: Well, that . . . even that isn’t necessary, Mr. President, unless the Treasury feels that the list which Dave’s put together on pages 16 to 19 is not an adequate list. Staats: I have a slant, Mr. President . . . [Unclear exchange.] Staats: This list here adds up . . . adds up to 2.8 billion. To get down to Doug’s figures, it’d be only 1.9. So we have definitely put in here more items that add up to 2.8 than you would need to get down to— President Kennedy: Why don’t you give us a [unclear]. Dillon: Some of the things aren’t on this list. For instance— President Kennedy: What else have we got to decide? Bell: That’s all . . . at this point. President Kennedy: [Unclear] do something else, so we can talk a little more? Bell: All right. President Kennedy: But, in other words, we don’t see any new budgeting procedures that are going to make our problem easier, do we? Bell: I do not, Mr. President, but we haven’t signed off on— President Kennedy: Is everybody agreed that we shouldn’t try to put up an advance sort of list? It seems to me in some of these programs where the increase will be much marked and where there is going to be a plateau, that it may be advantageous to indicate it. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 347 Bell: Yes. [Unclear exchange.] Dillon: —the space program, and particularly with HEW you could say that this list was [unclear]. [Unclear exchange.] President Kennedy: —we won’t allocate for [unclear]. I think it’s facing the facts, because they’re the ones . . . two-thirds of our increases have been in these areas. We can look for the next three or four years at this . . . Ackley: We soften the impact of the $100 billion breakthrough, if we add in the cash figures. President Kennedy: It doesn’t say foreign aid, too. We’ve got to consider what we should do with foreign aid. Dillon: That’s something we want to look at, because actually these figures—foreign aid—are too high, and the Budget Bureau reduced them themselves, because they were based on back when . . . before Appropriations had cut substantially. [Unclear] reduced these figures automatically, so we [unclear]. Bell: [Unclear.] McNamara is not necessarily, when he gets through with the next month or so, going to come in with figures this low. Certainly, they’re not going to be lower, and they may very well be substantially higher. If he adds divisions, for instance, that he is considering— President Kennedy: They’re the 16, in addition? Bell: Above 16. That was Max Taylor’s recommended addition.61 President Kennedy: Well, Max is going to be an expensive chief. Dillon: He’s gonna be an expensive [unclear]. [Laughter.] Bell: The space budget looks as though it’s going to have to be higher than what we have here. Seaborg, Celebrezze,62 Freeman63 are among the agency heads who have already put us on notice that they will be proposing substantially larger figures. President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Bell: It isn’t going to be easy, but we come to this figure. If you want to go to the lower figure, then I think we should start it by talking to the Cabinet . . . who we’re going to need to take along. But we should say to the Cabinet that the figures that they and we have been talking about, that you have reviewed now, and they look to you too high, and you have instructed us to go back and trim them back. Because this is the kind of 61. General Maxwell D. Taylor, former superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy and Army chief of staff, had been sworn in by President Kennedy as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on 1 October 1962, the day before convening this recorded tax and budget meeting. 62. Anthony J. Celebrezze was secretary of health, education, and welfare, July 1962 to July 1965. 63. Orville L. Freeman was secretary of agriculture, January 1961 to January 1969. 348 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 backing that we would require to go back to these people and open it up on the low side.64 And that could be better, you know . . . easier than— Dillon: [Unclear.] Bell: I’m not saying we don’t want to do it. But I think we ought to, if that’s the way you want it. Dillon: One thing, Mr. President, that’s . . . I think important. Looking at this, it’s one of the big areas, and this is this NASA program where for us to cut back anything you’d have to slow up the date of the landing on the moon. I asked Dave what that meant and he said that meant ’67. Now . . . well, I . . . we’ve always had this commitment to be there by the end of the— President Kennedy: No, we really felt that ’67 . . . . We said the end of the— Dillon: End of the decade. President Kennedy: Yeah. I think we probably should not . . . I think we . . . currently there may be some things we’re doing in space which are superfluous or just supportive but not vital. But I don’t think we ought to . . . I’d rather unbalance my budget and all the rest, and— Dillon: You want us to get there by ’67? Unclear exchange between Dillon and President Kennedy. President Kennedy: —not have the commitment. Then if we could justify it, we could make a mistake and we’d be penny-wise and [poundfoolish]. And really . . . except, the only question I really have is whether that agency isn’t doing many more things up in space than— Bell: Well . . . President Kennedy: —than is to be done. Bell: Yeah. President Kennedy: And the Defense Department. Bell: Yeah, with this we have— President Kennedy: Our Titan III, and so on.65 Bell: Yeah. For this we have a full-scale review which is now . . . just coming into focus now, and we’ll be back to you in about two weeks on it, which takes Titan III versus the C1 and the other elements.66 There isn’t much duplication, direct, as you know. But the Air Force has a Gemini program, now, as well as NASA. They want to use Gemini for military flyers, to learn how to operate out there. And we are questioning that, so 64. See “Cabinet Meeting on the Federal Budget for Fiscal Year 1964,” 18 October 1962. 65. The Titan III was the largest intercontinental ballistic missile. 66. The C1 is the Lockheed C-130 Hercules transport plane. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 349 that . . . But I don’t think there’s much there; we won’t find there’s a great deal of duplication to cut out. I think that we will achieve—when we bring this to you, and it’s been nailed down—some limits on the military program which will be very helpful. Meeting begins to break up. Unidentified: [Unclear.] I’m going to meet Senator Douglas on the [unclear].67 President Kennedy: I’m meeting him at 5:30. [Unclear exchange.] Dillon: Mr. President, if you could say that I have talked about this overview, now, you know . . . if that would counteract the New York Times last Sunday?68 President Kennedy: Yeah, yeah. That’s right, about the business thing. Yeah. Well, what we can . . . what we’re going to put in the economy, we got there. What we’re going to take out as opposed to the [unclear] . . . the heart. What can we say? Dillon: Well, we . . . I guess they’re getting the figures together. I think that on an expenditure basis, on a national income accounts basis, we’re giving much more stimulation, certainly, than we were in the last . . . in the second quarter of this year. I think that would be something that . . . you’ll have the figures in a couple of days, that— Bell: Yeah, [unclear] difficulty is— Dillon: —you could talk about. Bell: —not the difficulty. But what the point is, that on an income . . . on a real basis . . . on an income and product accounts basis, what we are doing now is running a deficit. That is stimulating the economy. We, of course, have not publicly announced any figure for the deficit. And we will not, presumably . . . will not do so until this review of the budget comes out a few days after the election . . . except determining that we have plans for it, as the— President Kennedy: I mean, isn’t it possible for us to say that we’re spending $4 billion more to [unclear] last quarter? 67. Paul H. Douglas was a Democratic senator from Illinois, 1949 to 1967, and chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, 1959 to 1967. 68. Possibly James Reston, “Seattle: The Mood of the Country and President Kennedy,” New York Times, 23 September 1962, p. 10E. Reston noted: “Not since the heyday of antiRoosevelt feeling in the Thirties has there been such personal and emotional feeling against ‘that man in the White House.’” Though this feeling may well be what Dillon hopes to counteract, Reston concluded by adding that “the main strategic objective of the Democratic party now, as always, is to have elections decided on a simple partisan basis, and the Republicans, by making a party issue out of the steel price controversy and the stock market crash, have clearly furthered this aim.” 350 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 Bell: It would be possible, yes. Dillon: Just to say that. Something like that. President Kennedy: I think we have to go to . . . can’t we say that in the first six months there was this plateau effect during the last— Dillon: Everyone knows there’s a seasonal effect, and I think you’ve got to disengage a little bit out of that, because that is so . . . Bell: The seasonal effect is— Dillon: You can’t take credit for the seasonal effect. That wouldn’t— Bell: Well, the seasonal effect is not real. That’s simply a cash— Dillon: A cash— Bell: —that situation there. It doesn’t have to mean that— Dillon: [Unclear.] Bell: —there’s a real effect on the economy. Sorensen: Oh, you mean we’re putting in 4 billion dollars more, seasonally adjusted? Bell: Yes, that’s right. Heller: Well . . . Dillon: In fact, you’re putting in some more, but— Bell: Yeah. Dillon: —in addition, they’re putting in more demands; it’s just seasonal. President Kennedy: I think we ought to try to get it in shape for putting out, whether it ought to be put out by the Treasury, or the council, or the Budget Bureau . . . . We can decide when we take a look at the figures. Bell: That’s fine. President Kennedy: I think that with all this trouble, right now, the market’s having, the quicker we do that, the better. Bell: Well, now, we’ll have the figures, I think, tomorrow. President Kennedy: What do you think, the Sunday [New York] Times? Should we get that fellow who writes to . . . where is the most effective . . . ? Heller: I think in the Sunday Times and send it [unclear]. Bell: Sunday Times, Monday Wall Street Journal. I think that’s probably the way to do it. Dillon: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: Well, I think that we ought to probably let Treasury or the . . . if we’re going to put it in those mediums, we ought to let Treasury or the Bureau of the Budget do it. Schultze: How about Treasury? Dillon: Well, no one’s going to get past the [unclear]. Meeting on the Budg et and Tax Cut Proposal 351 Bell: [Laughter.] President Kennedy: [Unclear.] I don’t think we— Bell: [Unclear] statement of fact. President Kennedy: Maybe it ought to come from the Bureau of the Budget. I don’t think we want to have Walter do it. 69 Bell: No, I think that’s right. Dillon: [Unclear] political thing with the Bureau of the Budget. [Unclear exchange.] Unidentified: I think we can— Dillon: It might need to be done right after the Congress quits. Bell: There’d be some logic in a preliminary flash figure right after the Congress leaves, you know, it would be something to hang it on there if the Congress left and our quick estimate of the effect of their actions on the budget seems to . . . indicates that we are now— President Kennedy: I think it ought to come out of the [Bureau of the] Budget. So let’s try to do it as quickly as we can. We can estimate Congress going on Saturday. Maybe we could do it in the Sunday papers or Monday because that’s a quicker— Bell: OK. President Kennedy: OK. President Kennedy turns the machine off. Before welcoming the chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois, into his office, the President had to take care of a matter even more pressing than the ’63 budget. At about 2:30 P.M., Governor Barnett had called the White House to request that the federalized Mississippi National Guardsmen be returned to state control. The President understood that he had to minimize the amount of time that Oxford appeared to be under siege. Kennedy began taping a conversation of this matter with Kenneth O’Donnell in the Oval Office before calling the secretary of the Army, Cyrus Vance. With the recorder still running in the Oval Office, Kennedy also taped most of the telephone conversation with Vance. 69. Walter Heller was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers. Compared to Dave Bell at the Bureau of the Budget, and Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon, Heller was considered the most outspoken liberal voice in the administration on matters economic. 352 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 5:25 P.M. [T]he first 24 hours the use of force was desirable, and now it won’t be. So that I suppose every time you get a picture of somebody getting knocked down, it feeds the fire around that place. Conversation with Kenneth O’Donnell and Cyrus Vance70 On October 2 as of 8:00 A.M., 8,735 Army troops had reached Oxford, with more heading toward the town. By the next day (October 3), the number would reach 9,827. According to the New York Times, the total number of troops (including the National Guard) in Oxford and the surrounding area was approximately 15,000. The Army units were under the direction of General Hamilton Howze. President Kennedy: Secretary Vance, he doesn’t [unclear].71 Kenneth O’Donnell: Now, Mr. President, there are 2,500 National Guard troops that we’d like to take out, you know, the chlorine that sunk [unclear]. President Kennedy: Yeah. O’Donnell: There is a danger that we are going to use guards to do it. [Unclear] have not been federalized. Twenty-five hundred to do it anyway. President Kennedy: Get the guards in. Well, what will they use? O’Donnell: The 2,500 are not involved anyway for the [unclear]. President Kennedy: Yeah. Who conducted? Who [do] we turn them over to? O’Donnell: The state. President Kennedy: All right. O’Donnell: And these are the ones who’ll try to do something? [Unclear.] President Kennedy: OK, fine. Now, who are we going to have announce that? O’Donnell: Vance just called me, he said he’s proceeding to do it but he won’t . . . 70. Tape 27, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. The telephone call with Cyrus Vance is on Dictabelt 4J.1, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. They have been spliced together to reproduce all sides of this three-way conversation. 71. Cyrus Vance was secretary of the Army. Conversation with Kenneth O’Donnell and Cyr us Vance 353 President Kennedy: Will he announce it then? Evelyn Lincoln announces that Secretary Vance is on the line. Evelyn Lincoln: Secretary Vance. President Kennedy: [on the telephone] Hello? Cyrus Vance: [Unrecorded.] President Kennedy: Oh, yes this is fine about the 2,500 troops then? Vance: [Unrecorded.] President Kennedy: About being used for that chlorine business? Vance: [Unrecorded.] President Kennedy: Yeah, for that purpose? Vance: [Unrecorded.] President Kennedy: And then they would not be called back in? Vance: [Unrecorded.] President Kennedy: Right. Now, [the dictabelt recording begins here] what about the other, the troop situation down there? How do you, how are you, how many . . . Vance: We have got, it should be about 10,000 now. Those are what Howze is trying to stabilize in the Oxford area, sir.72 And what we propose to do on this, was General Wheeler was going to get in touch with General Howze, ask him to prepare a plan with respect to the phased withdrawal of troops of Mississippi.73 And to submit that back so that we could then come and submit it to you, sir. President Kennedy: Yeah, the quicker we could probably make some public indication of that, then, of course, the better off— Vance: Right, sir. President Kennedy: —psychologically it would be. They think that that’s the number that they may need for awhile? Vance: Yeah. They think that for the time being or so that this is the safest number to have there. President Kennedy: I see. Vance: It may be somewhat excessive, sir, but my feeling is it’s better to be safe on [unclear]. President Kennedy: Now, do they have some instructions down there about how they should handle people? That they . . . Vance: Minimum force [unclear] minimum force. President Kennedy: . . . so we could, you know, that’s been sort of restated. I think it may have to be restated today because in the first 24 72. Hamilton Howze, commander of the 18th Airborne Corps, was in charge of the military at the Oxford campus. 73. General Earle G. Wheeler. 354 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 2, 1962 hours the use of force was desirable, and now it won’t be. So that I suppose every time you get a picture of somebody getting knocked down, it feeds the fire around that place. So I suppose at least it ought to be brought to his attention to see how he thinks it should be done. Vance: Right. Well, we will do so. President Kennedy: OK. Fine. Vance: Sir, do you want to release anything [unclear], would you like us to do it in terms of the public release? President Kennedy: Let me just think about that. Now, we’ve got the question of this release back to the state. Probably if we do it, it’s a little bit too . . . Has he asked us to do it, Barnett? Has Barnett asked us for them or who’s asked? Vance: Barnett has not asked us; Barnett has not asked us to do this. President Kennedy: Yeah. Who has asked us to do it? Vance: Mr. President, I can’t tell you who in the state of Mississippi has. President Kennedy: He did. You see, well, now . . . Why don’t we do it this way? You people announce that the President has approved the troop— Vance: All right. [Unclear] “the President has approved.” We’ll release it over here and check the [unclear] . . . President Kennedy: We ought to find out who’s asked us to do it, though, so that . . . [off the phone to Kenny O’Donnell] Well, when did he ask us to do it? O’Donnell: The Governor asked us to. President Kennedy: Well, when did he ask us, do you know? O’Donnell: He asked us about 2[:00] or 2:30. President Kennedy: [on the phone to Vance] The guess is that they, Kenny says that the Governor asked the civil defense, and so on. Of course, I suppose he didn’t ask for the troops because he didn’t have to ask us for the troops. O’Donnell: No, he asked them for a declaration of a national emergency so he could get . . . [unclear]. President Kennedy: We’d given them that [unclear], that we’d give them a declaration of national emergency? [speaking to Vance on the phone] Well, now who have you been talking to about this, Cy? Is it McDermott?74 Vance: McDermott. Yeah. President Kennedy: About the 2,500? What they’re going to do with 74. Edward A. McDermott was director of the Office of Emergency Planning and a member of the National Security Council. W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 3, 1962 355 2,500 troops, I don’t know. We agreed to help them get the thing out.75 But I don’t know what they’re going to do with 2,500 soldiers to get it out, so . . . Vance: The letter I have from McDermott says, “While we have no way to judge the appropriate figure, the state director of civil defense of Mississippi has informed the Public Health Service officials that 2,500 troops would be needed.” O’Donnell is saying something to the President in the background. President Kennedy: [to O’Donnell] Did they? O’Donnell: He hasn’t [unclear] number of troops. President Kennedy: I see. All right, well, I see. Well, then, I would think we ought to say that at the request of the civil defense director— Vance: State director of civil defense of Mississippi. President Kennedy: —that yes, the President has approved the . . . Vance: Yeah. Fine. President Kennedy: And so we don’t get Barnett into it . . . Vance: Right. President Kennedy: Right. OK. Fine. Vance: Yes, indeed, sir. President Kennedy: Thank you, bye. After hanging up the telephone, the President switches off both tape machines. President Kennedy’s next appointment was with Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois. The Douglas meeting and one later with Allan E. Lightner, Jr., the senior U.S. diplomatic representative in Berlin, went untaped. Kennedy left the office for the pool at 8:00 P.M. Wednesday, October 3, 1962 The Kennedy administration continued making gains in Congress. The Senate sent the White House a tax revision bill containing the Kennedy business investment deduction. The price for this was the defeat of a measure to recoup some of the lost revenue through a withholding tax 75. Possibly another reference to the chlorine. 356 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 3, 1962 on dividends and interest. Compromises also surrounded Senate passage of the Foreign Aid Bill. The administration did not get as large an appropriation as hoped; but the Senate was far more generous than the House, which had cut the tab from $4.8 billion to $3.6 billion. The Senate authorized $4.4 billion. What little President Kennedy taped this day dealt with influencing the Senate-House conference on foreign aid to discourage the House from incorporating its cuts in the final bill. Kennedy also added to his record of taped civil-rights calls to the secretary of the Army, Cyrus Vance. 9:20 A.M. We would like to come over if we can . . . General Wheeler and I, to discuss [a] withdrawal plan with you, sir. Conversation with Cyrus Vance1 On October 3, 9,827 Army troops remained in Oxford. Small numbers of forces began to depart from Oxford by truck and helicopter for either Memphis or Columbus Air Force Base. Nevertheless, the total number of regular troops in Oxford continued to increase slightly over the next several days, reaching 10,113 by the morning of October 8.2 President Kennedy: Cy? Cyrus Vance: Yes, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Morning. 1. Dictabelt 4J.2, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 2. On October 8, the Army removed the remaining check points from the Ole Miss campus, allowing cars to enter without being searched. Despite this, troops still patrolled the grounds, the town of Oxford, and the surrounding countryside. More than 5,400 troops that had been standing by at installations in Memphis and Columbus, Mississippi, were ordered to return to their bases. According to the New York Times, on 8 October, 3,000 National Guard troops, 14,000 regular troops, and 1,500 military police remained on duty. Of the regular troops on duty, half were at bases in Memphis and Columbus, 90 miles away. On 10 October, the Army completed a significant withdrawal of troops from the Oxford area, reducing the number of men from 10,000 to 5,200. The remaining troops were divided nearly equally between regular Army and federalized Mississippi National Guard members. At peak strength, there had been some 23,600 men in Oxford and the surrounding area. Conversation with John McCormack 357 Vance: Morning, sir. We would like to come over if we can, about twelve, General [Earle G.] Wheeler and I, to discuss [a] withdrawal plan with you, sir. President Kennedy: Good. Fine. OK, I’ll be right here. Vance: Fine, sir. President Kennedy: Good. OK. Vance: See you then. Robert Kennedy recalled that as a result of the logistical foul-up on the night of September 30, the President was “as mad at Cy Vance and the information that Cy Vance was giving him as I’ve seen him during the course of the administration. He asked for an investigation to be conducted.”3 Vance and Lieutenant General Earl G. Wheeler, the new chief of staff of the U.S. Army, were due to come to the White House later that morning to discuss the withdrawal plan for Oxford and, perhaps, to discuss the conduct of the presidential investigation. Before the arrival of Vance and Wheeler, the President made telephone calls to the Speaker of the House and to Lawrence F. O’Brien, a special assistant to the President, who handled congressional affairs, to discuss the forthcoming conference on the foreign aid bill. 10:05 A.M. I don’t know what my psychology would be these days on Otto. Conversation with John McCormack4 The President wanted to discuss with the Speaker of the House possible strategies for getting an increased authorization for foreign aid out of the upcoming conference on the Foreign Aid Bill committee meeting. Otto Passman, Democratic representative from Louisiana and chairman of the Foreign Operations Subcommittee of the House Appropriations 3. Edwin O. Guthman and Jeffrey Shulman, eds., Robert Kennedy in His Own Words: The Unpublished Recollections of the Kennedy Years (New York: Bantam Books, 1988), p. 168. 