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McGeorge Bundy

McGeorge "Mac" Bundy (March 30, 1919 – September 16, 1996) was an American academic who served as the U.S. National Security Advisor to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson from 1961 through 1966. He was president of the Ford Foundation from 1966 through 1979. Despite his career as a foreign-policy intellectual, educator, and philanthropist, he is best remembered as one of the chief architects of the United States' escalation of the Vietnam War during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations.

McGeorge Bundy
5th United States National Security Advisor
In office
January 20, 1961 – February 28, 1966
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byGordon Gray
Succeeded byWalt Rostow
Personal details
Born(1919-03-30)March 30, 1919
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedSeptember 16, 1996(1996-09-16) (aged 77)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Resting placeMount Auburn Cemetery
Political partyRepublican
SpouseMary Lothrop
Children4
EducationYale University (AB)
Harvard University

After World War II, during which Bundy served as an intelligence officer, in 1949 he was selected for the Council on Foreign Relations. He worked with a study team on implementation of the Marshall Plan. He was appointed a professor of government at Harvard University, and in 1953 as its youngest dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, working to develop Harvard as a merit-based university. In 1961 he joined Kennedy's administration. After serving at the Ford Foundation, in 1979 he returned to academia as professor of history at New York University, and later as scholar in residence at the Carnegie Corporation.

Early life and education

Born in 1919 and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, Bundy was the third son in a prosperous family long involved in Republican politics. His older brothers were Harvey Hollister Bundy, Jr., and William Putnam Bundy, and he had two younger sisters, Harriet Lowell and Katharine Lawrence.[1] His father, Harvey Hollister Bundy, from Grand Rapids, Michigan, was a prominent attorney in Boston serving as a clerk for Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. in his younger days. Bundy's mother, Katherine Lawrence Putnam, was related to several Boston Brahmin families listed in the Social Register, the Lowells, the Cabots, and the Lawrences; she was a niece to Harvard president Abbott Lawrence Lowell.[2] Through his mother, Bundy grew up with the other Boston Brahmin families, and throughout his life he was well connected with American elites.[2]

The Bundys were close to Henry L. Stimson. As Secretary of State under Herbert Hoover, in 1931 Stimson appointed Harvey Bundy as his Assistant Secretary of State. Later Bundy served again under Stimson as Secretary of War, acting as Special Assistant on Atomic Matters,[3] and serving as liaison between Stimson and the director of the Office of Scientific Research and Development, Vannevar Bush.[4] William and McGeorge grew up knowing Stimson as a family friend and colleague of their father.[5] The senior Bundy also helped implement the Marshall Plan.

McGeorge Bundy attended the private Dexter Lower School in Brookline, Massachusetts, and the elite Groton School, where he placed first in his class and ran the student newspaper and debating society. Biographer David Halberstam writes:

He [McGeorge Bundy] attended Groton, the greatest "Prep" school in the nation, where the American upper class sends its sons to instill the classic values: discipline, honor, a belief in the existing values and the rightness of them. Coincidentally, it's at Groton that one starts to meet the right people, and where connections which will serve well later on – be it at Wall Street or Washington – are first forged; one learns, at Groton, above all, the rules of the Game and even a special language: what washes and does not wash.[6][7][page needed]

He was admitted to Yale University, one year behind his brother William. When applying to Yale, Bundy wrote on the entrance exam "This question is silly. If I were giving the test, this is the question I would ask, and this is my answer."[8] Despite this, he was still admitted to Yale as he was awarded a perfect score on his entrance exam.[8] At Yale, he served as secretary of the Yale Political Union and then chairman of its Liberal Party.[8] He was on the staff of the Yale Literary Magazine and also wrote a column for the Yale Daily News, and as a senior was awarded the Alpheus Henry Snow Prize. Like his father, he was inducted into the Skull and Bones secret society, where he was nicknamed "Odin." [8] He remained in contact with his fellow Bonesmen for decades afterward.[9] He graduated from Yale with an A.B. in mathematics in 1940. In 1940, he advocated American intervention in World War Two, writing "Though war is evil, it is occasionally the lesser of two evils."[8] In 1941, he was awarded a three-year Junior Fellowship in the Harvard Society of Fellows. At the time, Fellows were not allowed to pursue advanced degrees, "a requirement intended to keep them off the standard academic treadmill"; thus, Bundy would never earn a doctorate.[10]

In 1941, Bundy ran for the Ward 5 Seat on the Boston City Council. He was endorsed by the outgoing incumbent, Henry Lee Shattuck, but lost to A. Frank Foster by 92 votes.[11][12]

Military service

During World War II, Bundy decided to join the United States Army despite his poor vision. He served as an intelligence officer.[13] In 1943, he became an aide to Rear Admiral Alan G. Kirk, who knew his father. On 6 June 1944, as an aide to Admiral Kirk, Bundy witnessed first-hand the Operation Overlord landings from the deck of the cruiser USS Augusta.[8] He was discharged at the rank of captain in 1946 and returned to Harvard, where he completed the remaining two years of his Junior Fellowship.

Academic career

From 1945 to 1947, Bundy worked with Stimson as ghostwriter of his third-person autobiography, On Active Service in Peace and War (1947).[14] Stimson suffered a massive heart attack (leading to a speech impediment) two months after completing his second appointment as United States Secretary of War in the fall of 1945, and Bundy's assistance was integral to the completion of the book.

In 1948, he worked for Republican presidential candidate Thomas E. Dewey as a speechwriter specializing in foreign policy issues.[15] Bundy had expected Dewey to win the 1948 election, and to be rewarded with some sort of senior post in a Dewey administration.[2] After Dewey's defeat, Bundy became a political analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, where he studied Marshall Plan aid to Europe. Notable members of the study group were Dwight D. Eisenhower, then serving as president of Columbia University; future Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles; future CIA official Richard M. Bissell, Jr.; and diplomat George F. Kennan. The group's deliberations were sensitive and secret, dealing as they did with the classified fact that there was a covert side to the Marshall Plan, by which the CIA used certain funds to aid anti-communist groups in France and Italy.[16]

In 1949, Bundy was appointed as a visiting lecturer in Harvard University's Department of Government. He taught the history of U.S. foreign policy and was popular among students; after two years, he was promoted to associate professor and recommended for tenure.[17]

In 1950, he married Mary Buckminster Lothrop, who came from a socially prominent and wealthy Bostonian family; they had four sons.

