Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Cuban Missile Crisis, Reconsidered
The Weekly Standard ^ | 10/21/2002 | Peter Schweizer

Posted on 10/12/2002 2:35:49 PM PDT by Pokey78

Was John F. Kennedy really the model Cold War statesman?

FORTY YEARS AGO this month, President John F. Kennedy was locked in a test of wills with Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev over missiles in Cuba. Memorialized in both film and print, the Cuban missile crisis has come to be the ultimate symbol of presidential resolve and courage. In the 1974 movie "The Missiles of October" and the more recent "Thirteen Days," starring Kevin Costner, JFK is portrayed as a resolute and unflinching commander in chief. He's given the same heroic portrayal in his brother Bobby Kennedy's "Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis," a book still regularly assigned in college classes. And many historians still share the view of Arthur Schlesinger Jr. that Kennedy's actions demonstrated to the "whole world . . . the ripening of American leadership unsurpassed in the responsible management of power . . . [a] combination of toughness . . . nerve and wisdom, so brilliantly controlled, so matchlessly calibrated that [it] dazzled the world."

In short, Kennedy's handling of the crisis has captured the popular imagination, making him perhaps the most potent symbol of Cold War courage and resolve. But now that the Soviet archives have been opened, it's time to retire JFK as Cold War hero. Instead, the mantle should be passed to Ronald Reagan who, according to those archives, was the president they most respected and feared.

Most portrayals of the Cuban missile crisis begin with the secret placement of Soviet missiles in Cuba and Kennedy's insistence that they be removed. But the story actually begins a couple of years earlier, when JFK first stepped into the Oval Office.

The Kremlin was very pleased when JFK edged out Richard Nixon in 1960. Before the election, the KGB resident in Washington had been ordered to "propose diplomatic or propaganda initiatives, or any other measures, to facilitate Kennedy's victory." The Kremlin regarded Kennedy as a "typical pragmatist," who would change his position and accommodate adversaries if it served his interests. Khrushchev went so far as to delay the release of American U-2 pilot Gary Francis Powers, who was being held in prison after being shot down on a spy mission over the Soviet Union, until after the election. By doing so, said Khrushchev, he was "voting" for Kennedy.

Shortly after JFK became president, he was put to the test. In March 1961, Communist guerrillas armed with new shipments of Soviet weapons advanced deep into the eastern reaches of Laos, which borders Vietnam. The peaceful country's neutrality was supposedly guaranteed by the 1954 Geneva Accords, but the North Vietnamese wanted to use the country as a supply line for their forces fighting in the south. In short order they occupied Eastern Laos and began developing what came to be called the Ho Chi Minh Trail to arm their forces fighting in South Vietnam. In Washington, Kennedy was apprised of the situation and elected to do nothing.

One month later, a large force of Cuban exiles began landing on the beaches of Cuba, near the so-called Bay of Pigs. They had been trained and equipped by the CIA with the intent of liberating the country from Fidel Castro. The plot was something that Kennedy had inherited from Eisenhower. Kennedy signed off on the operation, but nixed a critical ingredient: When the exiles hit the beaches they did so without American air or naval support. The exile army was driven back in a matter of days. The operation was an unmitigated disaster.

A few months later, Soviet bloc leaders decided to begin construction on the Berlin Wall to stem the flow of refugees into West Berlin. As they broke ground, Kennedy became furious. He called up the reserves, sent troops to Europe, and proposed a substantial increase in the military budget. But he was not prepared to resist the move. "It seems particularly stupid," he told aides, "to risk killing a million Americans over an argument about access rights on the Autobahn."

Kennedy thought that by showing restraint he was avoiding a crisis. But in reality he was causing one. In the Kremlin, the combination of Kennedy's tough words and lack of action was seen as weakness and fear. After JFK's speech on the Berlin crisis, Khrushchev hosted a secret meeting of the Central Committees of Communist Parties of the Soviet Union. "Kennedy spoke [to frighten us] and then got scared himself," snickered Khrushchev, according to a transcript. The president was "too much of a lightweight both for the Republicans as well as for the Democrats."

