APPENDIX F RICHARD M. NIXON'S MEMORANDUM ON MEETING WITH FEDEL CASTRO, 19 APRIL 1959

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February 29, 1960
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50X1 -HUM Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 R Next 7 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R0002e11.11.111130001-5 vallINIMINIMINIMENIMININNIMMmomm?0\00, _ Appendix F Richard M. Nixon's Memorandum on Meeting with Fidel Castro. 19 April 1959 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 ? Nmer.wir ? RICHARD NIXON July 27, 1979 LA CASA PACIFICA SAN CLEMENTE, CALIFORNIA I am enclosing copy of the summary of my conversation with Fidel Castro in 1959, as you requested in your letter of July 19th. With best wishes, Sincerely, Dr. Jack B. Pfeiffer CIA Historian Washington, D.C. 20505 enclosure, 4 pages Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25 : CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 # vaor Tor .1 NI 1111111V CONFIDENTIAL April 19, 1959 Summary of conversation between The Vice President and Fidel Castro: When Castro arrived for the conference he seemed somewhat nervous and tense. He apparently felt that he had not done as well on "Meet the Press" as he had hoped. He was particularly concerned about whether he might have irritated Senator Smothers for the comments he made with regard to him. I reassured him at the beginning of the conversation that "Meet the Press" was one of the most difficult programs a public official could go on and that he had done extremely well -- particularly having in mind the fact that he had the courage to go on in English rather than to speak through a translator. The subjects we discussed were no different from those on which he had made public statements on several other occasions. A brief summary, however, might be of interest, particularly in view of the comments I made with regard to the positions he took. I suggested at the outset that while I understood some reasonable time might elapse before it would be feasible to have elections it would nevertheless be much better from his viewpoint if he were not to state so categorically that it would be as long as four years before elections would be held. I urged him to state Ms position as being in favor of having elections at the earliest possible date and that four years would be the maximum amount of time that would elapse before elections were scheduled. He went into considerable detail as he had in public with regard to the reasons for not holding elections, emphasizing particularly that "the people did not want elections because the elections in the past had produced bad government." He used the same argument that he was simply reflecting the will of the people in justifying the executions of war criminals and his overruling the acquittal of Batista's aviators. In fact he seemed to be obsessed with the idea that it was his responsibility to carry out the will of the people whatever it might appear to be at a particular time. It was also apparent that as far as his visit to the United States was concerned his primary interest was "not to get a change in the sugar quota or to get a government loan but to win support for his policies from American public opinion." It was this almost slavish subservience to prevailing majority, opinion -- the voice of the mob -- rather than his naive attitude toward Communism and his obvious lack of understanding of even the most elementary economic principles which con- cerned me most in evaluating what kind of a leader he might eventually turn out to be. That is the reason why I spent as much time as I could trying to emphasize that he had the great gift of leadership, but that it was the responsibility of a leader not always to follow public opinion but to help to direct it in the proper channels -- not to give the people what they think they want at a time of emotional stress but to make them want what they ought to have. I pointed out that it might be very possible that Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 New Nor -2 the people of Cuba were completely disillusioned as far as elections and represen- tative government were concerned but that this placed an even greater responsibility on him to see that elections were held at the very earliest date, and thereby to restore the faith of the people in democratic processes. Otherwise, the inevitable result would be the same dictatorship against which he and his followers had fought so gallantly. I used the same argument with regard to freedom of the press, the right to a fair trial before an impartial court, judge and jury, and on other issues which came up during the course of the conversation. In every instance he justified his departure from democratic principles on the ground that he was following the will of the people. I, in my turn, tried to impress upon him the fact that while we believe in majority rule that even a majority can be tyrannous and that there are certain individual rights which a majority should never have the power to destroy. I frankly doubt that I made too much impression upon him but he did listen and appeared to lie somewhat receptive. I tried to cast my appeal to him primarily in terms of how Ms place in history would be affected by the courage and statesman- ship he displayed at this time. I emphasized that the easy thing to do was to follow the mob, but that the right thing in the long-run would be better for the people and, of course, better for him as well. As I have already indicated he was incredibly naive with regard to the Communist threat and appeared to have no fear whatever tthat the Communists might eventually come to power in Cuba. He said that during the course of the revolution there had been occasions when the Communists over- played their band and "my people put them in their place." He implied that this would be the situation in the future in the event that the Communists tried to come to power. As a matter of fact, in his attitude toward Communism, both internally and from an international standpoint, he sounded almost exactly like Sukarno had sounded to me when! visited Indonesia in 1953. In our discussions of Communism I again tried to cast the arguments in terms of his own self-interest and to point out that the revolutiOn which he had led might be turned against him and the Cuban people unless he kept control of the situation and made sure that the Communists did not get into