Following his promotion to full professor in 1953, Bundy was appointed dean of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Only 34, he remains the youngest person to have received a decanal appointment in the University's history as of 2019. An effective and popular administrator, Bundy led policy changes intended to develop Harvard as a class-blind, merit-based university with a reputation for stellar academics.[18] He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1954.[19] During his time as a Dean at Harvard, Bundy first met Senator John F. Kennedy who sat on the Harvard Board of Overseers, and got to know him well.[2] He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1991.[20]

National Security Advisor

Bundy moved into public political life in 1961 when appointed as National Security Advisor in the administration of President John F. Kennedy. Kennedy considered Bundy for Secretary of State, but decided that since he was a relatively youthful president, that he wanted an older man as Secretary of State, causing him to appoint Bundy National Security Adviser instead.[21] In common with other members of Kennedy's cabinet, Bundy considered the Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, to be ineffectual.[22] Bundy, a registered Republican, offered to switch parties to become a registered Democrat when he entered the White House.[23] Kennedy vetoed that offer, saying he preferred to have a Republican National Security Adviser to rebut charges that he was "soft on Communism."[23]

One of Kennedy's "wise men," Bundy played a crucial role in all of the major foreign policy and defense decisions of the Kennedy administration and was retained by Lyndon B. Johnson for part of his tenure. Bundy was involved in the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the Vietnam War. At the first meeting of the National Security Council under Kennedy, Bundy was told the four areas of worry were Cuba, the Congo, Laos, and Vietnam.[24] From 1964 to 1966, he was also chair of the 303 Committee, responsible for coordinating government covert operations.[25]

Bundy was a strong proponent of the Vietnam War during his tenure, believing it essential to contain communism. He supported escalating United States involvement, including commitment of hundreds of thousands of ground troops and the sustained bombing of North Vietnam in 1965. According to Kai Bird, Bundy and other advisors well understood the risk but proceeded with these actions largely because of domestic politics, rather than believing that the US had a realistic chance of victory in this war.[5]

In November 1961, Bundy advised Kennedy to send a division to fight in Vietnam, writing: "Laos was never really ours after 1954. South Vietnam is and want to be."[26] In 1963, Bundy vetoed an attempt by another Harvard professor, Henry Kissinger, to join the Kennedy administration.[27] Bundy knew Kissinger well and told Kennedy that he was a schemer who was not to be trusted. In August 1963, when the diplomat Paul Kattenburg advised ending American support for South Vietnam, Bundy was extremely critical, arguing that American aid to South Vietnam was working as planned and accused Kattenburg of making an argument with no evidence.[28] In October 1963, he agreed to the transfer of the CIA station chief, John Richardson, to help clear the way for a coup against President Diem.[29] Just before the coup on 29 October 1963, Bundy wired the American ambassador in Saigon, Henry Cabot Lodge: "We do not accept as a basis for U.S. policy that we have no power to delay or discourage a coup."[30] On the night of 1 November, Bundy stayed up all night, awaiting news of the coup, and reported to Kennedy in the morning that only the presidential guard had stayed loyal while the rest of the South Vietnamese Army had supported the coup.[31] On 4 November, Bundy told the media that the United States would recognize the new government in Saigon.[32] The same day he told to Kennedy that photographs of corpses of the Ngo brothers (Diệm and Nhu) might appear in the media showing their hands tied behind their backs and bullet holes through the back of their heads, joking that this was not his preferred way to commit suicide (it was initially announced that both Ngo brothers had committed suicide, through it was later admitted that they had been executed).[32]

On 22 November 1963, Bundy was at his office in Washington when he received a telephone call from the Defense Secretary Robert McNamara telling him that Kennedy had just been assassinated while visiting Dallas, Texas.[33] Bundy broke down in tears at the news of the death of his friend.[34] Bundy took a somewhat patronizing attitude to the new president, Lyndon Johnson, telling him before his first cabinet meeting as president to "avoid any suggestion of over-assertiveness."[35] In the spring of 1964, Bundy told Johnson that the South Vietnamese government was unable to defeat the Viet Cong and American intervention would probably be necessary.[36] As Bundy sought to ingratiate himself with Johnson, his once friendly relations with Robert Kennedy declined as the latter considered him a "turncoat."[37] Johnson was annoyed by Bundy's habit, which started when Kennedy was president, of popping in and out of the Oval Office as it suited him, and asked him to stick to a strict schedule.[38]

In January 1964, Bundy advised Johnson to dismiss General Paul D. Harkins as commander of the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam, writing: "I do not know anyone, except perhaps Max Taylor, in the top circle of the government who believes that General Harkins is the right man for the war in Vietnam now … Harkins has been unimpressive in his reporting and analyzing , and has shown a lack of grip on the realities of the situation."[39] Bundy advised replacing Harkins with General William Westmoreland, saying Vietnam is "much too important to be decided by Bob McNamara's reluctance to offend Max Taylor, saying that Johnson had the power "to give him a direct order to do what in his heart he knows he should. He is a soldier."[40] Johnson distrusted Bundy because of his family's inherited wealth and his elite status as a product of Ivy League universities, and much preferred McNamara who only became rich as an executive with the Ford Motor Company and had only attended Harvard Business School.[40] For his part, Bundy found many of Johnson's mannerisms highly offensive such as his practice of exposing his penis to prove that he was well endowed and refusing to close the bathroom door when he was using the toilet.[41] Johnson rather enjoyed offending Bundy.[41]

In October 1964, when the Undersecretary of State, George Ball, circulated a memo "How Valid Are the Assumptions Underlying Our Vietnam Policy?", Bundy emerged as Ball's leading critic and offered Johnson a detailed memo arguing there was no comparison between the French and American wars in Vietnam.[42] In December 1964 after the Vietcong bombed the Brink's Hotel in Saigon, Bundy advised Johnson to begin a strategical bombing campaign against North Vietnam, giving in a memo five reasons not to bomb North Vietnam vs. nine reasons to bomb North Vietnam.[43] Bundy predicated that bombing North Vietnam would solve South Vietnam's morale problems, saying the South Vietnamese soldiers would fight better once they knew the United States was involved in the war.[43] In a cable to Maxwell Taylor, the ambassador in Saigon, Johnson gave domestic reasons why he would not bomb North Vietnam at present, saying he was to introduce his Great Society reforms soon, complaining about conservative Republicans and Democrats that: "They hate this stuff, they don't want to help the poor and the Negroes, but they're afraid to be against it at a time like this when there's all this prosperity. But the war-oh, they'll like the war."[44] However, Johnson went on that once his Great Society reforms were adopted by Congress, he would commit the United States to war, saying he had doubts that North Vietnam could be defeated by strategic bombing alone, and he would send American troops to fight in South Vietnam sometime in 1965.[45]

In February 1965, Bundy visited South Vietnam.[46] On 7 February 1965, the Viet Cong attacked an American air base at Pleiku with mortars, killing eight Americans and wounding 126.[47] Bundy advised Johnson to begin a strategic bombing campaign against North Vietnam in retaliation.[47] Bundy afterwards visited the Pleiku base where he was disturbed by the sight of the wounded servicemen, saying he never seen so much blood in all his life.[48] Upon his return to Washington, Bundy in a memo to the president wrote: "The situation in Vietnam is deteriorating, and without new U.S. action defeat appears inevitable-probably not in a matter of weeks or perhaps even months, but within the next year or so. There is still time to turn around, but not much. The stakes in Vietnam are extremely high, the American investment is very large, and the American responsibility is a fact of life which is palpable in the atmosphere of Asia, and even elsewhere. The international prestige of the United States, and a substantial part of our influence, are directly at risk in Vietnam."[49] Bundy called for "graduated and continuing bombings" of North Vietnam as the best response.[49] Bundy reported that what he had seen in South Vietnam suggested that the majority of the South Vietnamese people believed "the Vietcong are going to win in the long run."[49] When the British Prime Minister Harold Wilson, who was alarmed by Johnson's Vietnam policy proposed a summit in an attempt to change his policy, Bundy told the British ambassador Lord Harlech that such a summit would be "unhelpful".[50] The columnist Walter Lippmann contacted Bundy asking him to advise Johnson to change his Vietnam policies, only to find that the National Security Adviser was solidly loyal to the president.[51] Lippmann was astonished by Bundy's ignorance about Vietnamese history as he discovered Bundy had no idea that South Vietnam was a recent creation.[52]