For Nikita Khrushchev, Kennedy's failure at the Bay of Pigs, along with Communist successes in Laos and Berlin, was proof that he could have things his way with the young president. When Robert Frost returned from a September 1962 trip to the Soviet Union, he said that Khrushchev had told him Kennedy was "too liberal to fight." In short, Kennedy was encouraging Khrushchev to pursue what would become his most dangerous gambit.

In May 1962, Khrushchev announced to the Politburo his secret plan to put Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. Fidel Castro was eager for the missiles because they would deter another Bay of Pigs-type invasion. Khrushchev figured if he could pull the plan off, it would shift the balance in the arms competition because his shorter-range ballistic missiles would now be capable of reaching the United States.

The Soviet premier, seemingly always the gambler, was hoping to build the missile sites before the United States even detected them. On the chance that they were discovered, he believed that Kennedy might fear a confrontation and not take any substantial action. Soviet transport ships brought material and specialists to Cuba where construction crews busily worked on the missile batteries. The plan seemed to be going as Khrushchev hoped, until an American U-2 spy plane flying over the island uncovered the scheme. When Kennedy learned about it, he was again furious.

The president ordered an immediate naval blockade of Cuba and regular U-2 flights to monitor the situation. He explained his position to Khrushchev in unambiguous terms: Remove the missiles and the personnel to man them or military action is imminent. Khrushchev, mulling over the situation in his Kremlin office, knew the strategic situation favored the United States. Not only did America have nuclear superiority; Cuba was just off the American coastline while the Soviet Union was halfway around the world. Kennedy had called his bluff; a bargain needed to be struck. And Kennedy, contrary to the steely determination portrayed in the movies, was all too willing to deal.

Khrushchev agreed to withdraw the missiles. But he wanted several things in return. For his ally Fidel Castro, who was angered by any suggestion that the missiles be pulled out, he demanded a pledge that the United States would never invade Cuba again. And for good measure, he wanted U.S. nuclear missiles in Turkey, which were pointed at Soviet forces, removed as well.

On Saturday, October 27, 1962, as the crisis reached a crescendo, Soviet ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin went to the Justice Department for a private meeting with Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, who was serving as a confidant for his brother. Moscow might have been negotiating from a weak position, but Bobby Kennedy didn't press the matter. His brother was prepared to make a no invasion pledge, he told Dobrynin, and would pull the Jupiter missiles out of Turkey. But he cautioned that the deal needed to be done quietly. "The president can't say anything public in this regard about Turkey," the Soviet transcripts of the meetings quote RFK as saying. It would be too much of a political embarrassment. The missiles would need to be withdrawn under some pretext and without consulting NATO allies. Dobrynin agreed to the secret bargain and it was never mentioned in public.

Indeed, Bobby Kennedy was so sensitive about the secret deal involving missiles in Turkey that when his diary of the crisis was later published as "Thirteen Days," the editor of the book, Ted Sorensen, purposely deleted any mention of them.



LIKE THE REST OF AMERICA, Ronald Reagan spent much of October 1962 watching closely the duel between Kennedy and Khrushchev. He was of course pleased that the crisis was over. But he fretted in public that Kennedy had given up too much. He faulted Kennedy for agreeing to a no invasion pledge. "Are missile bases enough," he asked, "or will we insist on freedom for all Cubans?"

Reagan had always had his doubts about Kennedy, fearing that he was simply not up to meeting the Soviet challenge. In January 1962, during a speech at Huntington Memorial Hospital in California, he saw what Khrushchev saw, and expressed his concerns about whether JFK could handle "the roughnecks of the Kremlin." He was surrounded by "well-meaning and misguided people" who failed to understand the threat. Reagan also astutely noted that by not challenging the Communist move into Laos, Kennedy was signaling his willingness "to drink the bitter cup of capitulation" in Southeast Asia.

In the months following the Cuban missile crisis, Reagan made some pointed suggestions about what America should do next. While the Kennedy administration began pursuing arms control agreements, Reagan wrote an article explaining that the goal should be not to coexist with communism but to defeat it. Crank up the arms race, he advised in early 1963; there was no way Moscow could keep up.

When Reagan announced for the presidency years later, in 1979, the KGB wrote a secret analysis of Reagan the man. Unlike Kennedy, whom they considered prone to changing his mind, Reagan got grudging respect from the KGB. He was "a firm and unbending politician for whom words and deeds are one and the same."