4. Dictabelt 4K.3, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 358 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 3, 1962 Committee, an inveterate foe of foreign aid, would have to be induced to accept, in conference, the addition of $300 to $400 million to the $3.6 billion in foreign aid in the House version of the bill. Apparently before starting to record, the President had told McCormack that Larry O’Brien, his special assistant for congressional relations, would be coming up to the Hill to see him and Passman. President Kennedy: . . . foreign aid conference. I didn’t know whether it would be possible for him to come up and speak to you about our thoughts. Then perhaps you and I could talk on the phone again and you could give me your judgment about what we ought to try to work out with Otto. John McCormack: Sure. A . . . absolutely. And . . . we meet at eleven today, and Larry can come up anytime. . . . Oh, I’ll come off the rostrum once we get going. We’re going into the . . . I’ll get into the third supplemental, so will it be convenient for him about half past eleven or so? President Kennedy: Good. Fine. I’ll have him up there. McCormack: I think . . . You see, Otto agreed; when I said my understanding . . . I’ll put it that way . . . that he’d go at least 300 in this title one, and probably a little more. President Kennedy: Right. Right. McCormack: Is that right? President Kennedy: Right. That’s right. He . . . you remember, we were talking about 350 and then he said, “Well, we will go over 300 and see what more we can do.” Now, in view of the fact that we did well in the Senate, actually an even split would take us to 400 million over the House figure. So I thought that if he went up there with . . . Larry would have two sets of figures, and then we could just see what we could do with him. McCormack: And I was thinking that a . . . My thought would be that . . . that you and I and Passman and whoever you wanted in from the department would sit . . . get together down at the White House. Naturally it would be at the White House. President Kennedy: Right. Right. McCormack: I think your . . . the psychological effect, don’t you see? President Kennedy: Right. I don’t know what my psychology would be these days on Otto. [Laughter.] I’ll tell you— McCormack: Well, I know, Mr. President, it’s a pretty tough . . . It . . . it may not get all we seek, but it will get a hell of a lot more than he would give to someone else. President Kennedy: OK. Good. Well, I’ll have Larry up there and then I’ll be glad to meet whenever . . . you think would be best today. Conversation with Lawrence F. O’Brien 359 McCormack: Today? President Kennedy: Well, I think if they are going into conference tomorrow, either today, or whatever time you thought. Today or tomorrow would be fine with me. McCormack: Better today. In other words, he’d . . . he would allocate it, as I understood it, anyway you wanted. President Kennedy: Right. What we got to try to do is get him up to as near 400 as we can. McCormack: I know. I agree with you. President Kennedy: I’ll have Larry up there, though, at 11:30. McCormack: All right. President Kennedy: Thanks, Mr. Speaker. McCormack: Right. Right. The President then called Lawrence F. O’Brien to inform him of his discussion with the Speaker. Sometime That Morning [O]nce you get him briefed on the 400 . . . we can arrange to see Otto. Conversation with Lawrence F. O’Brien5 President Kennedy spoke to Special Assistant Larry O’Brien to follow up on his discussion with the Speaker of the House John McCormack. The President anticipated having a personal lobbying session with Congressman Passman at the White House, but wanted O’Brien first to talk over the foreign aid numbers with the Speaker. Kennedy would also raise an unidentified matter with O’Brien. That portion of the conversation was either not recorded or erased. Unidentified: Hello. Evelyn Lincoln: The President asked for Mr. O’Brien. He’s on. 5. Dictabelt 4K.6, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 360 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 3, 1962 Unidentified: OK. President Kennedy: Larry? Larry O’Brien: Yes, sir, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Tell him to call . . . . The Speaker said that he’d call you at 11:30 and then, perhaps, he will want to arrange—once you get him briefed on the 400—6 O’Brien: All right. President Kennedy: —we can arrange to see Otto, if necessary, down here.7 O’Brien: Right. President Kennedy: Now, the second thing is that I talked to Charlie . . .8 O’Brien: Yeah. Secretary Vance and General Wheeler entered the White House at 12:14 P.M. Kennedy did not tape this meeting. After these military advisers left, the President had lunch with J. Edgar Hoover, the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The President then went to the Executive Mansion for the rest of the day. He did not swim today and may have been feeling the initial effects of the illness that would keep him in bed all of October 4. During the afternoon, the President presumably received reports on the progress of Walter Schirra’s nine-hour space mission. In early September, Schirra’s mission had influenced the scheduling of the final phase of the DOMINIC nuclear test series because of concerns over the radiation effects of high-altitude testing.9 At 6:17 P.M., the President spoke with Schirra, who had returned safely and was onboard the aircraft carrier USS Kearsage. At 6:30, the President held an unrecorded meeting in the Oval Room of the White House with his Soviet specialists. It is not known when that meeting ended. 6. The Speaker of the House, from 1962 to 1971, was John W. McCormack, Democratic congressman from Massachusetts, 1928 to 1971. 7. Otto Passman was a Democratic U.S. House member from Louisiana, 1947 to 1977, and chairman of the Foreign Operations Subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee. The most powerful and outspoken opponent of foreign aid in Congress, Passman continually clashed with the Kennedy administration over its foreign aid requests. 8. Unidentified. 9. See “Meeting on the DOMINIC Nuclear Test Series,” 5 September 1962. M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8 , 1962 361 Monday, October 8, 1962 After spending all of October 4 upstairs at the White House with a cold, the President set off on a three-day campaign swing through Ohio, Michigan, and Minnesota. Having returned home Sunday night, the President entered the Oval Office at 9:32 A.M. While the President was out of Washington, the Berlin situation had heated up again. On October 6, a British military vehicle, seeking to come to the aid of a man who had been shot at the Wall, had been prevented from entering East Berlin. Meanwhile talks on Berlin between Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko and Dean Rusk had brought no progress. On Sunday the three Western powers were considering a formal protest to the Soviets because the bar on the British military vehicle was a violation of the Four Power agreements.1 Also during the President’s absence, another U-2 had flown a Cuba mission. In accordance with the September 10 decision on the reconnaissance plan for Cuba, this U-2 hugged the Cuban coast without crossing over any territory to avoid identified surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites. Back from his honeymoon, the director of central intelligence, John McCone, wanted the next U-2 flight to be more daring. Agents on the island were reporting the existence of surface-to-surface missiles and missile sites in one of the regions of Cuba not photographed since August 29. McCone wanted a U-2 to cover those areas, even though this meant risking the loss of the plane to a Soviet-made SAM. McCone had met resistance from the West Wing of the White House and was on the President’s schedule for October 8. On October 5, McGeorge Bundy, the special assistant to the President for national security affairs, had defended the reconnaissance plan in conversation with McCone. Bundy argued that the lack of “hard information” from the center of the island was not really cause for concern because the Soviets “would not go so far” as to put nuclear missiles in Cuba.2 McCone would have his chance today to make his case directly to the President. 1. See the New York Times, 6–8 October 1962; Telegram, Rusk (New York) to State Department, 6 October 1962, FRUS, 15: 348–51. 2. McCone, “Memorandum of Discussion with the President’s Special Assistant for National Security Affairs” (Bundy), 5 October 1962, FRUS, 11: 13–15. 362 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 Before McCone’s arrival, the President had scheduled a meeting with Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon. As Morse was about to enter the White House, the President called the Senate Majority Leader, Mike Mansfield, for some advice. 10:30 A.M. I think that a lot of them are a little bit afraid of Mike because of his power on the Interior and other appropriations committees over there. They thought, well, they better go along. Conversation with Mike Mansfield3 A fight had developed on Capitol Hill over a proposed $10 million appropriation for a National Aquarium in Washington, D.C. The sponsor of the project was Representative Mike Kirwan of Youngstown, Ohio. A longtime supporter of organized labor and New Deal–Fair Deal legislation, Kirwan was best known in recent years as a champion of pork-barrel legislation. Chairman of the Interior and Related Agencies Subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee (and second-ranking Democrat on the Appropriations Committee), he was nicknamed Big Mike and Prince of Pork. Democratic Senators Wayne Morse of Oregon and Frank Church of Iowa and others opposed the aquarium, with support from newspapers that termed it a blatant boondoggle.4 Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield’s secretary, Bobby Baker, one of the most astute vote counters on the Hill, had alredy warned Democrats against letting principle dictate their positions on the aquarium, and Morse, Church, and others who ignored this advice had already suffered Kirwan’s retribution, seeing the conference committee on the Interior Appropriations Bill eviscerate public works planned for their states. With Mansfield, Kennedy sought to rescue Morse and the others and undo some of the potential political fallout. Having asked the nation to give him more Democrats in the upcoming midterm elections, to 3. Dictabelt 4K.7, Cassette B, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 4. Morse had developed a reputation for stubbornness and had shown a willingness to take on his own party—Republican until 1952, an interlude as an independent, and Democratic from 1955. Conversation with Mik e Mansfield 363 change a simple numerical majority into a working majority by adding liberals and moderates to offset conservative southern Democrats, Kennedy could ill afford a party quarrel of this kind. Recording begins in midconversation. President Kennedy: I suppose that he’s going to blow me out of the water? 5 Mike Mansfield: Not you. Kirwan. President Kennedy: Yeah, but he’s asked . . . I suppose he’s probably going to ask me to do something. Is there anything I can do? Mansfield: Well, now, the only thing is this: What . . . he’s very much disturbed that because of his opposition to the Aquarium Bill, that Kirwan has knocked out a lot of his projects—6 President Kennedy: That’s right. Mansfield: —in the Public Works Bill. He will show you newspaper clippings which will indicate his and Edith Green’s defeat.7 And there’s nothing that you can do. . . . All you can say is that you’ll call up Kirwan and see what you can do, and we’ll probably get Bob Kerr to do the same thing over here.8 President Kennedy: I see. Well, why did the senators let it go?9 Because, I suppose they’re mad at him [Morse] too, aren’t they? He’s been kicking everybody around for so long that— Mansfield: Well . . . President Kennedy: —finally, they decided to kick him, I guess, didn’t they? Mansfield: Of course, well . . . that’s partly it, but it was a personal thing with— President Kennedy: Kirwan. Mansfield: —Mike. And I think that a lot of them are a little bit 5. Referring to Morse. 6. Morse was upset that the Interior Department Appropriations Bill, after passing the Senate and having been sent to House-Senate conferees, had been stripped of planning appropriations for the Columbia and Willamette river channel projects, funds for construction of the Yaquina Bay and Harbor project, and funds for a reclamation project at Pendleton, all in Oregon. 7. Edith Green was a Democratic U.S. House member from Oregon, 1955 to 1974. 8. Robert S. Kerr was a U.S. senator from Oklahoma, 1948 to 1963, and chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. The irony of Kennedy’s request to have Kerr intercede on behalf of Morse here is that Morse had recently led a filibuster against Kennedy’s Comsat proposal, a proposal to privatize government satellite development, ultimately steered through to passage by none other than Senator Kerr. 9. In the conference committee. 364 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 afraid of Mike because of his power on the Interior and other appropriations committees over there. They thought, well, they better go along. President Kennedy: Yeah. Mansfield: And it’s . . . the amounts are really small. They don’t mean anything. President Kennedy: Yeah . . . yeah. Mansfield: But I think that, if you will, say, you will call Kirwan, and I’ll get Bob Kerr to talk to Kirwan. That might be the best way out of it. President Kennedy: Yeah . . . yeah. Well, why don’t I call Kirwan before I see Wayne, and see whether I can do anything? Mansfield: OK. President Kennedy: But, I mean, Wayne . . . [chuckles] OK, Mike. Right. Mansfield: OK, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Good-bye, now. Following this bit of legislative business, Kennedy met with Wayne Morse for twenty minutes. The rest of the morning was devoted to foreign policy, and the President did not tape any of it. John McCone and McGeorge Bundy came to discuss, among other topics, the secret negotiations with Fidel Castro over the release of the Bay of Pigs prisoners. James B. Donovan, mediator for the United States, had just arrived in Havana for his second meeting with Castro. Having negotiated the trade of Soviet spy William Fisher, also known as Rudolf Abel, for imprisoned U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers in the winter of 1962, Donovan was trusted by both sides in the Cold War as an honest negotiator. And U-2s may have figured in another aspect of this conversation. As mentioned in the editors’ introduction for October 8, McCone was in the midst of a campaign to persuade the White House to permit a U-2 to fly over east central Cuba, where agents had pinpointed a possible missile installation. Bundy had opposed McCone’s recommendation on October 5, considering it an unnecessary risk. McCone must have made some progress, as he was able to press Kennedy further on the need for a U-2 overflight of Cuba again the next day, October 9. Following this Cuba discussion, the President met with his science adviser, Jerome B. Wiesner. The DOMINIC test series still had a month to go, and with the successful completion of the Schirra mission, there was nothing holding back the last remaining high-altitude tests. Then the President performed some more legislative business, which he did tape. Conversation with Alber t Gore 365 12:00 P.M. Now, it’s really your choice, and I think that if you ask Hubert and Bob not to override, they would not and would fight it. But, I don’t know whether you want to put that much at stake on it or not. Conversation with Albert Gore10 The Self-employed Pension Bill, H.R. 10, was passed 361–0 by House vote on September 25 and 70–8 by Senate vote on September 28. Permitting self-employed persons to establish tax-deductible pension funds, it vexed the President in several ways. It was estimated to cost the U.S. Treasury an expected $100 to $125 million at a time when President Kennedy hoped to produce a tight budget for the upcoming fiscal year— mostly to secure passage of his tax cut proposals; it represented an important step toward taxpayer equity but did not cover all groups with equal claims; and it struck the President that if introduced later, in a general tax reform package, it might well help secure passage of such reform, in itself a principal goal of the administration.11 Because Senator George Smathers (D-Florida) threatened to block a pocket veto by keeping Congress in session as long as it would take, President Kennedy had determined that he could only sign the bill or issue an outright veto. The lopsided margins by which the bill had passed did little to encourage a veto, and his conversation here with Senator Albert Gore, a prominent supporter of the administration and member of the Senate Finance Committee, would focus on the likelihood of an override were Kennedy to issue a veto.12 Gore was one of the eight senators who voted against the measure during its final passage, contending that it conflicted with the administration’s tax reform proposals designed to 10. Dictabelts 4K.8 and 48.2, Cassettes band M, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Albert A. Gore was Democratic U.S. senator from Tennessee, 1953 to 1971. 11. “The President’s Special News Conference with Business Editors and Publishers,” Public Papers of the Presidents, John F. Kennedy, 1962 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963), pp. 714–15. Under the bill, a self-employed person would be allowed to deduct from taxable income 50 percent of contributions to a retirement fund. The annual deductions would apply to a maximum of 10 percent of annual income with a ceiling of $2,500. 12. Along with Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois, Gore was the chief supporter of administration plans for general tax reform. 366 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 eliminate special favors for the wealthy and politically well connected. Having ten days with which to act on passed legislation while Congress remained in session, Kennedy was fast approaching the deadline for a decision on a veto. President Kennedy: Hello. Albert Gore: Yes? President Kennedy: Albert, how are you? Gore: Fine. How are you, Mr. President? President Kennedy: Oh, very good. Well, now, it looks, unfortunately like we’re beginning to run out of time— Gore: Yeah, I’m afraid so. President Kennedy: —on H.R. 10. Unfort[unately] . . . I wish to hell that Congress had gotten out Saturday.13 Now, what is your thought about how we should do this? I don’t want to veto it if . . . unless we’ve got a prayer. Now, do you think we could . . . what do you think we could get in the Senate? I don’t think we can do very well in the House. Gore: Well, it depends on [unclear] . . . Mike will help you. 14 President Kennedy: Yeah, but Hubert’s for the bill. 15 Gore: Well, he’s for the . . . Now, Ralph Yarborough told me that he would sustain a veto—16 President Kennedy: Right. Gore: —and announce for it. I’d say it would depend on Hubert and Bob Kerr.17 If they will resist overriding a veto, then Mike and I can corral enough others to prevent its being overridden. President Kennedy: Well, now Hubert has told me at the last week’s breakfast, and he said it again Saturday, that he wants . . . that he’s for the bill. Gore: Well . . . President Kennedy: I’ll tell you what I’ll do is I’ll get ahold of Hubert and . . . but . . . and see where he thinks we are. What we don’t— 13. Allowing for a pocket veto. 14. Mike Mansfield was a Democratic U.S. senator from Montana, 1953 to 1977, and Senate majority leader, 1961 to 1977. 15. Hubert H. Humphrey was a Democratic U.S. senator from Minnesota, 1949 to 1964 and 1971 to 1978; majority whip during the Kennedy administration; and vice president, 1965 to 1969. 16. Ralph Yarborough was a Democratic U.S. senator from Texas, 1957 to 1971. 17. Robert S. Kerr was a U.S. senator from Oklahoma, 1948 to 1963, and chairman of the Senate Finance Committee during the Kennedy administration until his death on 1 January 1963. Conversation with Alber t Gore 367 Dictabelt 4K.8 ends at this point, in the middle of the conversation between President Kennedy and Senator Gore. The conversation is continued on Dictabelt 48.2. President Kennedy: —to do is end up the session which is beginning to pass some pretty good bills, and have it . . . have us overridden so that we’re 300 to 3 in the House and, you know, get about 8 or 9 votes in the Senate. That won’t . . . if we could get it close then we’ve got a . . . then it seems to me that we’d be glad to . . . I’d like to veto it. Gore: Yeah. President Kennedy: But what we ought to do is see how many we can get; otherwise we’ll end up on such a negative note that we won’t be in very good shape going into the election to ask for a Democratic Congress, and we’d give the Republicans something to write about for a week. Gore: Well, of course, I want you to do whatever you think is best to be done. President Kennedy: Right. Gore: I am more or less saying that if you want to make a fight to prevent the veto from being overridden, my opinion is it can be defeated in the Senate. But it can’t be defeated unless you put yourself on the line on the thing. Now, it’s really your choice, and I think that if you ask Hubert and Bob not to override, they would not and would fight it. But, I don’t know whether you want to put that much at stake on it or not. President Kennedy: Right. Well, let me do this. Let me talk to Mike Mansfield. He’s against the bill, Hubert’s for the bill, and Smathers is for the bill. And, of course, Bobby Baker’s for the bill. . . .18 Gore: Well, you know it’s a hell of a thing, with a Democratic majority, to have a paid employee who is a lobbyist for a special interest bill. President Kennedy: I know, well, he’s working for you fellas. Gore: I know [laughing]. President Kennedy: [chuckling] Not for me. Gore: He never did work for you in the Senate. 18. Bobby Baker was secretary to the Senate majority leader, 1955 to 1963. As secretary to Senate majority leaders Lyndon Johnson and Mike Mansfield, Baker established himself as a preeminent head counter and dispenser of unofficial favors. He also became an unofficial lobbyist through his Washington, D.C., law firm, Tucker and Baker, and earned a substantial income even as he drew the meager salary attached to his official occupation. Though officially attached to Senator Mansfield at this point, Baker worked much more closely with Senator Kerr and often reflected Kerr’s views on any particular piece of legislation or government business. In January 1967, Baker would be convicted of income tax evasion, theft, and conspiracy to defraud the government. 