Bundy advised Johnson that the best way to "sell" the Vietnam War to the American people was as an extension of the Great Society.[51] Bundy told the president he should create a multi-billion dollar Southeast Asia Development Corporation that would build an enormous dam on the Mekong River which he wrote would be "bigger and more imaginative than the TVA and a lot tougher to do".[51] Bundy suggested the proposed Southeast Asia Development Corporation and its dam on the Mekong would be able to bring electricity to all of Southeast Asia and thereby industrialize the entire region within the next 20 or so years.[51] In a speech on 7 April 1965 at Johns Hopkins University, Johnson proposed the Southeast Asia Development Corporation and the dam on the Mekong that would electrify all of Southeast Asia, saying that the Vietnam war was a struggle for economic development, which he accused North Vietnam of seeking to prevent.[53] As the war continued, Johnson berated Bundy, saying he wanted "more ideas and more horsepower and more imagination".[53]

In March 1965, the first "teach-in" to protest the Vietnam war was held at the University of Michigan and Bundy was challenged to a debate, which he declined, saying in a public letter "if your letter came to me for grading as a professor, I would not be able to give it high marks".[54] Subsequently, Bundy accepted a challenge from George McTurnan Kahin, a Cornell University professor who specialized in Southeast Asia, for a public debate to be televised live on 15 May 1965.[54] Johnson did not want the debate to take place, fearing that Bundy might lose. Johnson arranged to send Bundy to the Dominican Republic, causing him to miss the debate.[55] One of the debate's organizers, Barry Commoner, a biologist at the University of Washington, stated that Bundy might give other professors bad marks for their letters, but he "has turned in a terrible record on attendance".[47] When the Harvard Crimson newspaper ran an editorial criticizing the Vietnam War, Bundy who always closely followed developments at Harvard, wrote an 11-page rebuttal criticizing the editorial and compared the editors of the Harvard Crimson to the appeasers of the 1930s.[56]

When Bundy realized that Johnson had sent him to Santo Domingo to prevent him from debating Kahin, without informing the president he contacted Fred Friendly, a television producer at CBS, saying he wanted to debate Hans Morgenthau, an international affairs professor at the University of Chicago, live on television.[56] When Johnson learned that CBS was airing the Bundy-Morgenthau debate on 21 June 1965, Johnson was incensed, saying to his aide Bill Moyers: "Do you see this? Bundy is going on television-on national television-with five professors. That's an act of disloyalty. He didn't tell me because he knew I didn't want him to do it".[56] Johnson told Moyers to go sack Bundy on the spot, but changed his mind.[56] Relations between Johnson and Bundy were notably tense afterwards.[57] On 21 June 1965, the television debate was aired live under the title Vietnam Dialogue: Mr. Bundy and the Professors with Eric Sevareid as the moderator.[58] During the debate, Bundy accused Morgenthau of being a defeatist and pessimist, citing his 1961 statement that Laos was destined to go Communist, leading Morgenthau to reply: "I may have been dead wrong on Laos, but it doesn't mean I am dead wrong on Vietnam".[58] Bundy then brought up a statement Morgenthau made in 1956, praising President Diem of South Vietnam for creating a "miracle".[58] Bundy was generally considered to have won the debate, but Johnson was still furious with him.[58] Bundy privately conceded that his time as National Security Adviser was coming to a close.[58] Johnson instructed Moyers to terminate Bundy, who upon being told he was fired, stated "Again?" and went back to work.[59] Though Johnson kept changing his mind about whatever to sack Bundy, he could see his time at the White House was quite limited, and he contacted Nathan Pusey, the president of Harvard asking if he could return to academia.[59]

In June 1965, Bundy advised Johnson not to step up the bombing in response to the execution by the Viet Cong of an American POW, Sergeant Harold Bennett, warning that this mean in a certain sense losing control of the level of the bombing as such a precedent would mean the United States would have to step up the bombing in the future in the event of more atrocities.[59] However, Bundy told Ball at the time that his influence over Johnson was in decline and he did not expect his advice to be accepted.[59] Johnson ordered the bombing to increased as Bundy feared that he would. In July 1965, Bundy recruited a group of elder statesmen known as "the Wise Men" to advise Johnson from time to time.[60] The unofficial leader of the "Wise Men" was the former Secretary of State Dean Acheson.[60] The first meeting of the "Wise Men" did not go well with Johnson engaging in an extended bout of self-pity, complaining that he had only acted in Vietnam because he had to and was being criticized by the media and Congress, much to the disgust of the "Wise Men", who complained that they had not come to the White House to listen to this.[61] However, the "Wise Men" expressed their approval of Johnson's Vietnam policy, and Bundy afterwards thanked Acheson, saying that Johnson felt more confident now that he was acting correctly.[61]

Despite his support for the war, Bundy criticized what he regarded as a sloppy thinking by other members of Johnson's cabinet, most notably in July 1965 when he attacked the plans of McNamara to send more troops to Vietnam as being "rash to the point of folly...In particular I see no reason to suppose that the Vietcong will accommodate us by fighting the kind of war we desire. I think the odds are that if we put in 40-50 battalions with the missions here proposed, we shall find them only lightly engaged and ineffective in hot pursuit."[62] Bundy stated the problem with Vietnam was that the South Vietnamese state was dysfunctional, leading him to write "...this is a slippery slope toward total U.S. responsibility and corresponding fecklessness on the Vietnamese side".[62] Bundy advised Johnson not to send more troops to South Vietnam as a way to pressure the South Vietnamese to make reforms.[63] Bundy advised Johnson to ponder: "What are the chances of our getting into a white man's war with all the brown men against us or apathetic?".[64] However, Bundy was still committed to the war as he wrote in another memo titled "France in Vietnam, 1954, and the U.S. in Vietnam, 1965-A Useful Analogy?" that France failed because of "the war's acute unpopularity" and "French political instability", none of which Bundy wrote applied to the United States in 1965.[64] Expanding on this theme, Bundy wrote: "France was never united or consistent in her prosecution of the war in Indochina. The war was not popular in France itself, was actively opposed on the left and was cynically used by others for domestic political ends".[64] By contrast, Bundy wrote at present that only academics and churchmen were opposed to the war, and they were a minority within a minority, reminding Johnson that according to the most recent polls 62% of American supported the war.[64]

In July 1965, an American diplomat in Paris, Ed Gullion, opened up secret talks with Mai Van Bo, who headed the National Liberation Front's office in Paris.[65] To provide secrecy, Gullion was code-named R.[65] Bundy advised Johnson to let the talks proceed, writing: "Let R do the talking this time and see if there is any give in his position".[65] However, the XYZ talks as the negotiations were called floundered over the demand that the United States unconditionally cease bombing North Vietnam as a precondition for peace talks.[65]