the position3 of power and influence. On this score I feel I made very little impression, if any. Speaking to him from a personal standpoint I urged him at the earliest possible moment to bring good strong men into his government and to delegate responsibilities to them in the economic and other areas where he presently was making many decisions. I tried to point out that unless he did this he would have a workload which would be so great that he could not provide the leadership and the vision that the Cuban people needed for the great issues. I put as much emphasis as possible on the need for him to delegate responsibility, but again whether I got across was doubtful. It was apparent that while he paid lip service to such institutions as freedom of speech, press and religion his primary concern was with developing programs for economic progress. He said over and over that a man who worked in the sugar cane fields for three months a year and starved the rest of the year wanted a job, something to eat, a house and some clothing and didn't care a whit about whether he had freedom along with it. I of course tried to emphasize that here again as a leader of his people, he should try to develop support for policies which could assure economic progress with freedom rat her than without it. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 - 3 - He indicated that it was very foolish for the United States to furnish arms to Cuba or any other Caribbean country. He said "anybody knows that our countries are not going to be able to play any part in the defense of this hemisphere in the event a world war breaks out. The arms governments get in this hemisphere are only used to suppress people as Batista used his arms to fight the revolution. It would be far better if the money that you give to Latin American countries for arms be provided for capital investment." I will have to admit that as far as his basic argument was concerned here I found little that I could disagree with! We had a rather extended discussion of how Cuba could get the investment capital it needed for economic progress. He insisted that what Cuba primarily needed and what he wanted was not private capital but government capital. He gave me some rather confused arguments as to why plants that were licensed and/or owned and operated by the government would serve the best interests of Cuba better than privately owned enterprises. I told him quite bluntly that his best hope as far as the United States was concerned was not in getting more government capital but in attracting private capital. I explained that government capital was limited because of the many demands upon it and the budget problems we presently confronted. I pointed out that private capital on the other hand was expansible and that he would be serving the interests a Cuba far better by adopting policies which would attract it. I pointed out that there was competition for capital throughout the Americas and the worlct and that it would not go to a country where there was any considerable fear that policies might be adopted which would discriminate against private enterprise. At this point he, at considerable length, tried to explain why he had said and done some of the things which had appeared to be anti-private enterprise up to this time. Here again on this point I doubt if I made too much of an impression. He explained his agrarian reform program in considerable detail justifying it primarily on the ground that Cuba needed more people who were able to buy the goods produced within the country and that it would make no sense to produce more in factories unless the amount of money in the hands of consumers was increased. He rather bitterly assailed the United States press for what he called their unfair reporting of the revolution after he came to power. I, of course, tried to explain that speaking fromsorne personal experience, it was necessary to expect and to learn to take criticism both fair and unfair. I would not be surprised if his sensitivity with regard to criticism might eventually lead him to take some rather drastic steps toward curtailing freedom of the press in the future. He also spoke rather frankly about what he felt was a very disturbing attitude on the part of the American press and the American people generally. His argument went along this line: 'yours is a great country--the richest, the greatest, the most powerful in the world. Your people, therefore, should be proud and confident and happy. But everyplace I go you seem to be afraid -- afraid of Communism, afraid that if Cuba has land reform it will grow a little rice and the market for your rice will. be reduced -- afraid that if Latin America becomes more industrialized American factories will not be able to sell as much abroad as they have previously. You in America should not be talking so much about your fear of what the Communists Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Nue - 4 - may do in Cuba or in some other country in Latin America, Asia or Africa -- you should be talking more about your own strength and the reasons why your system is superior to Communism or any other kind of dictatorship." In my turn of course I tried to explain that we welcomed the industrialization and development of Latin America, that one of our best customers was Canada, for example, which was highly industrialized and that as economic conditions improved in any country this was not only good for that country but good for us as well. I also tried to put our attitude toward Communism in context by pointing out that Communism was something more than just an idea but that its agents were dangerously effective in their ability to grasp power and to set up dictatorships. I also emphasized, how-. ever, that we realized that being against Communism was not enough -- that it was even more important that we make it by our actions, by what we say and what we do abroad that we convince people every place that we want to help them achieve economic progress in a climate of freedom. Several other subjects were discussed blit none that I think are worth noting at this point. Significantly enough, he did not raise any questions about the sugar quota nor didhe engage in any specific discussions with regard to economic assistance. His primary concern seemed to be to convince me that he was sincere, that he was not a Communist and that his policies had the support of the great majority of the Cuban