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Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.

Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (July 5, 1902 – February 27, 1985) was an American diplomat and politician who represented Massachusetts in the United States Senate and served as United States Ambassador to the United Nations in the administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. In 1960, he was the Republican nominee for Vice President on a ticket with Richard Nixon, who had served two terms as Eisenhower's vice president. The Republican ticket narrowly lost to Democrats John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson; Lodge later served as a diplomat in the administrations of Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, and Gerald Ford and was a presidential contender in 1964.

Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.
Official portrait, 1960
Personal Representative of the President to the Holy See
In office
June 5, 1970 – July 6, 1977
PresidentRichard Nixon
Gerald Ford
Jimmy Carter
Preceded byHarold H. Tittmann Jr. (acting)
Succeeded byDavid Walters
United States Ambassador to West Germany
In office
May 27, 1968 – January 14, 1969
PresidentLyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byGeorge C. McGhee
Succeeded byKenneth Rush
United States Ambassador to South Vietnam
In office
August 25, 1965 – April 25, 1967
PresidentLyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byMaxwell D. Taylor
Succeeded byEllsworth Bunker
In office
August 26, 1963 – June 28, 1964
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byFrederick Nolting
Succeeded byMaxwell D. Taylor
3rd United States Ambassador to the United Nations
In office
January 26, 1953 – September 3, 1960
PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower
Preceded byWarren Austin
Succeeded byJerry Wadsworth
United States Senator
from Massachusetts
In office
January 3, 1947 – January 3, 1953
Preceded byDavid I. Walsh
Succeeded byJohn F. Kennedy
In office
January 3, 1937 – February 3, 1944
Preceded byMarcus A. Coolidge
Succeeded bySinclair Weeks
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
from the 15th Essex district
In office
1932–1936
Preceded byHerbert Wilson Porter
Succeeded byRussell P. Brown
Personal details
Born(1902-07-05)July 5, 1902
Nahant, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedFebruary 27, 1985(1985-02-27) (aged 82)
Beverly, Massachusetts, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Emily Sears
(m. 1926)
Children2, including George
Parent(s)George Cabot Lodge
Mathilda Frelinghuysen Davis
RelativesLodge family
EducationHarvard University (BA)
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
RankLieutenant colonel
Battles/wars

Born in Nahant, Massachusetts, Lodge was the grandson of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and the great-grandson of Secretary of State Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen. After graduating from Harvard University, Lodge won election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives. He defeated Democratic governor James Michael Curley in 1936 to represent Massachusetts in the United States Senate. He resigned from the Senate in 1944 to serve in Italy and France during World War II. Lodge remained in the Army Reserve after the war and eventually rose to the rank of major general. In 1946, Lodge defeated incumbent Democratic Senator David I. Walsh to return to the Senate.

He led the Draft Eisenhower movement before the 1952 election and managed Eisenhower's successful campaign for the Republican presidential nomination at the 1952 Republican National Convention. Eisenhower defeated Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson II in the general election, but Lodge lost his own re-election campaign to then-Congressman Kennedy. Lodge was named as ambassador to the United Nations in 1953 and became a member of Eisenhower's Cabinet. Vice President Nixon chose Lodge as his running mate in the 1960 presidential election, but the Republican ticket lost the close election.

In 1963, the now-President Kennedy appointed Lodge to the position of Ambassador to South Vietnam, where Lodge supported the 1963 South Vietnamese coup. In 1964, Lodge won by a plurality a number of that year's party presidential primaries and caucuses on the strength of his name, reputation, and respect among many voters, though the nomination went to Barry Goldwater. This effort was encouraged and directed by low-budget but high-impact grassroots campaign by academic and political amateurs. He continued to represent the United States in various countries under Presidents Johnson, Nixon, and Ford. Lodge led the U.S. delegation that signed the Paris Peace Accords with North Vietnam, leading to the end of the Vietnam War. He died in Beverly, Massachusetts, in 1985.

Early life and education edit

Lodge was born in Nahant, Massachusetts. His father was George Cabot Lodge, a poet, through whom he was a grandson of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, great-great-grandson of Senator Elijah H. Mills, and great-great-great-grandson of Senator George Cabot. Through his mother, Mathilda Elizabeth Frelinghuysen (Davis), he was a great-grandson of Senator Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen,[1] and a great-great-grandson of Senator John Davis. He had two siblings: John Davis Lodge (1903–1985), also a politician, and Helena Lodge de Streel (1905-1998).[2][3]

Lodge attended St. Albans School and graduated from Middlesex School. In 1924, he graduated cum laude from Harvard College, where he was a member of the Hasty Pudding and the Fox Club.[4]

Lodge worked in the newspaper business from 1924 to 1931. He was elected in 1932, and served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1933 to 1936.[5]

U.S. senator (1937–1944, 1947–1953) and World War II service (1944–1945) edit

In November 1936, Lodge was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, defeating Democrat James Michael Curley. He served from January 1937 to February 1944.

World War II edit

Lodge served with distinction during the war, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel. During the war he saw two tours of duty. The first was in 1942 while he was also serving as a U.S. senator. The second was in 1944 and 1945 after he resigned from the Senate.[citation needed]

The first period was a continuation of Lodge's longtime service as an Army Reserve officer. Lodge was a major in the 1st Armored Division. That tour ended in July 1942, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered congressmen serving in the military to resign one of the two positions, and Lodge, who chose to remain in the Senate, was ordered by Secretary of War Henry Stimson to return to Washington. During this brief service, he led a squadron of American tankers at Gazala; they were the first Americans to engage German troops on land in the war.[6]

After returning to Washington and winning re-election in November 1942, Lodge went to observe allied troops serving in Egypt and Libya,[7] and in that position, he was on hand for the British retreat from Tobruk.[6]

Lodge served the first year of his new Senate term but then resigned his Senate seat on February 3, 1944, in order to return to active duty,[8] the first U.S. senator to do so since the Civil War.[9] He saw action in Italy and France.

In the fall of 1944, Lodge single-handedly captured a four-man German patrol.[10]

At the end of the war, in 1945, he used his knowledge of the French language and culture, gained from attending school in Paris, to aid Jacob L. Devers, the commander of the Sixth United States Army Group, to coordinate activities with the French First Army commander, Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, and then carry out surrender negotiations with German forces in western Austria.[citation needed]

Lodge was decorated with the French Legion of Honor and Croix de Guerre with palm.[11] His American decorations included the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star Medal.

After the war, Lodge returned to Massachusetts and resumed his political career. He continued his status as an Army Reserve officer and rose to the rank of major general.[12][13][14]

Return to Senate and the drafting of Eisenhower edit

In 1946 Lodge defeated Democratic Senator David I. Walsh and returned to the Senate. He soon emerged as a spokesman for the moderate, internationalist wing of the Republican Party. After World War II, which Lodge believed was in part caused by American isolationism, he came to advocate internationalism, saying: "The ideal of a provincial nation has given way to the realization that we have become the world's greatest power ... World War II first taught us the value of collective security."[15]

In March 1950, Lodge sat on a subcommittee of the Government Operations Committee, chaired by Democratic Senator Millard Tydings, which looked into Senator Joseph McCarthy's list of possibly communist State Department employees. Lodge argued in hearings that Tydings demonized McCarthy and whitewashed McCarthy's supposed discovery of security leaks at the State Department. Lodge told Tydings:

Mr. Chairman, this is the most unusual procedure I have seen in all the years I have been here. Why cannot the senator from Wisconsin get the normal treatment and be allowed to make his statement in his own way, ... and not be pulled to pieces before he has had a chance to offer one single consecutive sentence. ... I do not understand what kind of game is being played here.[16]

In July 1950, the record of the committee hearing was printed, and Lodge was outraged to find that 35 pages were not included.[17] Lodge noted that his objections to the conduct of the hearing and his misgivings about the inadequacy of vetting suspected traitors were missing,[18] and that the edited version read as if all committee members agreed that McCarthy was at fault and that there was no Communist infiltration of the State Department.[19] Lodge stated "I shall not attempt to characterize these methods of leaving out of the printed text parts of the testimony and proceedings ... because I think they speak for themselves." Lodge soon fell out with McCarthy and joined the effort to reduce McCarthy's influence.[20]

In late 1951, Lodge helped persuade General Dwight D. Eisenhower to run for the Republican presidential nomination. When Eisenhower finally consented, Lodge served as his campaign manager and played a key role in helping Eisenhower to win the nomination over Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, the candidate of the party's conservative faction.[21] Taft favored a quasi-isolationist foreign policy, being opposed to American membership in NATO and the United Nations, and Lodge wanted Eisenhower to run in order to pull the GOP away from Taft's ideology. Gossip talk of the day said that he reportedly declined an offer to be Ike's running mate.[citation needed]

1952 Senate campaign edit

In the fall of 1952, Lodge found himself fighting in a tight race for re-election with John F. Kennedy, then a U.S. Representative. His efforts in helping Eisenhower caused Lodge to neglect his own campaign. In addition, some of Taft's supporters in Massachusetts defected from Lodge to the Kennedy campaign out of anger over Lodge's support of Eisenhower.[22] In November 1952 Lodge was defeated by Kennedy; Lodge received 48.5% of the vote to Kennedy's 51.5%. This was the second of three Senate elections contested between a member of the Republican Lodge family and a member of the Democratic Fitzgerald-Kennedy clan, after the 1916 election between Lodge's and Kennedy's grandfathers and before the 1962 special election between Lodge's son and Kennedy's younger brother Ted.

Kennedy was congratulated for his victory by his dominating father, Joseph Kennedy Sr, saying at long last an Irish Catholic had humbled a scion of the WASP Boston Brahmin elite, saying that this was the most satisfying of all his son's electoral victories.[23] It was neither the first nor the last time a Lodge faced a Kennedy in a Massachusetts election.

Ambassador to the United Nations (1953–1960) edit

Lodge was named U.S. ambassador to the United Nations by President Eisenhower in February 1953, with his office elevated to Cabinet-level rank. In contrast to his grandfather (who had been a principal opponent of the UN's predecessor, the League of Nations), Lodge was supportive of the UN as an institution for promoting peace. As he famously said about it, "This organization is created to prevent you from going to hell. It isn't created to take you to heaven."[24] Since then, no one has even approached his record of seven and a half years as ambassador to the UN. During his time as UN Ambassador, Lodge supported the Cold War policies of the Eisenhower administration, and often engaged in debates with the UN representatives of the Soviet Union. Lodge often appeared on television "talking tough" to Soviet diplomats, and famously responded to the charge that the United States was responsible for aggression around the world by saying: "Membership in the United Nations gives every member the right to make a fool of himself, and that is the right of which the Soviet Union, in this case, has taken full advantage of."[25]

During the CIA-sponsored overthrowing of the legitimate Guatemalan government, when Britain and France became concerned about the US being involved in the aggression, Lodge (as US Ambassador to the United Nations) threatened to withdraw US support to Britain on Egypt and Cyprus, and to France on Tunisia and Morocco, unless they backed the US in their action.[26] When the government was overthrown, the United Fruit Company, of which Lodge was a significant stockholder,[27][28][29] re-established itself in Guatemala. The episodes tainted an otherwise distinguished career and painted Lodge as a face of US imperialism and exceptionalism.[30]

In 1959, he escorted Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev on a highly publicized tour of the United States.[23] In 1960 he embarked on a reciprocal tour of the Soviet Union, including stops at the Bibi-Khanym Mosque in Samarkand.[31]

1960 vice presidential campaign edit

 
President John F. Kennedy meets with Director General of the Atlantic Institute, Henry Cabot Lodge, in the Oval Office, White House, Washington, D.C., 1961.

Lodge left the UN ambassadorship, turning over his seat to Deputy Chief Jerry Wadsworth during the election of 1960 to run for Vice President on the Republican ticket headed by Richard Nixon, against Lodge's old foe, John F. Kennedy. Before choosing Lodge, Nixon had also considered U.S. Representative Gerald Ford of Michigan and U.S. Senator Thruston B. Morton of Kentucky. Nixon finally settled on Lodge in the mistaken hope that Lodge's presence on the ticket would force Kennedy to divert time and resources to securing his Massachusetts base, but Kennedy won his home state handily. Nixon also felt that the name Lodge had made for himself in the United Nations as a foreign policy expert would prove useful against the relatively inexperienced Kennedy. Nixon and Lodge lost the election in a razor-thin vote.