As Pusey was unable to give him a position consistent with his former station, Bundy contacted John McCloy, the chairman of the Ford Foundation, to see if he could become president of the Ford Foundation.[66] Bundy had difficult relations with Johnson by this point, but he felt it was his patriotic duty as an American to leave government service in a manner that did not embarrass the president.[66] On 8 November 1965, Bundy was offered the presidency of the Ford Foundation, whose annual pay was $75,000 compared to the $30,000 he made as National Security Adviser.[66] Furthermore, the Ford Foundation had an endowment of $200 million to be spent annually, making it the world's biggest charity, which appealed to Bundy, as it allow him to maintain that he was still engaged in important work.[66] Through Bundy had discussed his interest in the Ford Foundation with Johnson previously, when the president learned from reading the New York Times that the offer had been made, he was notably angry.[66] Bundy agreed to stay on until the end of 1966, but Johnson became abrasive and abusive towards him, taking the viewpoint that Bundy was guilty of betraying him and he was a coward who was leaving because he could not handle the stress of the Vietnam War.[66] As Johnson ceased listening to Bundy, his role by the end of 1966 had been reduced to reporting information and laying out options for the president.[67] In his last report to Johnson in 1966, he stated China was denouncing the Americans as "running dogs of imperialism"; that Marshal Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia believed a peaceful end to the war was possible with time; that the governments of Hungary and Algeria were offering to serve as intermediaries in peace talks; that the French president Charles de Gaulle wanted the United States to cease bombing North Vietnam and open talks; and that the governments of Britain and Canada were pressing the Soviet Union in turn to pressure North Vietnam to open peace talks.[67] In his last service to Johnson, when Senator Robert F. Kennedy criticized the Vietnam War in a speech on 31 October 1966, Bundy went on On Meet the Press television show to offer a defense of the Johnson administration and to rebut Kennedy's criticism.[68]

Return to academia

He left government in 1966 to serve as president of the Ford Foundation,[69] remaining in this position until 1979. On 12 October 1968, Bundy criticized the Vietnam War in a speech, saying: "There is no prospect of military victory against North Vietnam by any level of U.S. military force which is acceptable or desirable."[70]

After testifying before the Church Committee in 1975, Bundy issued a statement: "As far as I ever knew, or know now, no one in the White House or at the Cabinet level ever gave any approval of any kind to any CIA effort to assassinate anyone." Bundy added: "I told the committee in particular that it is wholly inconsistent with what I know of President Kennedy and his brother Robert that either of them would have given any such order or authorization or consent to anyone through any channel."[71]

Beginning in 1979, Bundy returned to academia as a professor of history at New York University. He was professor emeritus from 1989 until his death. During this period, he helped found the group known as the "Gang of Four," whose other members were Kennan, Robert McNamara and Gerard Smith; together they spoke and wrote about American nuclear policies. They published an influential 1983 Foreign Affairs article that proposed ending the US policy of "first use of nuclear weapons to stop a Soviet invasion of Europe".[5] He also wrote Danger and Survival: Choices About the Bomb in the First Fifty Years (1988). Their work has been credited with contributing to the SALT II treaty a decade later.[5]

Bundy was employed by the Carnegie Corporation of New York from 1990 until his death, serving as chair of the Committee on Reducing the Nuclear Danger (1990-1993) and scholar-in-residence (1993-1996).

Death

Bundy died in September 1996 from a heart attack at the age of 77.[72]

Legacy

  • In 1969 he was presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Lyndon Johnson, one of 20 to receive the medal "in the last 24 hours of [Johnson's] presidency in January 1969".[73]
  • Bundy was later included on President Richard Nixon's "Enemies List", his compilation of political opponents.
  • Views of Bundy's role in the Vietnam War changed over the decades. Gordon Goldstein's 2008 book, Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam, was reported in late September 2009 as the "must-read-book" among President Barack Obama's war advisers, as they contemplated the alternative courses ahead in Afghanistan. Richard C. Holbrooke, who had reviewed the book in late November 2008, was a member of the team of presidential advisers in 2009.[1][74]

Publications

Articles

  • “To Cap the Volcano”. Foreign Affairs, vol. 48, no. 1, October 1969. pp. 1–20. JSTOR 20039419. doi:10.2307/20039419.
  • , The Atlantic Monthly vol. 240, no. 5, November 1977. pp. 41–54.

Books

Media

Appearances

Portrayal in other media

Bundy and his role have been featured in feature and TV films:

See also

Books and articles

  • Langguth, A.J. (2000). Our Vietnam The War 1954-1975. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743212312.

References

  1. ^ a b 'The Doves Were Right' Review by Richard C. Holbrooke of Goldstein, Gordon M., Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam, The New York Times Book Review, 28 November 2008. Retrieved 7/7/09.
  2. ^ a b c d Langguth 2000, p. 231.
  3. ^ Kenneth W Hechler (5 January 1953). "Memorandum on the Potsdam Conference to David D Lloyd". www.nuclearfiles.org.
  4. ^ Daniel J. Kevles (March 1990). "The Politics of Atomic Reality". Reviews in American History. 18 (1).
  5. ^ a b c d Mark Danner, "Members of the Club: Review of Kai Bird's 'THE COLOR OF TRUTH/ McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy: Brothers in Arms. A Biography', The New York Times, April 1999, accessed 22 November 2014
  6. ^ Halberstam, David (1972). The Best and the Brightest. Random House. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-394-46163-2.
  7. ^ Peter W. Cookson, Jr.; Caroline Persell (1987). 1969 quotation of David Halberstam in America's Elite Boarding Schools. Basic Books (published 1985). ISBN 0-465-06269-5. OCLC 660054698. OL 18166618W. Wikidata Q108671720.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Langguth 2000, p. 230.
  9. ^ Goldstein, Gordon M. (2008). Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam. Henry Holt. ISBN 9780805079715.
  10. ^ Douglas Martin (March 2, 2007). "Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., a Partisan Historian of Power, Is Dead at 89". The New York Times. from the original on December 10, 2008.
  11. ^ "Shattuck Gives Support to Bundy for City Council". The Boston Daily Globe. August 16, 1941.
  12. ^ Annual Report of the Election Department. Boston [Election Dept.] 1941. p. 41.
  13. ^ "McGeorge Bundy; Advisor to Two Presidents in 1960s". Los Angeles Times. 17 September 1996. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
  14. ^ "When Bundy Says, 'The President Wants--'" (paid archive), The New York Times, December 2, 1962. Partial quote: "After V-J Day, Bundy spent a year and a half working on the Stimson book, . ... " Retrieved July 7, 2009.
  15. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 231..
  16. ^ Covert CIA side to the Marshall Plan – see Bird, Kai (1998). The Color of Truth: McGeorge and William Bundy, Brothers in Arms: A Biography. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 106. ISBN 0-684-80970-2.
  17. ^ Goldstein, Gordon M. Lessons in Disaster: Mcgeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam. New York: Times Books/Henry Holt and Co, 2008.
  18. ^ Kabaservice, Geoffrey (2004). The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment. New York: Henry Holt & Co. pp. 136–140. ISBN 0-8050-6762-0.
  19. ^ "Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  20. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-04-07.
  21. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 42-43.
  22. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 143.
  23. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 318.
  24. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 115.
  25. ^ Miller, James E. (2001). Foreign Relations, 1964–1968 Volume XII. United States Government Printing Office.
  26. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 152.
  27. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 205.
  28. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 237.
  29. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 248.
  30. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 250.
  31. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 254.
  32. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 261.
  33. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 265.
  34. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 266.
  35. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 267.
  36. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 293.
  37. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 297.
  38. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 305.
  39. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 276-277.
  40. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 277.
  41. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 407.
  42. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 317-318.
  43. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 327.
  44. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 328.
  45. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 328-329.
  46. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 336-337.
  47. ^ a b c Langguth 2000, p. 337.
  48. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 338.
  49. ^ a b c Langguth 2000, p. 340.
  50. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 342.
  51. ^ a b c d Langguth 2000, p. 353.
  52. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 354.
  53. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 354-355.
  54. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 358.
  55. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 359.
  56. ^ a b c d Langguth 2000, p. 367.
  57. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 367-368.
  58. ^ a b c d e Langguth 2000, p. 368.
  59. ^ a b c d Langguth 2000, p. 369.
  60. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 373.
  61. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 374.
  62. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 370.
  63. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 371-372.
  64. ^ a b c d Langguth 2000, p. 372.
  65. ^ a b c d Langguth 2000, p. 386.
  66. ^ a b c d e f Langguth 2000, p. 394.
  67. ^ a b Langguth 2000, p. 416.
  68. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 423.
  69. ^ "People in the News ... Bundy Takes Over". The Des Moines Register. March 3, 1966.
  70. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 526.
  71. ^ "2 Former Kennedy Aides Deny Assassination Plots". The New York Times. 12 July 1975.
  72. ^ Goldstein, Gordon (2008). Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam. New York: Times Books. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-8050-7971-5.
  73. ^ Sanger, David E., "War Figures Honored With Medal of Freedom" (limited no-charge access), The New York Times, December 15, 2004.
  74. ^ Rich, Frank (September 26, 2009), "Op-ed: Obama at the Precipice", The New York Times, retrieved September 27, 2009

