THE COLD WAR
Throughout
most of its history, the United States has had a tendency to isolationism, with
very little desire to extend its influence beyond the Western hemisphere. Americans
were reluctant to enter World War I, and relieved when the war was over. The
majority wanted to curtail international involvements: Wilson's "solemn
referendum" on the League of Nations turned out to be a solemn refusal to
get involved. Likewise in World War II, America tried to avoid
getting involved, delaying entry into the war until it was almost too
late. After this war too, many Americans wanted to see us withdraw
from foreign affairs, but this proved to be impossible. During the
post-War period, America reluctantly accepted its responsibilities as a major
player in world affairs and was moderately successful in leading the free world
through the difficult years of what came to be called the Cold War.
[Note
that for the 2nd MT, I only want you to comment on the first 18 years of the
Cold War period. We will only cover the period up to the assassination of
JFK in November of 1963. The final part of the Cold War I will talk about
in more detail later.]
August,
1945. After the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the
Japanese surrendered. World War II was over. The good guys had
won--sort of. Why only sort of? While world War II stopped the
Fascists, the Nazis, and the military dictatorship of Japan, it left another
totalitarian system, Communism, stronger than ever.
Prior
to WW II, there was only one communist nation on the face of the earth, the
Soviet Union. And that was simply not the Marxist dream. Marxists
wanted to see the "dictatorship of the proletariat" spread worldwide,
and while Comintern had succeeded in destabilizing democratic governments in
places like Germany and Italy, the Communists had no where been able to take
control themselves.
During
the opening days of WW II, the Communists got there chance to expand. The
Soviets took over the Baltic states, Eastern Poland, and Finland. During
the last days of WW II, they were able to push much further, pushing into
countries like Hungary and Poland. The big question was what would
happen when the war was over? Would the Soviets go home and leave
these countries independent? Perhaps not....
In
February of 1945, Churchill, Stalin, Roosevelt met at Yalta to try to reach
some agreement on what was going to happen in Europe once the war was actually
over. Churchill and Roosevelt wanted Stalin out of Eastern Europe,
but Roosevelt wanted other things as well. He hoped for Soviet help
in the war against Japan and for Russian participation in a new organization,
the United Nations. Stalin agreed to last two, and Churchill and
Roosevelt dropped their demands that he leave Eastern Europe--perhaps thinking
they (or the United Nations) could do something after Hitler and the Japanese
were defeated.
Roosevelt
wasn't a well man--he'd be dead within a few months. Also, he seems
to have been a bit naive. In 1942, he had said, "I think that
if I give him (Stalin) everything I possibly can and ask nothing in return he
won't try to annex anything and will work with me for a world of democracy and
peace."
But
within a few months of Yalta, Roosevelt at last saw his mistake. "We
can't do business with Stalin. He has broken every one of the
promises he made at Yalta." And then there's my all-time
favorite Roosevelt quotes, "Stalin is not a man of his word."
But
Stalin did keep his promise to enter the war against Japan. Two days
after the atomic bomb was dropped and just a few days before the Japanese
surrender, Stalin's troops poured into Manchuria, and as a result of this token
effort, Stalin and the Russians were rewarded with substantial chunks of
Japanese territory. And soon, the democracies were bargaining with
Stalin again.
In
July and August 1945, the victorious allies met at Potsdam to try to work out a
settlement.
At
Potsdam, it was also agreed the Germany would be divided into four occupied
zones and punished in other ways. Later, the Soviet-occupied zone
would be East Germany, the three zones occupied by France, Britain and the U.S.
would unite into West Germany.
Unfortunately,
for the most part, the Potsdam conference agreement strengthened the Soviet
Union. The Soviets were given all sorts of concessions to compensate
them for their sacrifices during the war--concessions that came at the expense
of other eastern European countries, particularly Poland.
One
good thing came out of the Potsdam conference. It was decided that Nazis who
had committed atrocities during the war would be put on trial. This
led to the famous Nuremberg trials where Nazi war criminals were told over and
over again that following orders was no excuse for crimes against
humanity. A good principle, but--ironically--sitting among the
judges were Soviet officials--officials from a nation that committed crimes as
bad or worse than those of the Nazis.
Poland
was a good example of problem. Remember that the Soviets had invaded Eastern
Poland during the first days of WWII. Among other atrocities, they
took 22,000 Polish officers that they had captured, marched them into Katyn
Forest, and massacred them all. But that was not nearly as bad as
what was to come.