The choice of Lodge proved to be questionable. He did not carry his home state for Nixon. Also, some conservative Republicans charged that Lodge had cost the ticket votes, particularly in the South, by his pledge (made without Nixon's approval) that if elected, Nixon would name at least one African American to a Cabinet post.[32] He suggested appointing the diplomat Ralph Bunche as a "wonderful idea".[33] Nixon was furious at Lodge for his speech in New York promising to name an African American to the cabinet, and accused him of spending too much time campaigning with minority groups, instead of the white majority.[32] One Republican from West Virginia said of Lodge's speech: "Whoever recommended that Harlem speech should have been thrown out of an airplane at 25,000 feet".[32]

Between 1961 and 1962, Lodge was the first director-general of the Atlantic Institute.[34]

Ambassador to South Vietnam (1963–1964, 1965–1967) and presidential candidacy edit

Kennedy appointed Lodge to the position of Ambassador to South Vietnam, which he held from 1963 to 1964. After the Battle of Ap Bac on January 2, 1963, Kennedy's confidence in South Vietnam's President Ngô Đình Diệm was shaken.[35] On May 8, 1963, the Buddhist crisis began when the police in Hue fired into a peaceful crowd celebrating Vesak (the birthday of the Buddha) killing nine people, eight of whom were children.[36] The killings in Hue provoked widespread outrage by Buddhists, who had long felt discriminated against by the Catholic Diệm, leading to a series of huge nationwide protests organized by the Buddhist clergy.[37] Kennedy, alarmed by a situation that was swirling out of control, sent a message to Diệm, urging him to apologize for the Hue incident, only to receive the absurd reply that the Hue incident was the work of the Viet Cong.[38] On June 7, 1963, Madame Nhu, the wife of Diem's younger brother and right-hand man Ngô Đình Nhu, in a press conference accused the United States of being behind the Buddhist protests, a charge that deeply stung Kennedy.[38] As the current ambassador, Frederick Nolting, was a partisan of Diệm, Kennedy felt it was time for a new ambassador who would be tough on Diệm in a way that Nolting never could be. Furthermore, Nolting had considered it his duty to silence unfavourable press coverage of Diệm, causing him to become embroiled in a feud with reporters such as Neil Sheehan of the United Press, Malcolm Browne of the Associated Press, and David Halberstam of The New York Times, who all wrote that the Diem regime was corrupt and unpopular.[39] The heavy-handed efforts to silence the anti-Diem journalists reflected badly on the Kennedy administration, with the president complaining he was now being criticized for Nolting's actions. On June 27, 1963, Kennedy named Lodge as his ambassador to South Vietnam.[40] Lodge had visited Vietnam as a newsman in the 1930s, and though he spoke no Vietnamese, he was fluent in French, a language widely used by the South Vietnamese elite.[41] More importantly, Kennedy was haunted by the way that the "loss of China" had badly damaged the Truman administration, and feeling that South Vietnam might likewise now be lost, wanted a well-known Republican politician as his ambassador in South Vietnam to shield him from Republican attacks that he "lost" South Vietnam.[41]

Kennedy had chosen Lodge because he knew he would accept.[23] The Cabot-Lodges were one of the most distinguished Boston Brahmin families with a long history of public service, and that given his pride in his family's history, Lodge would never turn down an opportunity to serve the United States.[23] Lodge for his part was a man of dynamic energy and immense ambition who very much wanted to be president, and believed that if he was successful as an ambassador to an important American ally in the middle of a crisis, that would help his presidential ambitions.[42] After losing the 1960 election, Lodge had retired to private life, serving as the director-general of the Atlantic Institute in Paris that served to promote Atlanticism, a role that in political terms had side-lined him to the margins of American life.[23] When Kennedy asked Lodge if he was willing to serve as an ambassador, Lodge replied: "If you need me, of course, I want to do it".[23] But first, Lodge had to consult his wife and his friend, Eisenhower.[43] Emily Lodge was very supportive of her husband's decision while Eisenhower warned against it.[44] Eisenhower told Lodge that Kennedy offered Republicans like C. Douglas Dillon and Robert McNamara only the more difficult jobs that might damage their reputations, and was convinced that Kennedy had offered the ambassadorship as a way of ruining his reputation.[44] Despite Eisenhower's advice not to accept the ambassadorship, Lodge told him that he felt it was his patriotic duty to accept, saying that the Cabot Lodges had always served the United States regardless if the president was a Democrat or a Republican, and he was not going to break with his family's traditions.[44]

On August 22, 1963, Lodge landed in Saigon, a city that was in turmoil with much of the population marching in protests demanding Diem's resignation as the previous night, Nhu had ordered his Special Forces to raid and sack Buddhist temples all over South Vietnam.[45] In Saigon, the Xa Loi Temple, the largest Buddhist temple in Saigon, was stormed shortly after midnight by the Special Forces, who proceeded to smash up and loot the temple while arresting 400 monks and nuns.[46] The news that the all-Catholic Special Forces had desecrated Buddhist temples and assaulted and sometimes killed monks and nuns outraged the Buddhist majority and noticeably, many of the young people participating in the marches came from the middle and upper-class families that previously formed the bedrock of support for Diem.[46] Thrust into the crisis, Lodge received a cable from Kennedy demanding to know what was going on, and in his reply Lodge wrote that Nhu had ordered the raids "probably" with the "full support" of his older brother.[47] In his first press conference, Lodge gave a roistering talk about the freedom of the press, earning cheers from the reporters who resented Nolting's attempts to silence them.[48] Many of the journalists described the tall, handsome and urbane Lodge, speaking in an authoritative manner with an upper-class New England accent, as the perfect embodiment of what an American ambassador should be.[48] Knowing that Lodge had been sent to Saigon to be tough with Diem, some of the reporters taunted South Vietnamese officials present by saying: "Our new mandarin is going to lick your old mandarin".[48] One of Lodge's first acts as ambassador was to visit the Agency for International Development (AID) office in Saigon, where two Buddhist monks had taken refuge, and whom he agreed to grant asylum to.[49] When Lodge learned that the two monks were vegetarians, following the precepts of the Buddha who proclaimed all killing was immoral, the ambassador ordered the AID workers to bring them only vegetables and fruits.[49]

Ever since July 1963, a group of senior South Vietnamese generals had been in contact with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), asking for American support for a coup d'état. Lodge advised caution, saying a coup would be a "shot in the dark".[47] On August 26, Lodge arrived at the Gia Long Palace to present his credentials to President Diem.[50] As Lodge spoke no Vietnamese and Diem no English, they talked in French. Lodge, a patrician and wealthy scion of a distinguished Boston Brahmin family, had a very poor working relationship with Diem, an equally patrician and wealthy scion of a distinguished mandarin family as both men were too used to having others defer to them to accept an equal.[50] Lodge gave Diem a list of reforms to carry out such as his dismissing Nhu; silencing his abrasive and bombastic wife, Madame Nhu; bring to trial the officials responsible for the massacre in Hue on May 8; and provide for greater religious tolerance, all of which were anathema to him.[51] Lodge later told the journalist Stanley Karnow in an interview about his first meeting with Diem:

I could see a cloud pass across his face when I suggested that he get rid of Nhu and improve his government. He absolutely refused to discuss any of the topics that President Kennedy had instructed me to raise, and that frankly jolted me. He looked up at the ceiling and talked about irrelevant subjects. I thought it was deplorable.[52]

In an attempt to pressure Diem, Lodge had the Vietnamese channel of the Voice of America radio station run a program absolving the South Vietnamese Army of any responsibility for the raids on the Buddhist temples, stating the raids were the work only of the Special Forces, which were another branch of the armed forces.[50] Kennedy believed that the principal problem was not Diem, but Nhu, who had emerged as the leader of a hardline, ultra-Catholic faction that was spoiling for a fight with the Buddhists. At one point, to get Nhu out of South Vietnam, a plan emerged to offer Nhu (who fancied himself an intellectual, being very committed to a Catholic philosophy called Personalism) a professorship of philosophy at Harvard, which however was foiled when the Harvard professor of economics serving with the Kennedy administration, John Kenneth Galbraith, warned that Nhu's murky writings on his Personalist philosophy would not make the grade at Harvard.[53]

The new ambassador quickly determined that Ngo Dinh Diem, President of the Republic of Vietnam, was both inept and corrupt and that South Vietnam was headed for disaster unless Diem reformed his administration or was replaced.[54] Lodge supported an analysis by John Richardson, the CIA station chief in Saigon that the Diem regime had now "reached the point of no return".[55] When Lodge was asked by a reporter why he had not visited the Gia Long Palace for weeks, he replied: "They have not done anything I asked. They know I want. Why should I keep asking?"[56] However, General Paul D. Harkins of the Military Assistance Advisory Group-Vietnam, was a staunch admirer of Diem, and sent back reports to Washington over a "backchannel" that argued that Diem had the situation well under control and there was no need for a coup.[55] Faced with conflicting information, Kennedy vacillated and waffled, much to Lodge's frustration.[55] In an attempt to prod the president into making up his mind, on August 29 Lodge wrote in a cable: "We are launched on a course from where there is no respectable turning back: the overthrow of the Diem government. There is no turning back because U.S. prestige is already publicly committed to this end in large measure, and will become more so as the facts leak out. In a more fundamental sense, there is no turning back because there is no possibility, in my view, that the war can be won under a Diem administration".[55] In a dispatch to the Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, Lodge wrote: "I believe the government suspects us of trying to engineer a coup".[57] Nhu was the leader of a secret political party, the Can Lao, that had thoroughly infiltrated all of the organs of the South Vietnamese state, and furthermore, the Can Lao members kept surveillance on the Americans in South Vietnam.[57] From the intelligence provided by the Can Lao, Nhu had a general idea from late August 1963 on that there was a plot against his brother and that the Americans were in contact with the plotters.[58]

Lodge, noting that the South Vietnamese Army was completely reliant upon American military aid, demanded that Kennedy halt all such aid as long as Diem was president, and to make an "all-out effort" to have the mutinous generals "move promptly", as the outcome of the coup would depend "at least as much on us as them".[59] Lodge warned that to allow Diem to continue would lead to a popular revolt that would bring in a "pro-Communist or at best neutralist set of politicians ... Our help to the regime in past years inescapably gives us a responsibility that we cannot avoid".[60] At the same time, the French president, Charles de Gaulle, had launched a major diplomatic initiative to end the war in Vietnam that called for a federation of North and South Vietnam, and for both Vietnams to be neutral in the Cold War.[61] The French ambassador to South Vietnam, Roger Lalouette, worked closely with Ramchundur Goburdhun, the Indian chairman of the International Control Commission (ICC) and the Polish Commissioner of the ICC, Mieczysław Maneli, to advance this plan, which notably both Diem and Ho Chi Minh, accepted in principle.[61] The North Vietnamese stated that provided that the Americans pulled out of their forces out of South Vietnam and stopped supporting Diem, then they would accept de Gaulle's peace plan and stop trying to overthrow Diem.[61] Lodge for his part was opposed to the Franco-Polish-Indian peace plan, as he saw the proposed neutralization of South Vietnam as no different from Communist control of South Vietnam.[61]

Kennedy accepted Lodge's recommendations and gave him carte blanche to manage the affairs in Vietnam as he best saw fit, and gave him the power to cut off American aid if necessary.[60] Just why Kennedy delegated such to Lodge has remained a matter of debate. Kennedy's "court historian", Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. later wrote Lodge was "a strong man with the bit between his teeth" whom Kennedy could not manage.[60] By contrast, Karnow speculated that Kennedy having embraced and praised Diem preferred that the "messy job" of overthrowing him be contracted out to Lodge, all the more so as there was always the possibility that the coup might fail, in which case the president would blame a "rogue ambassador".[60] On September 2, Kennedy in a television interview with Walter Cronkite was for the first time publicly critical of Diem and even repeated some of Lodge's remarks from his dispatch of August 29, saying the Diem regime had "gotten out of touch with the people".[60]

Lodge, who was eager for the coup to start as soon as possible, found the rebel generals to be a dilatory lot, who preferred to party, drink and womanize rather than plan a coup.[60] Lodge wrote that getting the rebel generals to move was like "pushing a piece of spaghetti".[60] However, Lodge seemed not to be aware that the four leading plotters did not command any troops.[62] In Saigon, there were the Special Forces led by Colonel Le Quang Tung, a Catholic who was intensely loyal to the Ngo family and there was the regular Saigon garrison, commanded by General Ton That Dinh, a man of uncertain loyalties.[62] Dinh had to be persuaded to join the conspiracy for the coup to work, but Lodge, who kept pressing for action, bitterly wrote that the conspirators had "neither the will nor the organization ... to accomplish anything".[62] General Dinh, a bombastic man with a colossal ego had painted himself as a Diem loyalist, calling a press conference to boast that he had smashed a conspiracy of Communists, Buddhists and "foreign adventurers" (i.e. Americans) to overthrow President Diem.[63] Dinh told the press conference: "I have defeated Henry Cabot Lodge. He came here to stage a coup d'etat, but I, Ton That Dinh, have conquered him and saved the country".[63] To persuade Dinh to change loyalties, one of the leading conspirators, General Trần Văn Đôn, invited him to join him in "inspection tour" of the provincial towns of South Vietnam in September 1963.[63] The "inspection tour" was just merely an excuse to engage in drinking binges and to visit the best brothels in the provinces as drinking and having sex with prostitutes were two favourite forms of activity for South Vietnam's generals.[63] In course of this binge of drinking and sex, Đôn played on Dinh's ego, saying that a "national hero" like him should be in the cabinet, which showed Diem's rank ingratiate.[63] The trick worked, and Dinh then consulted his favourite fortune-teller to ask his future held; unaware that Đôn had bribed the fortune teller, he was told that he was destined for high office soon.[63]