Further reading

External video
  Presentation by Kai Bird on The Color of Truth at the JFK Presidential Library, October 15, 1998, C-SPAN
  • Bellah, Robert N. (2005). "McCarthyism at Harvard". The New York Review of Books. Vol. 52, no. 2. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  • Bird, Kai. The Color of Truth: McGeorge and William Bundy, Brothers in Arms: A Biography. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1998. ISBN 0-684-80970-2.
  • Gardner, Lloyd. "Harry Hopkins with Hand Grenades? McGeorge Bundy in the Kennedy and Johnson Years", in Behind the Throne: Servants of Power to Imperial Presidents, 1898–1968, ed. Thomas J. McCormick and Walter LaFeber. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993. pp. 204–229. ISBN 0-299-13740-6.
  • Goldstein, Gordon M., Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam New York: Henry Holt & Co., 2008. pp. 300. ISBN 0-8050-9087-8.
  • Halberstam, David. "The Very Expensive Education of McGeorge Bundy". Harper's Magazine 239, no. 1430 (July 1969), pp. 21–41.
  • Kabaservice, Geoffrey. The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 2004. pp. 136–140. ISBN 0-8050-6762-0.
  • Nünlist, Christian. Kennedys rechte Hand: McGeorge Bundys Einfluss als Nationaler Sicherheitsberater auf die amerikanische Aussenpolitik, 1961–63. Zurich: Center for Security Studies, 1999. ISBN 3-905641-61-5.
  • Preston, Andrew. “The Little State Department: McGeorge Bundy and the National Security Council Staff, 1961–65”. Presidential Studies Quarterly, vol. 31, no. 4, December 2001. pp. 635–659. doi:10.1111/j.0000-0000.2001.00191.x
  • Preston, Andrew. The War Council: McGeorge Bundy, the NSC, and Vietnam. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-674-02198-3.

External links

  • for the WGBH series,
  • Point of View of Nuremberg Trial Prosecutor Telford Taylor on McGeorge Bundy at the Library of Congress Web Archives (archived 2001-12-03)
  • Pentagon papers: Telegram From the Ambassador in Vietnam (Lodge) to McGeorge Bundy on US Options With Respect to a Possible Coup, mentioning the term "plausible denial" 2005-02-17 at the Wayback Machine Alternative link: Pentagon papers, Telegram 216, same cable
  • NY Times Obituary
  • Oral History Interviews with McGeorge Bundy, from the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library at archive.today (archived 2012-12-15)
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Political offices
Preceded by National Security Advisor
1961–1966
Succeeded by