In
the last days of World War II, the Soviets could have come to the aid of the
Polish resistance forces. Instead, they let Hitler do much of their
dirty work for them, allowing the resistance forces to be wiped out before
moving in themselves. And when Soviet troops finally march in, the
treated Polish civilians with the utmost brutality, raping women, stealing
everything of value, and killing anyone who tried to resistance.
When
the Soviet troops got to German territory, there treatment of civilians was
even worse. Soviet soldiers raped tens of thousands of women and
young girls--probably committing at least two million rapes.
[See
this review of Antony's Beever's book on the fall of Berlin or another review of Beever's book.]
Stalin
didn't mind at all--he *wanted* such behavior. Why? To
create tremendous fear of the Soviet army. And it worked. Fear of
the Soviets was powerful tool of local communists in securing support, and
eventually communist governments working hand in glove with the Soviet Union
controlled most of the countries of eastern Europe.
Winston
Churchill now warned of a new menace, telling us that "An iron curtain
descended on Europe." But it wasn't just Europe. In
1949, Communists took over in China too--and it like the Marxist dream of
world-wide communism might become a reality. In the 1950's, Stalin's
successor Nikita Khrushchev could confidently tell the democracies, "We
will bury you."
And
for more than 40 years it looked as if there was a chance they would. This
period (from roughly 1945-1991) is what we call the period of the Cold War, the
period in which advocates of Communism (led by the Soviet Union) worked to
expand that particularly flavor of totalitarianism, while advocates of
democracy (led by the United States) worked to contain Communism.
The
countries of the Free World had some advantages. Liberal democracy,
with its free markets and free men, invariably works out better in economic
terms. Note the contrast between free West Germany and communist
East Germany. Further, citizens of a democracy enjoy freedoms those
living under totalitarianism can't even dream of.
But
this very freedom was, to a certain extent, a disadvantage. Communist
agents and communist sympathizers [see Mona Charon's book Useful Idiots.]
could take advantage of fundamental western freedoms like freedom of the speech
and freedom of the press to advocate for a system where there would be no
freedom of speech of freedom of the press. Anti-Communism was
unfashionable among the Western elites, and the Roosevelt administration was
filled with communist sympathizers and even Communist agents. An
example of the former, Henry Wallace, Roosevelt's Secretary of Agricultural, a
man who favored unilateral disarmament after WW II. An example of
the latter, Alger Hiss a communist spy working for the state department who had
actually accompanied Roosevelt to the Yalta conference.
Fortunately
for the cause of Democracy, Roosevelt's death put into office a leader not
nearly as naive about the communist threat as FDR, a Missouri farmer named
Harry S Truman.
Truman
not tainted with the elitist attitudes of the Harvard and Yale men who tend to
dominate American politics. He was tainted with college at all, or
the elitist attitudes that go with it. He got his education while
serving in the military--good background for a president. He had not
been part of Roosevelt's "inner circle"--in fact, he didn't even know
we about the A-bomb until he became president.
Truman's
first step was to clear out the pinkos from within. He dismissed
Henry Wallace calling him, "A pacifist 100%. He wants us to
disband our armed forces, and give Russia our atomic secrets." Of
such men, Truman said, "I am afraid they are a sabotage front for Joe
Stalin."
Truman
put an end to the sabotage front. He launched a systematic
investigation of the loyalty of 3 million federal employees, eventually
dismissing 3000 of them. At the same time, Richard Nixon and other
members of the House Un-American Activities Committee exposed Alger Hiss as a
communist agent. Hiss was convicted of perjury and sent to prison.
Truman
also created the CIA, an intelligence gathering organization that could (on
occasion) be used as a counter to what eventually came to be called the KGB,
the Soviet covert operations team.
Truman
put an end to Communist expansion in Europe. Partly, this was
through the adoption of the Truman doctrine, a doctrine that provided military
assistance to any nation fighting communist expansion--as we did in Greece and
Turkey in 1948. But, perhaps more important: Truman's decision to
help rebuild Europe economically. Truman pushed through congress the
Marshall Plan, a plan that gave more than $10 billion in aid to restore the
European economy.
In
Japan likewise, the US helped the restore our war-ravaged former enemy. US
occupation forces under General MacArthur helped oversee the demilitarization
of Japan, but also the creation of a democratic government.