Faced with a difficult situation with different advisers telling him to do different things, Kennedy procrastinated by sending out the McNamara Taylor mission consisting of General Maxwell Taylor and the Defense Secretary Robert McNamara to gather more facts to help him decide.[64] McNamara and Taylor painted a mostly favourable picture of Vietnam under Diem, saying that war would be over by 1965 if Diem continued with his current policies.[64] Taylor over a tennis match at the Cercle Sportif sports club with one of the conspirators, General Dương Văn Minh, asked him how the plot was going.[65] Knowing that Taylor was a Diem supporter, Minh answered that he knew nothing of any plans for a coup, which the former then repeated to Kennedy.[65] On the basis of this, Kennedy cabled Lodge on October 2 to say: "No initiative should now be taken to give any covert encouragement to a coup. There should, however, be an urgent effort ... to identify and build contacts with possible alternatives leadership as and when it appears".[65] On October 5, Lodge cabled back to Kennedy that he learned that the generals were finally ready to proceed, having won over Dinh.[65] The CIA officer, Lucien Conein met with General Minh who asked that the United States "not thwart" a coup and promise to continue to provide the aid worth about $500 million per year after Diem was overthrown.[65] Lodge seized upon Minh's remark to argue to Kennedy that the United States should promise that it "will not attempt to thwart" a coup, a formula that Kennedy embraced as it allowed to maintain to others and perhaps to his conscience as well that he had not promised to support a coup against Diem.[66] Lodge himself later used this line as a defence against criticism, saying he did not promise to support a coup, only "not thwart" it.[66]

At the same time, Lodge and General Harkins waged a struggle against one another with both men leaking unflattering information about the other to the press.[67] At a reception at the British Embassy on October 22, Harkins pulled aside one of the leading conspirators, General Đôn, to say he knew he was plotting a coup and that if he knew what was best for him to cancel it.[68] Đôn was so upset about this apparent betrayal by the United States that he cancelled the coup which was scheduled for October 26.[68] The conflict between Lodge and Harkins also extended to Kennedy as the latter continued to send messages to the president warning against the coup while the former continued to press for it.[68] Kennedy, who had grown increasingly nervous and hesitant, had his National Security Adviser, McGeorge Bundy, sent Lodge a cable on October 25 saying that the United States should abandon the coup if there were "poor prospects of success".[69] Lodge in reply maintained "it seems at least an even bet that the next government would not bungle and fumble as the present one has".[69] Lodge also argued to stop a coup would be to take on "an undue responsibility for keeping the incumbents in office", which was a "judgment over the affairs of Vietnam".[69] In the next sentence, he ignored his principle of noninterference in South Vietnamese internal affairs by suggesting that in a post-Diem cabinet should include Tran Quoc Buu, a trade union leader who had long been funded by the CIA, and the Buddhist leader Tri Quang, who had impressed Lodge with his anticommunism.[69] On October 28, Diem asked for the entire diplomatic corps to attend a press conference at the Saigon airport, where he talked about his plans to bring nuclear energy to South Vietnam.[69] During the conference, General Đôn was able to speak to Lodge privately and asked him bluntly who spoke for the United States: Harkins or Conein?[70] Lodge answered that it was the latter and to ignore Harkins.[71] The same day, Lodge sent a dispatch to Kennedy saying a coup was "imminent", and that he would have only four hours notice before the coup started, which "rules out my checking with you".[71]

On October 29, Kennedy called a meeting of the National Security Council (NSC) to discuss what to do.[71] Taylor read out several messages from Harkins who argued that Diem should be back as "we are gaining in the contest" against the Viet Cong.[71] Harkins also wrote: "There is a basic difference apparently between the ambassador's thinking and mine".[71] Attending the NSC meeting was Kennedy's younger brother, Attorney General and right-hand man, Robert Kennedy, who argued that backing a coup "risks so much" and stated that the most important thing was keeping the Communists out of power, which led him to back Diem.[72] As his younger brother was the president's most influential adviser, Kennedy changed his mind and decided against the coup.[72] Writing on behalf of Kennedy, Bundy sent a message to Lodge warning the possibility of a civil war between pro-Diem and anti-Diem forces "could be serious or even disastrous for U.S. interests".[72] Lodge was ordered to have Conein tell Đôn that "we do not find that the presently revealed plans give a clear prospect of quick results" and to put Harkins in charge of the embassy in Saigon when the ambassador was due to leave shortly for a meeting in Washington.[72]

Lodge ignored this order from Bundy, stating in his reply that to have Harkins in charge of the embassy during an event "so profoundly political as a change of government" would violate the principle that the serving officers of the U.S. armed forces must always be non-political.[72] He further argued that the only way of stopping the coup would be to inform Diem which officers had been plotting against him which would "make traitors out of us" and destroy the "civilian and military leadership needed to carry the war ... to its successful conclusion" as Diem would have the rebel officers all shot.[72] Lodge told Kennedy that when the coup started, he would grant asylum to Diem and the rest of the Ngo family should they ask for it, but felt that to stop the coup would be interference in South Vietnam's internal affairs.[72] Lodge also argued that the money should be "discreetly" provided to the plotters to "buy off potential opposition" and for the United States to immediately recognize a post-Diem government.[72] Finally, he argued that was needed for South Vietnam was "nation-building".[72] Lodge wrote: "My general view is that the United States is trying bring this medieval country into the twentieth century ... We have made considerable progress in military and economic ways, but to gain victory we must also bring them into the twentieth century politically, and that can only be done by either a thoroughgoing change in the behaviour of the present government or another government".[73] Faced with stark warnings from Lodge that the majority of the South Vietnamese people hated the Ngo family and there no possibility of a victory over the Viet Cong as long as Diem continued in power, Kennedy changed his mind yet again.[74] More importantly, Kennedy had learned that Nhu had opened negotiations with the Viet Cong for a ceasefire, apparently as a way of pressuring the Americans not to abandon the Diem regime, but which had the effect of persuading the president that the Ngo brothers were going soft on the Communists.[75] In his final message to Lodge, Kennedy wrote: "If you should conclude that there is not clearly a high prospect of success, you should communicate this doubt to the generals in a way calculated to persuade them to desist at least until chances are better ... But once a coup under responsible leadership has begun ... it is in the interest of the U.S. government that it should succeed".[74] Kennedy had essentially abdicated responsibility by leaving the final decision about whatever to back a coup to Lodge, who had no doubts in his mind that a coup was the best course of action.[74]

Unknown to Lodge, the Ngo brothers had learned of the conspiracy and Nhu had developed a complex plan to stage a pseudo-coup to find out just who were the plotters were.[76] Nhu's plan consisted of two stages. The first was Bravo I with Diem loyalists pretending to stage a coup, which would be joined by the rebel generals while at the same time the pseudo-coup makers would murder several American advisers and proclaim on the radio station that a "revolutionary government" had come to power, which would tar the real rebel generals with the charge of being pro-Communist.[76] Afterwards, Bravo II would begin with Colonel Tung's Special Forces marching into Saigon to restore Diem's authority and kill all enemies of the Ngo family.[76] Thinking that General Dinh was still loyal, Nhu informed him of his Bravo plans, which the former then revealed to the plotters.[77] Dinh agreed to take part in Nhu's Bravo plan, and told officers loyal to Diem that they would be pretended to be taking part in a coup.[78] On November 1, 1963, at about 10 am, Lodge visited the Gia Long Palace to meet Diem who gave him a two-hour-long lecture about American ingratitude towards his regime.[78] At about noon, Lodge returned to the embassy for lunch.[78] At about 1 pm, the coup began with many officers thinking that they were only taking part in the first plan.[79] However, at a meeting of senior officers, General Đôn announced that the coup was, in fact, real, and invited them to join it; with the exception of Colonel Tung, all stood up and applauded.[80] General Minh ordered his bodyguard, Captain Nguyen Van Nhung, to take Colonel Tung outside and have him shot.[80] Both the Ngo brothers spent the afternoon at the cellar of the Gia Long Palace, confident and relaxed, expecting their Bravo plan were working out perfectly and only at about 3:30 pm, did they first suspect that they had been betrayed.[80]

At about 4:30, Diem phoned Lodge to ask for his help.[81] The following transcript of their conversation in French reads:

Diem: Some units have made a rebellion and I want to know what is the attitude of the United States.

Lodge: I do not feel well enough informed to be able to tell you. I have heard the shooting, but [I] am not acquainted with all the facts. Also, it is four thirty A.M in Washington and the U.S. government cannot possibly have a view.
Diem: But you must have some general ideas. After all, I am a chief of state. I have tried to do my duty. I want to do now what duty and good sense require. I believe in duty above all.
Lodge: You have certainly done your duty. As I told you only this morning, I admire your courage and your great contribution to your country. No one can take from you the credit for all you have done. Now I am worried about your physical safety. I have a report that those in charge of the current activity offer you and your brother safe-conduct out of the country if you resign. Have you heard this?
Diem: No. [Long pause]. You have my telephone number.
Lodge: Yes. If I can do anything for your physical safety, please call me.

Diem: I am trying to re-establish order. [Hangs up][81]

Later that day, the Ngo brothers secretly fled the Gia Long Palace while the rebel generals, unaware of their flight, ordered an attack on the palace.[82] The Presidential Guard, who were equally unaware of the flight of the Ngo brothers, stood their ground and in the ensuring fighting over the next hours left hundreds dead.[83] The Ngo brothers fled into Cholon, the Chinese district of Saigon that formed a city within the city as Cholon was a vast, sprawling district of labyrinth streets where the majority of people spoke Cantonese or Mandarin.[82] Lodge attempted to get into touch with Diem with the aim of arranging for him to go into exile, but it was unclear just where he was, as Diem in his phone calls from Cholon kept making out that he was still at the Gia Long Palace. Finally, Diem revealed in a phone call to Đôn that he and his brother were at Saint Francis Xavier, a Catholic church in Cholon, and was willing to go into exile provided he, his brother and their families were promised safe conduct.[84] Despite the promise of safe conduct, the Ngo brothers were shot in the armored personnel carrier that was supposed to take them to the airport.[85] Lodge invited the generals to the embassy to congratulate them for what he saw as a job well done.[86] In a cable to Kennedy, he wrote: "The prospects now are for a shorter war".[86]

On November 24, 1963, two days after Kennedy's assassination, Lodge arrived in Washington to meet the new president, Lyndon Johnson.[87] Johnson told Lodge he would not "lose" Vietnam, saying "tell those generals in Saigon that Lyndon Johnson intends to stand by our word".[87] After Diem's assassination, Lodge seems to have lost interest in Vietnam as he became increasingly lethargic in performing his duties as ambassador.[88] After his high hopes that Diem's removal would spark improvements, he reported that the new leader, General Dương Văn Minh, was a "good, well intentioned man", but asked "Will he be strong enough to get on top of things?"[88] In December 1963, the Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, visited South Vietnam where he reported the American team in Saigon "lacks leadership, has been poorly informed and is not working to a common plan".[89] McNamara described a dysfunctional atmosphere at the embassy as Lodge was still feuding with Harkins and had blocked him from using the embassy's cable room to communicate with Washington.[89] Lodge distrusted the diplomats at the embassy, and was noted for his secretive ways.[90]

While Diem was eventually assassinated and his government toppled in a November 1963 coup d'état, the coup sparked a rapid succession of leaders in South Vietnam, each unable to rally and unify their people and in turn overthrown by someone new. These frequent changes in leadership caused political instability in the South, since no strong, centralized and permanent government was in place to govern the nation, while the Viet Minh stepped up their infiltration of the Southern populace and their pace of attacks in the South. Having supported the coup against President Diem, Lodge then realized it had caused the situation in the region to deteriorate, and he suggested to the State Department that South Vietnam should be made to relinquish its independence and become a protectorate of the United States (like the former status of the Philippines) so as to bring governmental stability. The alternatives, he warned, were either increased military involvement by the U.S. or total abandonment of South Vietnam by America.[91]

In June 1964, Lodge resigned as ambassador to run to seek the Republican nomination to be the presidential candidate for the election of that year.[92] Lodge had been unpopular with his embassy staff, and most were happy to see him go.[90]

"Walking for president" edit

 
Republican primaries results by state
Lodge won three primaries as a "write-in" candidate without making any public appearances.