mcgeorge, bundy, mcgeorge, bundy, march, 1919, september, 1996, american, academic, served, national, security, advisor, presidents, john, kennedy, lyndon, johnson, from, 1961, through, 1966, president, ford, foundation, from, 1966, through, 1979, despite, car. McGeorge Mac Bundy March 30 1919 September 16 1996 was an American academic who served as the U S National Security Advisor to Presidents John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson from 1961 through 1966 He was president of the Ford Foundation from 1966 through 1979 Despite his career as a foreign policy intellectual educator and philanthropist he is best remembered as one of the chief architects of the United States escalation of the Vietnam War during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations McGeorge Bundy5th United States National Security AdvisorIn office January 20 1961 February 28 1966PresidentJohn F KennedyLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byGordon GraySucceeded byWalt RostowPersonal detailsBorn 1919 03 30 March 30 1919Boston Massachusetts U S DiedSeptember 16 1996 1996 09 16 aged 77 Boston Massachusetts U S Resting placeMount Auburn CemeteryPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseMary LothropChildren4EducationYale University AB Harvard UniversityAfter World War II during which Bundy served as an intelligence officer in 1949 he was selected for the Council on Foreign Relations He worked with a study team on implementation of the Marshall Plan He was appointed a professor of government at Harvard University and in 1953 as its youngest dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences working to develop Harvard as a merit based university In 1961 he joined Kennedy s administration After serving at the Ford Foundation in 1979 he returned to academia as professor of history at New York University and later as scholar in residence at the Carnegie Corporation Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Military service 3 Academic career 4 National Security Advisor 5 Return to academia 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 Publications 9 Media 10 See also 11 Books and articles 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and education EditBorn in 1919 and raised in Boston Massachusetts Bundy was the third son in a prosperous family long involved in Republican politics His older brothers were Harvey Hollister Bundy Jr and William Putnam Bundy and he had two younger sisters Harriet Lowell and Katharine Lawrence 1 His father Harvey Hollister Bundy from Grand Rapids Michigan was a prominent attorney in Boston serving as a clerk for Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr in his younger days Bundy s mother Katherine Lawrence Putnam was related to several Boston Brahmin families listed in the Social Register the Lowells the Cabots and the Lawrences she was a niece to Harvard president Abbott Lawrence Lowell 2 Through his mother Bundy grew up with the other Boston Brahmin families and throughout his life he was well connected with American elites 2 The Bundys were close to Henry L Stimson As Secretary of State under Herbert Hoover in 1931 Stimson appointed Harvey Bundy as his Assistant Secretary of State Later Bundy served again under Stimson as Secretary of War acting as Special Assistant on Atomic Matters 3 and serving as liaison between Stimson and the director of the Office of Scientific Research and Development Vannevar Bush 4 William and McGeorge grew up knowing Stimson as a family friend and colleague of their father 5 The senior Bundy also helped implement the Marshall Plan McGeorge Bundy attended the private Dexter Lower School in Brookline Massachusetts and the elite Groton School where he placed first in his class and ran the student newspaper and debating society Biographer David Halberstam writes He McGeorge Bundy attended Groton the greatest Prep school in the nation where the American upper class sends its sons to instill the classic values discipline honor a belief in the existing values and the rightness of them Coincidentally it s at Groton that one starts to meet the right people and where connections which will serve well later on be it at Wall Street or Washington are first forged one learns at Groton above all the rules of the Game and even a special language what washes and does not wash 6 7 page needed He was admitted to Yale University one year behind his brother William When applying to Yale Bundy wrote on the entrance exam This question is silly If I were giving the test this is the question I would ask and this is my answer 8 Despite this he was still admitted to Yale as he was awarded a perfect score on his entrance exam 8 At Yale he served as secretary of the Yale Political Union and then chairman of its Liberal Party 8 He was on the staff of the Yale Literary Magazine and also wrote a column for the Yale Daily News and as a senior was awarded the Alpheus Henry Snow Prize Like his father he was inducted into the Skull and Bones secret society where he was nicknamed Odin 8 He remained in contact with his fellow Bonesmen for decades afterward 9 He graduated from Yale with an A B in mathematics in 1940 In 1940 he advocated American intervention in World War Two writing Though war is evil it is occasionally the lesser of two evils 8 In 1941 he was awarded a three year Junior Fellowship in the Harvard Society of Fellows At the time Fellows were not allowed to pursue advanced degrees a requirement intended to keep them off the standard academic treadmill thus Bundy would never earn a doctorate 10 In 1941 Bundy ran for the Ward 5 Seat on the Boston City Council He was endorsed by the outgoing incumbent Henry Lee Shattuck but lost to A Frank Foster by 92 votes 11 12 Military service EditDuring World War II Bundy decided to join the United States Army despite his poor vision He served as an intelligence officer 13 In 1943 he became an aide to Rear Admiral Alan G Kirk who knew his father On 6 June 1944 as an aide to Admiral Kirk Bundy witnessed first hand the Operation Overlord landings from the deck of the cruiser USS Augusta 8 He was discharged at the rank of captain in 1946 and returned to Harvard where he completed the remaining two years of his Junior Fellowship Academic career EditFrom 1945 to 1947 Bundy worked with Stimson as ghostwriter of his third person autobiography On Active Service in Peace and War 1947 14 Stimson suffered a massive heart attack leading to a speech impediment two months after completing his second appointment as United States Secretary of War in the fall of 1945 and Bundy s assistance was integral to the completion of the book In 1948 he worked for Republican presidential candidate Thomas E Dewey as a speechwriter specializing in foreign policy issues 15 Bundy had expected Dewey to win the 1948 election and to be rewarded with some sort of senior post in a Dewey administration 2 After Dewey s defeat Bundy became a political analyst at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York where he studied Marshall Plan aid to Europe Notable members of the study group were Dwight D Eisenhower then serving as president of Columbia University future Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles future CIA official Richard M Bissell Jr and diplomat George F Kennan The group s deliberations were sensitive and secret dealing as they did with the classified fact that there was a covert side to the Marshall Plan by which the CIA used certain funds to aid anti communist groups in France and Italy 16 In 1949 Bundy was appointed as a visiting lecturer in Harvard University s Department of Government He taught the history of U S foreign policy and was popular among students after two years he was promoted to associate professor and recommended for tenure 17 In 1950 he married Mary Buckminster Lothrop who came from a socially prominent and wealthy Bostonian family they had four sons Following his promotion to full professor in 1953 Bundy was appointed dean of Harvard s Faculty of Arts and Sciences Only 34 he remains the youngest person to have received a decanal appointment in the University s history as of 2019 An effective and popular administrator Bundy led policy changes intended to develop Harvard as a class blind merit based university with a reputation for stellar academics 18 He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1954 19 During his time as a Dean at Harvard Bundy first met Senator John F Kennedy who sat on the Harvard Board of Overseers and got to know him well 2 He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1991 20 National Security Advisor EditBundy moved into public political life in 1961 when appointed as National Security Advisor in the administration of President John F Kennedy Kennedy considered Bundy for Secretary of State but decided that since he was a relatively youthful president that he wanted an older man as Secretary of State causing him to appoint Bundy National Security Adviser instead 21 In common with other members of Kennedy s cabinet Bundy considered the Secretary of State Dean Rusk to be ineffectual 22 Bundy a registered Republican offered to switch parties to become a registered Democrat when he entered the White House 23 Kennedy vetoed that offer saying he preferred to have a Republican National Security Adviser to rebut charges that he was soft on Communism 23 One of Kennedy s wise men Bundy played a crucial role in all of the major foreign policy and defense decisions of the Kennedy administration and was retained by Lyndon B Johnson for part of his tenure Bundy was involved in the Bay of Pigs Invasion the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam War At the first meeting of the National Security Council under Kennedy Bundy was