368 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 President Kennedy: [laughing] No, I know that . . . I know that. But I will talk to Mike and ask Mike what . . . how many votes he thinks he can get and also Bob Kerr, and I’ll be talking to you again before we do anything. Now, it may be that the House won’t have a quorum by Wednesday. We can see what that situation is. But I won’t do anything on this thing until late . . . until whatever the time limit is on it. Gore: I doubt very much if the House will have a quorum, and the Senate will have a hell of a time getting a quorum. President Kennedy: Well, we’ll take a look. So we’ve got another 48 hours on it, and in the meanwhile, I’ll be talking to you before what[ever] . . . I make a decision. Gore: Whatever you do is satisfactory to me, and I’ll come back up and make whatever fight you want made. President Kennedy: OK, fine . . . well— Gore: Whatever you decide, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Good. Well, I’m going to have breakfast with Mike in the morning and then I’ll be back in touch with you before we make a final decision. Gore: OK. President Kennedy: Thanks, Albert. On October 10, 1962, two days after this conversation and six hours before the deadline, Kennedy signed the Self-employed Pension Bill without comment. Kennedy’s last appointment before lunch was an unrecorded meeting with Walt W. Rostow, counselor of the Department of State and chairman of the Policy Planning Council. The only meeting the President taped on this day was a continuation of the previous Tuesday’s $100 billion budget discussion. This followed an unrecorded meeting of Bell, Sorensen, O’Brien, and O’Donnell. Meeting on the Budg et 369 4:48–5:10 P.M. [S]ome feel that we’re going to have to break the 100 billion dollar barrier. So we might as well break it now as in the election year. Meeting on the Budget19 Though Pennsylvania senator Joseph Clark lamented in 1963 when discussing the national debt and the federal deficit that “no topic in our time has been the victim of so much nonsense,” few then were willing to countenance the ideas of President Kennedy and his economic advisers on the subject. Kennedy and CEA chairman Walter Heller and other administration economists called for a small measure of deficit spending, for accelerated public works outlays, and for a federal income tax cut to move the nation’s economy toward full employment and toward its productive potential.20 Though U.S. corporations had increased their indebtedness in the 1957 to 1962 period by approximately 200 percent, U.S. individuals by approximately 380 percent, and state and local governments by approximately 400 percent, the federal government was expected to avoid this trend; Kennedy’s political opponents lost little sleep driving this point home to the American public. As President Kennedy planned for last-minute campaign stops, mostly in the Midwest and Northeast (and in Senator Clark’s home state on five separate occasions), former President Eisenhower was engaged in a campaign tour of his own, stumping for Republican congressional candidates, speaking pejoratively of Kennedy’s domestic program as the “Far Frontier,” and warning the nation of Kennedy’s, and by proxy, the Democratic Party’s, fiscal recklessness. At the meeting detailed below, Douglas Dillon, Kennedy’s secretary of the Treasury, and formerly under secretary of state in the Eisenhower administration, began by recalling the methods under which spending plans had been presented in 19. Including President Kennedy, David Bell, C. Douglas Dillon, Henry Fowler, Walter Heller, Charles Schultze, Theodore Sorensen, and Elmer Staats. Tape 27A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 20. See “Letter to the President of the Senate and to the Speaker of the House Transmitting a Proposed Stand-By Capital Improvements Act. 19 February 1962,” Public Papers of the Presidents, pp. 143–44; “Remarks Upon Signing the Public Works Acceleration Act. 14 September 1962,” ibid., pp. 682–83. 370 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 the previous administration. Though the first part of the meeting was not captured on tape, the recorded portion began with Dillon counseling the use of low-spending estimates and reminding his colleagues in the Kennedy administration of how that device had helped the Eisenhower administration limp toward its modestly higher spending targets. Kennedy pressed Chairman Heller to use the White House as a “pulpit for public education in economics.” Nevertheless, the President believed that there were limits on what the administration could do. Though a tax cut would be difficult to pass, increased spending—in an obvious and direct fashion—seemed politically out of the question.21 Consequently, with an eye toward the creation of a conservative-liberal coalition and the postwar reconfiguration of a tax code designed largely for World War II, Kennedy gravitated more and more toward the tax cut proposal as the preferred economic stimulus.22 Accordingly, questions like how to spend more on targeted investments, how to avoid draconian cuts elsewhere, and how to present a budget that would appear “responsible” enough to win a tax cut, defined the discussion as Kennedy and his advisers considered and wrestled with the administration’s future budget proposals. Begins in midconversation. Douglas Dillon: . . . expenditures on the low side, because it wouldn’t mean anything if they actually . . . if more was spent because it was . . . how much you would spend on past commitments, whether you spent more than estimated. It doesn’t stop you from delivering something that’s already in the pipeline. And we deliberately made our estimates low, thinking they might run over, and actually they very seldom, if ever, did. Oh, it was . . . services couldn’t deliver quite as many and some happily stayed with it. But the key thing is what you request. And in a way, what you rec[ommend] . . . put down for these two items in expenditures; you really run off the preceding year’s tendency for a good esti- 21. Heller noted that when Kennedy called for a balanced budget in his 1961 State of the Union address, “we counted seven escape hatches” [quoted in Walter W. Heller, New Dimensions in Political Economy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), p. 31]. 22. Kennedy may never have given up on the idea of economic prosperity through increased government spending. Only 11 days before his assassination, with the tax cut bill as yet bottled up in the Senate Finance Committee, Kennedy reminded Heller, “First we’ll get your tax cut, and then we’ll get my expenditure programs” (quoted in Heller, New Dimensions, p. 113). Meeting on the Budg et 371 mate rather tightly. So I think that these two figures can stand up very well on the basis of the previous criterion. President Kennedy: I think we can do something there. Now, the . . . Peace Corps. David Bell: This is also, of course, the USIA and the State Department; there are small increases for both. Elmer Staats: For the Peace Corps, this would hold them at about the level of where they would be just about a year from now. About a year from now they’ll be just about 10,000. President Kennedy: Soybeans? Has Larry O’Brien left?23 We’re going to know a little more after this election about agriculture.24 Dillon: Sure. Well, Dave said there have been some other reductions; . . . price support would be real difficult.25 He said he felt soybeans was possible and wouldn’t make any difference anyway if you can use it right.26 Bell: The main . . . the main money in here is the rural housing loans. That’s the main issue, Mr. President. Dillon: Let’s see . . . it’s 50 million and 75. Bell: The REA generating loans is also a tough one.27 [Pause.] Well, these— Dillon: In determining anything, it’s just . . . just not going up as fast as you were doing. That’s the whole point . . . if that’s where you’re planning to go. President Kennedy: I don’t think we can probably get medical care by if we don’t cover the non–Social Security beneficiaries.28 23. Lawrence F. O’Brien was special assistant to the President for congressional relations, 1961 to 1965. 24. In the domain of agricultural policy, the Kennedy administration was attempting to move away from price supports to a regime characterized by direct payments to producers and lessened market interference. 25. The reference is to reductions in agricultural price supports. 26. Soybeans, emerging as a major export crop, were not subject to acreage control limitations, nor would they later be eligible for direct payments. In most years—1957, 1958, and 1961 being the exceptions—soybean market prices had remained above predetermined support levels. 27. The REA is the Rural Electrification Administration. 28. Kennedy’s proposal for medical care for the aged was not faring well, politically, and at the end of his administration, stood as one of his more notable legislative failures. Indeed, the Medicare proposal that finally became legislation in 1965 required quite a bit of political maneuvering, the addition of a Medicaid program for the poor of all ages, and the force of the Johnson landslide in the 1964 presidential election in order to prevail. 372 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 Dillon: Well, this is just a deferment for one year— President Kennedy: Yeah. Dillon: —if you wanted to. President Kennedy: Yeah. Bell: Now, this would mean on the education, Mr. President, this would mean no program at all in the elementary and secondary field. That’s what the implication of this would be. President Kennedy: Well, we can’t get it by.29 It’s just really as if . . . almost a political question as to whether we update it or recommend it, because [unclear] I think was— Bell: There have been these suggestions to . . . Remember this year you had a recommendation for a quality improvement bill. And this 141 million is just everything we had in for that and, as well as, direct aid to school districts for construction and teachers’ salaries and so on. President Kennedy: All right. Well I want Ted [Sorensen] to look at what we ought to do about . . . what we ought to recommend in the field of education. Theodore Sorensen: I think, like many things in this list, Mr. President, we can make a judgment on this at the time we make our legislative program judgments, and the time we make that judgment really is after election day. If we lose 40 seats, we’re not going to be going up with the same education bill. President Kennedy: If we lose ten seats. We lost one already. Twenty-second pause. All right, on the Interior Department, I think we can do something on that by taking another item . . . Bell: Well, the Indian schools is an important— President Kennedy: That’s pretty hard to do, we don’t want to . . . but the other thing, oceanography, helium, conservation, water fowl land acquisition, fisheries program, increased acquisition of recreational land, acceleration to improvement of parks and public lands. All those— Dillon: This is all increased acquisition and acceleration of improvements that we’re talking about; they’d still be moving ahead at present rates which is already increased over what was ever done before. [Unclear] that’s all we’re talking about. President Kennedy: Occupational safety legislation. What is that, now? 29. As he predicted, Kennedy’s aid to education proposals for the 87th Congress were defeated. Meeting on the Budg et 373 Bell: That’s a legislative proposal and it’s not much money. Six or eight million . . . Sorensen: Grants to states. It’s a very small amount. Bell: Yeah, 6 or 8 million dollars. President Kennedy: What does it do? What do we do with them? Bell: They would be grants to the state labor departments to promote occupational safety standards in factories. Unidentified: It’s research. Bell: [Unclear] would also be involved. Dillon: And, as I said to this thing, this is illustrative— Unidentified: Uh-huh. Dillon: —and economic [unclear] 6 or 7 million dollars . . . Bell: The key point here— President Kennedy: Well, I think the only way you’re really going to save much with these 6 and 8 million dollar grants— Unidentified: [Unclear.] Bell: Yes. That’s right. President Kennedy: [Unclear] big programs are too— Bell: Yeah. President Kennedy: —have too . . . but, I mean, if you get these agencies all thinking about these smaller ones . . . Bell: Well, the important issue here would be the training . . . piece of that. We got in a big fight with the Labor Department about that. We’re already a good deal lower than they think we should be. Twelve-second pause. President Kennedy: GSA.30 That could— Bell: That, of course, is, that’s work on buildings, primarily. And you can set that about any pace you want. President Kennedy: Reduced direct housing loans are proposed, 25,000 housing loans, 23,000 loans? Bell: Yeah. President Kennedy: I don’t know really why the Veterans Administration is in the direct loans these days, anyway. How is it? Bell: Simply for historical reasons. We got in after World War II. And successive Budget Bureaus and presidents have been trying to get them out. Last year, after a considerable fight with Teague, we got an agreement under which this program goes along, but the veterans begin to lose eligi- 30. The abbreviation GSA stands for General Services Administration. 374 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 bility after a certain number of years.31 And a good slug of the veterans are beginning, now, to lose their eligibility under that legislation. So this will be phased out in a period of four or five more years . . . the bulk of it, as I recall. By ’68, I think . . . you’re just about through with this. But that was the best we could do in terms of the legislative agreement. And, meantime, they do have the authority and the veterans are eligible. So you, presumably, have to . . . they . . . they’re under restriction now. They’re holding back. They could lend a lot more. The question is kind of where you draw the line of how much heat you’re willing to take to prevent loans being made that actually could be made under the existing law. Unidentified: Yeah. Bell: Twenty-five thousand is about the level this year, and it’s about the same as the level last year. This involves some cutback. Fourteen-second pause. President Kennedy: But, some feel that we’re going to have to break the 100 billion dollar barrier. So we might as well break it now as in the election year. Dillon: Well, I think you may well. . . . I don’t know what you’re gonna be in, you may well break it in NOA; that’s going to be a different figure entirely.32 We’re talking about expenditures here. How much higher is NOA in August, here? Sorensen: I thought we’d already broken a 100 billion dollars. Unidentified: Oh, we’re up by 6 or 7 billion. Dillon: Well, that was a different NOA. [Pause.] Sorensen: You know that it’s being broken this year? Unidentified: Yeah. Bell: About to be five . . . under these figures which are August 30th figures. Dillon: So that . . . that includes— Bell: Mostly 2 billion dollars for the IMF and a lot of things like that, that are not actual expenditures.33 It won’t be actual expenditures. Dillon: If we break it next year in NOA so the budgets that are going in would be over— Bell: No, it’s broken now! 31. Olin E. “Tiger” Teague was a U.S. representative from Texas, 1947 to 1979; chairman of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, 1963 to 1973; and a much-decorated World War II veteran. 32. The abbreviation NOA stands for new obligational authority. 33. The abbreviation IMF stands for the International Monetary Fund. Meeting on the Budg et 375 Dillon: Well, it will be again next year. Bell: Oh, yes, yes . . . [unclear]. Dillon: So, for that reason, I would think in the . . . if it’s broken, then the . . . I’m only thinking of the expenditure side, would seem to be your . . . your tax reduction . . . what chance you have to get it. Walter Heller: Well, there . . . there, you know, there are some other arguments that point on the up side. Every dollar of expenditure increase gives you more punch. You get a dollar of tax reduction because you’re surer of the economic impact and certainly the . . . the slack in the economy. Secondly, I suppose there is there some validity in the argument that if Congress is going to cut taxes, and they’re going to want to make a showing of cutting your expenditure proposals—as part of the price of admission of the tax cut—to put them up a little higher doesn’t make you look as good, I grant, if they cut, but it gives them the feeling that they’ve paid the price of admission for a tax cut. Well, it’s just that a number of these things, I think, are cheaper if we do them now than if we do them later. Dillon: The real problem with that cutting business is that they get those people involved, and the Ways and Means Committee and the Finance Committee are not the Appropriations Committee, and they will, they’ll [unclear]. The chances of getting any tax reduction is going to be very difficult anyway, and it’s required that . . . showing that we’re really trying to hold down expenditures. Bell: I think . . . I believe, now, that you have to— Dillon: Well, they’re not— Bell: I don’t make anything out of your third argument. The others, I think, are something that, you know . . . Unidentified: [Unclear.] Bell: The basic problem is that the President’s program would cost this much. And if you’re going to cut it, you’re going to cut the programs. And this is on the one side, and the strategy of dealing with the Congress is on the other side, although there are arguments both ways on the strategy side. Dillon: But these are all sort of picking at things, and— Unidentified: [Coughs.] Dillon: —certainly they are all . . . the foreign aid ones are not enough, are not any cuts, actually, and— Bell: Yes, Congress—[Unclear exchange.] Dillon: —very little. Bell: Yeah, not very much, but— President Kennedy: How about the Indian thing we can cut, but that isn’t very much money in that anyway . . . it’s only about 4 or 5 million? 376 M O N DAY, O C T O B E R 8, 1962 Bell: Which, sir? President Kennedy: The Indian schools. Bell: Oh no, sir, it’s more than that. I’d say, probably, 15 or 20 million. President Kennedy: Is it really? Bell: Yeah. You see, the previous administration left us in lousy shape on Indian schools. Staats: I don’t believe it’s that much in this one year, but it’s about a three- or four-year program all together. But in the first— President Kennedy: Are the schools pretty bad? Bell: Well, yeah. Staats: Yeah, pretty— Bell: Some of the kids didn’t have school at all. Staats: A lot of the children just don’t have any school. President Kennedy: Well, if we’ve got to get a good speech, well, we ought to give it Wednesday night or through this weekend.34 I ought to stick to my script, about some of the things we’ve done. As I say, that thing on agriculture is really impressive. It’s hard to give these speeches to these . . . threefold, obviously, but it seems to me, over the weekend, if we can sort of get about three or four speeches—like this Indian school thing—it’d show what we’ve done there as opposed to . . . it would build a better base for— Bell: I think this is, this is 10 million dollars. President Kennedy: I think that’s sort of the theme for this weekend. Bell: Ten million dollars [unclear]. President Kennedy: Congress will be closing . . . these will be deadlocked. Unidentified: [Unclear] the Indian schools. Dillon: The increase. Unidentified: Ten [unclear], sir. President Kennedy: It’s a hell of a story, the . . . I think the agency may even see it right. Put them all together . . . four different speeches or three, you’ll have a chance to do these domestic things. [Pause.] OK, now . . . Dillon: We simply . . . approach on this, as Ted said, a lot of these decisions you can’t take until you sit down and do the final thing. It’s just 34. President Kennedy gave a series of congressional campaign speeches in Ohio, Michigan, and Minnesota, 5 to 7 October 1962, and in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and New York, 12 to 15 October 1962. Wednesday, 10 October 1962, he spoke in Baltimore, Maryland. Meeting on the Budg et 377 a question whether to start off trying to make decisions up here or start off down here and then if you spot down— President Kennedy: All right, well, let’s start off with 98.5, Dave, and then let’s . . . we’ll have to get each one.35 Anything that’s added beyond that will have to be added as a result of a decision that we’ll take individually. Bell: OK. President Kennedy: We may go up to 108 billion, [unclear] go back to a hundred, but let’s start with the . . . Are you going to [unclear]? Dillon: I don’t know where you come out. Unidentified: Before the last election— Staats: These are bridges we can cross a little better after we get a little further along with our message. [Pause.] Dillon: Mr. President, you might like to note that [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: [Unclear.] Dillon: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: We can divide that, Ted, I was thinking that. . . . So what do you think about this thing, trying to— Sorensen: Well, I think, you know it depends a little bit on the audience. President Kennedy: Hard to make it as a speech, but I . . . I’d like to get it in as a sort of— Sorensen: Going on nationwide television, that is something that— Unidentified: [Unclear.] Sorensen: [Unclear] I’m already concerned [unclear] that the whole thing together, although that’s . . . that’s— President Kennedy: That’ll be a boring speech?36 Sorensen: It’s a less-boring speech. What you need to remember is, given that audience type and— Unidentified: [Unclear.] Sorensen: Out in Minnesota and all . . . President Kennedy: You haven’t got about15 [unclear] that’s a mean feat. [Unclear] can stand on the ground. Now those [unclear]. Unidentified: Yeah. 35. Reference is to the $981/2 billion administrative budget (excluding trust fund transactions). 36. After his 13 August 1962 televised address to the nation on economic policy, delivered with a plethora of statistics and accompanying charts and graphs, President Kennedy seemed particularly concerned that such presentations never be delivered again in such an uninteresting style. 378 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 9, 1962 President Kennedy: That poll shows Judd ahead.37 Sorensen: [Unclear] the firsthand meeting [unclear]. Unidentified: [Unclear.] President Kennedy: If Judd gets to 43 percent . . . Sorensen: Yeah, [unclear] and Andersen’s pulled up an old [unclear].38 Unidentified: [Unclear.] Unidentified: That just seems ridiculous. Heller: Did Hubert say that he was doubtful about that poll?38 President Kennedy: Which one? Heller: This . . . you haven’t [unclear] this poll, this last one?39 President Kennedy: Yeah, well, no . . . I think we’d better, I don’t think they’ve got much of a poll. I just think the problem is that . . . oop, turn that up, will you? Just turn them up. The President turned off the machine. The Secretary of the Treasury stayed behind to continue the discussion with the President and Walter Heller. The President had some time for more telephone calls, then he went to the pool at 7:03 P.M. Tuesday, October 9, 1962 The President left only one recording from this important day. An hour before he was to sign a piece of pork barrel legislation to satisfy a difficult and powerful congressman, the President called Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield for mutual congratulations on the approval of a compromise version of the foreign aid bill providing for a $300 million increase over the amount voted by the House. 37. Walter H. Judd was a Republican U.S. representative from Minnesota and keynote speaker at the 1960 Republican National Convention. Judd, in what was considered a mild upset at the time, lost in the 1962 election to Democratic state senator Donald M. Fraser. 38. This is mostly likely a reference to Elmer Lee Andersen, governor of Minnesota, then running for reelection in 1962. His reelection bid resulted in the closest election in Minnesota history with a loss to his opponent by 91 votes. 39. Hubert H. Humphrey was a U.S. senator from Minnesota. 40. A University of Minnesota professor of economics before joining the Kennedy administration, Walter Heller was particularly interested in this Minnesota congressional race. Conversation with Mik e Mansfield and Mik e Kirwan 379 9:54 A.M. Are you sure you don’t want to witness this—this extraordinary action as I’m bulldozed and bludgeoned and beaten into being the greatest friend of the fish . . . ? Conversation with Mike Mansfield and Mike Kirwan1 Congressman Michael “Big Mike” Kirwan had raised the hackles of Senator Wayne Morse by removing, in conference committee on the Interior and Other Agencies Appropriations Bill, several large public works projects destined for Morse’s Oregon. His sole reason, publicly announced, was that Morse had refused to support his $10 million national aquarium proposal for the same bill. Recognizing both the capricious nature of Kirwan’s maneuvers and also the importance of pleasing the chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, who was also a senior member of the Appropriations Committee, Kennedy asked Senator Mansfield and Senator Robert Kerr of Oklahoma to help him settle the Kirwan-Morse dispute. President Kennedy confers here with Mansfield before speaking to Kirwan in an effort to conclude a settlement agreeable to Kirwan, Morse, and the President himself. And though the President signed the Aquarium Bill later that morning, as he promises here, and Kirwan dutifully restored Morse’s public works projects in the Supplemental Appropriations Bill, the national aquarium project itself, planned for the Hains Point area of the nation’s capital, remained dependent on congressional funding that was ultimately never provided. Mike Mansfield: [Unclear] it’s for you, Mike Kirwan and I. President Kennedy: Right. Mansfield: I told Mike to put the Oregon items back. President Kennedy: Right. Mansfield: And, he would appreciate it—if you’re going to do it—he asked [unclear] that you sign the Aquarium Bill as soon as you can. President Kennedy: Right. In other words, you would not wait on it? 1. Dictabelt 49.1, Cassette M, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. Mike Mansfield was Democratic U.S. senator from Montana, 1953 to 1977, and Senate majority leader, 1961 to 1977. Michael J. Kirwan was a Democratic U.S. representative from Ohio, 1937 to 1970. 