Once he was elected president, Reagan outlined ambitious plans to undermine and defeat the Soviet Union in a series of secret directives. Nothing quite like it had ever been undertaken in the history of the Cold War. Using economic, military, and psychological pressure, he developed a plan to defeat the Soviet empire.

Throughout he demonstrated tremendous resolve. He enacted the largest peacetime military build-up in American history, even though the plan was opposed by the majority of his cabinet. Early in his administration, William P. Clark and Tom Reed came to him to explain the super-secret Continuity of Government program. In place since the Eisenhower administration, COG was a plan to evacuate the president from the White House in the event of a nuclear war. Both Clark and Reed could sense Reagan's discomfort as they described the program, particularly the part about being hustled away on a helicopter to a safe location. When Reed was finished Reagan shook his head.

"No, I'm not going to do that," he told them. "If it happens--God forbid--I'm not going anywhere. I'm staying here at my post." The two men left and were forced to revise America's nuclear war-fighting plans.

Reagan developed an ambitious strategy and then stuck to it. Even during the heights of Gorbymania, there was very little change in the substance of his policies. Reagan was quite simply immovable, much to the frustration of the Kremlin. "No matter what diplomatic tack Moscow examined or actually took," recalls Ambassador Dobrynin, "the Reagan administration proved impervious to it. We came to realize that in contrast to most presidents who shift from their electoral rhetoric to more centrist, pragmatic positions by the middle of their presidential term, Reagan displayed an active immunity to the traditional forces, both internal and external, that normally produce a classic adjustment."

How we choose to look at the Cold War will determine how we face the strategic challenges of the war on terrorism. If we study JFK, we can learn about how to react to a crisis and the art of "crisis management." By studying Reagan, we can learn how to forge a strategy of victory and to defeat our enemies.

So as the television cameras carry 40th anniversary reruns of "Thirteen Days" with images of a resolute JFK, don't imagine that you are watching the apotheosis of Cold War toughness. Think back instead to Gdansk, Poland, on a rainy day in September 1990. Ronald Reagan is at the birthplace of Solidarity, standing in front of a crowd of thousands who are chanting "Thank You! Thank You!" while serenading him with "Sto Lat," a song in honor of Polish heroes. Lech Walesa's former parish priest approaches Reagan with a sword. "I am giving you the saber," he tells the former president, "for helping us to chop off the head of communism."


Peter Schweizer, a fellow at the Hoover Institution, is the author of a new book, "Reagan's War" (Doubleday), from which parts of this essay are adapted.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-23 next last

1 posted on 10/12/2002 2:35:49 PM PDT by Pokey78
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
All this is true, and actually well-known. The Bay of Pigs gave the USSR the impression that Kennedy was weak, and they continued to probe and test him up till the time that he died.

I was kept in the army an extra three months past my release date because of the Berlin crisis. The airlift has always been portrayed as a great Kennedy victory, but it could just as well be portrayed as a defeat.

What Schweitzer hints at, but does not rub in, is that the Vietnam War was also a result of Kennedy's perceived weakness. It too was badly handled at the start, because Bundy, McNamara, and the rest were frankly incompetent.

McNamara was also responsible for the Edsel.
2 posted on 10/12/2002 2:45:47 PM PDT by Cicero
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cicero
airlift has always been portrayed as a great Kennedy victory

The blockade and airlift was in 1948.

3 posted on 10/12/2002 2:51:24 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
the dirty little secret that no one talks about is that there were no missles in cuba....this was a CIA hatched plot to convince the world there were offensive missles in Cuba by releasing pictures to the TIMES and the networks in order to force JFK into an attack on Fidel

The cool thing was that JFK, working with Kruchev, convinced the world that missles that weren't there, were removed publicly in full view....very cool

(You'll remember you never saw any missles on the deck of the Soviet ships on the way in, did you?)

This was the final straw for JFK's enemies.....they knew they couldn't beat him fair and square, or by cheating......he was appointing republicans to cabinet positions, he was cutting taxes, he was a President who was more dedicated to the people he served than the monied people who were used to buying and selling presidents....so,the word went out.....

4 posted on 10/12/2002 2:53:17 PM PDT by The Wizard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
"...heights of Gorbymania..."