Despite their defeat in 1960 neither Nixon's nor Lodge's national profiles were damaged with both being speculated candidates for the 1964 presidential election and Lodge's was greatly improved with him being mentioned on the "Most Admired Men" list in 1962 and received mentions to be included in Republican presidential polling and when included he came ahead of major candidates such as George Romney and Nelson Rockefeller.[93][94][95]

1964 presidential candidacy edit

In 1962 after helping campaign for his son George C. Lodge in the Senate race Paul Grindle, the nephew of Senator Leverett Saltonstall who had filled Lodge's seat after his resignation to join World War Two, along with Sally Saltonstall, Caroline Williams, and David Goldberg opened a Lodge for President office in Boston, but in 1964 was forced to shut down after failing to prove any affiliation with Lodge. However, Grindle relocated to Concord, New Hampshire. The organization acquired a mailing list of 96,000 Republican voters which successfully established a base for Lodge in New Hampshire. Footage of former President Eisenhower endorsing Lodge for vice president in 1960 was used in TV commercials and portrayed as Eisenhower endorsing Lodge for president. Three days before the March 10 New Hampshire primary Goldwater chose to stop campaigning in the state as he predicted a victory for himself with a substantial number of votes for Lodge.[96]

 
Lodge in 1964

In 1964, Lodge, while still Ambassador to South Vietnam, was the surprise write-in victor in the Republican New Hampshire primary, defeating declared presidential candidates Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller.[97] His entire campaign was organized by a small band of political amateurs working independently of the ambassador, who, believing they had little hope of winning him any delegates, did nothing to aid their efforts. However, when they scored the New Hampshire upset, Lodge, along with the press and Republican party leaders, suddenly began to seriously consider his candidacy. Many observers remarked on the situation's similarity to 1952, when Eisenhower had unexpectedly defeated Senator Robert A. Taft, then leader of the Republican Party's conservative faction. However, Lodge (who refused to become an open candidate) did not fare as well in later primaries, and Goldwater ultimately won the presidential nomination.[98] Like most liberal Republicans, Lodge opposed Goldwater, particularly his proposal to realign the Democratic and Republican parties into Liberal and Conservative parties, calling it "abhorrent", and felt that nobody should oppose the aid of the federal government in helping Americans. At one point during the convention, Lodge was confronted by a staunch Goldwater supporter who called him terrible for opposing Goldwater. In reply, Lodge said: "You're terrible, too."[99][100]

Later diplomatic career edit

He was re-appointed ambassador to South Vietnam by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965, and served thereafter as Ambassador-at-large (1967–1968) and Ambassador to West Germany (1968–1969). In 1969, when his former running mate Richard M. Nixon finally became president, Nixon having decided not to reselect him as his running mate, he was appointed by President Nixon to serve as head of the American delegation at the Paris peace negotiations, and he served occasionally as personal representative of the President to the Holy See from 1970 to 1977.[101]

Personal life edit

 
Henry Cabot Lodge and family

In 1926, Lodge married Emily Esther Sears. They had two children: George Cabot Lodge II (born 1927) and Henry Sears Lodge (1930–2017).[102] George worked in the federal civil service and is now professor emeritus at Harvard Business School.

Henry Sears married Elenita Ziegler of New York City and was a former sales executive.[103] Henry's son, Henry Sears Lodge Jr., MD, (1958-2017) was a physician at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and became well known as the author of the 'Younger Next Year' series of books.[104]

In 1966 he was elected an honorary member of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati.[105]

Lodge died in 1985 after a long illness and was interred in the Mount Auburn Cemetery in Watertown, Massachusetts.[106] Two years after Lodge's death, Sears married Forrester A. Clark. She died in 1992 of lung cancer and is interred near her first husband in the Cabot Lodge family columbarium.[107]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Jackson, Kenneth T.; Markoe, Karen; Markoe, Arnie (1998). The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives: 1981-1985. Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 9780684804927.
  2. ^ "LODGE, John Davis, (1903–1985)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved July 29, 2011.
  3. ^ . The Massachusetts Historical Society. MHS. Archived from the original on November 26, 2013. Retrieved December 24, 2011.
  4. ^ Gale, Mary Ellen (November 4, 1960). "Lodge at Harvard: Loyal Conservation 'Who Knew Just What He Wanted to Do'". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  5. ^ "LODGE, Henry Cabot, Jr.,(1902 - 1985)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
  6. ^ a b , Time, July 20, 1942.
  7. ^ , Time, 1942-07-42.
  8. ^ , Time, February 14, 1944.
  9. ^ "Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr. - Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
  10. ^ , Time, October 9, 1944.
  11. ^ , Time, March 19, 1945.
  12. ^ The United States and the United Nations: Hearings Before the Committee on Foreign Relations: Biography, Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. United States Senate. 1975. p. 6.
  13. ^ Army, Navy, Air Force Journal. Vol. 97. Washington, DC: Army and Navy Journal Incorporated. 1960. p. 785.
  14. ^ "Obituary: Henry Cabot Lodge". ARMY Magazine. Washington, DC: Association of the United States Army. 35: 15. 1985.
  15. ^ Richardson 1985, p. 151.
  16. ^ Tydings hearing p.11
  17. ^ Congressional Record, July 24, 1950, 10813-14
  18. ^ Congressional Record, July 24, 1950, pp 10815-19.
  19. ^ Tydings report, p. 167
  20. ^ Evans, M.Stanton (2007). Blacklisted by History. USA: Crown Forum. pp. 444. ISBN 978-1-4000-8105-9.
  21. ^ Richardson 1985, p. 149.
  22. ^ Whalen, Thomas J. (2000). Kennedy versus Lodge: The 1952 Massachusetts Senate Race. Boston, Mass.: Northeastern University Press. ISBN 978-1-55553-462-2.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Langguth 2000, p. 217.
  24. ^ . www.bartleby.com. Archived from the original on February 8, 2007.
  25. ^ Richardson 1985, p. 149-150.
  26. ^ Young, John W. (1986). "Great Britain's Latin American Dilemma: The Foreign Office and the Overthrow of 'Communist' Guatemala, June 1954". International History Review. 8 (4): 573–592 [p. 584]. doi:10.1080/07075332.1986.9640425.
  27. ^ Cohen, Rich (2012). The Fish that Ate the Whale. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. p. 186. ISBN 9780374299279.
  28. ^ Ayala, Cesar J (1999). American Sugar Kingdom. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807847886.
  29. ^ Keen, Benjamin; Haynes, Keith (2013). A History of Latin America (9th ed.). Boston: Wadsworth. p. 444.
  30. ^ Schlesinger, Stephen; Kinzer, Stephen (1983). Bitter Fruit: The Untold Story of the American Coup in Guatemala. Doubleday & Company, Inc. ISBN 0385183542.
  31. ^ "People". Time. Vol. LXXV, no. 8. February 22, 1960.
  32. ^ a b c White 2009, p. 297.
  33. ^ The New York Times, October 14, 1960
  34. ^ Melvin Small (June 1, 1998). "The Atlantic Council—The Early Years" (PDF). NATO.
  35. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 260–262.
  36. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 279.
  37. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 279–280.
  38. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 280.
  39. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 296.
  40. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 280–282.
  41. ^ a b Karnow 1983, pp. 281–282.
  42. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 281-282 & 345.
  43. ^ Langguth 2000, pp. 217–218.
  44. ^ a b c Langguth 2000, p. 218.
  45. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 285–286.
  46. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 285.
  47. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 286.
  48. ^ a b c Langguth 2000, p. 220.
  49. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 221.
  50. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 288.
  51. ^ Jacobs 2006, p. 157-158.
  52. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 288–289.
  53. ^ Young 1990, p. 99.
  54. ^ Lodge, Henry Cabot (1979). Interview with Henry Cabot Lodge (Video interview (part 1 of 5)). Open Vault, WGBH Media Library and Archives.
  55. ^ a b c d Karnow 1983, p. 289.
  56. ^ Jacobs 2006, p. 158.
  57. ^ a b Jacobs 2006, p. 157-164.
  58. ^ Jacobs 2006, p. 164.
  59. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 289–290.
  60. ^ a b c d e f g Karnow 1983, p. 290.
  61. ^ a b c d Jacobs 2006, p. 165.
  62. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 291.
  63. ^ a b c d e f Karnow 1983, p. 302.
  64. ^ a b Karnow 1983, pp. 293–294.
  65. ^ a b c d e Karnow 1983, p. 294.
  66. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 295.
  67. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 296–297.
  68. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 297.
  69. ^ a b c d e Karnow 1983, p. 298.
  70. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 298–299.
  71. ^ a b c d e Karnow 1983, p. 299.
  72. ^ a b c d e f g h i Karnow 1983, p. 300.
  73. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 300–301.
  74. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 301.
  75. ^ Young 1990, p. 101.
  76. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 303.
  77. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 303–304.
  78. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 304.
  79. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 305.
  80. ^ a b c Karnow 1983, p. 306.
  81. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 307.
  82. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 308.
  83. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 308–309.
  84. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 309.
  85. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 310.
  86. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 311.
  87. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 323.
  88. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 324.
  89. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 325.
  90. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 346.
  91. ^ Moyar (2006). Triumph Forsaken: The Vietnam War, 1954–1965. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 273. ISBN 0-521-86911-0.
  92. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 345.
  93. ^ "Poll Shows Kennedy Again Most Admired". The Boston Globe. January 1, 1963. p. 36. from the original on May 14, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  94. ^ "Rockefeller Leads GOP Voter Survey". The Tampa Tribune. January 13, 1963. p. 58. from the original on May 14, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  95. ^ "Curtis and Graham Lead GOP Poll For Governor's Seat". The North Adams Transcript. June 22, 1963. p. 3. from the original on May 14, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  96. ^ . Archived from the original on May 17, 2019.
  97. ^ . Archived from the original on August 2, 2007.
  98. ^ "Draft Lodge". Legacy Americana. Retrieved October 1, 2018.
  99. ^ "Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus", Rick Perlstein, 2009
  100. ^ "Lodge Denounces Party Realigning; 'Totally abhorrent', he says of Goldwater's proposal", The New York Times, November 16, 1964.
  101. ^ "Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (1902–1985)". Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  102. ^ "Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. Photographs II, ca. 1880-1979". www.masshist.org.
  103. ^ "Milestones, Aug. 8, 1960". Time. August 8, 1960.
  104. ^ Grimes, William (March 14, 2017). "Henry S. Lodge, Author of 'Younger Next Year' Books, Dies at 58". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  105. ^ Roster of the Society of the Cincinnati. 1974 edition. pg. 17.
  106. ^ "Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (1902-1985) | Mount Auburn Cemetery". mountauburn.org.
  107. ^ "Emily Lodge Clark, 86; Was Senator's Widow". The New York Times. June 10, 1992.

References edit

  • Jacobs, Seth (2006). Cold War Mandarin: Ngo Dinh Diem and the Origins of America's War in Vietnam, 1950–1963. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0742544482.
  • Karnow, Stanley (1983). Vietnam: A History. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-6707-4604-5.</ref>
  • Langguth, A. J. (2000). Our Vietnam: The War, 1954–1975. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-81202-9.
  • Nichter, Luke A. (2020). The Last Brahmin: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. and the Making of the Cold War. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-21780-3. online reviews
  • Richardson, Elliot (1985). "Henry Cabot Lodge". Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 97: 149–152.
  • White, Theodore H. (2009). The Making of the President, 1960. Pymble, NSW: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-061-98601-7.
  • Young, Marilyn (1990). The Vietnam Wars. New York: Harper.