380 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 9, 1962 Mansfield: No. President Kennedy: Right. Mansfield: It would make Mike very happy. President Kennedy: Oh, good. I’ll sign it this morning, then. Mansfield: Fine [unclear] here—wait a minute. Good-bye. Here’s Mike. President Kennedy: Yeah. Mike Kirwan: Hello. President Kennedy: Hello, hello. Kirwan: Yes. President Kennedy: How are you doing? Kirwan: This is Mike . . . President Kennedy: Are you sure you don’t want to witness this— Kirwan: No, no . . . no. President Kennedy: —this extraordinary action as I’m bulldozed and bludgeoned and beaten into being the greatest friend of the fish . . . ? Kirwan: That’s . . . . Do you want me to go down, then? President Kennedy: I’ve eaten more fish . . . Kirwan: What? Well, do you want me to go down? President Kennedy: Well, why don’t you come down and watch it? Kirwan: All right. That’s what I’ll . . . when are you going to do it? President Kennedy: Well, I’ll do it whenever you want to be down here. Kirwan: All right. I’ll go right down now, then. President Kennedy: OK. Right. The President had an important meeting on Berlin scheduled with the French foreign minister, Maurice Couve de Murville, with whom he intended to share U.S. estimates of how long it would take the allies to respond to a Soviet provocation in Berlin. It would take four days, for example, to launch a battalion-sized probe on the Berlin autobahn. The two men would agree that, given the current tensions on Berlin, contingency planning had to be improved to allow for a much faster response time.2 The President also had two significant meetings on Cuba. Before lunch he met with John McCone, Robert Kennedy, Edwin Martin, George Ball, McGeorge Bundy, and Ralph A. Dungan. In the late afternoon he met again with John McCone, and included Maxwell Taylor and Roswell Gilpatric. The principal decision facing Kennedy was whether to endorse the CIA request for a U-2 flight over San Cristóbal in west cen- 2. Memorandum of Conversation, 9 October 1962, FRUS, 15: 351–55. W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 10, 1962 381 tral Cuba. The flight was to be over Cuba for only 12 minutes but would come close to some identified SAM sites. The risks were high. The last time the CIA had photographed this part of the island was August 29 and new SAM sites might have been constructed since then. The President approved this mission.3 The U-2 would make its direct overflight on October 14. Wednesday, October 10, 1962 John McCone made an unscheduled visit to the White House on October 10. The Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) had just met with the House Appropriations Committee to discuss James B. Donovan’s negotiations with Fidel Castro on the Bay of Pigs prisoners. McCone found some congressional uneasiness about these negotiations. Newspapers on Tuesday had carried front-page stories on Donovan’s mission, a potential partisan political issue. Donovan was running for the Senate against the Republican Jacob Javits in New York. It was reported that the 1,113 prisoners were expected back in Miami by the weekend.1 The DCI also wanted to brief the President on low-level photographs of the cargoes on the Soviet merchant ships headed for Cuba. Several ships carried crates that photoanalysts believed contained IL-28 bombers. This was the first hard evidence of the delivery of weapons that might be construed as offensive in character. Kennedy did not tape this meeting; however, from McCone’s detailed summary it is clear that the President was disturbed by these new photographs.2 As he had done when the first U-2 photographs of SAM sites were developed, Kennedy asked that this material be withheld from the rest of his administration. His argument was that the domestic political situation was such that any leak of the information about possible bombers would reduce his independence of action. McCone argued against strict restriction and gained the President’s approval to reducing the circle of the informed to the President’s key advisers and those intelligence officers required to give expert analysis. 3. Gilpatric “Notes on a Meeting with the President,” 9 October 1962, described in FRUS, 11: 17. 1. “Final Parley Set on Cuba Captives,” New York Times, 9 October 1962. James Donovan returned from Cuba on October 11 empty handed. 2. Memorandum on Donovan Project, Meeting 10 October 62, John McCone, FRUS, 11: 17–19. 382 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 10, 1962 “We’ll have to do something drastic about Cuba,” McCone recorded the President as saying. Kennedy expected a new operational plan for Cuba from the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the week of October 14. At some point during the day, the President called an old friend, Senator George Smathers of Florida. Like McCone, Smathers was a prod on the subject of Cuba. The President, Smathers later recalled, “always identified me with pushing, pushing, pushing.”3 The immediate reason for the telephone call was that the President had signed Smathers’s Selfemployed Pension Bill. The President so disliked his friend’s bill that he signed it without ceremony. Time Unknown I just don’t want these guys around; particularly if this Cuban thing ever works out . . . So, we’ve got to get them out tomorrow night. Then everybody goes home, and, shit, nobody knows what the hell’s going on. Conversation with George Smathers4 Wanting to avoid the imminent override of a veto he had hoped to deliver, Kennedy consented to sign H.R. 10, the Self-employed Pension Bill, only hours before its deadline, and three days before the adjournment of the 87th Congress. The bill’s chief Senate sponsor, George Smathers of Florida, had warned the President on September 28 not to consider a pocket veto; Smathers pledged to keep Congress in session past the signing deadline to prevent just such a possibility. Though President Kennedy objected to the legislation on the grounds that it would reduce federal revenue by $100 to $125 million and would largely benefit wealthy attorneys and physicians, he signed it, reluctantly, and called Smathers afterward to break the news. There would, however, be no signing ceremony for this bill and Kennedy would ask Senator Smathers not to broadcast news of the signing that evening. 3. Cited in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Robert Kennedy and His Times (New York: Ballantine Books, 1978), p. 530. 4. Dictabelt 50.3, Cassette M, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. George A. Smathers was a Democratic U.S. senator from Florida, 1951 to 1969. Conversation with Georg e Smathers 383 Despite their differences over this bill, Kennedy and Smathers enjoyed a warm relationship marked by frequent golf outings and White House breakfasts. Ostensibly a courtesy call to inform Smathers of the latebreaking news, this conversation would meander, as well, into a discussion of the James Meredith–University of Mississippi crisis, the Donovan negotiations with Castro, and the lingering showdown over the handful of appropriations bills yet to be completed. President Kennedy: [Unclear] Smathers that I’d do what you want to do, and I just signed that goddamned bill.5 George Smathers: Did you really? President Kennedy: Yeah, in spite of the fact that they tell me there isn’t a quorum present up there. I just figured that a hundred were going to show—in spite of what Drew Pearson said. Smathers: I was getting ready to say, that article by . . . Drew Pearson’s going to be mad at you.6 President Kennedy: Well, I know that. He is going to be mad at me, but that won’t be new. Smathers: Yeah. That’s right, well he’s such a bad guy . . . But you really signed it? President Kennedy: Yeah, I signed it. Smathers: Well, I think that’s fine. Actually, Mr. President, I— President Kennedy: No, no, no . . . don’t tell me how good it is. Smathers: No, I’m not going to tell you how good it is; I’m going to tell you, politically, it’ll be good. It’ll be good. President Kennedy: What about . . . can you get those guys out of there tomorrow night? 7 Smathers: I think so. It’s Russell now. 8 5. The Self-employed Pension Bill, H.R. 10, also known as the Keough-Smathers Bill. 6. Reference to a Drew Pearson column published that morning in the Washington Post, discussed in greater detail, below (see Drew Pearson, “The Washington Merry-Go-Round: Sen. Smathers Puts Up Roadblock,” Washington Post, 10 October 1962, p. D11). 7. A reference to the Senate and to Congress in general. On the heels of the first national elections during the Kennedy administration, the President is anxious to see Congress adjourn and head home for the last few weeks of the campaign. 8. Richard Russell, Democratic U.S. senator from Georgia, was in the middle of a fight with House conferees over the Department of Agriculture Appropriations Act, one of a handful of appropriations bills not yet completed. Jamie Whitten, Democratic U.S. representative from Mississippi and chair of the House Agriculture Subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee, had suggested that Senate amendments not previously considered by a House 384 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 10, 1962 President Kennedy: I know, but, God, can’t we tell him we’ll give it out of the contingency or we’ll do it with something else? I mean isn’t there something that we can do with that goddamned Jamie Whitten?9 Smathers: I know it, it’s awful. But that’s the . . . everything else is soluble—quickly . . . except that. I— President Kennedy: Well, if we get everything else, I just don’t want these guys around; particularly if this Cuban thing ever works out, we want them out of there. Smathers: That’s right. President Kennedy: So, we’ve got to get them out tomorrow night. Then everybody goes home, and, shit, nobody knows what the hell’s going on. Smathers: Exactly . . . exactly. President Kennedy: There’s nothing that can be done with those god . . . Come on. You’d think those southerners . . . I thought you southerners were thick as thieves? Smathers: Well, we are! We are! But not . . . but Jamie doesn’t want to go home. The difficulty is— President Kennedy: He doesn’t want to go home? Smathers: He doesn’t want to go home. He wants to stay up here. President Kennedy: That’s a— Smathers: And Dick Russell doesn’t want to go. He told me this afternoon, he said . . . I said, “Dick, can’t we get this damn thing settled?” And he said, “Well, not before next week.” I said, “Well, Jesus Christ!” And he said, “Well, frankly, I’m not much interested in going home anyway.” President Kennedy: God, that’s a selfish fucking attitude, isn’t it? With a lot of guys running for reelection? Smathers: Yes, it is . . . yes. I know it. It’s terrible. But many southerners don’t want to go home. This is a problem. Sam Ervin said, 10 “I’ve lost my enthusiasm for going home, now with this Mississippi thing.”11 President Kennedy: He thinks he’s going to get a lot of— committee or sent down from the President were to be excluded from the conference report and final bill. Angered on the basis of principle and by the removal of a $1.6 million amendment for a peanut-marketing research facility in Dawson, Georgia, Russell intended to keep Congress working until he got his way. 9. See note 8. 10. Samuel J. Ervin, Jr., was Democratic U.S. senator from North Carolina, 1954 to 1975. 11. Reference to the crisis at the University of Mississippi following James Meredith’s attempts to register from 25 September to 1 October. Conversation with Georg e Smathers 385 Smathers: Sikes12 and Herlong, all of these fellas ought to be running, and they’re here.13 Paul Rogers talked to him a little while ago . . . he’s not going home!14 President Kennedy: Why? He doesn’t want to listen to all that moaning? Smathers: Well, they don’t want to listen to all that moaning and they don’t want to be put in a position where they’ve either got to jump on you or, you know, get with Barnett.15 And they don’t figure that either one is too good at the moment. So they’re just trying to let it cool. President Kennedy: Yeah, yeah. Smathers: And this is what I think is wrong— President Kennedy: Of course, I think they ought to be able to get some middle position . . . just regret this— Smathers: That’s right. Well, the southern governors did very well. President Kennedy: Yeah . . . yeah. Smathers: They did very well. President Kennedy: I think, why don’t they just keep quiet about it and just say “Well, it’s a regrettable incident—period.” That’s all I’d say if I were a southerner. Smathers: Yeah. President Kennedy: Just say “I regret what happened, this is not very . . . ” you know, and then just go on to something else. Shit, nobody’s— Smathers: Well, that’s what I’m saying. We handled it all right— President Kennedy: Then nobody knows whether you regret that Meredith entered or you regretted that troops were used or you regretted bloodshed or you regretted that you knew me. Smathers: That’s right. I deplore— President Kennedy: [Unclear.] Smathers: —extremism. See, we handled it well in Florida, and it could have been handled with a little . . . exercised a little judgment and— President Kennedy: Leadership. Smathers: —and leadership, it could have been handled elsewhere. And then I’d move on. 12. Robert L. F. Sikes was a Democratic U.S. representative from Florida, 1941 to 1979, and senior member of the House Appropriations Committee. 13. A. Sydney Herlong, Jr., was a Democratic U.S. representative from Florida, 1949 to 1969. 14. Paul G. Rogers was a Democratic U.S. representative from Florida, 1955 to 1979. 15. Ross Barnett, segregationist governor of Mississippi from 1960 to 1964, refused to register Meredith at Ole Miss, touching off a riot and President Kennedy’s deployment of federal troops. 386 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 10, 1962 President Kennedy: [Snickers.] Smathers: Thompson said he was pretty disturbed about the fact that . . . you . . . didn’t take his word for it . . . said Thompson.16 We’re going to finally find the southern [unclear] that is going to say, “Thompson talked to me about going to the President.” We haven’t found it yet. And Drew Pearson gets you right over the barrel. President Kennedy: What about Drew? He was pretty mean this morning, wasn’t he?17 Smathers: God, he was nasty. Jesus! President Kennedy: That comes out of “my shins are black and blue”? Smathers: That’s right. I eat your food and then I spit all over you and kick you in the shins . . . President Kennedy: He doesn’t know about all those votes you gave us? Smathers: That’s right. He doesn’t want to know about them. He’s going to stay with those four fellas, or eight fellas. President Kennedy: Estes? He’s got Estes.18 Smathers: Estes and Albert.19 President Kennedy: Yeah, Estes feeds him that stuff. Smathers: Yeah, I know it. President Kennedy: Estes and Albert. Smathers: That’s right. President Kennedy: And Wayne.20 Smathers: And Wayne gives it to him. Wayne’s up here raising hell again. President Kennedy: Is he? About what? His public works?21 Smathers: Yeah. 16. Reference to William “Bill” Thompson, president of the East Coast Railway, who had recently joined President Kennedy, Smathers, and Bill Dale of the First National Bank of Orlando for a cruise aboard the presidential yacht, Honey Fitz. All three of Kennedy’s guests were the subject of an acerbic Drew Pearson column in the Washington Post that morning and were cited as evidence of Kennedy’s predilection for treating his political enemies better than his political allies. 17. Pearson, “Sen. Smathers Puts Up a Roadblock.” “The interesting thing,” Pearson noted, assaying the Kennedy-Smathers relationship, “is that the more the debonair Senator kicks him on the legislative shins, the more his old golfing partner comes back smiling.” 18. Estes Kefauver was Democratic U.S. senator from Tennessee, 1949 to 1963, and the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in 1956. 19. Albert A. Gore was Democratic U.S. senator from Tennessee, 1953 to 1971. 20. Wayne Morse was Republican U.S. senator from Oregon, 1945 to 1952; Independent U.S. senator from Oregon, 1952 to 1955; and Democratic U.S. senator from Oregon, 1955 to 1969. 21. Public works projects for Oregon removed during conference committee on Interior and Other Agencies Appropriations Act at the behest of Representative Michael Kirwan, the chair of the House conferees. Conversation with Georg e Smathers 387 President Kennedy: Jeez! We got that all fixed! Smathers: I know, but he’s still mad, and still talking about it, and he came in and made a big speech yesterday about how he told you. . . . He said, “I said, Mr. President, I’m not going to permit this to happen. I’m not going to let our Democratic party . . . ”Have you ever heard anything so repulsive in your whole life? President Kennedy: I know it. He never says . . . It doesn’t matter to me, and here we got it all fixed with Kirwan and I signed his goddamned bill, 22 and I called him up and said he’ll let it go on the Supplemental.23 No, no, he wants to . . . he’s sore at me because I took away his issue. Smathers: That’s right. That’s right. President Kennedy: But he comes . . . oh well. Smathers: But he’s making some more over here. President Kennedy: Another speech? Smathers: Yeah. He’s got a speech on . . . I don’t know what the hell it was. Something about the District of Columbia. President Kennedy: Wait until he hears about H.R. 10. Smathers: Oh, he’ll die. He’ll die. Well, I’m delighted you signed it, and— President Kennedy: Well, don’t say anything about it for a while. Until they get out of there tonight. OK? Smathers: I won’t say anything. President Kennedy: OK. It’ll come out soon enough. Smathers: Yeah. President Kennedy: Gore will be coming in [unclear] up from Tennessee.24 Smathers: Yeah. That’s right. President Kennedy: OK. Smathers: Thank you a million. President Kennedy: Righto. Smathers: I really appreciate it, and best of luck. After speaking with Smathers, the President called the House sponsor of the pension bill. 22. Michael J. Kirwan was a Democratic U.S. representative from Ohio. See “Conversation between President Kennedy and Mike Mansfield,” 8 October 1962, for additional detail on the Kirwan-Morse confrontation. 23. Supplemental Appropriations Bill. 24. President Kennedy had promised to inform Senator Gore of his intentions regarding H.R. 10. 388 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 10, 1962 Time Unknown Oh, God. You are the greatest . . . Conversation with Eugene Keogh25 Congressman Eugene J. Keogh, the third-ranking member of the House Ways and Means Committee, had championed and cosponsored the Selfemployed Pension Bill with Senator George Smathers.26 After signing the bill quietly on October 10 and first phoning Smathers with the news, the President then telephoned Keogh, most likely to deliver the same news. What follows is a fragment of their conversation, in which Keogh endorses the Communications Satellite Act, signed by President Kennedy several weeks earlier on August 31, 1962. Eugene Keogh: [Unclear] this communications satellite. President Kennedy: Oh, God. You are the greatest . . . I just called you and Smathers. You, obviously have a direct line to each other, or else you’ve got one down here. Keogh: No, I just cut him off to talk to you. President Kennedy: Did you? Well . . . Keogh: I do commend it though. President Kennedy: I said to Smathers, “Don’t— Before the end of the day, the President had a conversation with an unidentified official about James Meredith’s public criticisms of the racial composition of the troops sent to maintain order in Oxford, Mississippi. On October 9, the Army had begun withdrawing large numbers of troops from Oxford. 25. Dictabelt 49.1, Cassette M, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 26. Eugene J. Keogh was Democratic U.S. representative from New York, 1937 to 1967. Keogh retired in 1967 after 30 years in Congress, though he was only 59 years old at the time. Conversation about James Meredith 389 Time Unknown [A]pparently, we had no Negro troops on patrol. Conversation about James Meredith27 On October 9, 1962, in a handwritten statement, James Meredith asserted that the U.S. Army had “resegregated” the troops that remained on campus. As Meredith wrote: “The first two days of my stay at the University . . . the military units looked like American units. All soldiers held their positions and performed the task for which they had been trained. . . . Since that time the units have been resegregated. Negroes have been purged from their positions in the ranks.” That same day, Secretary of the Army Cyrus Vance stated that when troops were “first employed in the Oxford area Negro soldiers were not used on patrols in order to avoid unnecessary incidents.” On October 6, when the situation was stabilized, African American troops were again used “in the performance of all normal functions in the units in all operations.” President Kennedy: Now today, James Meredith charged that the Army was segregating them and I wondered what had been done with that discussion I had Friday night.28 Do you know anything about it? Unidentified: No, sir. Except that Cy[rus Vance], you know he’s out at the hospital, as you probably heard, at long last. Cy, he called me just a few minutes ago and said that he talked with your brother about this. President Kennedy: Yeah. Unidentified: And that he wants to put out a statement. Now what the facts are, apparently, we had no Negro troops on patrol. President Kennedy: Yeah. Unidentified: They were in the units, but they have been returned to their full duties within the last days, or day or so, something like that. We’re trying to find out exactly what Meredith said and we are fixing up a statement for Cy to put out, describing exactly what the situation is. President Kennedy: Well, you better let me have it. 27. Dictabelt 50.2, Cassette M, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 28. “Meredith Charges Army Segregated Oxford Force,” New York Times, 10 October 1962. 