people. My own appraisal of him as a man is somewhat mixed. The one fact we can be sure of is that he has those indefinable qualities which make him aleader of men. , Whatever we may think of him he is going to be a great factor in the development of Cuba and very possibly in Latin American affairs generally. He seems to be sincere. He is either incredibl naive about Communism r wider Communist disci -- my guess 10 the former, and as I have already implied his ideas as to how to run a government or an economy are less developed than those of almost any world figure I havemet in fifty countries. But because be has the power to lead to which I have referred, we have no choice but at least to try to orient him in the right direction, npriacsified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 R Next 6 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for i'71ease 2013/03/25: 61A-RDP85-00664R000200130 lest 72e.a-k?fa ;74v- /f64/ Py Cuba, Castro and John F. Kennedy Amin. 19, 1959, I met A for the first and only t ime the man who was to he the major {reign- policy issue of the 191'xo Presidential campaign; who was destined to be a hero in the warped mind of Lee larvey Oswald, President Ken- nedy's assassin; and who in 104 is still a major campaign issue. The man, of course, was Fidel Castro. It is safe to say that no other individual in the world has created qach a conflict of opinion in the United States. Many foreign-policy experts strongly support Sen. J. Fulhright's view that Castro is merely "a nuisance but not a grave threat to the United States." The opposing view, which I share, is that Castro is a dangerous threat to our peace and security?and that we cannot tolerate the presence of his communist regime 91) miles from our shores. Tile primary evidence which caused me to reach this con- clusion was provided by Castro him- scli in the conversation I had with hIFYI more than five years ago. it WAS /I Sunday afternoon, and there was nothing I wanted less to do than to go down to my Capitol ,ifice for a meeting with the new Cohan dictator. But there were spe- cial circumstances which prompted e' ' /711(1 (1)/(1 mc to schedule the appointment. Castro had come to power in Cuba a little more than three months be- fore. I le was now in Washington at the invitation of the American So- ciety or Newspaper Editors. Because his visit was L1110InCial, and because he had been making violent anti- American statements, President FA- senhower had declined to see him. Since I had had considerable experience in dealing with Latin American problems and because they thought some special treatment might change Castro's unfriendly at- titude, our ambassador to Cuba, Philip Bonsai, itnd Secretary of State Christian I lerter urged me to meet with him. I agreed, on the condition that the two of LIS would talk alone, without members of his stall or mine present, and that there should be no photographs taken or other attempts made to exploit our conference or publicity pur- poses. It seemed to me that until he demonstrated some intention of modifying his anti-American stand Ile should not be accorded the same treatment I would give to other vis- iting fOreign officials. Apart Prom the beard and the bat- tle-fatigue unifOrm which are now his trademarks, Castro was one of the most striking foreign officials I met during my (.?- gilt years as Vice 283 44, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 284 CUBA, CASTRO President. As I told President 1..c howcr later, he seemed to haveNilet indefinable quality which, lor good or evil, makes a leader of men. I le had a compelling, intense voice, sparkling black eyes, and he radiated vitality. After,--;1/2 hours of discussion I summed up my impres- sions in this way?he looked like a revolutionary, talked like an-idealis- tic college professor and reacted likc a communist, lie was intelligent, shrewd, at times eloquent. lie gave an appearance of sincerity, but what he said followed a pattern all too familiar to mc. I had had conversa- tions with many communist leaders abroad and in the United States. The answers to questions came back almost parrotlike from them, as they now did from Castro. Q. Why don't you have free elec- tions? A. The people of Cuba don't want tree elections; they produce bad gov- ernment. Q. Why don't you give fair trials to those whom you charge oppose the revolution? A. The people of Cuba don't want them to have fair trials. They want them shot as quickly as possible. Q. Aren't you afraid the commu- nists in your government will even- tually take it over? A. I. am not afraid of the commu- nists; I can handle them. I made no headway in attempting to convince him 'that international communism is more than just an economic and political idea and that its agents arc dangerously effective AND JOHN B. KENNEDY in their ability to grasp power ad; to set up dictatorships. At the conclusion of our confer- ence I wrote a four-page secret memorandum, and sent copies to President Eisenhower, Secretary I leiter and Allen Dulles, head of the Central Intelligence Agency. MV C011CIUSinll was, "Castro is either in- credibly naive about communism or is under communist discipline." In the the weeks immediately Ater Castro left 'Washington, several spir- ited policy discussions on Cuba took place within the Eisenhower admin- istration. The majority view in the State Department was in sharp dis- agreement with my appraisal of Cas- tro. Most of the career foreign-policy experts argued vigorously that Cas- tro was "liberal" but that, despite some communist ;issociations, he definitely was not a communist. Their view prevailed over mine at the outset, and their recommenda- tions were followed. From that day to this, the lack of a firm and con- sistent policy toward Castro has caused the United States to accept a continuing series of defeats, per- mitting our avowed enemies to be- come entrenched in the Western 1 lemisphere. Castro presented a complex prob- lem from the very start. Ile had come to power with the tacit sup- port and encouragement of the ma- jority of the foreign-policy experts in the State Department, as well as with the enthusiastic approval (,f powerful elements cif the Anief,,, press. Cuba A that time, a (1,?!- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2913/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 286 CCB/I, C,1,87.R0 AND of Batista's misrule, was in need of a revolution. The tragedy was that Castro turned up as its leader. The mistake made by some of our gulli- ble State Department officials and by certain influential columnists and editorial writers was that they failed to recognize the real problem we laced. Our choice was not between Batista and somebody better, butj between Batista and somebody far worse. It was not long before President .1isenhower began to realize that the original appraisal of Castro was wrong. Within months, bloody purges, illegal confiscations of prop- erty and Moscow-line attacks on the United States completely unmasked Castro and exposed him for what he really is. By early f96o President Eisen- hower reached the conclusion that Castro was an agent of international communism and a menace to peace in this hemisphere. In a top-secret meeting in his office, it which I was preseffl, he authorized the CIA to organize and train Cuban exiles for the eventual purpose of freeing their homeland from Castro's communist rule, Six months later, on October at, 1 960, just lour years ago, it was the C,7777-- issue which forced me to make the most difficult and, as it turned out, the m()st costly decision of my political career. Castro in the 1960 Campaign 1 WAS in my suite in the Waldorf- Astoria in New 'i irk, preparing for JOHN F. KENNEDY the lburth and last of my television debaKs with john U. Kennedy. The subject was to be foreign policy, an area in which most observers con- sidered me to have the advantage because of my wider experience in that field. But the headlines in the afternoon papers forced mc to make a critical decision which put me at a serious disadvantage in discussing the m,ijor foreign_policy issue of thc 961) campaign. Ile issue was then, as 11 is in 1964, what should be American policy toward Castro's communist gov- ernment in Cuba. For several weeks Kennedy had been criticizing our administration's policy without making specific recommendations as to how it should be changed. A few days earlier, in a speech before the American Legion Convention in Miami Beach, I had gained the initiative on the issue by calling for a quarantine of the Castro regime and setting forth a specific program to accomplish that objective. And now, just before we were to debate this issue face-to-face on television before 70 million voters, Kennedy counter- attacked. Eight-column headlines in the afternoon papers read: KENNEDY ADVOCATES U.S. INTERVENTION IN CUBA; CALLS FOR All) '1'0 REBEL FORCES IN CUBA. In his statement he declared, "We must attempt to strengthen the non-Batista, democratic, anti-Castro forces iii exile and in Cuba itself who oiler eventual hope (if. over- throwing Castro. Thus far, these fighters or freedom have had vir- Don't. 11, hate\ yr ti trail r a a . Lict. fly 1,) whcre maw a mu Ira\ 01, ,?? ?,11.seasou Nrki, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 9-1-000?1,00ZOOn1179900-98dC11-V10 SZ/?0/? eseeiej .104 panaiddv Ado Paz!l!ueS u! PeWsseloaCI 0 288 THE READ tually no support from our govern- ment." As I finished reading the story, I realized the difficulty of the decision I had to make. For months I had : I known that we had been doing ex- actly what Kennedy seemed to be advocating?supporting and train- ing Cuban exiles so that they could free Cuba from communist control. But this was a top-secret CIA pro.- ect. I was one y iree 1TleM hers of the President's cabinet who had been briefed on it, and the irony was that I had been the strangest and most persistent advocate for set- and supporting such a pro- lung up gram. Now the question was, did John Kennedy know of the existence of the pro.eqjPresident Eisenhower instructed Allen Dulles, head of the CIA., to brief the Democratic candidate on all operations, includ- ing top-secret operations. I knew that. Kennedy had already received two briefings from Dulles. I imme- diately had a member of MN' staff call the White House on the secur- ity line to ask if these briefings cov- ered Cuba. A member of the White House stall indicated they had. (Sev- eral months after the election, Allen Dulles was to state that his briefing of Kennedy had included Cuba but not the training program for Cuban exiles.) At the time of the debate, however, and after checking with the \\lite House, I had to proceed on the assumption that Ken nedv had been briefed on the secret pro- gram. ER'S DIGEST 1\ 0 re 112 I was faced with a heads-he-wins. tails-I-lose proposition. If in the TV debate I were to reveal the existence of the training program and point out that I had been one of its strong. est advocates. I would pull the rug out from under Kennedy's positiun. But if I did so, the project would he doomed, and also the lives of brave men, both inside and outside of Cuba, who were receiving trainiii4 and assistance. Decisive Consideration: Security I HAD only one choice: to protect the security of the program, I had In oppose Kennedy on his position of advocating that the United States openly aid anti-Castro forces inside and outside Cuba. The decision was right from the standpoint of the country. It was wrong politically. When the tele- vision debate was concluded, Ken- nedy emerged as the man who seas advocating a "get-tough policy" toward Castro. I seas the man wilt, was "soft" on Castro?the exact op- posite of the truth. Any manlier of factors could have made the difference in what was to be the closest Presidential election in history, where a shift of less than one-halt* a vote a precinct would have changed the result. Most ob- servers agree that our positions on the Cuban issue could well have been the decisive factor. lint I have never had any regrets about this dc- cisimi, or any .doubt that it was the only one I could make under the cir- cumstances. 