External links edit

  • United States Congress. "Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (id: L000394)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  • The Papers of Henry Cabot Lodge, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library
  • The short film U.S. Warns Russia to Keep Hands off in Guatemala Crisis (1955) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
  • The short film STAFF FILM REPORT 66-27A (1966) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.
  • A film clip "Longines Chronoscope with Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (May 2, 1952)" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
Massachusetts House of Representatives
Preceded by
Herbert Wilson Porter
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
from the 15th Essex district

1932–1936
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts
(Class 2)

1936, 1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from Massachusetts
(Class 1)

1946, 1952
Succeeded by
Vincent J. Celeste
Preceded by Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States
1960
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by United States Senator (Class 2) from Massachusetts
1937–1944
Served alongside: David I. Walsh
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Senator (Class 1) from Massachusetts
1947–1953
Served alongside: Leverett Saltonstall
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Baby of the Senate
1942–1943
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to the United Nations
1953–1960
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to South Vietnam
1963–1964
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to South Vietnam
1965–1967
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Ambassador to West Germany
1968–1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by Personal Representative of the President to the Holy See
1970–1977
Succeeded by
David Walters
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Recipient of the Sylvanus Thayer Award
1960
Succeeded by

henry, cabot, lodge, july, 1902, february, 1985, american, diplomat, politician, represented, massachusetts, united, states, senate, served, united, states, ambassador, united, nations, administration, president, dwight, eisenhower, 1960, republican, nominee, . Henry Cabot Lodge Jr July 5 1902 February 27 1985 was an American diplomat and politician who represented Massachusetts in the United States Senate and served as United States Ambassador to the United Nations in the administration of President Dwight D Eisenhower In 1960 he was the Republican nominee for Vice President on a ticket with Richard Nixon who had served two terms as Eisenhower s vice president The Republican ticket narrowly lost to Democrats John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson Lodge later served as a diplomat in the administrations of Kennedy Johnson Nixon and Gerald Ford and was a presidential contender in 1964 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Official portrait 1960Personal Representative of the President to the Holy SeeIn office June 5 1970 July 6 1977PresidentRichard NixonGerald FordJimmy CarterPreceded byHarold H Tittmann Jr acting Succeeded byDavid WaltersUnited States Ambassador to West GermanyIn office May 27 1968 January 14 1969PresidentLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byGeorge C McGheeSucceeded byKenneth RushUnited States Ambassador to South VietnamIn office August 25 1965 April 25 1967PresidentLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byMaxwell D TaylorSucceeded byEllsworth BunkerIn office August 26 1963 June 28 1964PresidentJohn F KennedyLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byFrederick NoltingSucceeded byMaxwell D Taylor3rd United States Ambassador to the United NationsIn office January 26 1953 September 3 1960PresidentDwight D EisenhowerPreceded byWarren AustinSucceeded byJerry WadsworthUnited States Senatorfrom MassachusettsIn office January 3 1947 January 3 1953Preceded byDavid I WalshSucceeded byJohn F KennedyIn office January 3 1937 February 3 1944Preceded byMarcus A CoolidgeSucceeded bySinclair WeeksMember of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from the 15th Essex districtIn office 1932 1936Preceded byHerbert Wilson PorterSucceeded byRussell P BrownPersonal detailsBorn 1902 07 05 July 5 1902Nahant Massachusetts U S DiedFebruary 27 1985 1985 02 27 aged 82 Beverly Massachusetts U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseEmily Sears m 1926 wbr Children2 including GeorgeParent s George Cabot LodgeMathilda Frelinghuysen DavisRelativesLodge familyEducationHarvard University BA Military serviceBranch serviceUnited States ArmyRankLieutenant colonelBattles warsWorld War II Battle of GazalaBorn in Nahant Massachusetts Lodge was the grandson of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and the great grandson of Secretary of State Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen After graduating from Harvard University Lodge won election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives He defeated Democratic governor James Michael Curley in 1936 to represent Massachusetts in the United States Senate He resigned from the Senate in 1944 to serve in Italy and France during World War II Lodge remained in the Army Reserve after the war and eventually rose to the rank of major general In 1946 Lodge defeated incumbent Democratic Senator David I Walsh to return to the Senate He led the Draft Eisenhower movement before the 1952 election and managed Eisenhower s successful campaign for the Republican presidential nomination at the 1952 Republican National Convention Eisenhower defeated Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson II in the general election but Lodge lost his own re election campaign to then Congressman Kennedy Lodge was named as ambassador to the United Nations in 1953 and became a member of Eisenhower s Cabinet Vice President Nixon chose Lodge as his running mate in the 1960 presidential election but the Republican ticket lost the close election In 1963 the now President Kennedy appointed Lodge to the position of Ambassador to South Vietnam where Lodge supported the 1963 South Vietnamese coup In 1964 Lodge won by a plurality a number of that year s party presidential primaries and caucuses on the strength of his name reputation and respect among many voters though the nomination went to Barry Goldwater This effort was encouraged and directed by low budget but high impact grassroots campaign by academic and political amateurs He continued to represent the United States in various countries under Presidents Johnson Nixon and Ford Lodge led the U S delegation that signed the Paris Peace Accords with North Vietnam leading to the end of the Vietnam War He died in Beverly Massachusetts in 1985 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 U S senator 1937 1944 1947 1953 and World War II service 1944 1945 2 1 World War II 2 2 Return to Senate and the drafting of Eisenhower 2 3 1952 Senate campaign 3 Ambassador to the United Nations 1953 1960 3 1 1960 vice presidential campaign 4 Ambassador to South Vietnam 1963 1964 1965 1967 and presidential candidacy 4 1 Walking for president 4 2 1964 presidential candidacy 5 Later diplomatic career 6 Personal life 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editLodge was born in Nahant Massachusetts His father was George Cabot Lodge a poet through whom he was a grandson of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge great great grandson of Senator Elijah H Mills and great great great grandson of Senator George Cabot Through his mother Mathilda Elizabeth Frelinghuysen Davis he was a great grandson of Senator Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen 1 and a great great grandson of Senator John Davis He had two siblings John Davis Lodge 1903 1985 also a politician and Helena Lodge de Streel 1905 1998 2 3 Lodge attended St Albans School and graduated from Middlesex School In 1924 he graduated cum laude from Harvard College where he was a member of the Hasty Pudding and the Fox Club 4 Lodge worked in the newspaper business from 1924 to 1931 He was elected in 1932 and served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1933 to 1936 5 U S senator 1937 1944 1947 1953 and World War II service 1944 1945 editIn November 1936 Lodge was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican defeating Democrat James Michael Curley He served from January 1937 to February 1944 World War II edit Lodge served with distinction during the war rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel During the war he saw two tours of duty The first was in 1942 while he was also serving as a U S senator The second was in 1944 and 1945 after he resigned from the Senate citation needed The first period was a continuation of Lodge s longtime service as an Army Reserve officer Lodge was a major in the 1st Armored Division That tour ended in July 1942 when President Franklin D Roosevelt ordered congressmen serving in the military to resign one of the two positions and Lodge who chose to remain in the Senate was ordered by Secretary of War Henry Stimson to return to Washington During this brief service he led a squadron of American tankers at Gazala they were the first Americans to engage German troops on land in the war 6 After returning to Washington and winning re election in November 1942 Lodge went to observe allied troops serving in Egypt and Libya 7 and in that position he was on hand for the British retreat from Tobruk 6 Lodge served the first year of his new Senate term but then resigned his Senate seat on February 3 1944 in order to return to active duty 8 the first U S senator to do so since the Civil War 9 He saw action in Italy and France In the fall of 1944 Lodge single handedly captured a four man German patrol 10 At the end of the war in 1945 he used his knowledge of the French language and culture gained from attending school in Paris to aid Jacob L Devers the commander of the Sixth United States Army Group to coordinate activities with the French First Army commander Jean de Lattre de Tassigny and then carry out surrender negotiations with German forces in western Austria citation needed Lodge was decorated with the French Legion of Honor and Croix de Guerre with palm 11 His American decorations included the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star Medal After the war Lodge returned to Massachusetts and resumed his political career He continued his status as an Army Reserve officer and rose to the rank of major general 12 13 14 Return to Senate and the drafting of Eisenhower edit In 1946 Lodge defeated Democratic Senator David I Walsh and returned to the Senate He soon emerged as a spokesman for the moderate internationalist wing of the Republican Party After World War II which Lodge believed was in part caused by American isolationism he came to advocate internationalism saying The ideal of a provincial nation has given way to the realization that we have become the world s greatest power World War II first taught us the value of collective security 15 In March 1950 Lodge sat on a subcommittee of the Government Operations Committee chaired by Democratic Senator Millard Tydings which looked into Senator Joseph McCarthy s list of possibly communist State Department employees Lodge argued in hearings that Tydings demonized McCarthy and whitewashed McCarthy s supposed discovery of security leaks at the State Department Lodge told Tydings Mr Chairman this is the most unusual procedure I have seen in all the years I have been here Why cannot the senator from Wisconsin get the normal treatment and be allowed to make his statement in his own way and not be pulled to pieces before he has had a chance to offer one single consecutive sentence I do not understand what kind of game is being played here 16 In July 1950 the record of the committee hearing was printed and Lodge was outraged to find that 35 pages were not included 17 Lodge noted that his objections to the conduct of the hearing and his misgivings about the inadequacy of vetting suspected traitors were missing 18 and that the edited version read as if all committee members agreed that McCarthy was at fault and that there was no Communist infiltration of the State Department 19 Lodge stated I shall not attempt to characterize these methods of leaving out of the printed text parts of the testimony and proceedings because I think they speak for themselves Lodge soon fell out with McCarthy and joined the effort to reduce McCarthy s influence 20 In late 1951 Lodge helped persuade General Dwight D Eisenhower to run for the Republican presidential nomination When Eisenhower finally consented Lodge served as his campaign manager and played a key role in helping Eisenhower to win the nomination over Senator Robert A Taft of Ohio the candidate of the party s conservative faction 21 Taft favored a quasi isolationist foreign policy being opposed to American membership in NATO and the United Nations and Lodge wanted Eisenhower to run in order to pull the GOP away from Taft s ideology Gossip talk of the day said that he reportedly declined an offer to be Ike s running mate citation needed 1952 Senate campaign edit In the fall of 1952 Lodge found himself fighting in a tight race for re election with John F Kennedy then a U S Representative His efforts in helping Eisenhower caused Lodge to neglect his own campaign In addition some of Taft s supporters in Massachusetts defected from Lodge to the Kennedy campaign out of anger over Lodge s support of Eisenhower 22 In November 1952 Lodge was defeated by Kennedy Lodge received 48 5 of the vote to Kennedy s 51 5 This was the second of three Senate elections contested between a member of the Republican Lodge family and a member of the Democratic Fitzgerald Kennedy clan after the 1916 election between Lodge s and Kennedy s grandfathers and before the 1962 special election between Lodge s son and Kennedy s younger brother Ted Kennedy was congratulated for his victory by his dominating father Joseph Kennedy Sr saying at long last an Irish Catholic had humbled a scion of the WASP Boston Brahmin elite saying that this was the most satisfying of all his son s electoral victories 23 It was neither the first nor the last time a Lodge faced a Kennedy in a Massachusetts election Ambassador to the United Nations 1953 1960 editLodge was named U S ambassador to the United Nations by President Eisenhower in February 1953 with his office elevated to Cabinet level rank In contrast to his grandfather who had been a principal opponent of the UN s predecessor the League of Nations Lodge was supportive of the UN as an institution for promoting peace As he famously said about it This organization is created to prevent you from going to hell It isn t created to take you to heaven 24 Since then no one has even approached his record of seven and a half years as ambassador to the UN During his time as UN Ambassador Lodge supported the Cold War policies of the Eisenhower administration and often engaged in debates with the UN representatives of the Soviet Union Lodge often appeared on television talking tough to Soviet diplomats and famously responded to the charge that the United States was responsible for aggression around the world by saying Membership in the United Nations gives