390 W E D N E S DAY, O C T O B E R 10, 1962 Unidentified: All right. President Kennedy: As I say, I assume that after I talked to him Friday, he began to put them back in again. President Kennedy: The only thing is [Deputy Attorney General Nicholas] Katzenbach told me that on the patrols it was just the white soldiers . . . Unidentified: . . . Yes . . . President Kennedy: . . . so I didn’t know what happened with that discussion I had had Friday. Unidentified: No, Cy didn’t tell me about talking with you, but I assume that’s when they did it because I know . . . President Kennedy: . . . Well, as of yesterday, they were still just white in the patrol cars. Unidentified: I see. President Kennedy: So I’d like to find out. You better call Cy again and ask him what he did after Friday, number one. Tell him, number two, to be careful what he says because evidently Katzenbach said yesterday it was just whites. And then let me know what the statement’s going to be before you put it out. Unidentified: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: OK. Thanks. Unidentified: Right. Bye The President had at least one Mississippi-related meeting this day. Between 5:26 and 5:50 A.M. he met with the U.S. Army chief of staff, General Earle G. Wheeler. Kennedy did not tape it. The White House was turning its attention ever more to the midterm elections. At 8:00 P.M. the President left for a two-hour visit to Baltimore. Thursday, October 11, would be a half day in the Oval Office. Following meetings with the U.S. ambassador to Guinea, William Attwood, and the journalist John Gunther the President signed the Trade Bill and left for New York City. From Thursday afternoon through Sunday night, October 14, the President would campaign in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 391 Tuesday, October 16, 1962 On September 4 President Kennedy responded to reports of Soviet arms shipments to Cuba by choosing to issue (through press secretary Salinger) a statement noting that this was happening and drawing a line that warned only against Soviet deployment of “offensive” weapons in Cuba. Everyone, including the Soviets, understood that in this context offensive meant systems able to deliver nuclear weapons to the United States. The White House statement was at least as significant for what it said Kennedy would tolerate. It told administration insiders, like those involved in the ongoing debate about the future of the Mongoose program against Castro, that Kennedy would accept Soviet arms shipments to Cuba. Kennedy’s best hope thus was to overwhelm the critics with a barrage of official statements downplaying the significance of these shipments of “defensive” arms in order to deflate the opposition case. The Republicans had reacted with even more serious charges. Probably on the basis of the many reports and rumors coming out of Cuba and conveyed by private Americans in contact with Cuban exile groups, Republican senator Kenneth Keating of New York announced on the floor of the Senate that there were “Soviet rocket installations in Cuba.” With Republicans on the offensive, Kennedy felt obliged to make yet another statement. Bundy’s advice was critical. President Kennedy would be giving a press conference on September 13. Cuba was bound to come up. On September 11 the Soviet government declared unequivocally that Moscow had not sent and would not send nuclear missiles to Cuba. There was no need for this, the Soviet government announced. The next day Bundy urged Kennedy to repeat, in person, the line Salinger had put out on September 4. Bundy opened his memo by telling Kennedy that if he wanted to invade Cuba, he should then reject his advice, because Kennedy would be minimizing the Soviet threat there. But, as Bundy knew, President Kennedy had told his aides repeatedly that he did not want a U.S. invasion of Cuba, that the real danger came from the Soviet Union, and that this danger was likely to arise later that year in Berlin.1 1. On the sources for Keating’s allegations, see Max Holland, “A Luce Connection: Senator Keating, William Pawley, and the Cuban Missile Crisis,” Journal of Cold War Studies 1 (Fall 1999), pp. 139–67. Bundy to President Kennedy, “Memorandum on Cuba for the Press 392 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 President Kennedy himself underscored a position that accepted what was already discovered and drew a line against what the Soviets had just promised they would not do. Kennedy said that “unilateral military intervention on the part of the United States cannot currently be either required or justified.” He added that if Cuba “should ever . . . become an offensive military base of significant capacity for the Soviet Union, then this country will do whatever must be done to protect its own security and that of its allies.” The administration mounted a forceful campaign of denial, with the President right in the front line. The Soviet assurances were repeated by the amiable Soviet ambassador, Anatoly Dobrynin, who spoke with Robert Kennedy and soon afterward with the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Adlai Stevenson, saying flatly to each man that the Soviet government had no intention whatever of using Cuba as an offensive military base. Over the month until the crisis actually broke, Kennedy remained of the view that the notion of the Soviets’ turning Cuba into a missile base came largely from the imagination and zeal of Republicans campaigning for Senate and House seats up for election in November (although his brother Robert and the Republican CIA director, John McCone, had also voiced this fear). Largely at the instance of Keating and Republican Senator Homer Capehart of Indiana, the Senate on September 20 passed by 86 to 1 a resolution authorizing the use of force against Cuba “to prevent the creation or use of an externally supported offensive military capability endangering the security of the U.S.” On October 10, Keating rose in the Senate to charge that the Soviets were establishing intermediate-range missile bases in Cuba. Kennedy knew of no intelligence data that warranted the Senate resolution or supported Keating’s allegation. He had learned that, in addi- Conference,” 13 September 1962, National Security Files, Box 36, “Cuba General September 62,” John F. Kennedy Library. Bundy’s introduction comes quickly and clearly to the point: 1. The congressional head of steam on this is the most serious that we have had. It affects both parties and takes many forms. 2. The immediate hazard is that the Administration may appear to be weak and indecisive. 3. One way to avoid this hazard is to act by naval or military force in the Cuban area. 4. The other course is to make a very clear and aggressive explanation of current policy and its justification. Bundy then argued for this “other course,” urging Kennedy to explain “The threat is under control [Bundy’s emphasis]. Neither Communist propaganda nor our own natural anger should blind us to the basic fact that Cuba is not—and will not be allowed to become—a threat to the United States.” T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 393 tion to surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), the Soviets were sending crates containing unassembled IL-28 bombers to Cuba. These bombers, though capable of carrying nuclear weapons, were being phased out of the Soviet Air Force as obsolete. In themselves, they were not a cause for worry. Moreover—though this was before evidence came in regarding the IL28s—the CIA’s topmost analytic group, its Board of National Estimates, produced a Special National Intelligence Estimate. Use of Cuba by the Soviet Union as a base for offensive ballistic missiles, said the board, “would be incompatible with Soviet practice to date and with Soviet policy as we presently estimate it. It would indicate a far greater willingness to increase the level of risk in U.S.-Soviet relations than the U.S.S.R. has displayed thus far. . . .”2 But as September turned to October with new kinds of Soviet arms being discovered in Cuba almost every week, an increasingly worried President was keeping an eye on accelerated contingency planning by State and Defense in case he was driven toward some kind of military action against Cuba.3 Kennedy not only had reason to feel justified in discounting the Republicans’ charges; he also felt he had a right to curb suspected leaks from the intelligence community feeding those charges. After he had shown Kennedy photographs of the crates containing IL-28 bombers on October 11, McCone noted: “The President requested that such information be withheld at least until after the elections as if the information got into the press, a new and more violent Cuban issue would be injected into the campaign and this would seriously affect his independence of action.”4 That Kennedy could make such a request of McCone, a Republican, is remarkable, but the final phrase, about his “independence of action,” may well have had wider significance to him. A letter from Khrushchev dated September 28 had brought Kennedy potentially ominous news about 2. Special National Intelligence Estimate 85-3-62, “The Military Buildup in Cuba,” 19 September 1962; reprinted in CIA Documents on the Cuban Missile Crisis 1962, ed. Mary McAuliffe (Washington, DC: Central Intelligence Agency, 1992), pp. 91–93. 3. Kennedy met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff on September 14 and was already wondering about the feasibility of an air strike against SAM sites. See the meeting on 21 September in which he reminded McNamara about the need to keep the plans up to date. On 2 October, prodded by the Chiefs, McNamara offered them a big list of contingencies for possible action, led off by a Soviet move against Berlin or Soviet deployment of “offensive” systems to Cuba (see Kennedy to McNamara, 21 September 1962, in FRUS, 10: 1081; McNamara to Taylor, 2 October 1962, in FRUS, 11: 6–7). 4. McCone, “Memorandum on Donovan Project,” 11 October 1962, in CIA Documents, McAuliffe, pp. 123–25. 394 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Berlin. In it, Khrushchev said, “the abnormal situation in Berlin should be done away with. . . . And under present circumstances we do not see any other way out but to sign a German peace treaty.” Moreover, Khrushchev commented angrily on agitation in the United States for action against Cuba. The congressional resolution, he said, “gives ground to draw a conclusion that the U.S. is evidently ready to assume responsibility for unleashing nuclear war.” Khrushchev asserted that he would not force the Berlin issue until after the U.S. congressional elections, but he seemed to say that, by the second half of November, time would run out. Kennedy discussed his reactions to the letter with his top “demonologists,” a nickname for his advisers on the Soviet Union, in the conversation that he recorded on September 29. Therefore, as mid-October arrived, Kennedy and members of his circle had reason to expect a crisis, perhaps their greatest crisis yet, over Berlin. To them, Khrushchev remained a mystifying figure, and in his last high-level meeting with an American, on September 6 with Interior Secretary Stewart Udall, Khrushchev had crudely threatened to go to war in order to force the issue in Berlin. Then there was Khrushchev’s meeting at the same time with the poet Robert Frost, in which the Soviet leader said he believed the United States and Western Europe to be weak and worn out. He invoked Tolstoy’s comment to Maxim Gorky about old age and sex: “The desire is the same; it’s the performance that’s different.” As Frost cleaned this up when answering questions from U.S. reporters, it came out: “He said we were too liberal to fight.” This was how Kennedy first heard it, and it infuriated him, not least because it provided fodder for Republicans in the congressional campaign.5 On Sunday, October 14, on ABC’s news program Issues and Answers, Bundy was denying the presence of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba to the national television audience just as a high-flying U-2 reconnaissance aircraft of the U.S. Strategic Air Command was flying a limited photographic mission directly over Cuba. For nearly a month, Director of Central Intelligence John McCone had pressed for such a flight. Secretary of State Dean Rusk had resisted. McCone suspected that the Soviets planned to turn Cuba into an offensive military base. Rusk worried lest some protests about U.S. overflights or some incident like that of 1960 complicate delicate ongoing negotiations. Moreover, Rusk knew that most Soviet experts, including those in McCone’s own CIA, thought 5. Richard Reeves, President Kennedy: Profile of Power (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993), p. 351. T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 395 McCone wrong. When Soviet SAMs were spotted in Cuba at the end of August, McCone pressed harder for U-2 flights, for he interpreted these SAMs as harbingers of offensive surface-to-surface missiles. Rusk’s resistance also hardened, for the Soviet SAMs were SA-2s, which had shot down Powers’s U-2 in 1960. The shootdown of a Taiwanese U-2 over western China on September 8 added to Rusk’s and Kennedy’s fears. Bundy had allied himself with Rusk. On September 10 Kennedy chose the cautious approach. But, as worrying evidence mounted, McCone—with Robert Kennedy’s support—won approval on October 9 for another U-2 flight directly over Cuba.6 That flight took place on October 14. During October 15, experts at the CIA’s National Photographic Intelligence Center (NPIC), in a nondescript building at 5th and K Streets in Washington, pored over photos from that October 14 U-2 flight over Cuba. Seeing images of missiles much longer than SAMs, they leafed through files of photos from the Soviet Union and technical data microfilmed by Soviet officer (and Anglo-American spy) Oleg Penkovsky. They came up with a perfect match. These were medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBMs) of the SS-4 family. At about 5:30 in the afternoon, Arthur Lundahl, the head of NPIC, passed the news to CIA headquarters out in Langley, Virginia.7 In ignorance of what was in progress at NPIC, McNamara had met that afternoon with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and dozens of lower-level officials. Although McNamara explained that Kennedy had decided not to take any military action against Cuba during the next three months, the group reviewed plans for a massive air strike on Cuba and for an invasion. That evening, Bundy and his wife gave a small dinner at their home on Foxhall Road for Charles (Chip) and Avis Bohlen. Chip Bohlen was going off to be U.S. ambassador to France. Called away to the telephone, Bundy heard CIA deputy director for intelligence Ray Cline say cryptically, “Those things we’ve been worrying about—it looks as though we’ve really got something.” “It was a hell of a secret,” Bundy wrote later. Though he considered immediately calling Kennedy, he concluded that a few hours made no difference. The President had been in New York State, speaking for Democratic congressional candidates, and had 6. For more background on the discovery of the missiles, see Graham Allison and Philip Zelikow, Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis (2d ed.; New York: Longman, 1999), pp. 219–24, 331–37. 7. Full details are in Dino Brugioni, Eyeball to Eyeball: The Inside Story of the Cuban Missile Crisis, ed. Robert F. McCort (New York: Random House, 1991), pp. 187–217. (Brugioni was in NPIC at the time.) 396 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 gotten back to Washington in the early hours of the morning. Bundy, as he also wrote later, “decided that a quiet evening and a night of sleep were the best preparation” the President could have for what lay ahead of him. Kennedy never reproached Bundy for giving him that extra rest.8 Bundy brought his news to the private quarters of the White House at about 9:00 A.M. on Tuesday, October 16. In the major morning papers, the President had seen one front-page story about Cuba. The Washington Post reported that “Communist sources” were floating a rumor of a possible trade—the West to make concessions on Berlin in return for a slowdown in the Soviet buildup of Cuba. State Department spokesman Lincoln White denied seeing any such proposal and said, “It would have been kicked out the window so fast it would have made your head swim.” The Post’s front page and that of the New York Times featured a Boston address by Eisenhower, attacking the Kennedy administration’s “dreary foreign record.” In his administration, Eisenhower said, “No walls were built. No threatening foreign bases were established.” President Kennedy told Bundy to round up officials—secretly—for a meeting later that morning. He phoned his brother Robert and asked him to come to the White House, where they briefly discussed the sensational news. At 9:25 President Kennedy began his regular schedule, meeting astronaut Walter Schirra and his family. In a brief break, just before 10:00, the President went to Kenny O’Donnell’s office and, as O’Donnell later recalled, said, “You still think the fuss about Cuba is unimportant?” “Absolutely,” O’Donnell answered. “The voters won’t give a damn about Cuba.” Kennedy then gave O’Donnell the news. “I don’t believe it,” O’Donnell replied. “You better believe it,” Kennedy said and added drily, “Ken Keating will probably be the next President of the United States.”9 After two more routine meetings that morning, Kennedy was able to open up about the missiles again for about half an hour with Bohlen, who was paying a previously scheduled farewell call as he prepared to depart for Paris. Kennedy finished his meeting with Bohlen and went on to the Cabinet Room. 8. McGeorge Bundy, Danger and Survival (New York: Random House, 1988), pp. 395–96. 9. Kenneth P. O’Donnell and David F. Powers, with Joe McCarthy, “Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye” (New York: Pocket Books, 1972), p. 369. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 397 11:50 A.M.–1:00 P.M. We’re certainly going to do [option] number one. We’re going to take out these missiles. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis10 Kennedy was in the Cabinet Room with his five-year-old daughter, Caroline, when his advisers filed into the Cabinet Room, accompanied by Lundahl and other experts from NPIC who set up photograph displays on easels. As Caroline was taken back to the residence and the meeting began, Kennedy turned on the tape recorder. Marshall Carter: This is the result of the photography taken Sunday, sir. There’s a medium-range ballistic missile launch site and two new military encampments on the southern edge of the Sierra del Rosario in west-central Cuba. President Kennedy: Where would that be? Carter: West-central, sir. That’s . . . Arthur Lundahl: South of Havana. [quieter, as an aside] I think this [unclear] represents these three dots we’re talking about. Carter: Have you got the big pictures? Lundahl: Yes, sir. Carter: The President would like to see those. The launch site at one of the encampments contains a total of at least 14 canvas-covered missile trailers measuring 67 feet in length, 9 feet in width. The overall length of the trailers plus the tow bars is approximately 80 feet. The other encampment contains vehicles and tents but with no missile trailers. Lundahl: [quietly to President Kennedy] These are the launchers here. Each of these are places we discussed. In this instance the missile trailer is backing up to the launching point. The launch point of this particular vehicle is here. This canvas-covered [unclear] is 67 feet long. Carter: The site that you have there contains at least eight canvas- 10. Including President Kennedy, George Ball, McGeorge Bundy, Marshall Carter, C. Douglas Dillon, Roswell Gilpatric, Sidney Graybeal, U. Alexis Johnson, Vice President Johnson, Robert Kennedy, Arthur Lundahl, Robert McNamara, Dean Rusk, and Maxwell Taylor. Tape 28, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 398 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 covered missile trailers. Four deployed probable missile erector launchers. These are unrevetted.11 The probable launch positions as indicated are approximately 850 feet, 700 feet, 450 feet—for a total distance of about 2,000 feet. In Area Two, there are at least 6 canvas-covered missile trailers, about 75 vehicles, and about 18 tents. And in Area Number Three we have 35 vehicles, 15 large tents, 8 small tents, 7 buildings, and 1 building under construction. The critical one — do you see what I mean?— is this one. Lundahl: [quietly to President Kennedy] There is a launcher right there, sir. The missile trailer is backing up to it at the moment. [Unclear.] And the missile trailer is here. Seven more have been enlarged here. Those canvas-covered objects on the trailers are 67 feet long, and there’s a small building between the two of them. The eighth one is the one that’s not on a particular trailer. [Unclear] backs up. That looks like the most-advanced one. And the other area is about 5 miles away. There are no launcher erectors on there, just missiles. President Kennedy: How far advanced is this? Lundahl: Sir, we’ve never seen this kind of an installation before. President Kennedy: Not even in the Soviet Union? Lundahl: No, sir. Our [nine seconds excised as classified information].12 But from May of ’60 on we have never had any U-2 coverage of the Soviet Union.13 So we do not know what kind of a practice they would use in connection with— President Kennedy: How do you know this is a medium-range ballistic missile? Lundahl: The length, sir. 11. An erector launcher trailer can carry a missile and then be secured in place at a designated launch point. The missile launcher is then erected to the firing angle and the missile is fired from it. To say the site is unrevetted means that earthworks or fortifications to protect against attack or the blast from the missile have not been constructed. 12. In an earlier, less stringent declassification of this material, more of this sentence was left intact, reading (once errors were corrected): “Our last look was when we had TALENT coverage of [three seconds excised as classified information] and we had a 350-mile [range] missile erected just on hard earth with a kind of field exercise going on.” TALENT was a codeword for overhead photography. The briefer was probably describing photography of the Tyuratam missile test range in the Soviet Union. 13. May 1960 was when Soviet air defenses shot down a CIA U-2 reconaissance aircraft piloted by Francis Gary Powers. Then-President Eisenhower suspended further U-2 flights over the Soviet Union. Powers was captured and eventually repatriated to the United States. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 399 President Kennedy: The what? The length? Lundahl: The length of it, yes. President Kennedy: The length of the missile? Which part? I mean which . . . ? Lundahl: The length of the missile, sir, is— President Kennedy: Which one is that? Lundahl: This will show it, sir. President Kennedy: That? Lundahl: Yes. Mr. Graybeal, our missile man, has some pictures of the equivalent Soviet equipment that has been dragged through the streets of Moscow that can give you some feel for it, sir. Sidney Graybeal: There are two missiles involved. One of them is our [designation] SS-3, which is 630 mile [range] and on up to near 700. It’s 68 feet long. These missiles measure out to be 67 foot long. The other missile, the 1,100 [mile range] one is 73 foot long. The question we have in the photography is the nose itself. If the nose cone is not on that missile it measures 67 feet—the nose cone would be 4 to 5 feet longer, sir—and with this extra length we could have a missile that’d have a range of 1,100 miles. The missiles that were known through the Moscow parade—we’ve got the data on that [unclear] on the pictures. President Kennedy: Is this ready to be fired? Graybeal: No, sir. President Kennedy: How long . . . ? We can’t tell that can we, how long before it can be fired? Graybeal: No, sir. That depends on how ready the GSC [ground support for the missile] [is], how— President Kennedy: Where does it have to be fired from? Graybeal: It would have to be fired from a stable, hard surface. This could be packed earth. It could be concrete, or asphalt. The surface has to be hard. Then you put a flame deflector plate on that to direct the missile. Robert McNamara: Would you care to comment on the position of nuclear warheads? This is in relation to the question from the President— when can these be fired? Graybeal: Sir, we’ve looked very hard. We can find nothing that would spell nuclear warhead in terms of any isolated area or unique security in this particular area. The mating of the nuclear warhead to the missile— from some of the other short-range missile data—[it] would take about a couple of hours to do this. McNamara: This is not fenced, I believe, at the moment? Lundahl: Not yet, sir. 400 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 McNamara: This is important, as it relates to whether these, today, are ready to fire, Mr. President. It seems almost impossible to me that they would be ready to fire with nuclear warheads on the site without even a fence around it. It may not take long to place them there, to erect a fence. But at least at the moment there is some reason to believe the warheads aren’t present and hence they are not ready to fire. Graybeal: Yes, sir. We do not believe they are ready to fire. Maxwell Taylor: However, there is no feeling that they can’t fire from this kind of field position very quickly: isn’t that true? It’s not a question of waiting for extensive concrete pads and that sort of thing. Graybeal: The unknown factor here, sir, is the degree to which the equipment has been checked out after it’s been shipped from the Soviet Union here. It’s the readiness of the equipment. If the equipment is checked out, the site has to be accurately surveyed—the position has to be known. Once this is known, then you’re talking a matter of hours. Taylor: Well, could this be an operational site except perhaps for the fact that at this point there are no fences? Could this be operational now? Graybeal: There is only one missile there, sir, and it’s at the actual, apparently, launching area. It would take them—if everything were checked out—it would still take them in the order of two to three hours before they could get that one missile up and ready to go, sir. Lundahl: Collateral reports indicated from ground observers that convoys of 50 to 60 of these kinds of Soviet vehicles were moving down into the San Cristobal area in the first couple of weeks of August. But this is the first time we have been able to catch them on photography, at a location. Theodore Sorensen: You say there is only one missile there? Graybeal: There are eight missiles there. One of them is in what appears to be the position from which they’re launched, in the horizontal, apparently near an erector to be erected in vertical position. Dean Rusk: Near an erector? You mean something has to be built? Or is that something that can be done in a couple of hours? Graybeal: Mobile piece of equipment, sir. We haven’t any specific [unclear] on this, but here is the way we believe that it could actually be lifted. Something of this nature. [Unclear] evidence would be the erector’s helping to raise the missile from its transporter up into a vertical position with the flame deflector on the ground. McNamara: Am I correct in saying that we have not located any nuclear storage sites with certainty as yet? This is one of the most important problems we face in properly interpreting the readiness of these missiles. It’s inconceivable to me that the Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 401 Soviets would deploy nuclear warheads on an unfenced piece of ground. There must be some storage site there. It should be one of our important objectives to find that storage site. Lundahl: May I report, sir, that two additional SAC [U-2] missions were executed yesterday. They were taken to the Washington area last night. They’re currently being chemically processed at the Naval Center in Suitland and they’re due to reach us at the National PI Center around 8:00 tonight.14 Both of these missions go from one end of Cuba to the other, one along the north coast and one along the south. So additional data on activities, or these storage sites which we consider critical, may be in our grasp, if we can find them. McNamara: And is it correct that there is, outside of Havana, an installation that appears to be hardened that might be the type of installation they would use for nuclear warheads, and therefore is a prospective source of such warheads? Lundahl: Sir, I couldn’t put my finger on that. The Joint Atomic Energy people may be looking at that and forming a judgment.15 But from photos alone I cannot attest to that. Carter: There would appear to be little need for putting this type of missile in there, however, unless it were associated with nuclear warheads. Rusk: Don’t you have to assume these are nuclear? McNamara: Oh, I think there’s no question about that. The question is one of readiness to fire, and this is highly critical in forming our plans. The time between today and the time when the readiness to fire capability develops is a very important thing. To estimate that, we need to know where these warheads are. And we have not yet found any probable storage of warheads. And hence it seems extremely unlikely that they are now ready to fire, or may be ready to fire within a matter of hours, or even a day or two. Twenty-four seconds excised as classified information.16 14. These are references to the Naval Photographic Intelligence Center in Suitland, Maryland, and to the National Photographic Interpretation Center, directed by Lundahl, that was part of the CIA. 15. Lundahl was referring to the Joint Atomic Energy Intelligence Committee (JAEIC) of the U.S. Intelligence Board. 