Read Camelot's Court: Inside the Kennedy White House Online
Authors: Robert Dallek
as McNamara’s war, 267
McNamara-Taylor visit (1963) and report, 409–11, 412, 413
McNamara visit (1962), 274–76
misinformation on, 274, 275, 277–78, 280–82, 284, 345–46, 396
as a muddle without a solution, 405–7
NIE report on, 348
Nolting and Diem, 230–31, 266
Nolting as ambassador, 163, 243, 244, 265, 274, 275, 337, 340, 343, 344–45, 348
partition of, 163
Pentagon officer inspection trip (1963), 340
press and, 20, 265, 267, 276–77, 285, 286, 336, 337–38, 342, 344, 345, 392, 393–98, 412–13
press censorship, 286, 408, 409
press complaints, 263, 264–65
public dissent against war, 281
reporter Sheehan in, 275–76
Rostow and, 92, 229–30
Rusk memo opposing Taylor-Rostow report, 241–42
Sorensen memo on, 165–66
“A Strategic Concept for South Vietnam” (Hilsman), 262
Strategic Hamlets Program, 277, 282, 283, 336, 338, 347–48, 349, 392, 406
supporters of military victory in, 343, 347–48
supporters of political initiative, 344
Taylor-Rostow report, 239–40, 241, 242
U.S. casualties in, 404
U. S. critics of war, 346–47
U. S. debate over, 343–45
U. S. military advisers in, 171, 240, 245, 261–62, 338, 348, 349
U. S. Special Forces in, 165
as war against communism, 159, 166–67, 169, 245, 247, 261, 272, 276, 286–87, 343, 405
Wheeler report, 341–42
White House fact-finding trip (1961), 237–40
White House press release promising withdrawal of troops, 411–12
Volcker, Paul, 432
von Brentano, Heinrich, 184
Vu Van Mau, 280
Wahl, Nicholas, 189
Wallace, George, 352, 432
Washington, George, ix, x, 1, 108
Webster, Daniel, 14
Westmoreland, William, 431
“What We Are Doing in Southeast Asia” (Harriman), 277
Wheeler, Earle, 316, 340, 341–42, 343, 346
White, Byron, 122, 123
White, Lincoln, 324–25
White, Theodore, 235, 248, 422
White House Historical Association, 125
Why England Slept
(JFK), 12
Wiesner, Jerome, 209, 356
Wilkie, Wendell, 218
Wilkins, Roy, 176, 251, 402
Wilson, Woodrow, 22, 25, 26, 93–94, 127, 380
Wofford, Harris, 119–20, 123
fate of Bowles and, 153
JFK’s presidential campaign, 120
as point man for JFK’s civil rights agenda, 60, 119–22, 175
World War II
Chamberlain’s appeasement, 8, 161
Eisenhower’s staff in, 68–69
firebombing of Tokyo, 86
Humphrey’s lack of service, 19
JFK as hero, 37
Joe Kennedy, Jr.’s death in, 9–10
Joe Kennedy, Sr. as ambassador to Great Britain, 7
Lovett in, 84
McNamara and, 85–86
O’Brien in, 112
Power in, 73
RFK in, 39
Rostow in OSS, 91
Rusk and, 97–98
Shriver in, 129
Taylor in, 157
Young, Kenneth T., 239
Rose and Joe Kennedy: JFK said of his father, “He made it all possible.”
President Kennedy and brother Bobby, his closest confidant and most forceful advocate.
Ted Sorensen, the brilliant thirty-three-year-old wordsmith who crafted most of Kennedy’s best lines during their eleven-year association.
In March 1962, former president Dwight Eisenhower saw Kennedy as too young and inexperienced to master Cold War challenges.
President Kennedy and Bobby with Vice President Lyndon Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk. The Kennedys lacked confidence in their judgments and consigned them to the fringes of the administration.
Historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. was a leading liberal voice in the White House and the person best prepared to recount its accomplishments after Kennedy’s death.
McGeorge Bundy, former Harvard dean and White House national security adviser, reflected Kennedy’s affinity for the most brilliant men he could find to staff his administration.
Kennedy discusses the Alliance for Progress with Latin American representatives. The Alliance reflected Kennedy’s hopes of winning “hearts and minds” in the contest with communism in the developing world.
Kennedy with Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, who enjoyed Kennedy’s high regard after their successful collaboration in the Cuban Missile Crisis, and General Maxwell Taylor, Kennedy’s choice as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Taylor was the only one of the military chiefs he fully trusted.
Sorensen in a later meeting with Fidel Castro, who outlasted all administration efforts to bring him down.
President Kennedy with Allen Dulles and John McCone, the former and new head of the CIA. Kennedy had grave doubts about their advice, but kept them on to mute conservative political opposition.
President Kennedy with Adlai Stevenson and United Nations representatives. Kennedy’s failure to consult Stevenson about the Bay of Pigs invasion embarrassed and angered him.