Despite
his foreign policy accomplishments, Truman looked likely to lose the 1948
election. The Democrats split three ways. Strom Thurmond
broke away "Dixiecrat" third party, cutting in to the Democrats base
in the South. Henry Wallace also jumped ship, leading a third party
"progressive" ticket.
[It's amazing how short our national collective
memory is. Wallace and his "progressives" really were what Truman
claimed, a sabotage front for Stalin and the Soviets. The Communists directly
supported Wallace's campaign, and students in the Communist Block took up the
chant, "Long live Wallace, death to Truman." There is some
evidence Wallace was a covert KGB agent. It's hard to imagine why anyone who
loves America would want to label themselves "progressive."]
Truman
seemed an inevitable loser to his Republican opponent Thomas Dewey--so much so,
that on election night, at least one major newspaper decided to go with the
headline "Dewey Beats Truman," not realizing that they were going to
end up with egg on their faces when the final votes were tallied.
During
his 2nd term, Truman continued his commitment to stop the spread of
Communism. In April of 1949, he helped create NATO, the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization. This was a defensive alliance in which
the member nations (the US, France, Britain, and others) maintained that an
attack on any one of them was an attack on all. If the Soviets
attacked any member nation, the combined might of NATO would be used against
them. The threat was enough: the Soviets never did attack a NATO member.
But
not all was going well. Traitors in Britain and the US (like Julius
and Ethel Rosenberg) leaked atomic secrets to the Soviets, and by the end of
1949, the Soviets had a bomb of their own. That same year, the Chinese
communists under Mao Tse-tung prevailed over Chiang Kai-Shek, and China became
communist.
And
that didn't seem the end. In 1950, backed by the Communist Chinese,
Communist North Korea attacked the democratic south. Truman
sent MacArthur to Korea.
[Well, actually MacArthur directed US forces from Tokyo!
If you want to know where the generals were, I'll tell you where they
were....]
With
UN authorization, the United States began a "police action" that
pushed the North Koreans back to the 38th parallel. UN/US troops
pushed them back further...too far, too aggressively. MacArthur
*wanted* to extend the war into China, but, as Omar Bradley noted, this was
probably, "The wrong war, at the wrong place, and the wrong time, with the
wrong enemy." Chinese response to the UN/US push was tougher
than MacArthur had expected. Truman dismissed the insubordinate
MacArthur, but fighting a war limited to Korea was tough enough. Ultimately,
more than 1,000,000 people died during the war, with over 50,000 American
casualties. And the war dragged on...there had to be a better way--a
better leader.
And
in 1952, Americans thought they had just that in Dwight David Eisenhower.
General
Eisenhower was one of the most popular presidents in US history. He
had been the mastermind behind the Normandy invasion, the most massive military
assault in all history. He was so popular that many Democrats had
wanted him as their candidate instead of Truman in 1948. Not
surprisingly, the Republicans (who had now been out of the White House for 20
years) were delighted that Eisenhower was willing to run as a Republican in
1952. The Democrats put up the witty and eloquent Adlai Stevenson,
but Stevenson had no chance against the popular Eisenhower. "I
like Ike" was enough of a slogan, plus Eisenhower's promise to go to
Korea.
As
president, Eisenhower was able (eventually) to wind down the Korean War--though
he had to threaten to use atomic weapons, and the basic conflict between the
two Koreas was left unsolved and with the potential to break into
open hostility at any time. Eisenhower was determined to stop
further Communist expansion in Asia. He helped create SEATO, an
equivalent to NATO for Asia.
But
Eisenhower had something of a dilemma as far as his Asian policy was
concerned. For a number of years, the US had been backing the French
in Indochina, helping the French defend their colonial possessions because,
among other things, the French were keeping the Communists from gaining
control. But in 1954, the French suffered a major defeat at Diem
Bien Phu, and it looked like they would be unable to hold onto Vietnam unless
the US provided more than money. The US would have to send
troops. This Eisenhower would not do. But he also was not
prepared to leave all of Vietnam in the hands of the Vietnamese
Communists. Instead, a 1954 compromise created two nations:
communist North Vietnam, and democratic South Vietnam. Eisenhower
now committed the US to defending the newly-created South Vietnamese
nation--and probably no one at the time realized how costly that commitment
would eventually become.
In
Europe too, Eisenhower was not the miracle-working anti-Communist people had
hoped for. In 1956, Hungarian revolutionaries tried to overthrow
their communist government expecting US and NATO help. The US
watched passively as Soviet tanks moved in to crush the revolution and put the
communists back in place.