every member the right to make a fool of himself and that is the right of which the Soviet Union in this case has taken full advantage of 25 During the CIA sponsored overthrowing of the legitimate Guatemalan government when Britain and France became concerned about the US being involved in the aggression Lodge as US Ambassador to the United Nations threatened to withdraw US support to Britain on Egypt and Cyprus and to France on Tunisia and Morocco unless they backed the US in their action 26 When the government was overthrown the United Fruit Company of which Lodge was a significant stockholder 27 28 29 re established itself in Guatemala The episodes tainted an otherwise distinguished career and painted Lodge as a face of US imperialism and exceptionalism 30 In 1959 he escorted Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev on a highly publicized tour of the United States 23 In 1960 he embarked on a reciprocal tour of the Soviet Union including stops at the Bibi Khanym Mosque in Samarkand 31 1960 vice presidential campaign edit nbsp President John F Kennedy meets with Director General of the Atlantic Institute Henry Cabot Lodge in the Oval Office White House Washington D C 1961 Lodge left the UN ambassadorship turning over his seat to Deputy Chief Jerry Wadsworth during the election of 1960 to run for Vice President on the Republican ticket headed by Richard Nixon against Lodge s old foe John F Kennedy Before choosing Lodge Nixon had also considered U S Representative Gerald Ford of Michigan and U S Senator Thruston B Morton of Kentucky Nixon finally settled on Lodge in the mistaken hope that Lodge s presence on the ticket would force Kennedy to divert time and resources to securing his Massachusetts base but Kennedy won his home state handily Nixon also felt that the name Lodge had made for himself in the United Nations as a foreign policy expert would prove useful against the relatively inexperienced Kennedy Nixon and Lodge lost the election in a razor thin vote The choice of Lodge proved to be questionable He did not carry his home state for Nixon Also some conservative Republicans charged that Lodge had cost the ticket votes particularly in the South by his pledge made without Nixon s approval that if elected Nixon would name at least one African American to a Cabinet post 32 He suggested appointing the diplomat Ralph Bunche as a wonderful idea 33 Nixon was furious at Lodge for his speech in New York promising to name an African American to the cabinet and accused him of spending too much time campaigning with minority groups instead of the white majority 32 One Republican from West Virginia said of Lodge s speech Whoever recommended that Harlem speech should have been thrown out of an airplane at 25 000 feet 32 Between 1961 and 1962 Lodge was the first director general of the Atlantic Institute 34 Ambassador to South Vietnam 1963 1964 1965 1967 and presidential candidacy editThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Henry Cabot Lodge Jr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 See also Xa Loi Pagoda raids Cable 243 Krulak Mendenhall mission McNamara Taylor mission and Arrest and assassination of Ngo Dinh Diem Kennedy appointed Lodge to the position of Ambassador to South Vietnam which he held from 1963 to 1964 After the Battle of Ap Bac on January 2 1963 Kennedy s confidence in South Vietnam s President Ngo Đinh Diệm was shaken 35 On May 8 1963 the Buddhist crisis began when the police in Hue fired into a peaceful crowd celebrating Vesak the birthday of the Buddha killing nine people eight of whom were children 36 The killings in Hue provoked widespread outrage by Buddhists who had long felt discriminated against by the Catholic Diệm leading to a series of huge nationwide protests organized by the Buddhist clergy 37 Kennedy alarmed by a situation that was swirling out of control sent a message to Diệm urging him to apologize for the Hue incident only to receive the absurd reply that the Hue incident was the work of the Viet Cong 38 On June 7 1963 Madame Nhu the wife of Diem s younger brother and right hand man Ngo Đinh Nhu in a press conference accused the United States of being behind the Buddhist protests a charge that deeply stung Kennedy 38 As the current ambassador Frederick Nolting was a partisan of Diệm Kennedy felt it was time for a new ambassador who would be tough on Diệm in a way that Nolting never could be Furthermore Nolting had considered it his duty to silence unfavourable press coverage of Diệm causing him to become embroiled in a feud with reporters such as Neil Sheehan of the United Press Malcolm Browne of the Associated Press and David Halberstam of The New York Times who all wrote that the Diem regime was corrupt and unpopular 39 The heavy handed efforts to silence the anti Diem journalists reflected badly on the Kennedy administration with the president complaining he was now being criticized for Nolting s actions On June 27 1963 Kennedy named Lodge as his ambassador to South Vietnam 40 Lodge had visited Vietnam as a newsman in the 1930s and though he spoke no Vietnamese he was fluent in French a language widely used by the South Vietnamese elite 41 More importantly Kennedy was haunted by the way that the loss of China had badly damaged the Truman administration and feeling that South Vietnam might likewise now be lost wanted a well known Republican politician as his ambassador in South Vietnam to shield him from Republican attacks that he lost South Vietnam 41 Kennedy had chosen Lodge because he knew he would accept 23 The Cabot Lodges were one of the most distinguished Boston Brahmin families with a long history of public service and that given his pride in his family s history Lodge would never turn down an opportunity to serve the United States 23 Lodge for his part was a man of dynamic energy and immense ambition who very much wanted to be president and believed that if he was successful as an ambassador to an important American ally in the middle of a crisis that would help his presidential ambitions 42 After losing the 1960 election Lodge had retired to private life serving as the director general of the Atlantic Institute in Paris that served to promote Atlanticism a role that in political terms had side lined him to the margins of American life 23 When Kennedy asked Lodge if he was willing to serve as an ambassador Lodge replied If you need me of course I want to do it 23 But first Lodge had to consult his wife and his friend Eisenhower 43 Emily Lodge was very supportive of her husband s decision while Eisenhower warned against it 44 Eisenhower told Lodge that Kennedy offered Republicans like C Douglas Dillon and Robert McNamara only the more difficult jobs that might damage their reputations and was convinced that Kennedy had offered the ambassadorship as a way of ruining his reputation 44 Despite Eisenhower s advice not to accept the ambassadorship Lodge told him that he felt it was his patriotic duty to accept saying that the Cabot Lodges had always served the United States regardless if the president was a Democrat or a Republican and he was not going to break with his family s traditions 44 On August 22 1963 Lodge landed in Saigon a city that was in turmoil with much of the population marching in protests demanding Diem s resignation as the previous night Nhu had ordered his Special Forces to raid and sack Buddhist temples all over South Vietnam 45 In Saigon the Xa Loi Temple the largest Buddhist temple in Saigon was stormed shortly after midnight by the Special Forces who proceeded to smash up and loot the temple while arresting 400 monks and nuns 46 The news that the all Catholic Special Forces had desecrated Buddhist temples and assaulted and sometimes killed monks and nuns outraged the Buddhist majority and noticeably many of the young people participating in the marches came from the middle and upper class families that previously formed the bedrock of support for Diem 46 Thrust into the crisis Lodge received a cable from Kennedy demanding to know what was going on and in his reply Lodge wrote that Nhu had ordered the raids probably with the full support of his older brother 47 In his first press conference Lodge gave a roistering talk about the freedom of the press earning cheers from the reporters who resented Nolting s attempts to silence them 48 Many of the journalists described the tall handsome and urbane Lodge speaking in an authoritative manner with an upper class New England accent as the perfect embodiment of what an American ambassador should be 48 Knowing that Lodge had been sent to Saigon to be tough with Diem some of the reporters taunted South Vietnamese officials present by saying Our new mandarin is going to lick your old mandarin 48 One of Lodge s first acts as ambassador was to visit the Agency for International Development AID office in Saigon where two Buddhist monks had taken refuge and whom he agreed to grant asylum to 49 When Lodge learned that the two monks were vegetarians following the precepts of the Buddha who proclaimed all killing was immoral the ambassador ordered the AID workers to bring them only vegetables and fruits 49 Ever since July 1963 a group of senior South Vietnamese generals had been in contact with the Central Intelligence Agency CIA asking for American support for a coup d etat Lodge advised caution saying a coup would be a shot in the dark 47 On August 26 Lodge arrived at the Gia Long Palace to present his credentials to President Diem 50 As Lodge spoke no Vietnamese and Diem no English they talked in French Lodge a patrician and wealthy scion of a distinguished Boston Brahmin family had a very poor working relationship with Diem an equally patrician and wealthy scion of a distinguished mandarin family as both men were too used to having others defer to them to accept an equal 50 Lodge gave Diem a list of reforms to carry out such as his dismissing Nhu silencing his abrasive and bombastic wife Madame Nhu bring to trial the officials responsible for the massacre in Hue on May 8 and provide for greater religious tolerance all of which were anathema to him 51 Lodge later told the journalist Stanley Karnow in an interview about his first meeting with Diem I could see a cloud pass across his face when I suggested that he get rid of Nhu and improve his government He absolutely refused to discuss any of the topics that President Kennedy had instructed me to raise and that frankly jolted me He looked up at the ceiling and talked about irrelevant subjects I thought it was deplorable 52 In an attempt to pressure Diem Lodge had the Vietnamese channel of the Voice of America radio station run a program absolving the South Vietnamese Army of any responsibility for the raids on the Buddhist temples stating the raids were the work only of the Special Forces which were another branch of the armed forces 50 Kennedy believed that the principal problem was not Diem but Nhu who had emerged as the leader of a hardline ultra Catholic faction that was spoiling for a fight with the Buddhists At one point to get Nhu out of South Vietnam a plan emerged to offer Nhu who fancied himself an intellectual being very committed to a Catholic philosophy called Personalism a professorship of philosophy at Harvard which however was foiled when the Harvard professor of economics serving with the Kennedy administration John Kenneth Galbraith warned that Nhu s murky writings on his Personalist philosophy would not make the grade at Harvard 53 The new ambassador quickly determined that Ngo Dinh Diem President of the Republic of Vietnam was both inept and corrupt and that South Vietnam was headed for disaster unless Diem reformed his administration or was replaced 54 Lodge supported an analysis by John Richardson the CIA station chief in Saigon that the Diem regime had now reached the point of no return 55 When Lodge was asked by a reporter why he had not visited the Gia Long Palace for weeks he replied They have not done anything I asked They know I want Why should I keep asking 56 However General Paul D Harkins of the Military Assistance Advisory Group Vietnam was a staunch admirer of Diem and sent back reports to Washington over a backchannel that argued that Diem had the situation well under control and there was no need for a coup 55 Faced with conflicting information Kennedy vacillated and waffled much to Lodge s frustration 55 In an attempt to prod the president into making up his mind on August 29 Lodge wrote in a cable We are launched on a course from where there is no respectable turning back the overthrow of the Diem government There is no turning back because U S prestige is already publicly committed to this end in large measure and will become more so as the facts leak out In a more fundamental sense there is no turning back because there is no possibility in my view that the war can be won under a Diem administration 55 In a dispatch to the Secretary of State Dean Rusk Lodge wrote I believe the government suspects us of trying to engineer a coup 57 Nhu was the leader of a secret political party the Can Lao that had thoroughly infiltrated all of the organs of the South Vietnamese state and furthermore the Can Lao members kept surveillance on the Americans in South Vietnam 57 From the intelligence provided by the Can Lao Nhu had a general idea from late August 1963 on that there was a plot against his brother and that the Americans were in contact with the plotters 58 Lodge noting that the South Vietnamese Army was completely reliant upon American military aid demanded that Kennedy halt all such aid as long as Diem was president and to make an all out effort to have the mutinous generals move promptly as the outcome of the coup would depend at least as much on us as them 59 Lodge warned that to allow Diem to continue would lead to a popular revolt that would bring in a pro Communist or at best neutralist set of politicians Our help to the regime in past years inescapably gives us a responsibility that we cannot avoid 60 At the same time the French president Charles de Gaulle had launched a major diplomatic initiative to end the war in Vietnam that called for a federation of North and South Vietnam and for both Vietnams to be neutral in the Cold War 61 The French ambassador to South Vietnam Roger Lalouette worked closely with Ramchundur Goburdhun the Indian chairman of the International Control Commission ICC and the Polish Commissioner of the ICC Mieczyslaw Maneli to advance this plan which notably both Diem and Ho Chi Minh accepted in principle 61 The North Vietnamese stated that provided that the Americans pulled out of their forces out of South Vietnam and stopped supporting Diem then they would accept de Gaulle s peace plan and stop trying to overthrow Diem 61 Lodge for his part was opposed to the Franco Polish Indian peace plan as he saw the proposed neutralization of South Vietnam as no different from Communist control of South Vietnam 61 Kennedy accepted Lodge s recommendations and gave him carte blanche to manage the affairs in Vietnam as he best saw fit and gave him the power to cut off American aid if necessary 60 Just why Kennedy delegated such to Lodge has remained a matter of debate Kennedy s court historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr later wrote Lodge was a strong man with the bit between his teeth whom Kennedy could not manage 60 By contrast Karnow speculated