BTW, Gorby came to power mostly because of Reagan reelection in 1984. After re-election even the old politburo figured out that they have no chance to fool their way through and returned to disarmament talks right away and when Chernenko died elected Gorby to try non-traditional tack.

5 posted on 10/12/2002 2:53:44 PM PDT by alex
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
Tough talk and no follow through, it seems there is ample reason for Clinton's well documented JFK worship. Much of the Cold War's anguish is attributable to Kennedy, just as the current jihad was fueled by Clinton's equivocations. Kennedy benefitted from martyrdom, something Clinton has, as yet, not attained.

Being cut down by a sniper does wonders for your legacy, erasing your weaknesses and amplifying your high minded resolve, as all thoughtful criticism dissolves into hero worship. Ask Malcom X, MLK, JFK and Lincoln.

6 posted on 10/12/2002 2:54:19 PM PDT by moodyskeptic
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
Castro Blames Khrushchev for Crisis... (10/9/02)
7 posted on 10/12/2002 3:21:50 PM PDT by Orion78
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
It's very clear that the Russians considered Kennedy an immoral playboy. I've always maintained that it is more than likely the Cuban missile crisis happened only because the Russians thought Kennedy was weak, as evidenced by the Bay of Pigs fiasco. Kennedy's stupidity almost got us into a nuclear war.
8 posted on 10/12/2002 4:23:36 PM PDT by B.Bumbleberry
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cicero
Right on.
9 posted on 10/12/2002 4:25:44 PM PDT by B.Bumbleberry
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
Some of this story was on ABC's "Up Close" last night. An old Russian naval officer was interviewed. According to him, during the missile crisis, a Russian sub commander encountered an American destroyer. He ordered the arming of his nuclear torpedoes, while the destroyer commander didn't realize the sub had nukes on board. They both literally had their fingers on the button. They both backed off in the end. We came that close.
10 posted on 10/12/2002 4:35:50 PM PDT by FlyVet
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: FlyVet
They both backed off in the end. We came that close.

Good thing Kennedy had a date with some harlot that day.

11 posted on 10/12/2002 4:50:11 PM PDT by tubebender
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
Khrushchev knew he was dealing with a weakling playboy president in Kennedy and got everything he wanted out of Kennedy. When it was over, the communists then knew they could move into Viet Nam.
12 posted on 10/12/2002 4:59:55 PM PDT by RLK
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: The Wizard
the dirty little secret that no one talks about is that there were no missles in cuba....

if you're not from Oz, ya gotta elaborate on this, CITATIONS or sumptin, PUH-LEEZE.

13 posted on 10/12/2002 5:54:04 PM PDT by 1234
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: tubebender
Good thing Kennedy had a date with some harlot that day.

Or two, or three.

14 posted on 10/12/2002 6:38:12 PM PDT by FlyVet
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: The Wizard
Yes....please show us the goods.
15 posted on 10/12/2002 7:10:22 PM PDT by thescourged1
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
I have had a lot of talks with people who were in congress and in positions of leadership during this period. I have also discussed it with people in the media who did not have axes to grind.

What followes is the concensus of many members of congress who were in office at the time and some of whom when on to higher positions in governement.

The congressional leaders at the time felt the goal of the Russians was to get our missiles out of Turkey. If the Turkey missiles were gone, the Russians felt they had a good chance with the peacenics to get our missiles ordered out of Germany and France. They even had hopes for England. They might have gotten it if Carter had been re-elected. Look at how Saddam can fool Jimmy boy.

Remember the huge resistance inside Germany to our upgrading missiles in Germany when Reagan was president? Reagan got it done. But it was not easy.

I don't think Castro was anything except a pawn to Russia in this game. And Fidel is still angry about that. He says the Russians lied to him. Perhaps they did. That only re-enforces that the Russian goal was to get our missiles out of Turkey and then use the peace-nics at a later time to get our missiles out of Europe.

If we did not have missiles to defend Europe, Russia could very well have taken much of it.

If you want to have an accurate picture of JKF, then just remember even the Kennedys said Teddy was Jacks more talented brother.

16 posted on 10/12/2002 8:41:33 PM PDT by Common Tator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: moodyskeptic
Much of the Cold War's anguish is attributable to Kennedy

No I'll give that honor to Truman. If he had taken the advice of Patten. We most likely would not have had any of this. ( but then who knows were a new time line would have taken us )

Patten from the west and LeMay from the east.