And
yet--a wonderful time as well. 1950's America was incredibly
prosperous. Eisenhower cut government spending--including military
spending--and the economy boomed. He trimmed some of the New Deal
bureaucracy, but kept the minimum wage law and launched some public spending
projects (like the interstate highway system). And all this was, in
some ways, a key to winning the Cold War. During the 1950's,
American classrooms were big on charts comparing the Soviet system and that of
the United States. Here's what we produce: here's what they
produce. Here's our standard of living. Here's
theirs. And, of course, overseas too this went a long way toward
helping win the Cold War. Would you rather live like an American or
a Russian? Anyone comparing American and Russian life in the 1950's
would have to choose America...maybe.
But
in 1957, we were in for a major shock. Cuba, our long time little
brother to the south, was going through a tough time. A ruthless dictator named
Batista was running the show. Batista promised the Cuban people free elections,
elections he never held. And yet, for a time, we backed him. "He's
an SOB," one American diplomat said, "but at least he's our
SOB." But Batista ceased to be our SOB, and the Eisenhower
administration decided that Batista had to go. But who would replace
him? Many, including some people in our CIA, favored a young Cuban
militant named Fidel Castro. The New York Times especially
editorialized in favor of Castro. "But he's a communist," said
some. "No way!" said the Times again and again and again.
Eventually,
US pressure forced Batista to give up his position. But, at the same
time, US policy makers decided that Castro wasn't a man they could support. But
Castro seized power anyway, and, since he couldn't get US support, he looked
elsewhere--to the Soviet Union. And it turned out that Castro *was*
a communist after all. And, guess what? We now had a
Soviet satellite only 90 miles off the US coast.
And,
speaking of satellites, on October 4, 1957 the US got another shock. The
Soviets sent into orbit Sputnik I and then a bit later Sputnik II (carrying a
dog!)--the first artificial satellites ever to orbit the earth. Now
it wasn't the dog in space that was scary: it was our realization of something
else the Soviets could send into space.
Throughout
the 1950's, Americans were worried about nuclear war, and now that the Soviets
had the technology to send objects into orbit, that threat became more direct
than ever. Kids in school went through drill after drill. Get under
your desk, left hand over your eyes, right hand over the back of your
neck. It was a scary time...
In
1958, Soviet leader Nikita Kruschev gave the US an ultimatum: get out of
Berlin. The US ignored the ultimatum...and we trembled on the brink
of nuclear war.
Despite
all this, Eisenhower's personal popularity remained high. Despite an
incapacitating heart-attack and doubts about the health of the oldest man (at
that point) to have ever held the presidency, Ike was
reelected by an overwhelming margin in 1956. But this personal
popularity wasn't going to automatically transfer to the next Republican
presidential candidate, Eisenhower's VP, Richard Nixon. The 1960
election was likely to be a very close one--and that's exactly what it turned
out to be.
In
1960, the Democrats put up John F. Kennedy. Now to explain JFK, I
need to go off on a tangent here and talk for a bit about his father Joseph
Kennedy.
Joe
Kennedy made his considerable fortune in some rather unsavory ways. He had
figured out clever ways of manipulating stock prices, maneuvering stock prices
up, getting people to rush in to what seemed a "can't miss" deal,
dumping his stock when prices were high--a letting suckers pick up the tab for
stocks worth much less than they had paid. He added to his fortune
by buying up liquor franchises during Prohibition--franchises that, once
Prohibition was lifted, became enormously valuable.
Kennedy
made political allies all over the political spectrum: Lafollette, Franklin
Roosevelt, Joe McCarthy, Adlai Stevenson, Herbert Hoover--anyone who might be
useful to him. His relationship with Roosevelt was particularly
interesting. Kennedy wanted to be Secretary of the Treasury (playing
the Andrew Mellon role, I guess), but Roosevelt made him head of the SEC (on
the principle that it takes a thief to catch a thief). Kennedy was
unhappy with Roosevelt, and, in 1944 was going to back the Republican candidate
(Dewey) instead. Roosevelt simply let him know that the IRS was
going to investigate him...and, all of a sudden, Kennedy was in the Roosevelt
camp again.
Jack
Kennedy was very much his father's son: a rich kid, ambitious, willing to adopt
his ideals (such as they were) to circumstances. He was neither
moral nor terribly discreet about his peccadilloes. His extramarital affairs
were numerous and (potentially) disastrous. He suffered from all sorts of
ailments, and was really too sick a man to handle any position of great
responsibility.