that Kennedy having embraced and praised Diem preferred that the messy job of overthrowing him be contracted out to Lodge all the more so as there was always the possibility that the coup might fail in which case the president would blame a rogue ambassador 60 On September 2 Kennedy in a television interview with Walter Cronkite was for the first time publicly critical of Diem and even repeated some of Lodge s remarks from his dispatch of August 29 saying the Diem regime had gotten out of touch with the people 60 Lodge who was eager for the coup to start as soon as possible found the rebel generals to be a dilatory lot who preferred to party drink and womanize rather than plan a coup 60 Lodge wrote that getting the rebel generals to move was like pushing a piece of spaghetti 60 However Lodge seemed not to be aware that the four leading plotters did not command any troops 62 In Saigon there were the Special Forces led by Colonel Le Quang Tung a Catholic who was intensely loyal to the Ngo family and there was the regular Saigon garrison commanded by General Ton That Dinh a man of uncertain loyalties 62 Dinh had to be persuaded to join the conspiracy for the coup to work but Lodge who kept pressing for action bitterly wrote that the conspirators had neither the will nor the organization to accomplish anything 62 General Dinh a bombastic man with a colossal ego had painted himself as a Diem loyalist calling a press conference to boast that he had smashed a conspiracy of Communists Buddhists and foreign adventurers i e Americans to overthrow President Diem 63 Dinh told the press conference I have defeated Henry Cabot Lodge He came here to stage a coup d etat but I Ton That Dinh have conquered him and saved the country 63 To persuade Dinh to change loyalties one of the leading conspirators General Trần Văn Đon invited him to join him in inspection tour of the provincial towns of South Vietnam in September 1963 63 The inspection tour was just merely an excuse to engage in drinking binges and to visit the best brothels in the provinces as drinking and having sex with prostitutes were two favourite forms of activity for South Vietnam s generals 63 In course of this binge of drinking and sex Đon played on Dinh s ego saying that a national hero like him should be in the cabinet which showed Diem s rank ingratiate 63 The trick worked and Dinh then consulted his favourite fortune teller to ask his future held unaware that Đon had bribed the fortune teller he was told that he was destined for high office soon 63 Faced with a difficult situation with different advisers telling him to do different things Kennedy procrastinated by sending out the McNamara Taylor mission consisting of General Maxwell Taylor and the Defense Secretary Robert McNamara to gather more facts to help him decide 64 McNamara and Taylor painted a mostly favourable picture of Vietnam under Diem saying that war would be over by 1965 if Diem continued with his current policies 64 Taylor over a tennis match at the Cercle Sportif sports club with one of the conspirators General Dương Văn Minh asked him how the plot was going 65 Knowing that Taylor was a Diem supporter Minh answered that he knew nothing of any plans for a coup which the former then repeated to Kennedy 65 On the basis of this Kennedy cabled Lodge on October 2 to say No initiative should now be taken to give any covert encouragement to a coup There should however be an urgent effort to identify and build contacts with possible alternatives leadership as and when it appears 65 On October 5 Lodge cabled back to Kennedy that he learned that the generals were finally ready to proceed having won over Dinh 65 The CIA officer Lucien Conein met with General Minh who asked that the United States not thwart a coup and promise to continue to provide the aid worth about 500 million per year after Diem was overthrown 65 Lodge seized upon Minh s remark to argue to Kennedy that the United States should promise that it will not attempt to thwart a coup a formula that Kennedy embraced as it allowed to maintain to others and perhaps to his conscience as well that he had not promised to support a coup against Diem 66 Lodge himself later used this line as a defence against criticism saying he did not promise to support a coup only not thwart it 66 At the same time Lodge and General Harkins waged a struggle against one another with both men leaking unflattering information about the other to the press 67 At a reception at the British Embassy on October 22 Harkins pulled aside one of the leading conspirators General Đon to say he knew he was plotting a coup and that if he knew what was best for him to cancel it 68 Đon was so upset about this apparent betrayal by the United States that he cancelled the coup which was scheduled for October 26 68 The conflict between Lodge and Harkins also extended to Kennedy as the latter continued to send messages to the president warning against the coup while the former continued to press for it 68 Kennedy who had grown increasingly nervous and hesitant had his National Security Adviser McGeorge Bundy sent Lodge a cable on October 25 saying that the United States should abandon the coup if there were poor prospects of success 69 Lodge in reply maintained it seems at least an even bet that the next government would not bungle and fumble as the present one has 69 Lodge also argued to stop a coup would be to take on an undue responsibility for keeping the incumbents in office which was a judgment over the affairs of Vietnam 69 In the next sentence he ignored his principle of noninterference in South Vietnamese internal affairs by suggesting that in a post Diem cabinet should include Tran Quoc Buu a trade union leader who had long been funded by the CIA and the Buddhist leader Tri Quang who had impressed Lodge with his anticommunism 69 On October 28 Diem asked for the entire diplomatic corps to attend a press conference at the Saigon airport where he talked about his plans to bring nuclear energy to South Vietnam 69 During the conference General Đon was able to speak to Lodge privately and asked him bluntly who spoke for the United States Harkins or Conein 70 Lodge answered that it was the latter and to ignore Harkins 71 The same day Lodge sent a dispatch to Kennedy saying a coup was imminent and that he would have only four hours notice before the coup started which rules out my checking with you 71 On October 29 Kennedy called a meeting of the National Security Council NSC to discuss what to do 71 Taylor read out several messages from Harkins who argued that Diem should be back as we are gaining in the contest against the Viet Cong 71 Harkins also wrote There is a basic difference apparently between the ambassador s thinking and mine 71 Attending the NSC meeting was Kennedy s younger brother Attorney General and right hand man Robert Kennedy who argued that backing a coup risks so much and stated that the most important thing was keeping the Communists out of power which led him to back Diem 72 As his younger brother was the president s most influential adviser Kennedy changed his mind and decided against the coup 72 Writing on behalf of Kennedy Bundy sent a message to Lodge warning the possibility of a civil war between pro Diem and anti Diem forces could be serious or even disastrous for U S interests 72 Lodge was ordered to have Conein tell Đon that we do not find that the presently revealed plans give a clear prospect of quick results and to put Harkins in charge of the embassy in Saigon when the ambassador was due to leave shortly for a meeting in Washington 72 Lodge ignored this order from Bundy stating in his reply that to have Harkins in charge of the embassy during an event so profoundly political as a change of government would violate the principle that the serving officers of the U S armed forces must always be non political 72 He further argued that the only way of stopping the coup would be to inform Diem which officers had been plotting against him which would make traitors out of us and destroy the civilian and military leadership needed to carry the war to its successful conclusion as Diem would have the rebel officers all shot 72 Lodge told Kennedy that when the coup started he would grant asylum to Diem and the rest of the Ngo family should they ask for it but felt that to stop the coup would be interference in South Vietnam s internal affairs 72 Lodge also argued that the money should be discreetly provided to the plotters to buy off potential opposition and for the United States to immediately recognize a post Diem government 72 Finally he argued that was needed for South Vietnam was nation building 72 Lodge wrote My general view is that the United States is trying bring this medieval country into the twentieth century We have made considerable progress in military and economic ways but to gain victory we must also bring them into the twentieth century politically and that can only be done by either a thoroughgoing change in the behaviour of the present government or another government 73 Faced with stark warnings from Lodge that the majority of the South Vietnamese people hated the Ngo family and there no possibility of a victory over the Viet Cong as long as Diem continued in power Kennedy changed his mind yet again 74 More importantly Kennedy had learned that Nhu had opened negotiations with the Viet Cong for a ceasefire apparently as a way of pressuring the Americans not to abandon the Diem regime but which had the effect of persuading the president that the Ngo brothers were going soft on the Communists 75 In his final message to Lodge Kennedy wrote If you should conclude that there is not clearly a high prospect of success you should communicate this doubt to the generals in a way calculated to persuade them to desist at least until chances are better But once a coup under responsible leadership has begun it is in the interest of the U S government that it should succeed 74 Kennedy had essentially abdicated responsibility by leaving the final decision about whatever to back a coup to Lodge who had no doubts in his mind that a coup was the best course of action 74 Unknown to Lodge the Ngo brothers had learned of the conspiracy and Nhu had developed a complex plan to stage a pseudo coup to find out just who were the plotters were 76 Nhu s plan consisted of two stages The first was Bravo I with Diem loyalists pretending to stage a coup which would be joined by the rebel generals while at the same time the pseudo coup makers would murder several American advisers and proclaim on the radio station that a revolutionary government had come to power which would tar the real rebel generals with the charge of being pro Communist 76 Afterwards Bravo II would begin with Colonel Tung s Special Forces marching into Saigon to restore Diem s authority and kill all enemies of the Ngo family 76 Thinking that General Dinh was still loyal Nhu informed him of his Bravo plans which the former then revealed to the plotters 77 Dinh agreed to take part in Nhu s Bravo plan and told officers loyal to Diem that they would be pretended to be taking part in a coup 78 On November 1 1963 at about 10 am Lodge visited the Gia Long Palace to meet Diem who gave him a two hour long lecture about American ingratitude towards his regime 78 At about noon Lodge returned to the embassy for lunch 78 At about 1 pm the coup began with many officers thinking that they were only taking part in the first plan 79 However at a meeting of senior officers General Đon announced that the coup was in fact real and invited them to join it with the exception of Colonel Tung all stood up and applauded 80 General Minh ordered his bodyguard Captain Nguyen Van Nhung to take Colonel Tung outside and have him shot 80 Both the Ngo brothers spent the afternoon at the cellar of the Gia Long Palace confident and relaxed expecting their Bravo plan were working out perfectly and only at about 3 30 pm did they first suspect that they had been betrayed 80 At about 4 30 Diem phoned Lodge to ask for his help 81 The following transcript of their conversation in French reads Diem Some units have made a rebellion and I want to know what is the attitude of the United States Lodge I do not feel well enough informed to be able to tell you I have heard the shooting but I am not acquainted with all the facts Also it is four thirty A M in Washington and the U S government cannot possibly have a view Diem But you must have some general ideas After all I am a chief of state I have tried to do my duty I want to do now what duty and good sense require I believe in duty above all Lodge You have certainly done your duty As I told you only this morning I admire your courage and your great contribution to your country No one can take from you the credit for all you have done Now I am worried about your physical safety I have a report that those in charge of the current activity offer you and your brother safe conduct out of the country if you resign Have you heard this Diem No Long pause You have my telephone number Lodge Yes If I can do anything for your physical safety please call me Diem I am trying to re establish order Hangs up 81 Later that day the Ngo brothers secretly fled the Gia Long Palace while the rebel generals unaware of their flight ordered an attack on the palace 82 The Presidential Guard who were equally unaware of the flight of the Ngo brothers stood their ground and in the ensuring fighting over the next hours left hundreds dead 83 The Ngo brothers fled into Cholon the Chinese district of Saigon that formed a city within the city as Cholon was a vast sprawling district of labyrinth streets where the majority of people spoke Cantonese or Mandarin 82 Lodge attempted to get into touch with Diem with the aim of arranging for him to go into exile but it was unclear just where he was as Diem in his phone calls from Cholon kept making out that he was still at the Gia Long Palace Finally Diem revealed in a phone call to Đon that he and his brother were at Saint Francis Xavier a Catholic church in Cholon and was willing to go into exile provided he his brother and their families were promised safe conduct 84 Despite the promise of safe conduct the Ngo brothers were shot in the armored personnel carrier that was supposed to take them to the airport 85 Lodge invited the generals to the embassy to congratulate them for what he saw as a job well done 86 In a cable to Kennedy he wrote The prospects now are for a shorter war 86 On November 24 1963 two days after Kennedy s assassination Lodge arrived in Washington to meet the new president Lyndon Johnson 87 Johnson told Lodge he would not lose Vietnam saying tell those generals in Saigon that Lyndon Johnson intends to stand by our word 87 After Diem s assassination Lodge seems to have lost interest in Vietnam as he became increasingly lethargic in performing his duties as ambassador 88 After his high hopes that Diem s removal would spark improvements he reported that the new leader General Dương Văn Minh was a good well intentioned man but asked Will he be strong enough to get on top of things 88 In December 1963 the Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara visited South Vietnam where he reported the American team in Saigon lacks leadership has been poorly informed and is not working to a common plan 89 McNamara described a dysfunctional atmosphere at the embassy as Lodge was still feuding with Harkins and had blocked him from using the embassy s cable room to communicate with Washington 89 Lodge distrusted the diplomats at the embassy and was noted for his secretive ways 90 While Diem was eventually assassinated and his government toppled in a November 1963 coup d etat the coup sparked a rapid succession of leaders in South Vietnam each unable to rally and unify their people and in turn overthrown by someone new These frequent changes in leadership caused political instability in the South since no strong centralized and permanent government was in place to govern the nation while the Viet Minh stepped up their infiltration of the Southern populace and their pace of attacks in the South Having supported the coup against President Diem Lodge then realized it had caused the situation in the region to deteriorate and he suggested to the State Department that South Vietnam should be made to relinquish its independence and become a protectorate of the United States like the former status of the Philippines so as to bring governmental stability The alternatives he warned were either increased military involvement by the U S or total abandonment of South Vietnam by America 91 In June 1964 Lodge resigned as ambassador to run to seek the Republican nomination to be the presidential candidate for the election of that year 92 Lodge had been unpopular with his embassy staff and most were happy to see him go 90 Walking for president edit nbsp Republican primaries results by state No primary held John W Byrnes Barry Goldwater Henry Cabot Lodge Jr James A Rhodes Nelson Rockefeller William W Scranton Lodge won three primaries as a write in candidate without making any public appearances Despite their defeat in 1960 neither Nixon s nor Lodge s national profiles were damaged with both being speculated candidates for the 1964 presidential election and Lodge s was greatly improved with him being mentioned on the Most Admired Men list in 1962 and received mentions to be included in Republican presidential polling and when included he came ahead of major candidates such as George Romney and Nelson Rockefeller 93 94 95 1964 presidential candidacy edit In 1962 after helping campaign for his son George C Lodge in the Senate race Paul Grindle the nephew of Senator Leverett Saltonstall who had filled Lodge s seat after his resignation to join World War Two along with Sally Saltonstall Caroline Williams and David Goldberg opened a Lodge for President office in Boston but in 1964 was forced to shut down after failing to prove any affiliation with Lodge However Grindle relocated to Concord New Hampshire The organization acquired a mailing list of 96 000 Republican voters which successfully established a base for Lodge in New Hampshire Footage of former President Eisenhower endorsing Lodge for vice president in 1960 was used in TV commercials and portrayed as Eisenhower endorsing Lodge for president Three days before the March 10 New Hampshire primary Goldwater chose to stop campaigning in the state as he predicted a victory for himself with a substantial number of votes for Lodge 96 nbsp Lodge in 1964In 1964 Lodge while still Ambassador to South Vietnam was the surprise write in victor in the Republican New Hampshire primary defeating declared presidential candidates Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller 97 His entire campaign was organized by a small band of political amateurs working independently of the ambassador who believing they had little hope of winning him any delegates did nothing to aid their efforts However when they scored the New Hampshire upset Lodge along with the press and Republican party leaders suddenly began to seriously consider his candidacy Many observers remarked on the situation s similarity to 1952 when Eisenhower had unexpectedly defeated Senator Robert A Taft then leader of the Republican Party s conservative faction However Lodge who refused to become an open candidate did not fare as well in later primaries and Goldwater ultimately won the presidential nomination 98 Like most liberal Republicans Lodge opposed Goldwater particularly his proposal to realign the Democratic and Republican parties into Liberal and Conservative parties calling it abhorrent and felt that nobody should oppose the aid of the federal government in helping Americans At one point during the convention Lodge was confronted by a staunch Goldwater supporter who called him terrible for opposing Goldwater In reply Lodge said You re terrible too 99 100 Later diplomatic career editHe was re appointed ambassador to South Vietnam by President Lyndon B Johnson in 1965 and served thereafter as Ambassador at large 1967 1968 and Ambassador to West Germany 1968 1969 In 1969 when his former running mate Richard M Nixon finally became president Nixon having decided not to reselect him as his running mate he was appointed by President Nixon to serve as head of the American delegation at the Paris peace negotiations and he served occasionally as personal representative of the President to the Holy See from 1970 to 1977 101 Personal life edit nbsp Henry Cabot Lodge and familyIn 1926 Lodge married Emily Esther Sears They had two children George Cabot Lodge II born 1927 and Henry Sears Lodge 1930 2017 102 George worked in the federal civil service and is now professor emeritus at Harvard Business School Henry Sears married Elenita Ziegler of New York City and was a former sales executive 103 Henry s son Henry Sears Lodge Jr MD 1958 2017 was a physician at NewYork Presbyterian Hospital and became well known as the author of the Younger Next Year series of books 104 In 1966 he was elected an honorary member of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati 105 Lodge died in 1985 after a long illness and was interred in the Mount Auburn Cemetery in Watertown Massachusetts 106 Two years after Lodge s death Sears married Forrester A Clark She died in 1992 of lung cancer and is interred near her first husband in the Cabot Lodge family columbarium 107 See also edit nbsp World War II portal nbsp Politics portalList of United States political appointments that crossed party linesFootnotes edit Jackson Kenneth T Markoe Karen Markoe Arnie 1998 The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives 1981 1985 Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 9780684804927 LODGE John Davis 1903 1985 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved July 29 2011 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Photographs II The Massachusetts Historical Society MHS Archived from the original on November 26 2013 Retrieved December 24 2011 Gale Mary Ellen November 4 1960 Lodge at Harvard Loyal Conservation Who Knew Just What He Wanted to Do The Harvard Crimson Retrieved February 14 2022 LODGE Henry Cabot Jr 1902 1985 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved January 15 2016 a b For Services Rendered Time July 20 1942 Into the Funnel Time 1942 07 42 Lodge in the Field Time February 14 1944 Lodge Henry Cabot Jr Biographical Information bioguide congress gov Retrieved June 7 2018 People Time October 9 1944 Reservations Time March 19 1945 The United States and the United Nations Hearings Before the Committee on Foreign Relations Biography Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Washington DC U S Government Printing Office United States Senate 1975 p 6 Army Navy Air Force Journal Vol 97 Washington DC Army and Navy Journal Incorporated 1960 p 785 Obituary Henry Cabot Lodge ARMY Magazine Washington DC Association of the United States Army 35 15 1985 Richardson 1985 p 151 Tydings hearing p 11 Congressional Record July 24 1950 10813 14 Congressional Record July 24 1950 pp 10815 19 Tydings report p 167 Evans M Stanton 2007 Blacklisted by History USA Crown Forum pp 444 ISBN 978 1 4000 8105 9 Richardson 1985 p 149 Whalen Thomas J 2000 Kennedy versus Lodge The 1952 Massachusetts Senate Race Boston Mass Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 462 2 a b c d e f Langguth 2000 p 217 Homework Help and Textbook Solutions bartleby www bartleby com Archived from the original on February 8 2007 Richardson 1985 p 149 150 Young John W 1986 Great Britain s Latin American Dilemma The Foreign Office and the Overthrow of Communist Guatemala June 1954 International History Review 8 4 573 592 p 584 doi 10 1080 07075332 1986 9640425 Cohen Rich 2012 The Fish that Ate the Whale New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux p 186 ISBN 9780374299279 Ayala Cesar J 1999 American Sugar Kingdom Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807847886 Keen Benjamin Haynes Keith 2013 A History of Latin America 9th ed Boston Wadsworth p 444 Schlesinger Stephen Kinzer Stephen 1983 Bitter Fruit The Untold Story of the American Coup in Guatemala Doubleday amp Company Inc ISBN 0385183542 People Time Vol LXXV no 8 February 22 1960 a b c White 2009 p 297 The New York Times October 14 1960 Melvin Small June 1 1998 The Atlantic Council The Early Years PDF NATO Karnow 1983 pp 260 262 Karnow 1983 p 279 Karnow 1983 pp 279 280 a b Karnow 1983 p 280 Karnow 1983 p 296 Karnow 1983 pp 280 282 a b Karnow 1983 pp 281 282 Karnow 1983 pp 281 282 amp 345 Langguth 2000 pp 217 218 a b c Langguth 2000 p 218 Karnow 1983 pp 285 286 a b Karnow 1983 p 285 a b Karnow 1983 p 286 a b c Langguth 2000 p 220 a b Langguth 2000 p 221 a b c Karnow 1983 p 288 Jacobs 2006 p 157 158 Karnow 1983 pp 288 289 Young 1990 p 99 Lodge Henry Cabot 1979 Interview with Henry Cabot Lodge Video interview part 1 of 5 Open Vault WGBH Media Library and Archives a b c d Karnow 1983 p 289 Jacobs 2006 p 158 a b Jacobs 2006 p 157 164 Jacobs 2006 p 164 Karnow 1983 pp 289 290 a b c d e f g Karnow 1983 p 290 a b c d Jacobs 2006 p 165 a b c Karnow 1983 p 291 a b c d e f Karnow 1983 p 302 a b Karnow 1983 pp 293 294 a b c d e Karnow 1983 p 294 a b Karnow 1983 p 295 Karnow 1983 pp 296 297 a b c Karnow 1983 p 297 a b c d e Karnow 1983 p 298 Karnow 1983 pp 298 299 a b c d e Karnow 1983 p 299 a b c d e f g h i Karnow 1983 p 300 Karnow 1983 pp 300 301 a b c Karnow 1983 p 301 Young 1990 p 101 a b c Karnow 1983 p 303 Karnow 1983 pp 303 304 a b c Karnow 1983 p 304 Karnow 1983 p 305 a b c Karnow 1983 p 306 a b Karnow 1983 p 307 a b Karnow 1983 p 308 Karnow 1983 pp 308 309 Karnow 1983 p 309 Karnow 1983 p 310 a b Karnow 1983 p 311 a b Karnow 1983 p 323 a b Karnow 1983 p 324 a b Karnow 1983 p 325 a b Karnow 1983 p 346 Moyar 2006 Triumph Forsaken The Vietnam War 1954 1965 New York Cambridge University Press p 273 ISBN 0 521 86911 0 Karnow 1983 p 345 Poll Shows Kennedy Again Most Admired The Boston Globe January 1 1963 p 36 Archived from the original on May 14 2019 via Newspapers com Rockefeller Leads GOP Voter Survey The Tampa Tribune January 13 1963 p 58 Archived from the original on May 14 2019 via Newspapers com Curtis and Graham Lead GOP Poll For Governor s Seat The North Adams Transcript June 22 1963 p 3 Archived from the original on May 14 2019 via Newspapers com How Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Won the 1964 New Hampshire Primary Without Lifting a Finger Archived from the original on May 17 2019 Union Leader Lodge s write in victory Archived from the original on August 2 2007 Draft Lodge Legacy Americana Retrieved October 1 2018 Before the Storm Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus Rick Perlstein 2009 Lodge Denounces Party Realigning Totally abhorrent he says of Goldwater s proposal The New York Times November 16 1964 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr 1902 1985 Retrieved October 24 2018 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Photographs II ca 1880 1979 www masshist org Milestones Aug 8 1960 Time August 8 1960 Grimes William March 14 2017 Henry S Lodge Author of Younger Next Year Books Dies at 58 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 2 2023 Roster of the Society of the Cincinnati 1974 edition pg 17 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr 1902 1985 Mount Auburn Cemetery mountauburn org Emily Lodge Clark 86 Was Senator s Widow The New York Times June 10 1992 References editJacobs Seth 2006 Cold War Mandarin Ngo Dinh Diem and the Origins of America s War in Vietnam 1950 1963 Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0742544482 Karnow Stanley 1983 Vietnam A History New York Viking Press ISBN 0 6707 4604 5 lt ref gt Langguth A J 2000 Our Vietnam The War 1954 1975 New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 81202 9 Nichter Luke A 2020 The Last Brahmin Henry Cabot Lodge Jr and the Making of the Cold War Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21780 3 online reviews Richardson Elliot 1985 Henry Cabot Lodge Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 97 149 152 White Theodore H 2009 The Making of the President 1960 Pymble NSW HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 061 98601 7 Young Marilyn 1990 The Vietnam Wars New York Harper External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Cabot Lodge junior United States Congress Henry Cabot Lodge Jr id L000394 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress The Papers of Henry Cabot Lodge Dwight D Eisenhower Presidential Library The short film U S Warns Russia to Keep Hands off in Guatemala Crisis 1955 is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive The short film STAFF FILM REPORT 66 27A 1966 is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive A film clip Longines Chronoscope with Sen Henry Cabot Lodge Jr May 2 1952 is available for viewing at the Internet ArchiveMassachusetts House of RepresentativesPreceded byHerbert Wilson Porter Member of the Massachusetts House of Representativesfrom the 15th Essex district1932 1936 Succeeded byRussell P BrownParty political officesPreceded byWilliam M Butler Republican nominee for U S Senator from Massachusetts Class 2 1936 1942 Succeeded byLeverett SaltonstallPreceded byHenry Parkman Jr Republican nominee for U S Senator from Massachusetts Class 1 1946 1952 Succeeded byVincent J CelestePreceded byRichard Nixon Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States1960 Succeeded byWilliam E MillerU S SenatePreceded byMarcus A Coolidge United States Senator Class 2 from Massachusetts1937 1944 Served alongside David I Walsh Succeeded bySinclair WeeksPreceded byDavid I Walsh United States Senator Class 1 from Massachusetts1947 1953 Served alongside Leverett Saltonstall Succeeded byJohn F KennedyHonorary titlesPreceded byBerkeley L Bunker Baby of the Senate1942 1943 Succeeded byJoseph H BallDiplomatic postsPreceded byWarren Austin United States Ambassador to the United Nations1953 1960 Succeeded byJerry WadsworthPreceded byFrederick Nolting United States Ambassador to South Vietnam1963 1964 Succeeded byMax TaylorPreceded byMax Taylor United States Ambassador to South Vietnam1965 1967 Succeeded byEllsworth BunkerPreceded byGeorge C McGhee United States Ambassador to West Germany1968 1969 Succeeded byKenneth RushPreceded byHarold Tittmann Personal Representative of the President to the Holy See1970 1977 Succeeded byDavid WaltersAwards and achievementsPreceded byJohn Foster Dulles Recipient of the Sylvanus Thayer Award1960 Succeeded byDwight D Eisenhower Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Cabot Lodge Jr amp oldid 1188979148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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