told the four areas of worry were Cuba the Congo Laos and Vietnam 24 From 1964 to 1966 he was also chair of the 303 Committee responsible for coordinating government covert operations 25 Bundy was a strong proponent of the Vietnam War during his tenure believing it essential to contain communism He supported escalating United States involvement including commitment of hundreds of thousands of ground troops and the sustained bombing of North Vietnam in 1965 According to Kai Bird Bundy and other advisors well understood the risk but proceeded with these actions largely because of domestic politics rather than believing that the US had a realistic chance of victory in this war 5 In November 1961 Bundy advised Kennedy to send a division to fight in Vietnam writing Laos was never really ours after 1954 South Vietnam is and want to be 26 In 1963 Bundy vetoed an attempt by another Harvard professor Henry Kissinger to join the Kennedy administration 27 Bundy knew Kissinger well and told Kennedy that he was a schemer who was not to be trusted In August 1963 when the diplomat Paul Kattenburg advised ending American support for South Vietnam Bundy was extremely critical arguing that American aid to South Vietnam was working as planned and accused Kattenburg of making an argument with no evidence 28 In October 1963 he agreed to the transfer of the CIA station chief John Richardson to help clear the way for a coup against President Diem 29 Just before the coup on 29 October 1963 Bundy wired the American ambassador in Saigon Henry Cabot Lodge We do not accept as a basis for U S policy that we have no power to delay or discourage a coup 30 On the night of 1 November Bundy stayed up all night awaiting news of the coup and reported to Kennedy in the morning that only the presidential guard had stayed loyal while the rest of the South Vietnamese Army had supported the coup 31 On 4 November Bundy told the media that the United States would recognize the new government in Saigon 32 The same day he told to Kennedy that photographs of corpses of the Ngo brothers Diệm and Nhu might appear in the media showing their hands tied behind their backs and bullet holes through the back of their heads joking that this was not his preferred way to commit suicide it was initially announced that both Ngo brothers had committed suicide through it was later admitted that they had been executed 32 On 22 November 1963 Bundy was at his office in Washington when he received a telephone call from the Defense Secretary Robert McNamara telling him that Kennedy had just been assassinated while visiting Dallas Texas 33 Bundy broke down in tears at the news of the death of his friend 34 Bundy took a somewhat patronizing attitude to the new president Lyndon Johnson telling him before his first cabinet meeting as president to avoid any suggestion of over assertiveness 35 In the spring of 1964 Bundy told Johnson that the South Vietnamese government was unable to defeat the Viet Cong and American intervention would probably be necessary 36 As Bundy sought to ingratiate himself with Johnson his once friendly relations with Robert Kennedy declined as the latter considered him a turncoat 37 Johnson was annoyed by Bundy s habit which started when Kennedy was president of popping in and out of the Oval Office as it suited him and asked him to stick to a strict schedule 38 In January 1964 Bundy advised Johnson to dismiss General Paul D Harkins as commander of the Military Assistance Command Vietnam writing I do not know anyone except perhaps Max Taylor in the top circle of the government who believes that General Harkins is the right man for the war in Vietnam now Harkins has been unimpressive in his reporting and analyzing and has shown a lack of grip on the realities of the situation 39 Bundy advised replacing Harkins with General William Westmoreland saying Vietnam is much too important to be decided by Bob McNamara s reluctance to offend Max Taylor saying that Johnson had the power to give him a direct order to do what in his heart he knows he should He is a soldier 40 Johnson distrusted Bundy because of his family s inherited wealth and his elite status as a product of Ivy League universities and much preferred McNamara who only became rich as an executive with the Ford Motor Company and had only attended Harvard Business School 40 For his part Bundy found many of Johnson s mannerisms highly offensive such as his practice of exposing his penis to prove that he was well endowed and refusing to close the bathroom door when he was using the toilet 41 Johnson rather enjoyed offending Bundy 41 In October 1964 when the Undersecretary of State George Ball circulated a memo How Valid Are the Assumptions Underlying Our Vietnam Policy Bundy emerged as Ball s leading critic and offered Johnson a detailed memo arguing there was no comparison between the French and American wars in Vietnam 42 In December 1964 after the Vietcong bombed the Brink s Hotel in Saigon Bundy advised Johnson to begin a strategical bombing campaign against North Vietnam giving in a memo five reasons not to bomb North Vietnam vs nine reasons to bomb North Vietnam 43 Bundy predicated that bombing North Vietnam would solve South Vietnam s morale problems saying the South Vietnamese soldiers would fight better once they knew the United States was involved in the war 43 In a cable to Maxwell Taylor the ambassador in Saigon Johnson gave domestic reasons why he would not bomb North Vietnam at present saying he was to introduce his Great Society reforms soon complaining about conservative Republicans and Democrats that They hate this stuff they don t want to help the poor and the Negroes but they re afraid to be against it at a time like this when there s all this prosperity But the war oh they ll like the war 44 However Johnson went on that once his Great Society reforms were adopted by Congress he would commit the United States to war saying he had doubts that North Vietnam could be defeated by strategic bombing alone and he would send American troops to fight in South Vietnam sometime in 1965 45 In February 1965 Bundy visited South Vietnam 46 On 7 February 1965 the Viet Cong attacked an American air base at Pleiku with mortars killing eight Americans and wounding 126 47 Bundy advised Johnson to begin a strategic bombing campaign against North Vietnam in retaliation 47 Bundy afterwards visited the Pleiku base where he was disturbed by the sight of the wounded servicemen saying he never seen so much blood in all his life 48 Upon his return to Washington Bundy in a memo to the president wrote The situation in Vietnam is deteriorating and without new U S action defeat appears inevitable probably not in a matter of weeks or perhaps even months but within the next year or so There is still time to turn around but not much The stakes in Vietnam are extremely high the American investment is very large and the American responsibility is a fact of life which is palpable in the atmosphere of Asia and even elsewhere The international prestige of the United States and a substantial part of our influence are directly at risk in Vietnam 49 Bundy called for graduated and continuing bombings of North Vietnam as the best response 49 Bundy reported that what he had seen in South Vietnam suggested that the majority of the South Vietnamese people believed the Vietcong are going to win in the long run 49 When the British Prime Minister Harold Wilson who was alarmed by Johnson s Vietnam policy proposed a summit in an attempt to change his policy Bundy told the British ambassador Lord Harlech that such a summit would be unhelpful 50 The columnist Walter Lippmann contacted Bundy asking him to advise Johnson to change his Vietnam policies only to find that the National Security Adviser was solidly loyal to the president 51 Lippmann was astonished by Bundy s ignorance about Vietnamese history as he discovered Bundy had no idea that South Vietnam was a recent creation 52 Bundy advised Johnson that the best way to sell the Vietnam War to the American people was as an extension of the Great Society 51 Bundy told the president he should create a multi billion dollar Southeast Asia Development Corporation that would build an enormous dam on the Mekong River which he wrote would be bigger and more imaginative than the TVA and a lot tougher to do 51 Bundy suggested the proposed Southeast Asia Development Corporation and its dam on the Mekong would be able to bring electricity to all of Southeast Asia and thereby industrialize the entire region within the next 20 or so years 51 In a speech on 7 April 1965 at Johns Hopkins University Johnson proposed the Southeast Asia Development Corporation and the dam on the Mekong that would electrify all of Southeast Asia saying that the Vietnam war was a struggle for economic development which he accused North Vietnam of seeking to prevent 53 As the war continued Johnson berated Bundy saying he wanted more ideas and more horsepower and more imagination 53 In March 1965 the first teach in to protest the Vietnam war was held at the University of Michigan and Bundy was challenged to a debate which he declined saying in a public letter if your letter came to me for grading as a professor I would not be able to give it high marks 54 Subsequently Bundy accepted a challenge from George McTurnan Kahin a Cornell University professor who specialized in Southeast Asia for a public debate to be televised live on 15 May 1965 54 Johnson did not want the debate to take place fearing that Bundy might lose Johnson arranged to send Bundy to the Dominican Republic causing him to miss the debate 55 One of the debate s organizers Barry Commoner a biologist at the University of Washington stated that Bundy might give other professors