1964 CUB /I, CASTRO 5' AND JOHN F. KENNEDY I had known, of course, that invasion was in progress, but it n er crossed my mind that it would CU allowed to fail. On April 19, 1961, three months after President Kennedy's inaugu- ration, I flew to Washington from my home state of California, to which I had returned to practice law after 14 Years in government service. I Was scheduled to make a foreign- policy speech in Chicago the follow- ing week, and I had written Allen Dulles to ask that he brief me on some of the latest developments. President Kennedy readily gave his approval; I had tin appointment to meet with Dulles at six o'clock on the afternoon of the 19th. The appointment was to be in my Washington home. I arrived there from the airport shortly before six, to find a message from the CIA that Dulles would be delayed for at least an hour. It was after 7:30 before the doorbell rang, and I went to greet him. The Bay of Pigs I HAD known and worked with Allen Dulles since the sun-mier of 1947 when he was one Of the advisers to the Herter Committee, of which I was a member. The minute I saw him I realized that lie was under great ernotional stress. I asked him if he 'would like a drink. Completely out of character for the smooth, cool professional I had seen handle so many difficult situations through dae years, he answered, "I certainly would. I really need one. This is the worst day of my life!" I asked, "What's wrong P He replied, "Everything is lost. The Cuban invasion is a total failure." Dulles now filled me in on IN att details. After the election, belt 0- President Kennedy took office January, Dulles had brief -ed rlfo completely on the training prog The President-elect had indicat-0 that he felt the program should 1:33 forward, and said he would folk < through on it after his inauguratit But, as had happened in the Eis( hower administration, a sharp ference of opinion about Cast developed among President Kent (cf)) dy's advisers. One group of activi urged him to go forward with t (Dm invasion plan. I lis liberal advist 0 from the State Department and r.,) his personal staff took the line ti 0 if American support of the inyasi became known, world opini 01 would react unfavorabl v. This 0-ro 0 advised that the United Stat.= should either try to get along- is "Ir Castro or find some other metn,0 for dealing with him. -0 co President Kennedy finally ovqia ruled his soft-line advisers lind c0 cided to go forward with the pia 09 "It took great courage," DuE 4?2 told me, "for the President to ovt (72. rule some of his advisers and or(] 0 the invasion to proceed." But in 1 2 end the soft-liners won_ their poi 8 and, by last-minute compromistr,) doomed the operation to failui 0 More COnCernt'd with an adverse 18 action from "world opinion" th,', with the threat of communism cri Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25 CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 0 (D 2,0 the Western Hemisphere, they per- suaded the President to curtail the original concept of the operation. Two of the three Free Cuban air strikes designed to knock out Cas- tro's air force were canceled, depriv- ing the invasion of air support."' The result was a disaster both for the Cuban Freedom Fighters and for the United States. \Ve got the blame for intervening; we were denied the credit we would have received for winning; and Castro was more firm- ly entrenched than ever. President Kennedy's Reaction ii ut \-Ex-it DAY, April 20, when I returned to mv home after a visit to the Capitol. I found a note by the telephone, left hr my 15-year-old daughter, Patricia. It read: "Presi- dent Kennedy has tried to reach you several times in the last hour. Please call the White Nouse operator," I placed the call, and the operator put the President on immediately. lis voice was tense but friendly as he said, "Dick, could you drop by to see me? Any time will be all right. I have appointments with Dick Rus- sell and with members of the Cuban Revolutionary Council, but other- wise my calendar is free this after- noon.- I told him that I would be at Ins 011-1Ce at four o'clock and would be available to see him at any time his schedule permitted. I was escorted into the President's private oflice a few minutes after I THE READ! -I)cci,ion for Di,astcr: At 1?1,t Thc truth Thc R:acitr's I )i,2.-(:st. S no mix r ::R'S DIGEST No.f;en71,0. arrived at the White House. I hadn't been in that historic oval room since 1 had said good-by to President Ei- senhower there on January 19, three months before. The President was standing at his desk talking with Vice President Johnson. "Lyndon k going down to see if he can't get thc Mexicans to support us on this Cu- ban business. I have just told him to tell the Mexicans they owe LIS a vote. Don't you think we should be tough with them It" I replied, "Well, the Mexicans of'- ten take the soft line where the com- munists are concerned, because ol the Girdenas inducnce, but thcy need LIS as IMICh or more than we need them today, and this is one time when I think we should insist that they stand with us." Shortly there- after, Johnson left the room, and the President sat down in his famous rocking chair. He proceeded to give his reactions to the events of the past few clays. "I have just come from a meeting with the members of the Cu! nut Revolutionary Council," he said. "Several of those who were there had lost their sons, brothers or other close relatives or friends in this ac- tion. Talking to them and seeing the tragic expressions on their faces was the worst experience of my life. "Last night," he continued "they were really mad at us. But today they have calmed down a lot and, believe it or not, they are ready to go out and fight again, if we will give them the word and the sup- port." 1964 CURl, CAS -1W) A '11) Kennedy did not try to hide his frustration, disappointment and fury over the failure of the operation. Pacing around the room and using his down-to-earth Irish, rather than his Harvard vocabulary, he told me how disappointed he had been in the advice he had received. "I was assured by everyone I checked with?all the military ex- perts and the CIA ?that the plan would succeed.- Over and over again, he reiterated the fact that these assurances had been given to him. He did not mention the fatal advice?given him by some of his liberal State Department and White House advisers?to cancel the two air strikes?and, in effect, destroy the plan. Finallv he put the key question to me, bluntly and directly: "What would you do now in Cuba ?- "I would find a proper legal cover and I would go in,- I answered. I suggested three possible legal justi- fications for taking such action: i. A new definition of aggression, based on the premise that Soviet-bloc equipment was useci by the Castro forces, and that we had an obligation to see that the Freedom Forces were at least equally supplied. 2. Send American forces in under our treaty right because of the potential threat to Guantdnamo. 3. Send American forces in to protect the lives and rights of the several thousand Amer- ican citizens still living in Cuba. I emphasized that I felt we must do whatever was necessary to rid Cuba of Castro and communism. 1011.V F. li.L.V.VEDY 291 Kennedy heard me out without comment, and then replied, "Roth Walter Lippmann (who had recent- ly had an interview with K hat- slit:hey) and Chip Bohlen (who had been our ambassador to Moscow) have reported that Khrushchev is in a very cocky mood at this time. It (I) (D 0_ 0 -0 their appraisal is correct, he may be- r lieve this is the time to move against > us and he might seize upon any ac- tion on our part in Cuba as an eXCLISe for doing so. This means that there is a good chance that, if we move on Cuba. Khrushchev will move on Berlin. I just don't think we can take the risk, in the event their apprai3t,t1 is correct. - Our conversation then turned briefly to Laos, where American support of a neutralist regime seemed to be leading to an eventual comm umkt takeover. I told President Kennedy I thought that in both Laos and Cuba the important thing was to take some affirmative action, including, if necessary, at least a commitment of American air power. He said, "I just don't think we ought to get involved in Laos, par- ticularly where we might find our- selves fighting millions of Chinese troops in the jungles.- His next re- mark underlined how the failure to come to grips with communism in one part of the world has weakened our position in every other part of the world. -In any event," he said. "I don't see how we can make any move in Laos, which is 5000 tildes away, if we don't make a move in 192 (. LI 11 t, 4 S7' k /1,\I 1) 1011N F. KENNEDY FIRM Arit, Declassified in Part 7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25 : CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 side door to one of the White I louse cars which he had ordered to be sent for me, and which was waiting in the driveway on the South Lawn. As we walked to the car, he threw out another strangely prophetic remark: "I hope you take the time to write a book. It's really a good idea, even if it sells only a few copies. There's something about being ,fn author which really builds the reputation of a political figure. Look what The Col/science of a Conservative has done for harry Goldwater!" Wc shook hands, and he turned and walked back up the path to his office. As he walked away, his head bowed, Isis hands januncd character- istically into his pockets, he seemed literally to be carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders. As I watched his weary, stooped figure, usually so erect and buoyant, disap- pear into the terrible loneliness of the White I louse office, I had an overwhelming sense of how de- pressed and discouraged he must have felt. I realize that political fig- ures are not supposed to experience ordinary emotions?particularly where their political opponents are concerned. hut I can truthfully say that, in this darkest hour of his polit- ical career, my heart went out to my I riend, Jack Kennedy, the man who had come to Congress the same year I (lid, 14 years before. The Lesson of the Bay of Pigs THE.000ttE RoosEvELT's daughter, J\ lice .Longworth, once told me, I replied, "[Isis, of course, is a de- cision which only y,,u can make, in the light o: your inlormation as to what our strength is and your intelli- gence reports on enemy strength and intentions. I Waist to tell you that I will publicly support you to the hilt if you make such a decision in regard to either Laos or Cuba, and I will urge all other Republicans to do likewise. I. realize that some political observers say you might risk political defeat in 1961. if either the Cuban or Far East crises involves an American armed forces commit- ment. I want you to know that I am ()Ise who will 'sever m,tke that a po- litical issue if such action becomes necessary." I lis reply, hs the light of what happened three years later, was prophetic, although I do not think he intended it that way. "The way things are going and with ill the problems \se have, if I do the right kind of a job, I don't know whether I .ins going to be here four years Irons now." I was not sure at the time what he meant by this. I .issumed that Presi- dent Kennedy foresaw that he might now have to take risky military ac- tion. And with the hay of Pigs flail- ore fresh in his mind, he realized that another such defeat could be disastrous [Or him politically in io61. Nevertheless, he said firmly, "YoLl can be sure the political conse- yiences will have no effect (111 the (ICHS1011 I Mak(' 111 this crisis." By that time we had talked for .t1- Water dries you Ordinary bath 6 Not Helene Curt .as it bathes dry and dewy-fresh ; "moisturizing bath Helene Ci. the light moistu 0196411, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 -ith the family? 's the g there. h Co CUBA. C.1,,I.R0 -1?VD /MIN Kl':,\INEDY "Fat! never believed in the old sayni*Ononi cry over spii led milk.' Ile always said, `01 cot/it:4' you cry over spilled milk?you cry and you stamp up and down to make some YOU don't spill it again!'" Because Cuba is a classic example of how not to conduct_ foreign policy in dealing with the communists, it is essential that we see where we went wrong in the past in order to determine what policy we should adopt in the future. There are two major lessons to be learned from the Bay of Pigs: First, when a decision has been made to commit American prestige, we must be prepared to commit an adequate amount of American power. As former Secretary of State James Byrnes, whose 82nd birthday celebration 1 attended shortly after the Bay of Pigs crisis, said, "We Americans must not begin anything we aren't prepared to finish." Second, American foreign policy must alwa1-)e dictated b tfirt?s'e- rests 0 tie nited States, -ty some Vaalic Coneept of -wor c pu ) opinion." The United Slates should-always have a concern tor the o_pinions of our friends in uther nations. But, as the strong_est nation in the world, it is our res ion- -,iliilit inaommeglIMINIIM011111 with ili In the Kremlin, Khrushchev must Lye watched with interest Amer- inept and fainthearted efforts tree Cuba. Ile drew his own con- insions from the spectacle, and he 29 now had (t-oo," .tason to doubt our resolve to stakruitp Ibr our own in- terests. As he later said to Robert Frost, "The Americans are too lib- eral to fight." The Cuban Missile Crisis A row months afterward, on June 4, 1961, Khrusheliev had an oppor- tunity to size up the new President and his advisers, at Vienna. What- ever his impression may have been, it is clear from the entire chain of events that our lailure at the Bay of Pigs led directly to the Soviet decision to move into the Western Hemisphere in force, with both men and missiles. The history of this infitmous and secret action by Khrushchey has been recorded elsewhere,* but it is perhaps instructive to note that once again the powerfhl State Depart- ment clique and the "liberal" mem- bers of the White I louse staff chose to ignore warnings, chiefly by the CIA and by Sen. Kenneth Keating, who repeatedly stated that Soviet forces of men and missiles were be- ing landed ill Cuba. By October 16, 1962, there was no longer any doubt. The CIA laid on the President's desk photographs of Soviet missiles in place in Cuba. The photos had been taken by the de_fru-tia-4.1.L....CIA's U-2 planes, and the evidence could not be brushed aside. On October 22, 1962, President Kennedy made his dramatic an- nouncement that the Soviet Union *Sec "While America Slept,- The Reader's Digest, March '6.;. e- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in GA ,'?11:0 AND 101IN P. Ii7P;NIVIDY 297 Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 ballismissilcs and jet bombers the United States became committed into Cuba. I le ordered a f.lockade, and demanded the removal Of exist- ing missiles, with on-site inspection to make certain that the job was done. This was the finest hour of his Presidency. People, not only in this country but throughout the free world, ,Ipplauded this fOrcefid com- mitment of American strength to the defense fi-cedom the cause of peace. By finally calling K hru- shchcv's 1)1011, President Kennedy assured his own place in history as the man who made nuclear black- mail an obsolete form of diplomacy. But, again, the tragic history of American indecisiveness repeated it- self. The persistent clique of ad- visers \vho had stayed Kennedy's hand at the Bay of Pigs began at once to nibble away :it the new strong policy. They insisted that the whole dispute be turned over to the United Nations for negotiation and settlement. By convincing the Presi- dent that he should back away from the strong course of action he had initially outlined, they enabled the United States to pull defeat out of the jaws of victory. These were the results of following their incredibly had advice: ? There was no insistence on On- site inspection. "OfTensive" missiles were apparently removed, but "de- fensive" missiles were allowed to remain. ? Not only were the Cuban exiles prohibited from engaging in In rifer ig out of other catsup !re poured. ore for Heinz. to a no-invasion policy. ? This weak-kneed foreign policy encouraged the enemy to bolder and bolder action. Shiploads of Soviet arms have continued to pour into Cuba?until today, except for the United States and Canada, the is- land is the strongest military power in the Western 1 Iemisphere. ? Khrushchey's gamble in put- ting missiles into Cuba was merely another application of the time-test- ed communist doctrine?"Two steps forward, one step backward." The operation turned out to be a net gain for the Kremlin. ON NOVENniEli 20, 413, I flew to Dallas to mend a meeting with one of the clients of the New York law firm with which 1 am associated. At in informal news conference, which 1 held on November 21, the questions were concerned chiefly with the visit of President Kennedy, who was scheduled to arrive in Dal- las the following day. One of the questioners pointed out that consid- erahle opposition had developed to some of the President's programs and that there might be some dem- onstrations against him and Vice President Johnson, who would he in the party. I urged, in a staterncra to the press which I later repeated on television, that the President and Vice President he shown the respect to which their offices entitled them. I stated, "Disagreement with his views is no CXCUSC for discourtesy to Pt, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 298 THE READI the office of President of the United States." 'Castro and Lee Harvey Oswald Ti ft roLLowiNG morning, Novena- 22, I boarded a plane to New York. We arrived on schedule at 12:56 after an uneventful flight. I hailed a cab and asked the driver to take me to my office. We were waiting for a light to change when a man ran over from the street corner and called out, "Do you have a radio in your cab?' The cab driver answered, "No. Why"- The man replied, "The President has just been shot in Dallas." This is the way I learned the news of President Kennedy's assassina- tion. I asked the cab driver te take me to my apartment rather than to my office. And then, for the next hour, I sat back in the cab wonder- ing- what had happened. When we arrived at the apart- ment, the doorman told me that the news had just been flashed on tele- vision: the President had died. I called J. Edgar Hoover, in 'Wash- ington, and asked him what infor- mation he had. He told me that a Lee Harvey Oswald, known to the FBI as a member of the pro-Castro Fair Play for Cuba Committee, was the alleged assassin. Oswald, without question, was a demented character who, accord- ing to the reports, had also tried to kill Gcn. Edwin A. Walker and had threatened to make an attc rn pt on my life rs well. What brought him to this con- :RS DIGEST November dition is still unknown. But certain- ly one of the major factors which warped his mind and drove him to this terrible deed was his contact with communism generally, and with Castro's fanatical brand of communism in particular. Fidel Castro, therefore, proved to be the most momentous figure in John F. Kennedy's life. It was Castro who provided the major foreign- policy issue in Kennedy's camp:lig-1i for the Presidency; it seas Castro who brought him to the lirwest point of his career, at the Bay of Pigs; it was Castro who supplied the oppor- tunity for Kennedy's greatest act of leadership as President, during the blockade; and, finally, Castro was an indirect Cause of the tragic snuff- ing out of John Kennedy's life at a time when, be reason of experience, added to his keen intelligence, his great vision and vitality, he Was Coming into the most productive pe- riod of his leadership of the nation. Where Are We Now? Ti-ns twisted and tragic chain of events brings us to r964. Cuba, alon with Vietnam, is the major foreign policy issue of the 1964 Presidenth campaign, as it was in 1960. Why. Cuba such a key issue' Preci,isc because it symbolizes our entire', proach to the menace of con a? nism, our entire approach to for policy. The answer to the qUestir What We must do about Cuba c determined only after we have found an answer to the much o'aail- 1964 1964 CUBA, C ASTRO 457) inclusive question: How does the United States propose to deal with communist aggression throughout the world This is the actual for- eign-policy issue we face today. There is strong support in the State Department and in the admin- istration for Senator Fulbright's view that Castro is not a danger but just a nuisance, and that we should be more flexible and more concilia- tory in our policies toward the So- viet Union and other communist countries. 'Those who urge a more flexible response to communism point out that there are difficulties in the com- munist bloc. There is a split between Communist China and the Soviet Union. There is the trouble that the Soviet Union is having with its satellites in Eastern Europe, whose people are overwhelmingly against their communist government. And there is the fact that communism. .conomically, has not been working Soviet Europe or in C.'onim twist ?.hina or in Cuba or in the satellite cern tries. 'Putting these developments to- g ther, those who formulate our 'Fign policy say that the world - ration has changed in our favor. lug the test-ban treaty, the sale of ...hcat to the Soviet Union and a . elligerent attitude by Khru- s!..,--\ //they argue that the cold war wing and that a new period of niodation with the commu- nist in order. My own evaluation leads to a totally different conclusion. This is JOHN F. KENNEDY 299 rio ti rue to be complacent about our position in the world. The last four years have seen the greatest series of foreign-policy failures of 'any com- parable period in our history. In Eu- rope, the Grand Alliance is in a shambles, with several of our allies refusing to support the United States in our policy toward Latin America and Asia. In Germany, the Berlin Wall stands as a grim monu- ment to American weakness and indecision in the face of a flagrant communist challenge. In Asia, Viet- nam is only the most recent and most shocking of a series of foreign- policy disasters that has reduced American prestige to an all-time low in that part of the world. Laos is practically gone. Cambodia is going. Burma and Indonesia are on the brink. In countries scattered around the world, acts of mobs descending on American embassies, stoning our representatives and tearing down the flag have becorne commonplace. We have been humiliated, frus- trated, outguessed and outmaneu- vered at every turn. In the face of this record, how can anyone in a responsible policy-making position say that the cold war is thawing The cold war isn't thawing: it is burning with a deadly heat. Com- munism isn't changing; it isn't sleep- ing; it isn't relaxing; it is, as always. plotting, scheming, working, fight- ing. Soviet weapons arC available to any group anywhere that is seeking to blow up the social order and 5. -Di: cr) N CD 0 CD ah CD (T) (i) CD 0 0) cn 01 8 o n.) o.) ey, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 CUBA, CAS1'R.0 AJ!) IN.LV A 1EDY create the char 'n which commu- nism thrives. iijoittsands of young people from non-communist coun- tries are today being trained in the arts of subversion?from the staging of riots to guerrilla tactics. In the bloodletting in Southeast Asia, Cy- prus, the Congo, Yemen, British Guiana and in other areas, commu- nists are directly or indirectly in- volved. While the danger of destruction by total war has gone down, the dan- ger of defeat without total war has gone up. Those who urge that we seek an "accommodation" with the communists fail to realize that when the communist leaders talk softly they are increasing their subversive and revolutionary activities. This is the situation with which the United States is presently confronted. It is a situation which calls for realistic thinking about communist strategy and tactics, and for a new policy to meet the threat that faces us. We must understand that the com- munist threat is worldwide, and if communism takes over in one coun- try the tremors are felt clear around the world. We need, therefUre, a worldwide approach. I completely reject the idea that there are so-called peripheral areas, collateral areas ? like Cuba and Vietnam?that are not important. For world communist leaders the battle for Cuba is llot about Cuba. It is about Latin America. And the eventual target is the U ril States. Cuba, for example, is*fteitur very doorstep. All the world looks on and sees that we do nothing to help our neighbors who are enslaved by a communist dictator. Is it any won- der that they are doubtful that we mean to resist communism in other parts of the world ? At this critical period, we must make up our minds that there can- not be one further retreat any place in the free world. We must have the military strength, the economic pro- grams and the political-action pro- grams to resist any further retreat. Rather than a policy of flexibility, of softening, of conciliation, we must have a strong and determined pol- icy. We must let those in the target nations know that the non-commu- nist world has had enough of this continued encroachment, and that we arc now ()Join, to stand firm. As I reflect on all that has hap- pened in recent years, one thing stands out clearly : the troubles our nation has experienced have come when we have failed to stand firm against the communist dictators. We have too often backed down?and backed away. It is time for us to put an end to this disgraceful, self-defeat- ing behavior. It is time to stand firm ?and then move forward in Cuba, in Vietnam and in any other area where freedom is denied or threat- ened by the forces of world corn- rnunism. 0A-MX. Special Christma5 OneNe' Subscrii and you need PA after January 10,: "A truly wonderful 12.ifi! Digest for the first time you's than any Christm: To help you get star invite you to order on of only $2. If you have previous already recei? with a s: But if yo take advai air Wa. The announcement card telli to receive the Digest for anoth nlaced on our tree, among ents, as a reminder that mc, _N-it is on the way." it.oheria Houston, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 R Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 50X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/03/25: CIA-RDP85-00664R000200130001-5 (240 , ptrat, 44T,14 tz a, 1?6), e./oq? 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