But
none of this mattered. In fact who and what Kennedy was mattered not
at all. His father's money created a powerful Massachusetts
political machine with both liberal and conservative politicians obligated to
support the Kennedys in return for past political favors. His
father's money hired the best speech writers and ghost-writers money could
buy. His father's money hired him the best campaign staff money
could by. His father's money hired the best political wife money
could by, the beautiful and stylish Jackie Kennedy.
All
this made for a carefully crafted Kennedy image. A World War II
incident blown all out of proportion made Kennedy seem like a hero, the skipper
of PT 109--and the dramatic story was told and retold: in the New
Yorker, in Reader's Digest, in a book and a movie. We
even got a top 40 song about PT 109!
And
then there was Profiles in Courage, a great book which won a
Pulitzer Prize. Supposedly written by Kennedy--but actually written by a ghost
writer.
Jackie
Kennedy was easily transformed from--well, what she was--into a symbol of the
idea American wife and mother.
All
of this was enough to get Kennedy elected to a senate seat and to secure the
Democrat nomination for president in 1960.
Opposing
him: Richard Nixon--of whom, I'll say a lot more later. For now,
it's important to understand that Nixon was just about the opposite of Kennedy,
a man from a lower-middle class background who had to work hard for everything
he had in life. Nixon was what his contemporaries called a
"grind" or an "iron butt," and there have been few
presidential candidates who knew as much about foreign and domestic policy as
Richard Nixon.
And
with a choice between these two men, the spoiled, superficial inexperienced
rich kid and the hard-working solidly middle class experienced statesman, the
American people chose...
Well,
that's hard to say. The campaign was an interesting one (the first
campaign I remember, by the way). It was the first to feature
televised debates between the candidates. Views of the debates
vary. The consensus is that Nixon won on substance but lost because
his stage make-up ran under the lights and spoiled his appearance. Those
who watched on TV thought Kennedy won, those who listened on the radio thought
Nixon won. But, at the time, no-one knew what had really happened.
Eisenhower
had devised a plan to topple Castro--what eventually became the Bay of
Pigs Invasion. Kennedy, as a possible president, had been
briefed on the plan so that, just in case he was president, he could be properly
prepared. But the plan depended on secrecy, and wasn't disclosed to
the public at large.
In
the debate, Kennedy decided to hammer the Eisenhower administration (and, by
implication, Nixon) as being soft of Castro. How could Nixon respond? Nixon
knew that Ike was begin anything but soft on Castro, but he couldn't explain
that without throwing away the whole plan. And so Nixon let Kennedy
score on cheap shots rather than say anything that might hamper American
anti-Communist efforts. Please remember that about Nixon.
Now
back to the question: which of these two men did the American people vote
for? And the answer: no one really knows. The official
popular vote was extremely close, with fewer than 100,000 votes (out of 68
million cast) separating the two candidates. The official Electoral
College margin was larger, with Kennedy taking 303 electoral votes and Nixon
219. But the results in Texas (24 electoral votes) and Illinois (27
electoral votes) were questionable. In Illinois, Mayer Daley's
corrupt Chicago machine manufactured votes for Kennedy, and it's nearly certain
that that state was stolen for Kennedy. In Texas too it's very
likely that Lyndon Johnson's political machine stole the election as well.
Nixon
could have challenged the election--but he was unwilling to do so. In
the midst of the Cold War, particularly, it seemed too dangerous to do anything
that would undermine the prestige of the presidency or the American people's
faith in their electoral system. Please remember that about Nixon.
[Kennedy,
by the way, privately called Nixon a fool for not challenging the
results. Two very different men here!]
When
Kennedy took office in 1961, he brought with him to Washington an army of rich
and successful men (e.g., Robert Strange McNamara left his position at Ford to
become Secretary of Defense) and intellectuals (e.g., Harvard Professor Arthur
Schlesinger). He brought with him his beautiful wife Jackie. The
press fell in love: this was a new Camelot!
Well,
would these brave knights solve our cold war problems? Not by a long
shot!
They
set lofty goals. Kennedy promised us we were confronting a New
Frontier, in which we would sacrifice for greatness. His inaugural
address promised, "America will pay any price, support any friend, oppose
any foe, to ensure the survival and the success of liberty."
But
what would happen when the chips were down?