Patton advocated attacking the Russians?

17 posted on 10/12/2002 10:56:30 PM PDT by quietolong
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: FlyVet
The Bedford Incident
18 posted on 10/12/2002 10:59:13 PM PDT by quietolong
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: thescourged1
I have reduced it here to just the basic facts.....

let me say this, I have provided a senario for your consideration and my own comfort limits me to just this.....I get nervous everytime I write about this and feel that it's better that you all just see it as speculation.

The point is the information is out there, and people other than I will eventualy come forward, but we will be very, very old, if alive at all, by then....

I'd bet it will surface like an old story from years ago written about in a paper back or the era's equivalent

19 posted on 10/13/2002 4:37:18 AM PDT by The Wizard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78; Cicero; The Wizard; FlyVet; RLK; Common Tator
Soviet submariner 'saved the world' in Cuban crisis
From Tim Reid in Washington
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/


My head is dizzy with spin, this latest anniversary conference in Cuba, while any real historic information would be most welcome, is producing some obvious disinformation and therefore I am suspect of any statements by McNamara and Orlov.

First if the USS Beale had "depth-charged" Orlov's sub as close as he says, it would have sunk. In the late '50's early '60's It was common ASW tactics for both aircraft and ship to drop "PDC's" (practice depth-charges) in conjunction with sonobouys to tract subs and the Russians knew this.

Second, it was not a U2 that strayed into Russian territory, it was an RB-47 (I think), had it been a U2 it would not have strayed, it would have intentionally flown into and out of the USSR. BTW, you should read Dino Brugioni's book "Eyeball to Eyeball."

Third, if the soviets had operational nuclear torpedos in '62, firing it would have only killed one or two destroyers and the sub itself. It's a good lead-in for the Bush Bashers.

Fourth, the only tactical nukes that we knew about or thought we knew about were at NAS Key West, where I was flying out of, and they were for the recently arrived Squadron of F-105 Starfighters. Had the Russians started fuelling the missiles, an 8 hour operation, and as a last resort to stop the firing of the missiles, the 105's would have been launched. The rest of us were armed with conventional weapons. BTW, SAC was on its way to the Fail-Safe line (I have spoken with SAC pilots who said they were on their way) and we had been briefed that the USSR had at most ONE ICBM that could have reached the USA, it does not take a rocket scientist to figure the odds.

Fifth, having been one of the few Aviators launched and fully armed with instructions to fire if fired on, following JFK's TV address to the nation, evening of Oct 22, I remember (I think) that our Detachment had gone to DEFCON-1, we flew just outside Havana Harbor, around Russian Cruisers, with SAMS locked on and Thank God nobody fired!!!

This all could have been avoided had JFK exercised the Honest Leadership that President BUSH Has and IS!!!

"Theodore Sorenson, President Kennedy's speechwriter, said that it sent a good message to a world on the verge of war." On these words hang Castro's image and Saddam's fate ;^(...rto

PS: The 40th Anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis is getting a lot of play on TV, in particular, C-SPAN's Washington Journal and coverage of Harvard/JFK School's presentations by the likes of Ted Sorensen and Robert McNamara. Those that worship at the altar of JFK, who have their anti-war draft-dodging legacy to defend, are revising the legacy of the Crisis to Bash Bush and his preemptive action plans for Iraq, so it is important to...

Remember that the missiles were ready as pictured in UN photos, Cuba had become a strategic nuclear base, then the blockade or quarantine was established with reservations, not as a preemptive action, followed immediately with the escalation of the cold-war, the arms-race, Vietnam and later, as documented in history books, "Thirteen Days" was dizzy with spin and 42 years later Cuba is still UN-listed as a
Terrorist-State...

The Missile Crisis came because the more powerful state also had a leader (JFK) who waited until it was a fait accompli and then said it would be "one hell of a gamble" to use its power to stop weapons of mass murder in Cuba. ...rto

"Saddam Hussein's regime is a grave and gathering danger. To suggest otherwise is to hope against the evidence. To assume this regime's good faith is to bet the lives of millions and the peace of the world in a reckless gamble." ...PRESIDENT BUSH
20 posted on 10/16/2002 5:17:36 PM PDT by visitor
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-23 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson