Sunday, November 17, 2013

JFK: FACTS BURIED FOR YEARS REVEALED

THE ABSURD TIMES


    We were unable to get a response for requests to republish.  We are including all the links involved and still will remove this material if requested by the copyright owner, if there is one. 

    Meanwhile, it is material that has been obfuscated vigorously, mainly by those with an economic interest is so doing and who may have been involved.

The site is valuable in any case and we are glad to make it available.


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1963 Vietnam Withdrawal Plans


President Kennedy meeting with Secretary of Defense McNamara and General Taylor in October 1963 after their fact-finding mission to Vietnam.
Was there a Vietnam withdrawal plan in 1963? The answer is yes. What is at issue is not whether such plans had been created and initiated, but whether they were “serious,” i.e., whether the withdrawal would have continued in the face of a worsening situation in South Vietnam.
On October 11, 1963, Kennedy signed NSAM 263, initiating a withdrawal of 1,000 troops out of roughly 16,000 Americans stationed in Vietnam. Other documents, including planning documents from the spring of 1963, show that this was the first step in a planned complete withdrawal.
The controversy surrounds the fact that military reporting of the war effort in 1963 was decidedly rosy, and Kennedy made statements indicating that the positive outlook made withdrawal possible. Following the November deaths of South Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem and President Kennedy, reporting of the military situation in Vietnam took a turn for the worse. Does this then mean that Kennedy would have done as his successor LBJ did, and escalate the war in response?
John Newman’s landmark 1991 book JFK & Vietnam argues that Kennedy knew that the military reporting was skewed, and intended to withdraw anyway. Other analyses by Peter Dale Scott and James Galbraith (son of Kennedy advisor John Kenneth Galbraith), and recent books including one by no less than Robert McNamara himself, support this view. On the other side are many Vietnam historians and also social critic Noam Chomsky, whoseRethinking Camelot is largely a rebuttal of this view.

RESOURCES:

Essays

Exit Strategy, by James K. Galbraith.
On Vietnam, by Noam Chomsky, plus a response by James K. Galbraith.
'Fog of War' vs. 'Stop the Presses', by Errol Morris and Eric Alterman.
The War Room, by Fred Kaplan.

Walkthroughs
Walkthrough - Vietnam in Late 1963 - A walkthrough of relevant documents regarding Vietnam policy from the spring of 1963 through a few days after Kennedy's death.
Documents

JCS Official File: Record Eighth Secretary of Defense Conference, 6 May 1963. This document, declassified in 1997, contains spring 1963 planning documents for a phased withdrawal from Vietnam.

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