16. In an earlier, less stringent, declassification of this material, most of the next sentence was left intact, reading (once errors were corrected): Lundahl: “ . . . If new types of radars, or known associated missile firing radars or associated with missile firing, are coming up on that, that might be another indicator of readiness. We know nothing of what those tapes [of electromagnetic emissions] hold, at the moment.” 402 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Rusk: When will those be ready? By the end of the day, do you think? Lundahl: They’re supposed to be in, sir. I think that’s right. Isn’t it, General Carter? Carter: The readout from Sunday’s [U-2 flights] should be available now. We have done some— Rusk: Weren’t there flights yesterday as well? Carter: Two flights yesterday. Rusk: You don’t have the results from those yet? Carter: No. The room is silent for about eight seconds. President Kennedy: Thank you. Lundahl: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: Well, when is . . . ? [Are] there any further flights scheduled? Carter: There are no more scheduled, sir. President Kennedy: These flights yesterday, I presume, cover the . . . Lundahl: Well, we hope so, sir— McGeorge Bundy: [Unclear], Mr. President. Because the weather won’t have been clear all along the island. So we can’t claim that we will have been—certainly we surely do not have up-to-date photographic coverage on the whole island. I should think one of our first questions is to— President Kennedy: Authorize more flights. Bundy: —consider whether we should not authorize more flights on the basis of COMOR priorities.17 There’s a specific question of whether we want a closer and sharper look at this area. That, however, I think should be looked at in the context of the question of whether we wish to give tactical warning and any other possible activities. McNamara: I would recommend, Mr. President, that you authorize such flights as are considered necessary to obtain complete coverage of the island. Now this seems to be ill defined. But I purposely define it that way because we’re running into cloud cover on some of these flights and I would suggest that we simply repeat the flight if we have cloud cover and repeat it sufficiently often to obtain the coverage we require. 17. The acronym COMOR stands for the interagency Committee on Overhead Reconaissance, a committee of the U.S. Intelligence Board. Chaired by James Reber, COMOR set guidelines and priorities for U.S. surveillance overflights of other countries. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 403 President Kennedy: General Carter, can you go do that? Carter: Yes, sir. McNamara: Now this is U-2 flying. Carter: U-2, sir. McNamara: This specifically excludes the question that Mac [Bundy] raised of low-level flying, which I think we ought to take up later, after our further discussions of the possibilities here.18 Lundahl: I have one additional note, sir, if I may offer it. Of the collateral information from ground observers as to where these kinds of trailers have gone, we don’t have any indications elsewhere on the island of Cuba except for this San Cristóbal area, where we do have coverage. But we have no ground collateral which indicates there might be an equivalent thing going on somewhere else. President Kennedy: In other words, the only missile base—intermediate-range missile base—that we now know about is this one. Is that correct? Is this one or two? This is one. . . . Carter: There’s three of them. Lundahl: Three, sir. Bundy: Three [unclear] associated. Do I understand that this is a battalion, as you estimate it, Mr. Graybeal? Graybeal: Yes, sir. We estimate that four missiles make up a battalion. So that in this one that you’re looking at, Mr. President, has eight missiles. That’d be two battalions out of a regiment size. This one in front of the table is a second separate installation from which we can see six missiles. So there are probably two more battalions there. The other missiles may be under the tree. The third installation has the tents, but there are no missiles identified anywhere in that area. President Kennedy: These are the only [ones] we now know about? Graybeal: Yes, sir. Lundahl: Other than those cruise missiles that you’re familiar with, those coastal ones. And the surface-to-air missiles.19 18. Low-level reconnaissance overflights went underneath clouds, low and fast, over their targets. These flights were carried out by air force or navy tactical reconnaissance units with aircraft like the F-101 or F8U. In September the CIA had asked McNamara to dispatch low-level overflights over Cuba but at that time he declined, preferring to leave the work to the U-2. 19. The Soviet SAM sites in Cuba were first identified after a U-2 overflight of Cuba on 29 August and the White House was briefed about this discovery on 31 August. The discoveries contributed to the first U.S. warning to the Soviets against deploying “offensive weapons” announced on 4 September. The same U-2 mission revealed another kind of mis- 404 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Unidentified: Any intelligence on that thing? President Kennedy: Mr. Rusk? Rusk: Mr. President this is, of course, a very serious development. It’s one that we, all of us, had not really believed the Soviets could carry this far. They seemed to be denying that they were going to establish bases of their own [in Cuba] and this one that we’re looking at is a Soviet base. It doesn’t do anything essential from a Cuban point of view. The Cubans couldn’t do anything with it anyhow at this stage. Now, I do think we have to set in motion a chain of events that will eliminate this base. I don’t think we can sit still. The question then becomes whether we do it by a sudden, unannounced strike of some sort or we build up the crisis to the point where the other side has to consider very seriously about giving in, or even the Cubans themselves take some action on this. The thing that I’m, of course, very conscious of is that there is no such thing, I think, as unilateral action by the United States. It’s so intimately involved with 42 allies and confrontation in many places that any action that we take will greatly increase the risks of a direct action involving our other alliances and our other forces in other parts of the world. So I think we have to think very hard about two major courses of action as alternatives. One is the quick strike. The point where we think there is the overwhelming, overriding necessity to take all the risks that are involved in doing that. I don’t think this in itself would require an invasion of Cuba. You could do it with or without such an invasion—in other words, if we make it clear that what we’re doing is eliminating this particular base or any other such base that is established. We ourselves are not moved to general war. We’re simply doing what we said we would do if they took certain action. Or we’re going to decide that this is the time to eliminate the Cuban problem by action [unclear] the island. The other would be, if we have a few days from the military point of view, if we have a little time, then I would think that there would be another sile site, near Banes in eastern Cuba, that CIA analysts needed more time to analyze. They finally judged (correctly) that this missile was a cruise missile (more akin to a small unguided jet aircraft, without a ballistic trajectory) with a range of 20 to 40 nautical miles, apparently designed for coastal defense. President Kennedy was briefed in person about this finding on 7 September (see Brugioni, Eyeball to Eyeball, pp. 120 –27). President Kennedy was concerned that the nature of this arguably defensive system not be misunderstood and that news about it not leak out into the ongoing, volatile domestic debate over his response to the Soviet buildup in Cuba. A new codeword classification, PSALM, was thereupon created—with a tightly restricted distribution—for future reports on Soviet deployments in Cuba. A new, even more explicit, public warning against deployment of “offensive weapons” was announced by the White House on 13 September. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 405 course of action, a combination of things, that we might wish to consider. First, that we stimulate the OAS procedure immediately for prompt action to make it quite clear that the entire hemisphere considers that the Rio Pact has been violated, and [unclear] over the next few days, under the terms of the Rio Pact.20 The OAS could constitute itself as an organ of consultation promptly, although maybe it may take two or three days to get instructions from governments and things of that sort. The OAS could, I suppose, at any moment take action to insist to the Cubans that an OAS inspection team be permitted to come and itself look directly at these sites, provide assurances to the hemisphere. That will undoubtedly be turned down, but it will be another step in building up our position. I think also that we ought to consider getting some word to Castro, perhaps through the Canadian ambassador in Havana or through his representative at the U.N. I think perhaps the Canadian ambassador would be the best, the better channel to get to Castro, get him apart privately and tell him that this is no longer support for Cuba, that Cuba is being victimized here, and that the Soviets are preparing Cuba for destruction, or betrayal. You saw the [New York] Times story yesterday morning that high Soviet officials were saying, “We’ll trade Cuba for Berlin.” This ought to be brought to Castro’s attention. It ought to be said to Castro that this kind of a base is intolerable and not acceptable. The time has now come when he must, in the interests of the Cuban people, must now break clearly with the Soviet Union and prevent this missile base from becoming operational. And I think there are certain military actions that we might well want to take straight away. First, to call up highly selected units, up to 150,000, unless we feel that it’s better, more desirable, to go to a general national emergency so that we have complete freedom of action. If we announce, at the time that we announce this development—and I think we do have to announce this development some time this week—we announce that we are conducting a surveillance of Cuba, over Cuba, and we will enforce our right to do so. We reject the condition of secrecy in this hemisphere in a matter of this sort. 20. The Organization of American States (OAS) was created after World War II as a collective organization of states in the Western Hemisphere for several cooperative purposes, including the task of responding (by a two-thirds vote) to aggression from a member or nonmember state, including economic or political sanctions. The founding documents were signed in Mexico City (1945) and especially the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance, signed in Rio de Janeiro (1947) and usually referred to as the Rio Pact. The OAS, spurred by the United States, had adopted sanctions against Cuba in early 1962. 406 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 We reinforce our forces in Guantánamo.21 We reinforce our forces in the southeastern part of the United States, whatever is necessary from the military point of view, to be able to give, clearly, an overwhelming strike at any of these installations, including the SAM sites. And also to take care of any MiGs or bombers that might make a pass at Miami or at the United States. Build up heavy forces, if those are not already in position. We then would move more openly and vigorously into the guerrilla field and create maximum confusion on the island [of Cuba]. We won’t be too squeamish at this point about the overt/covert character of what is being done. We review our attitude on an alternative Cuban government, and get Miro Cardona and his group in, Manuel Ray and his group, and see if they won’t get together on a progressive junta that would pretty well combine all principal elements, other than the Batista group, as the leaders of Cuba. And have them, give them, more of a status—whether we proceed to full recognition or not is something else. But get the Cuban elements highly organized on this matter. I think also that we need a few days to alert our other allies, for consultation in NATO. I’ll assume that we can move on this line, at the same time, to interrupt all air traffic from free world countries going into Cuba, insist to the Mexicans, the Dutch, that they stop their planes from coming in. Tell the British, and anyone else who’s involved at this point, that if they’re interested in peace they’ve got to stop their ships from Cuban trade at this point. In other words, isolate Cuba completely without, at this particular moment, a forceful blockade. I think it would be important for you to consider calling in General Eisenhower, giving him a full briefing before a public announcement is made as to the situation and the courses of action which you might determine upon. But I think that, by and large, there are these two broad alternatives: One, the quick strike. The other, to alert our allies and Mr. Khrushchev that there is an utterly serious crisis in the making here, and that Mr. Khrushchev may not himself really understand that or believe that at this point. I think then we’ll be facing a situation that could well lead to general war. Now with that we have an obligation to do what has to be done, but 21. Guantánamo was and is a U.S. naval base on the eastern end of Cuba, with U.S. rights secured by a long-term treaty signed decades before Castro seized power. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 407 to do it in a way that gives everybody a chance to pull away from it before it gets too hard. Those are my reactions of this morning, Mr. President. I naturally need to think about this very hard for the next several hours, what I and my colleagues at the State Department can do about it. McNamara: Mr. President, there are a number of unknowns in this situation I want to comment upon and, in relation to them, I would like to outline very briefly some possible military alternatives and ask General Taylor to expand upon them. But before commenting on either the unknowns or outlining some military alternatives, there are two propositions I would suggest that we ought to accept as foundations for our further thinking. My first is that if we are to conduct an air strike against these installations, or against any part of Cuba, we must agree now that we will schedule that prior to the time these missile sites become operational. I’m not prepared to say when that will be. But I think it is extremely important that our talk and our discussion be founded on this premise: that any air strike will be planned to take place prior to the time they become operational. Because, if they become operational before the air strike, I do not believe we can state we can knock them out before they can be launched. And if they’re launched there is almost certain to be chaos in part of the East Coast or the area in a radius of 600 to 1,000 miles from Cuba. Secondly, I would submit the proposition that any air strike must be directed not solely against the missile sites, but against the missile sites plus the airfields, plus the aircraft which may not be on the airfields but hidden by that time, plus all potential nuclear storage sites. Now this is a fairly extensive air strike. It is not just a strike against the missile sites, and there would be associated with it potential casualties of Cubans, not of U.S. citizens, but potential casualties of Cubans in, at least, in the hundreds, more likely in the low thousands—say two or three thousand. It seems to me these two propositions should underlie our discussion. Now, what kinds of military action are we capable of carrying out and what may be some of the consequences? We could carry out an air strike within a matter of days. We would be ready for the start of such an air strike within a matter of days. If it were absolutely essential, it could be done almost literally within a matter of hours. I believe the Chiefs would prefer that it be deferred for a matter of days. But we are prepared for that quickly. The air strike could continue for a matter of days following the initial day, if necessary. Presumably there would be some political discussions taking place either just before the air strike or both before and during. 408 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 In any event, we would be prepared, following the air strike, for an invasion, both by air and by sea. Approximately seven days after the start of the air strike that would be possible, if the political environment made it desirable or necessary at that time. Fine. Associated with this air strike undoubtedly should be some degree of mobilization. I would think of the mobilization coming not before the air strike but either concurrently with or somewhat following, say possibly five days afterwards, depending upon the possible invasion requirements. The character of the mobilization would be such that it could be carried out in its first phase at least within the limits of the authority granted by Congress. There might have to be a second phase, and then it would require a declaration of a national emergency. Now this is very sketchily, the military capabilities, and I think you may wish to hear General Taylor outline his. Taylor: We’re impressed, Mr. President, with the great importance of getting a strike with all the benefit of surprise, which would mean ideally that we would have all the missiles that are in Cuba above ground, where we can take them out. That desire runs counter to the strong point the Secretary made, if the other optimum would be to get every missile before it could become operational. Practically, I think, our knowledge of the timing of the readiness is going to be so difficult that we’ll never have the exact, perfect timing. What we’d like to do is to look at this new photography, I think, and take any additional, and try to get the layout of the targets in as near an optimum position as possible, and then take them out without any warning whatsoever. That does not preclude, I don’t think Mr. Secretary, some of the things that you’ve been talking about. It’s a little hard to say in terms of time, how much I’ve discussed. But we must do a good job the first time we go in there, pushing a hundred percent just as far, as closely, as we can with our strike. I’m having all the responsible planners in this afternoon, Mr. President, at 4:00, to talk this out with them and get their best judgment. I would also mention among the military actions we should take, that once we have destroyed as many of these offensive weapons as possible, we should prevent any more coming in, which means a naval blockade. So I suppose that, and also, a reinforcement of Guantánamo and evacuation of dependents. So really, in point of time, I’m thinking in terms of three phases. One, an initial pause of some sort while we get completely ready and get the right posture on the part of the target, so we can do the best job. Then, virtually concurrently, an air strike against, as the Secretary Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 409 said, missiles, airfields, and nuclear sites that we know of. At the same time, naval blockade. At the same time, reinforce Guantánamo and evacuate the dependents. I’d then start this continuous reconnaissance, the list that you have is connected, continuing over Cuba. Then the decision can be made as we’re mobilizing, with the air strike, as to whether we invade or not. I think that’s the hardest question militarily in the whole business, and one which we should look at very closely before we get our feet in that deep mud in Cuba. Rusk: There are certainly one or two other things, Mr. President. [Soviet foreign minister Andrei] Gromyko asked to see you Thursday [October 18]. It may be of some interest to know what he says about this, if he says anything. He may be bringing a message on this subject. I just want to remind you that you are seeing him and that may be relevant to this topic. I might say, incidentally, sir, that you can delay anything else you have to do at this point. Secondly, I don’t believe, myself, that the critical question is whether you get a particular missile before it goes off because if they shoot those missiles we are in general nuclear war. In other words, the Soviet Union has got quite a different decision to make if they shoot those missiles, want to shoot them off before they get knocked out by aircraft. So I’m not sure that this is necessarily the precise element, Bob. McNamara: Well, I would strongly emphasize that I think our planning should be based on the assumption it is, Dean. We don’t know what kinds of communications the Soviets have with those sites. We don’t know what kinds of control they have over those warheads. If we saw a warhead on the site and we knew that that launcher was capable of launching that warhead I would, frankly, I would strongly urge against the air attack, to be quite frank about it, because I think the danger to this country in relation to the gain that would accrue would be excessive. This is why I suggest that if we’re talking about an air attack I believe we should consider it only on the assumption that we can carry it off before these become operational. President Kennedy: What is the advantage? There must be some major reason for the Russians to set this up. It must be that they’re not satisfied with their ICBMs. What’d be the reason that they would . . . ? Taylor: What it’d give them is, primarily, it makes a launching base for short-range missiles against the United States to supplement their rather defective ICBM system, for example. That’s one reason. President Kennedy: Of course, I don’t see how we could prevent further ones from coming in by submarine. I mean, if we let them blockade the thing, they come in by submarine. 410 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 McNamara: Well, I think the only way to prevent them coming in, quite frankly, is to say you’ll take them out the moment they come in. You’ll take them out and you’ll carry on open surveillance. And you’ll have a policy to take them out if they come in. I think it’s really rather unrealistic to think that we could carry out an air attack of the kind we’re talking about. We’re talking about an air attack of several hundred sorties because we don’t know where these [Soviet] airplanes are.22 Bundy: Are you absolutely clear on your premise that an air strike must go to the whole air complex? McNamara: Well, we are, Mac, because we are fearful of these MiG21s.23 We don’t know where they are. We don’t know what they’re capable of. If there are nuclear warheads associated with the launchers, you must assume there will be nuclear warheads associated with aircraft. Even if there are not nuclear warheads associated with aircraft, you must assume that those aircraft have high-explosive potential. We have a serious air defense problem. We’re not prepared to report to you exactly what the Cuban air force is capable of; but I think we must assume that the Cuban air force is definitely capable of penetrating, in small numbers, our coastal air defense by coming in low over the water. And I would think that we would not dare go in against the missile sites, knock those out, leaving intact Castro’s air force, and run the risk that he would use part or all of that air force against our coastal areas—either with or without nuclear weapons. It would be a very heavy price to pay in U.S. lives for the damage we did to Cuba. Rusk: Mr. President, about why the Soviets are doing this, Mr. McCone suggested some weeks ago that one thing Mr. Khrushchev may have in mind is that he knows that we have a substantial nuclear superiority, but he also knows that we don’t really live under fear of his nuclear weapons to the extent that he has to live under fear of ours. Also, we have nuclear weapons nearby, in Turkey and places like that. President Kennedy: How many weapons do we have in Turkey? Taylor: We have the Jupiter missiles. Bundy: We have how many? McNamara: About 15, I believe to be the figure. 22. A sortie is one mission by one airplane. If eight airplanes flew against a target, that would be 8 sorties. If the planes flew two missions in one day, that would be 16 sorties in the day. 23. The MiG-21 (NATO designation “Fishbed”) was a short-range Soviet fighter-interceptor that could, in some configurations, carry a light bomb load against nearby targets. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 411 Bundy: I think that’s right. I think that’s right. Rusk: But then there are also delivery vehicles that could easily be moved through the air. McNamara: Aircraft. Rusk: Aircraft and so forth, route them through Turkey. And Mr. McCone expressed the view that Khrushchev may feel that it’s important for us to learn about living under medium-range missiles, and he’s doing that to sort of balance that political, psychological flank. I think also that Berlin is very much involved in this. For the first time, I’m beginning really to wonder whether maybe Mr. Khrushchev is entirely rational about Berlin. [Acting U.N. secretary-general] U Thant has talked about his obsession with it. And I think we have to keep our eye on that element. But they may be thinking that they can either bargain Berlin and Cuba against each other, or that they could provoke us into a kind of action in Cuba which would give an umbrella for them to take action with respect to Berlin. In other words, like the Suez-Hungary combination [in 1956]. If they could provoke us into taking the first overt action, then the world would be confused and they would have what they would consider to be justification for making a move somewhere else. But I must say I don’t really see the rationality of the Soviets pushing it this far unless they grossly misunderstand the importance of Cuba to this country. Bundy: It’s important, I think, to recognize that they did make this decision, as far as our estimates now go, in early summer, and that this has been happening since August. Their TASS statement of September 12 [actually 11] which the experts, I think, attribute very strongly to Khrushchev himself, is all mixed up on this point. It has a rather explicit statement: “The harmless military equipment sent to Cuba designed exclusively for defense, defensive purposes. The president of the United States and the American military, the military of any country, know what means of defense are. How can these means threaten the United States?” Now there. It’s very hard to reconcile that with what has happened. The rest, as the Secretary says, has many comparisons between Cuba and Italy, Turkey, and Japan. We have other evidence that Khrushchev honestly believes, or at least affects to believe, that we have nuclear weapons in Japan. That combination . . . Rusk: Gromyko stated that in his press conference the other day, too. Bundy: Yeah. They may mean Okinawa. McNamara: It’s unlikely, but it’s conceivable the nuclear warheads for these launchers are not yet on Cuban soil. 412 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Bundy: Now it seems to me that it is perfectly possible that they are in that sense a bluff. That doesn’t make them any less offensive to us, because we can’t have proof about it. McNamara: No. But it does possibly indicate a different course of action. And therefore, while I’m not suggesting how we should handle this, I think this is one of the most important actions we should take: to ascertain the location of the nuclear warheads for these missiles. Later in the discussion we can revert back to this. There are several alternative ways of approaching it. President Kennedy: Doug, do you have any . . . ? Douglas Dillon: No. The only thing I would say is that this alternative course of warning, and getting public opinion, and OAS action, and telling people in NATO and everything like that. It would appear to me to have the danger of getting us wide out in the open and forcing the Russians, the Soviets, to take a position that if anything was done they would have to retaliate. Whereas a quick action, with a statement at the same time saying this is all there is to it, might give them a chance to back off and not do anything. Meanwhile, you’ve got to think that the chance of getting through this thing without a Russian reaction is greater under a quick strike than building the whole thing up to a climax, and then going through with what will be a lot of debate on it. Rusk: That is, of course, a possibility, but . . . Bundy: The difficulties. I share the Secretary of the Treasury’s [Dillon’s] feeling a little bit. The difficulties of organizing the OAS and NATO. The amount of noise we would get from our allies saying that if they can live with Soviet MRBMs, why can’t we? The division in the alliance. The certainty that the Germans would feel that we were jeopardizing Berlin because of our concern over Cuba. The prospect of that pattern is not an appetizing one. Rusk: Yes, but you see, everything turns crucially on what happens. Bundy: I agree, Mr. Secretary. Rusk: And if we go with the quick strike, then, in fact, they do back it up, then you have exposed all of your allies and ourselves to all these great dangers without the slightest consultation, or warning, or preparation. Bundy: You get all these noises again. President Kennedy: But, of course, warning them, it seems to me, is warning everybody. And obviously you can’t sort of announce that in four days from now you’re going to take them out. They may announce within three days that they’re going to have warheads on them. If we come and attack, they’re going to fire them. So then what’ll we do? Then Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 413 we don’t take them out. Of course, we then announce: “Well, if they do that, then we’re going to attack with nuclear weapons.” Dillon: Yes, sir. That’s the question that nobody—I didn’t understand—nobody had mentioned is whether this takeout, this mission, was going to be able to deal with it with high explosives? President Kennedy: How effective can the takeout be, do they think? Taylor: It’ll never be a hundred percent, Mr. President, we know. We hope to take out a vast majority in the first strike. But this is not just one thing, one strike—one day, but continuous air attack for whenever necessary, whenever we discover a target. Bundy: You are now talking about taking out the air force as well, I think, speaking in those terms. I do raise again the question whether we [unclear] the military problem. But there is, I would think, a substantial political advantage in limiting the strike in surgical terms to the thing that is in fact the cause of action. Alexis Johnson: I suggest, Mr. President, that if you’re involved in several hundred strikes, and against airfields, this is what you would do: Preinvasion. And it would be very difficult to convince anybody that this was not a preinvasion strike. I think also, once you get into this volume of attack, that public opinion reaction to this, as distinct from the reaction to an invasion—there’s very little difference. And from both standpoints it would seem to me that if you’re talking about a general air attack program, you might as well think about whether we can eradicate the whole problem by an invasion just as simply, with as little chance of reaction. Taylor: Well, I would think we should be in a position to invade at any time, if we so decide. Hence that, in this preliminary, we should be thinking that it’s all bonus if we are indeed taking out weapons. President Kennedy: Well, let’s say we just take out the missile bases. Then they have some more there. Obviously they can get them in by submarine and so on. I don’t know whether you just can’t keep high strikes on. Taylor: I suspect, Mr. President, that we’d have to take out the surface-to-air missiles in order to get in. To get in, take some of them out. Maybe [unclear]. President Kennedy: How long do we estimate this will remain secure, this information, until people have it? Bundy: In terms of the tightness of our intelligence control, Mr. President, I think we are in unusually and fortunately good position. We set up a new security classification governing precisely the field of offensive 414 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 capability in Cuba just five days ago, four days ago, under General Carter. That limits this to people who have an immediate, operational necessity in intelligence terms to work on the data, and the people who have— President Kennedy: How many would that be, about? Bundy: Oh that will be a very large number, but that’s not generally where leaks come from. And the more important limitation is that only officers with a policy responsibility for advice directly to you receive this. President Kennedy: How many would get it over in the Defense Department, General, with your meeting this afternoon? Taylor: Well, I was going to mention that. We’d have to ask for relaxation of the ground rules that Mac has just enunciated, so that I can give it to the senior commanders who are involved in the plans. President Kennedy: Would that be about 50? Taylor: No, sir. I would say that, at this stage, 10 more. McNamara: Mr. President, I think, to be realistic, we should assume that this will become fairly widely known, if not in the newspapers, at least by political representatives of both parties within, I would say, I’m just picking a figure, I’d say a week. And I say that because we have taken action already that is raising questions in people’s minds. Normally when a U-2 comes back, we duplicate the films. The duplicated copies go to a series of commands. A copy goes to SAC. A copy goes to CINCLANT.24 A copy goes to CIA. And normally the photo interpreters and the operational officers in these commands are looking forward to these. We have stopped all that, and this type of information is going on throughout the department. And I doubt very much that we can keep this out of the hands of members of Congress, for example, for more than a week. Rusk: Well, Senator Keating has already, in effect, announced it on the floor of the Senate. Bundy: [speaking over Rusk] Senator Keating said this on the floor of the Senate on the 10th of October: “Construction has begun on at least a half-dozen launching sites for intermediate-range tactical missiles.” Rusk: That’s correct. That’s exactly the point. Well, I suppose we’ll have to count on announcing it not later than Thursday or Friday of this week. Carter: There is a refugee who’s a major source of intelligence on 24. Commander in Chief, U.S. Forces, Atlantic. Headquartered in Norfolk, CINCLANT at this time was Admiral Robert Dennison. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 415 this, of course, who has described one of these missiles in terms which we can recognize, who is now in this country. President Kennedy: Is he the one who’s giving Keating his stuff ? Carter: We don’t know. Bundy: My question, Mr. President, is whether, as a matter of tactics, we ought not to interview Senator Keating and check out his data. It seems to me that that ought to be done in a routine sort of way by an open officer of the intelligence agency. Carter: I think that’s right. President Kennedy: You have any thoughts, Mr. Vice President? Vice President Johnson: I agree with Mac that that ought to be done. I think that we’re committed at any time that we feel that there’s a buildup that in any way endangers, to take whatever action we must take to assure our security. I would think that the Secretary’s evaluation of this thing being around all over the lot is a pretty accurate one. I wouldn’t think it’d take a week to do it. I think they ought to [unclear] before then. I would like to hear what the responsible commanders have to say this afternoon. I think the question we face is whether we take it out or whether we talk about it. And, of course, either alternative is a very distressing one. But, of the two, I would take it out—assuming that the commanders felt that way. I’m fearful if we . . . I spent the weekend with the ambassadors of the Organization of American States. I think this organization is fine. But I don’t think, I don’t rely on them much for any strength in anything like this. And I think that we’re talking about our other allies, I take the position that Mr. Bundy says: “Well we’ve lived all these years [with missiles]. Why can’t you? Why get your blood pressure up?” But the fact is the country’s blood pressure is up, and they are fearful, and they’re insecure, and we’re getting divided, and I don’t think that . . . I take this little State Department Bulletin that you sent out to all the congressmen. One of the points you make: that any time the buildup endangers or threatens our security in any way, we’re going to do whatever must be done immediately to protect our own security. And when you say that, why, they give unanimous support. People are really concerned about this, in my opinion. I think we have to be prudent and cautious, talk to the commanders and see what they say. I’m not much for circularizing it over the Hill or with our allies, even though I realize it’s a breach of faith, not to confer with them. We’re not going to get much help out of them. Bundy: There is an intermediate position. There are perhaps two or 416 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 three of our principal allies or heads of government we could communicate with, at least on a 24-hour notice basis— Vice President Johnson: I certainly— Bundy: —ease the . . . Vice President Johnson: Tell the alliance we’ve got to try to stop the planes, stop the ships, stop the submarines and everything else they’re [the Soviets] sending. Just not going to permit it. And then— Bundy: Stop them from coming in there. Vice President Johnson: Yeah. President Kennedy: Well this is really talking about are two or three different potential operations. One is the strike just on these three bases. The second is the broader one that Secretary McNamara was talking about, which is on the airfields and on the SAM sites and on anything else connected with missiles. Third is doing both of those things and also at the same time launching a blockade, which requires, really, the third and which is a larger step. And then, as I take it, the fourth question is the degree of consultation. I don’t know how much use consulting with the British . . . I expect they’ll just object. Just have to decide to do it. Probably ought to tell them, though, the night before. Robert Kennedy: Mr. President? President Kennedy: Yes? Robert Kennedy: We have the fifth one, really, which is the invasion. I would say that you’re dropping bombs all over Cuba if you do the second, air and the airports, knocking out their planes, dropping it on all their missiles. You’re covering most of Cuba. You’re going to kill an awful lot of people, and we’re going to take an awful lot of heat on it. And then— you know the heat. Because you’re going to announce the reason that you’re doing it is because they’re sending in these kind of missiles. Well, I would think it’s almost incumbent upon the Russians then, to say, “Well, we’re going to send them in again. And if you do it again, we’re going to do the same thing to Turkey. And we’re going to do the same thing to Iran.” President Kennedy: I don’t believe it takes us, at least . . . How long does it take to get in a position where we can invade Cuba? Almost a month? Two months? McNamara: No, sir. No, sir. It’s a bare seven days after the air strike, assuming the air strike starts the first of next week. Now, if the air strike were to start today, it wouldn’t necessarily be seven days after today, but I think you can basically consider seven days after the air strike. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 417 President Kennedy: You could get six divisions or seven divisions into Cuba in seven days? Taylor: No, sir. There are two plans we have. One is to go at maximum speed, which is the one referred to you by Secretary McNamara, about seven days after the strike. We put in 90,000 men in 11 days. If you have time, if you can give us more time, so we can get all the advance preparation and prepositioning, we’d put the same 90,000 in, in five days. We really have the choice of those two plans. President Kennedy: How would you get them in? By ship or by air? McNamara: By air. Several: Airdrop and ship. McNamara: Simultaneous airdrop and ship. President Kennedy: Do you think 90,000 is enough? Taylor: At least it’s enough to start the thing going. And I would say it would be, ought to be, enough. McNamara: Particularly if it isn’t directed initially at Havana, the Havana area. This is a variant. General Taylor and . . . President Kennedy: We haven’t any real report on what the state of the popular reaction would be to all this, do we? We don’t know whether . . . Taylor: They’d be greatly confused, don’t you think? President Kennedy: What? Taylor: Great, great confusion and panic, don’t you think? It’s very hard to evaluate the effect from what the military consequences might be. McNamara: Sometime today, I think, at the State Department, we will want to consider that. There’s a real possibility you’d have to invade. If you carried out an air strike, this might lead to an uprising, such that in order to prevent the slaughter of the free Cubans, we would have to invade to reintroduce order into the country. And we would be prepared to do that. Rusk: I would rather think if there were a complete air strike against all air forces, you might as well do it. Do the whole job. President Kennedy: Well, now, let’s decide what we ought to be doing. Robert Kennedy: Could I raise one more question? President Kennedy: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: Is it absolutely essential that you wait seven days after you have an air strike? I would think that seven days, that’s what you’re going to have all— Taylor: If you give less, you run the risk of giving up surprise. If you start moving your troops around in order to reduce that. 418 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Robert Kennedy: Yeah. The only thing is, there’s been so much attention on Berlin in the last . . . Would you have to move them so that everybody would know it was Cuba? Taylor: Well, it’s troops, plus shipping even more so, you know. You’re going to have to assemble the ships necessary, and that will be very very overt, and we can think of no way to cover that up. McNamara: May I suggest, Max, that we mention this other plan we talked about. We should be prepared for a series of eventualities after the air strike starts. I think it’s not probable, but it’s conceivable that the air strike would trigger a nationwide uprising. And if there was strong opposition among the dissident groups, and if the air strike were highly successful, it’s conceivable that some U.S. troops could be put in in less than seven days. Taylor: That’s correct. At first our air, our airdrops, and our Marines. Well, the airdrop at least, beginning in five days. That might do the trick if this is really a national upheaval. McNamara: So we should have a series of alternative plans is all I’m suggesting, other than the seven days. Robert Kennedy: I just think that five days, even a five-day period— the United States is going to be under such pressure by everybody not to do anything. And there’s going to be also pressure on the Russians to do something against us. If you could get it in, get it started so that there wasn’t any turning back, they couldn’t . . . President Kennedy: But I mean the problem is, as I understand it . . . you’ve got two problems. One is how much time we’ve got on these particular missiles before they’re ready to go. Do we have two weeks? If we had two weeks, we could lay on all this and have it all ready to go. But the question really is whether we can wait two weeks. Bundy: Yeah. Taylor: I don’t think we’ll ever know, Mr. President, those operational questions, because with this type of missile, it can be launched very quickly with a concealed expedience— Bundy: Do we have any intelligence— Taylor: —so that even today, this one, this area, might be operational. I concede this is highly improbable. Bundy: One very important question is whether there are other areas which conceivably might be even more operational that we have not identified. McNamara: This is why, I think, the moment we leave here, Mac, we just have to take this new authority we have and put it— Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 419 Bundy: May I ask General Carter whether the intelligence, the collateral intelligence [information from human sources], relates only to this area, as I understood it this morning? Carter: That’s right. That’s why we specifically covered this area on the one [U-2 flight] Sunday [October 14] because [unclear]. McNamara: May I go back for a second, however, to the point that was raised a moment ago? Mr. President, I don’t believe that if we had two weeks, if we knew that at the end of two weeks we were going in, I don’t believe we could substantially lessen the five- or seven-day period required after the air attack, prior to the invasion, for the size force we’re talking about. Because we start with the assumption the air attack must take them by surprise. We would not be able to take the actions required to shorten the five- to seven-day period and still assure you of surprise in the air attack. And, therefore, we haven’t been able to figure out a way to shorten that five- to seven-day period while maintaining surprise in the air attack. President Kennedy: What are you doing for that five days? Moving ships, or where are the ships? McNamara: Moving ships. And we have to move transport aircraft by the scores around the country. We should move ships. Actually, the ship movement would not be as extensive in the 7-day invasion as it would be in an 11-day [invasion] after the air strike. Taylor: [Unclear] place after the air strike. McNamara: We have been moving already, on a very quiet basis, munitions and POL. We will have by the 20th, which is Friday I guess [actually Saturday], we will have stocks of munitions, stocks of POL prepositioned in the southeast part of this country. So that kind of movement is beginning. President Kennedy: What’s POL? McNamara: Petroleum, oil, and lubricants. So that kind of movement has already been taking place and it’s been possible to do it quietly. President Kennedy: What about armor, and so on? What about armor? McNamara: The armor movement would be noticeable if it were carried out in the volume we require. And hence the point I would make is that, knowing ahead of time, two weeks ahead of time, that we would carry out the invasion, would not significantly reduce the five- to sevenday interval between the strike by air and the invasion time, given the size force we’re talking about. Taylor: I think our point of view may change somewhat with a tactical adjustment here, a decision that would take out only the known missile sites and not the airfields. There is a great danger of a quick dispersal 420 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 of all the interesting aircraft. You’d be giving up surprise. There’s no [unclear] attack. Missiles can’t run off quite as readily. President Kennedy: The advantage of taking out these airplanes would be to protect us against a reprisal by them? Taylor: Yes. President Kennedy: I would think you’d have to assume they’d be using iron bombs and not nuclear weapons. Because, obviously, why would the Soviets permit nuclear war to begin under that sort of halfassed way? McNamara: I think that’s reasonable. Roswell Gilpatric: But they still have 10 IL-28s and 20 to 25 MiG21s.25 President Kennedy: So you think that if we’re going to take out the missile sites, you’d want to take out these planes at the same time? Gilpatric: There are eight airfields that are capable of mounting these jets. Eight— Bundy: But, politically, if you’re trying to get him to understand the limit and the nonlimit and make it as easy for him as possible, there’s an enormous premium on having a small, as small and clear-cut an action as possible, against the hazard of going after all the operational airfields becomes a kind of— President Kennedy: General— McNamara: War. Gilpatric: —the number of hours required for each type of air strike, if we were just going for the . . . McNamara: Yeah, sure. Sure. President Kennedy: Well, now, what is it we have, what is it we want to, need to, do in the next 24 hours to prepare for any of these three? It seems to me that we want to do more or less the same things, no matter what we finally decide. 