Kennedy
had claimed Ike was too soft on Cube--but he decided to go ahead with Ike's Bay
of Pigs plan to topple Castro. An army of 12,000 Cuban refugees
would land at the Bay of Pigs, while the US provided plenty of air
support. In April of 1961, our Cuban allies landed--but US air
support didn't show up, and our allies were cut to pieces. Not only
did the Bay of Pigs not topple Castro, but now Castro had his excuse to crack
down on any supposed opposition within Cuba. He arrested 100,000
people--and resistance to Castro was broken.
Further,
Castro turned even more to the Soviet Union for support. Then, in
October of 1962, US supply planes discovered that the Soviets had turned Cuba
into a missile base, with 42 missiles 1000-mile range missiles and 24 2000-mile
range missiles. All aimed at....
What
to do? Kennedy's advisors split, but, ultimately, Kennedy gave
Khrushchev an ultimatum: remove the missiles, or we will attack Cuba. This
would have meant a nuclear war in which 60 million Americans would have died
and probably as many Russians. Khrushchev estimated total world-wide deaths as
pershpas 500 million people. The world hovered on the brink of
catastrophe...and Khrushchev blinked. Or, rather, he figured a way
to turn a profit. He agreed to remove his missiles from Cuba...but,
in return, the US pulled its missiles out of Turkey and promised to do nothing
more to topple Castro--who, from his safe perch, continued to stir up
anti-American sentiment around the globe for the next 45 years.
Now
of course Kennedy is not entirely to blame. He had inherited the
Cuba problem from Eisenhower. And he had inherited other problems as
well. One of them, Berlin.
Berlin
was an isolate island of freedom in the midst of Communist East Germany. East
Germans by the hundreds had been escaping the Communist yoke by the simple
expedient of crossing over from Communist East Berlin to Democratic West
Berlin. The Communists got tired of this, and tried to cut-off the
supply corridor from West Berlin to West Germany. A massive airlift
kept West Berlin going, and the Communists gave up. But they then
put up a wall..the Berlin Wall...a symbol of the divide between east and
west. Kennedy himself flew to Berlin, and he wanted to express his
solidarity with the people of West Berlin by saying a few words in
German. He should have said, "Ich bin Berliner," "I
am of Berlin." What he actually said was "Ich
bin ein Berliner," a phrase that's a bit more ambiguous, and might well be
translated "I am a jelly donut." I feel that way a lot of
the time....
But
when you blunder as a history professor or a chess player, it's one
thing. To blunder as president of the United States is something
else again. And, unfortunately, Kennedy's last major Cold War
decision was an extraordinarily costly blunder.
Blame
for what eventually happened in Vietnam has to be shared by lots of people, but
Kennedy himself made a particularly serious mistake. For almost ten
years, American had been backing the Diem government of South Vietnam in Saigon
against communist insurgents: against the Vietcong rebels in the south itself,
and against North Vietnamese attacks. But things were just not going
well. Why? The South Vietnamese military blamed the
civilian government. If only they didn't interfere, we could win
this war. The military planned a coup, but they knew they needed the continued
support of America, and so they sent representative to Kennedy asking if he
would support them if they took over. Kennedy promised that he
would, and, on November 1, 1963, a military junta took over in South Vietnam,
murdering Diem. This put us in a very uncomfortable position. No
longer were supporting a democratically elected South Vietnamese government,
but a group of thugs--better than the Communists, no doubt, but hardly the kind
of government that would inspire the enthusiastic support of the American
people.
Three
weeks later, Kennedy himself was assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald. Interestingly,
views of Kennedy immediately altered. Dissatisfaction with Kennedy's blunders
turned into mourning for a fallen hero. Kennedy was a saint and
martyr and, ironically, more effective in this role than he ever was as
president.
One
side note. Kennedy's assassination sent shockwaves throughout America. We
were as grim as we could possibly be--it felt like the world was coming
apart. Kennedy was gone--and what next? A nuclear war
that would kill us all? My principle, Mrs. Pohemus, delivered the tragic news
of Kennedy's death...and I had never seen an adult so crushed. I was
as worried about the future as I could possibly be. And my dad
didn't help matters. As we sat at the dinner table, my dad said,
"There isn't going to be any tomorrow afternoon."
My
heart sank. My dad was telling me: this is it. The bombs
will drop. The world is over.
"Yes,"
said dad. "No tomorrow afternoon--because President Johnson has
declared it an official day of mourning."
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