25. The IL-28 (NATO designation “Beagle”) was a twin-engined light/medium jet bomber of an early postwar design (production began in 1950) with a cruising radius of about 750 miles, able to carry 6,500 pounds of nuclear or conventional (“iron”) bombs. On 28 September a Navy reconaissance aircraft in the Atlantic had photographed a Soviet freighter carrying ten fuselage crates for these bombers to Cuba. The Soviet freighter arrived on 4 October. Due to delay in the Navy’s transmission of its photos to CIA interpreters, the IL-28s were not identified until 9 October. McCone briefed President Kennedy about this discovery on 11 October. At that time Kennedy told McCone, “We’ll have to do something drastic about Cuba” and said he was looking forward to the JCS operational plan that was to be presented the following week (see McCone to File, “Memorandum on Donovan Project,” 11 October 1962, in CIA Documents, McAuliffe, p. 124; Brugioni, Eyeball to Eyeball, pp. 172–74). Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 421 Bundy: We’ve authorized, Mr. President, we have a decision, for additional intelligence reconnaissance. A minor decision that we’ll talk to Keating. It seems to me— President Kennedy: I don’t think Keating will be that helpful. Bundy: We’ll leave that out. President Kennedy: Yeah. Robert Kennedy: I think that then he’ll be saying afterwards that we tried to . . . Bundy: All right. The next item. I should think we need to know the earliest readiness for the various sizes of air strike and how long they would take to execute. President Kennedy: Mean probability. Dillon: One other question is: What, if anything, has to be done to be prepared for an eventuality of a Soviet action? Bundy: [Unclear] alert [unclear]. President Kennedy: And then I think what we ought to do is to figure out: What are the minimum number of people that we really have to tell. I suppose, well, there’s de Gaulle. Bundy: You want de Gaulle. It’s hard to say about Adenauer. You’ve got to tell, it seems to me, you’re going to have to tell SACEUR, and the commandant.26 Dillon: I would think this business about the Soviet reaction, that might be helpful if we could maybe take some general war preparation type of action that would show them that we’re ready if they want to start anything without, what you might, risk starting anything. You just don’t know. . . . Bundy: On this track, one obvious element on the political side is: Do we say something simultaneously to the Cubans, to the Soviets, or do we let the action speak for itself ? Rusk: This is the point, whether we say something to the Cubans and the Soviets before any, before . . . President Kennedy: I think, what we ought to do is, after this meeting this afternoon, we ought to meet tonight again at six, consider these various proposals. In the meanwhile, we’ll go ahead with this maximum, whatever is needed, from the flights. And, in addition, we will . . . 26. The acronym SACEUR stands for NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander, Europe—always a U.S. officer. The SACEUR at that time was General Lauris Norstad. The commandant was the commandant of the U.S. Sector of Berlin, Major General Albert Watson. 422 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 I don’t think we’ve got much time on these missiles. They may be . . . So it may be that we just have to . . . We can’t wait two weeks while we’re getting ready to roll. Maybe we just have to just take them out, and continue our other preparations if we decide to do that. That may be where we end up. I think we ought to, beginning right now, be preparing to present what we’re going to do anyway. We’re certainly going to do [option] number one. We’re going to take out these missiles. The questions will be whether, what I would describe as number two, which would be a general air strike. That we’re not ready to say, but we should be in preparation for it. The third is the general invasion. At least we’re going to do number one. So it seems to me that we don’t have to wait very long. We ought to be making those preparations. Bundy: You want to be clear, Mr. President, whether we have definitely decided against a political track. I, myself, think we ought to work out a contingency on that. Rusk: We’ll develop both tracks. President Kennedy: I don’t think we ought to do the OAS. I think that’s a waste of time. I don’t think we ought to do NATO. We ought to just decide who we talk to, and how long ahead, and how many people, really, in the government. There’s going to be a difference between those who know that—this will leak out in the next few days— there are these bases. Until we say, or the Pentagon or State, won’t be hard. We’ve already said it on the . . . So let’s say we’ve got two or three days. Bundy: Well, let’s play it, shall we, play it still harder and simply say that there is no evidence. I mean, we have to [unclear] be liars. President Kennedy: We ought to stick with that until we want to do something. Otherwise we give ourselves away, so let’s— Bundy: May I make one other cover plan suggestion, Mr. President? President Kennedy: Yes. Bundy: There will be meetings in the White House. I think the best we can do is to keep the people with a specific Latin American business black and describe the rest as intensive budget review sessions.27 But I haven’t been able to think of any other. President Kennedy: Nobody, it seems to me, in the State Department. I discussed the matter with Bohlen of the Soviet part and told him he could talk to [Llewellyn] Thompson. So that’s those two. It seems to me 27. In this context the word black means to keep undercover, covert. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 423 that there’s no one else in the State Department that ought to be talked to about it in any level at all until we know a little more. And then, as I say, in Defense we’ve got to keep it as tight as possible, particularly what we’re going to do about it. Maybe a lot of people know about what’s there. But what we’re going to do about it really ought to be, you know, the tightest of all because [unclear] we bitch it up. McNamara: Mr. President, may I suggest that we come back this afternoon prepared to answer three questions. First, should we surface our surveillance? I think this is a very important question at the moment. We ought to try to decide today either yes or no. President Kennedy: By “surface our”? McNamara: I mean, should we state publicly that, that you have stated we will act to take out any offensive weapons. In order to be certain as to whether there are or are not offensive weapons, we are scheduling U-2 flights or other surveillance— Bundy: [chuckling] This is covert reconnaissance. McNamara: Well, all right, or reconnaissance flights to obtain this information. We’ll make the information public. President Kennedy: That’d be one. All right, why not? McNamara: This is one question. A second question is: Should we precede the military action with political action? If so, on what timing? I would think the answer is almost certainly yes. And I would think particularly of the contacts with Khrushchev. And I would think that if these are to be done, they must be scheduled, in terms of time, very, very carefully in relation to a potential military action. There must be a very, very precise series of contacts with him, and indications of what we’ll do at certain times following that. And, thirdly, we should be prepared to answer your questions regarding the effect of these strikes and the time required to carry them off. I think— President Kennedy: How long it would take to get them organized. McNamara: Exactly. We’ll be prepared— President Kennedy: In other words, how many days from tomorrow morning would it . . . How many mornings from tomorrow morning would it take to get the, to take out just these missile sites, which we need to know now. How long before we get the information about the rest of the island, do you figure, General? Bundy: It could take weeks, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Weeks? Bundy: For complete coverage of a cloud-covered island. Unidentified: Well, depending on the weather. 424 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Taylor: Well, we’ve got about 80 percent now, don’t we? Carter: Yes, sir. It depends much on what we get out of yesterday’s flight, sir. They won’t be— Bundy: There are clouded areas, Mr. President, as I understand it. And there are areas that are going to be very substantially in permanent, or nearly permanent, cloud cover. Carter: We’ll have preliminaries by six tomorrow morning. President Kennedy: Well, there is the part of the island that isn’t covered by this flight we’re [expecting to learn about] by tomorrow morning. What about doing that tomorrow, plus the clouded part, doing low level? Have we got a plane that goes— Bundy: We can certainly go low level, and we have been reluctant to do that. The one thing to worry about on low level is that that will create a sense of tactical alert in the island. And I’m not sure we want to do that. Our guess is that the high-level ones have not, in fact, been detected. Taylor: I think that’s correct. Bundy: No reactions. President Kennedy: I would think that if we are going to go in and take out this, and any others we find, that we would at the same time do a general low-level photographic reconnaissance. Bundy: You could at the same time do a low level of all that we have not seen. That would certainly be sensible. President Kennedy: Then we would be prepared, almost any day, to take those out. Bundy: As a matter of fact, for evidentiary purposes, someone has made the point this morning that if we go in on a quick strike, we ought to have a photographic plane take shots of the sites. President Kennedy: All right. Well, now, I think we’ve got to watch out for this, for us to be doing anything quickly and quietly and completely. That’s what we’ve got to be doing the next two or three days. So, we’ll meet at 6:00? Robert Kennedy: How long? Excuse me. I just wondered how long it would take, if you took it and had an invasion. Taylor: To mount an invasion? Robert Kennedy: No. How long would it take to take over the island? Bundy carries on a side conversation about how to describe this meeting to the press. Taylor: Very hard to estimate, Bobby. But I would say that in five or six days the main resistance ought to be overcome. We might then be in there for months thereafter, cleaning that up. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 425 McNamara: Five or seven days of air, plus five days of invasion, plus— President Kennedy: I wonder if CIA could give us the state . . . the latest on his popular . . . so we get some idea about our reception there. I just hate to even waste these six hours. So it may be that we will want to be doing some movements in the next six hours. Unidentified: About the execution of the [unclear]? President Kennedy: Yeah. The meeting now begins to break up. Various separate conversations begin as some people leave. President Kennedy’s next appointment was for a formal lunch with the crown prince of Libya. President Kennedy: I want to add [unclear], better also. Are you two coming to lunch? Rusk: I was supposed to, but . . . President Kennedy: George, are you supposed to come? Ball: No. President Kennedy: You went to check out [unclear]. Rusk: Ros [Gilpatric], were you supposed to go [unclear]? Could you— President Kennedy: Six tonight? Bundy: Six. President Kennedy: All right, seven. Bundy: Seven is better actually for you, Mr. President. Is 6:30 manageable? That would be still better because you’re supposed to be out there [at a dinner party] at eight. President Kennedy: Well, that’s all right. That, then, seven. Between 6:30 and 7:00. As close to 6:30 as you can, be there. How many would there be? I’d like to have, I think we ought to have the members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff here. [Unclear reply from Gilpatric.] Well, then, you bring who you think ought to be brought. Bundy: [calling to departing participants] And I urge everybody to use the East Gate rather than the West Gate.28 President Kennedy: I think we ought to get . . . What’s Mr. McCone doing out there, General? Carter: He’s burying his stepson tomorrow morning.29 28. The West Gate was on the same side of the White House as the White House Press Room and was the usual path for observing the comings and goings of official visitors. The East Gate was the usual entrance for the residential side of the White House, used more for social functions and tours. 29. McCone had remarried in August. His wife’s son, Paul Pigott, had died on 14 October 426 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Others are talking in the background. Robert Kennedy: He’s back tomorrow. Unidentified: I just talked to him on the phone. I think he’d rather come back. President Kennedy: So, why don’t . . . you discussed it with him? Is he familiar with this information? Carter: Yes, sir. He’s aware of what has happened. Robert Kennedy: I talked to him about an hour ago. President Kennedy: Is he coming here? Robert Kennedy: He’ll be here tomorrow morning. They’re burying the child today, his son. President Kennedy: Why don’t we leave it in his judgment. [Mixed voices.] Robert Kennedy: I think we might tell him. He said he’s going to talk to you about this. Maybe just tell him about the meeting tonight. President Kennedy: All right. Now the other question is on—he’s [McCone] the man to talk to the General, Eisenhower. Where is the General now? Eisenhower? I’ll take care of that. I’ll have [unclear]. I want to get [unclear]. Bundy: [apparently to Dillon] It’s too complicated. [Dillon makes an unclear reply.] Yeah. Rusk: George, the President wants you to take my place at lunch [with the Libyan crown prince]. Ball: All right. But I’ve got . . . You know that I’ve got a 1:45 speech. Look, look, maybe they can reschedule that. [Rusk makes an unclear reply.] They can reschedule that. Rusk: That’s fine. There is a brief, unclear exchange between President Kennedy, McNamara, and Taylor about reconnaissance flights and then Kennedy leaves, with the tape machine still running. Taylor: [Unclear] mission pilots [unclear]. If we can make a decision here to use whatever facilities we have. [Mixed voices.] McNamara: [Unclear] hold off on this thing until tomorrow. [Unclear] first thing. Bundy: But you will run the reconnaissance? McNamara: Yeah, I was just talking to him. I’m going to get there right now. And I would suggest in this period we get [unclear names] and every- from injuries suffered in an auto racing accident in California. McCone had left Washington to accompany the body to Seattle for the funeral. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 427 body else and sit down at the table and figure out where these planes are. And consider what camps there are. [Mixed voices.] Why don’t you come down with, drive back [with us]? Why don’t you ride—pick up your car and drive over with us to the Pentagon and have lunch with us over there? Why don’t you call from here [unclear names] and come over, or anybody else you choose? [Unclear.] And then we can sit down [unclear] and sort out in great detail and see what we really need. Vice President Johnson: [concerned about improving his jet transport and communications as he travels] I have [unclear] authority. I wonder if there’s any good reason why you shouldn’t go to somebody and put [unclear]. If you had immediate [unclear] or something else, I’m away from you for four or five hours. I have a Grumman Gulfstream that I’ve leased. I want you to lease it for MATS [Military Air Transport Service], after the election. Let me use it for the [Lockheed] Jetstar. It’s a hell of a lot better for these small airfields. When I think about [unclear]. Anyway, I have a lease now and what I’d like to have is the best communication that you have that you’re . . . if it can be done. McNamara: Oh sure, sure. Vice President Johnson: As it is now, I’m going to get 100–200 miles from Washington on the [unclear reference to communication]. McNamara: Oh sure. 6:30 –8:00 P.M. I think any military action does change the world. And I think not taking action changes the world. And I think these are the two worlds that we need to look at. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis30 The morning meeting had ended with an understanding that the Pentagon team would analyze possibilities for a quick air strike, possibly followed by an invasion. Rusk and others at State would study how the adminis- 30. Including President Kennedy, George Ball, McGeorge Bundy, Marshall Carter, C. Douglas Dillon, Roswell Gilpatric, U. Alexis Johnson, Vice President Johnson, Robert Kennedy, Edwin Martin, Robert McNamara, Dean Rusk, Theodore Sorensen, and Maxwell Taylor. Tapes 28 and 28A, John F. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Presidential Recordings Collection. 428 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 tration could act promptly and effectively against the missiles without surprising allies in the hemisphere and Europe and possibly losing their support. While this went on, Kennedy kept to his announced schedule. He presided over a formal lunch for the crown prince of Libya. Adlai Stevenson was present. After lunch, Kennedy invited Stevenson to the family quarters. Showing Stevenson the U-2 photos, Kennedy said, “I suppose the alternatives are to go in by air and wipe them out or to take other steps to render the weapons inoperable.” Stevenson’s position was: “Let’s not go into an air strike until we have explored the possibilities of a peaceful solution.” During the afternoon, Stevenson took part in the meetings at the State Department. So did Soviet experts Bohlen and Thompson and the assistant secretary for Latin America, Edwin Martin. At Justice, Robert Kennedy had meanwhile held in his own office a meeting of those involved in Operation Mongoose. Describing the “general dissatisfaction” of the President with progress thus far, the Attorney General focused discussion on a new and more active program of sabotage that had just been prepared by the CIA. Pressed by the CIA representative (Richard Helms) to explain the ultimate objective of the operation and what to promise the Cuban exiles, Robert Kennedy hinted the President might be becoming less averse to overt U.S. military action. He wondered aloud how many Cubans would defend Castro’s regime if the country were invaded. After discussing the possibility of having Cuban émigrés attack the missile sites, he and the rest of the group seemed to agree this was not feasible. At the Pentagon, the Joint Chiefs of Staff conferred with CINCLANT, the commanders of SAC and the Tactical Air Command (TAC), and the general commanding the 18th Airborne Corps. McNamara joined later. Presuming that the Soviets would not initiate a nuclear war against the United States, the JCS favored an attack, regardless of whether the missiles were operational. They nevertheless approved several prudential steps to increase U.S. readiness for nuclear war. After McNamara left, the JCS agreed that they did not favor use of low-level reconnaissance flights over Cuba, fearing that they would “tip our hand.” They also agreed they would rather do nothing than limit an air strike only to MRBMs.31 In the last 40 minutes before returning to the White 31. Based on notes taken from transcripts of JCS meetings in October–November 1962. The notes were made in 1976 before these transcripts were apparently destroyed. They have since been declassified and are available from the National Security Archive, in Washington, D.C. Meeting on the Cuban Missile Crisis 429 House, McNamara and Gilpatric worked out an outline of three alternative courses of action, which McNamara would present at the meeting. From 4:00 on, Kennedy himself had been occupied with his regular schedule. He was able to return to the missile problem only as his advisers gathered in the Cabinet Room at 6:30. Taylor arrived a bit late, after the meeting began. President Kennedy activated the tape recorder as the meeting opened with the intelligence briefing. President Kennedy: Find anything new? Marshall Carter: Nothing on the additional film, sir. We have a much better readout on what we had initially. There’s good evidence that there are back up missiles for each of the four launchers at each of the three sites, so that there would be twice the number, for a total of eight which could eventually be erected. This would mean a capability of from 16 or possibly 24 missiles. We feel, on the basis of information that we presently have, that these are solid propellant, inertial guidance missiles with 1,100-mile range, rather than the oxygen propellant [and] radar controlled [type]. Primarily because we have no indication of any radar, or any indication of any oxygen equipment. And it would appear to be logical from an intelligence estimate viewpoint that if they are going to this much trouble, that they would go ahead and put in the 1,100 miles because of the tremendously increased threat coverage. I’ll let you see the map. President Kennedy: What is this map? Carter: That shows the circular range capability. President Kennedy: When was this drawn? Is this drawn in relation to this information? Carter: No, sir. It was drawn in some time ago, I believe. But the ranges there are the nominal ranges of the missiles rather than the maximum. That’s a 1,020 [mile] circle, as against 1,100. President Kennedy: Well, I was just wondering whether . . . San Diego de los Baños is where these missiles are? Carter: Yes, sir. President Kennedy: Well, I wonder how many of these [maps] have been printed out. McGeorge Bundy: The circle is drawn in red ink on the map, Mr. President. President Kennedy: Oh, I see. It was never printed? Carter: No, that’s on top. President Kennedy: I see. It isn’t printed. 430 T U E S DAY, O C T O B E R 16, 1962 Carter: It would appear that with this type of missile, with the solid propellant and inertial guidance system, that they could well be operational within two weeks, as we look at the pictures now. And once operational they could fire on very little notice. They’ll have a refire rate of from four to six hours, for each launcher. President Kennedy: What about the vulnerability of such a missile to bullets? Robert McNamara: Highly vulnerable, Mr. President. Carter: They’re vulnerable. They’re not nearly as vulnerable as the oxygen propellant, but they are vulnerable to ordinary rifle fire. We have no evidence whatsoever of any nuclear warhead storage near the field launchers. However, ever since last February we have been observing an unusual facility which now has automatic antiaircraft weapon protection. This is at Bejucal. There are some similarities but also many points of dissimilarity between this particular facility and the na