bad marks for their letters but he has turned in a terrible record on attendance 47 When the Harvard Crimson newspaper ran an editorial criticizing the Vietnam War Bundy who always closely followed developments at Harvard wrote an 11 page rebuttal criticizing the editorial and compared the editors of the Harvard Crimson to the appeasers of the 1930s 56 When Bundy realized that Johnson had sent him to Santo Domingo to prevent him from debating Kahin without informing the president he contacted Fred Friendly a television producer at CBS saying he wanted to debate Hans Morgenthau an international affairs professor at the University of Chicago live on television 56 When Johnson learned that CBS was airing the Bundy Morgenthau debate on 21 June 1965 Johnson was incensed saying to his aide Bill Moyers Do you see this Bundy is going on television on national television with five professors That s an act of disloyalty He didn t tell me because he knew I didn t want him to do it 56 Johnson told Moyers to go sack Bundy on the spot but changed his mind 56 Relations between Johnson and Bundy were notably tense afterwards 57 On 21 June 1965 the television debate was aired live under the title Vietnam Dialogue Mr Bundy and the Professors with Eric Sevareid as the moderator 58 During the debate Bundy accused Morgenthau of being a defeatist and pessimist citing his 1961 statement that Laos was destined to go Communist leading Morgenthau to reply I may have been dead wrong on Laos but it doesn t mean I am dead wrong on Vietnam 58 Bundy then brought up a statement Morgenthau made in 1956 praising President Diem of South Vietnam for creating a miracle 58 Bundy was generally considered to have won the debate but Johnson was still furious with him 58 Bundy privately conceded that his time as National Security Adviser was coming to a close 58 Johnson instructed Moyers to terminate Bundy who upon being told he was fired stated Again and went back to work 59 Though Johnson kept changing his mind about whatever to sack Bundy he could see his time at the White House was quite limited and he contacted Nathan Pusey the president of Harvard asking if he could return to academia 59 In June 1965 Bundy advised Johnson not to step up the bombing in response to the execution by the Viet Cong of an American POW Sergeant Harold Bennett warning that this mean in a certain sense losing control of the level of the bombing as such a precedent would mean the United States would have to step up the bombing in the future in the event of more atrocities 59 However Bundy told Ball at the time that his influence over Johnson was in decline and he did not expect his advice to be accepted 59 Johnson ordered the bombing to increased as Bundy feared that he would In July 1965 Bundy recruited a group of elder statesmen known as the Wise Men to advise Johnson from time to time 60 The unofficial leader of the Wise Men was the former Secretary of State Dean Acheson 60 The first meeting of the Wise Men did not go well with Johnson engaging in an extended bout of self pity complaining that he had only acted in Vietnam because he had to and was being criticized by the media and Congress much to the disgust of the Wise Men who complained that they had not come to the White House to listen to this 61 However the Wise Men expressed their approval of Johnson s Vietnam policy and Bundy afterwards thanked Acheson saying that Johnson felt more confident now that he was acting correctly 61 Despite his support for the war Bundy criticized what he regarded as a sloppy thinking by other members of Johnson s cabinet most notably in July 1965 when he attacked the plans of McNamara to send more troops to Vietnam as being rash to the point of folly In particular I see no reason to suppose that the Vietcong will accommodate us by fighting the kind of war we desire I think the odds are that if we put in 40 50 battalions with the missions here proposed we shall find them only lightly engaged and ineffective in hot pursuit 62 Bundy stated the problem with Vietnam was that the South Vietnamese state was dysfunctional leading him to write this is a slippery slope toward total U S responsibility and corresponding fecklessness on the Vietnamese side 62 Bundy advised Johnson not to send more troops to South Vietnam as a way to pressure the South Vietnamese to make reforms 63 Bundy advised Johnson to ponder What are the chances of our getting into a white man s war with all the brown men against us or apathetic 64 However Bundy was still committed to the war as he wrote in another memo titled France in Vietnam 1954 and the U S in Vietnam 1965 A Useful Analogy that France failed because of the war s acute unpopularity and French political instability none of which Bundy wrote applied to the United States in 1965 64 Expanding on this theme Bundy wrote France was never united or consistent in her prosecution of the war in Indochina The war was not popular in France itself was actively opposed on the left and was cynically used by others for domestic political ends 64 By contrast Bundy wrote at present that only academics and churchmen were opposed to the war and they were a minority within a minority reminding Johnson that according to the most recent polls 62 of American supported the war 64 In July 1965 an American diplomat in Paris Ed Gullion opened up secret talks with Mai Van Bo who headed the National Liberation Front s office in Paris 65 To provide secrecy Gullion was code named R 65 Bundy advised Johnson to let the talks proceed writing Let R do the talking this time and see if there is any give in his position 65 However the XYZ talks as the negotiations were called floundered over the demand that the United States unconditionally cease bombing North Vietnam as a precondition for peace talks 65 As Pusey was unable to give him a position consistent with his former station Bundy contacted John McCloy the chairman of the Ford Foundation to see if he could become president of the Ford Foundation 66 Bundy had difficult relations with Johnson by this point but he felt it was his patriotic duty as an American to leave government service in a manner that did not embarrass the president 66 On 8 November 1965 Bundy was offered the presidency of the Ford Foundation whose annual pay was 75 000 compared to the 30 000 he made as National Security Adviser 66 Furthermore the Ford Foundation had an endowment of 200 million to be spent annually making it the world s biggest charity which appealed to Bundy as it allow him to maintain that he was still engaged in important work 66 Through Bundy had discussed his interest in the Ford Foundation with Johnson previously when the president learned from reading the New York Times that the offer had been made he was notably angry 66 Bundy agreed to stay on until the end of 1966 but Johnson became abrasive and abusive towards him taking the viewpoint that Bundy was guilty of betraying him and he was a coward who was leaving because he could not handle the stress of the Vietnam War 66 As Johnson ceased listening to Bundy his role by the end of 1966 had been reduced to reporting information and laying out options for the president 67 In his last report to Johnson in 1966 he stated China was denouncing the Americans as running dogs of imperialism that Marshal Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia believed a peaceful end to the war was possible with time that the governments of Hungary and Algeria were offering to serve as intermediaries in peace talks that the French president Charles de Gaulle wanted the United States to cease bombing North Vietnam and open talks and that the governments of Britain and Canada were pressing the Soviet Union in turn to pressure North Vietnam to open peace talks 67 In his last service to Johnson when Senator Robert F Kennedy criticized the Vietnam War in a speech on 31 October 1966 Bundy went on On Meet the Press television show to offer a defense of the Johnson administration and to rebut Kennedy s criticism 68 Return to academia EditHe left government in 1966 to serve as president of the Ford Foundation 69 remaining in this position until 1979 On 12 October 1968 Bundy criticized the Vietnam War in a speech saying There is no prospect of military victory against North Vietnam by any level of U S military force which is acceptable or desirable 70 After testifying before the Church Committee in 1975 Bundy issued a statement As far as I ever knew or know now no one in the White House or at the Cabinet level ever gave any approval of any kind to any CIA effort to assassinate anyone Bundy added I told the committee in particular that it is wholly inconsistent with what I know of President Kennedy and his brother Robert that either of them would have given any such order or authorization or consent to anyone through any channel 71 Beginning in 1979 Bundy returned to academia as a professor of history at New York University He was professor emeritus from 1989 until his death During this period he helped found the group known as the Gang of Four whose other members were Kennan Robert McNamara and Gerard Smith together they spoke and wrote about American nuclear policies They published an influential 1983 Foreign Affairs article that proposed ending the US policy of first use of nuclear weapons to stop a Soviet invasion of Europe 5 He also wrote Danger and Survival Choices About the Bomb in the First Fifty Years 1988 Their work has been credited with contributing to the SALT II treaty a decade later 5 Bundy was employed by the Carnegie Corporation of New York from 1990 until his death serving as chair of the Committee on Reducing the Nuclear Danger 1990 1993 and scholar in residence 1993 1996 Death EditBundy died in September 1996 from a heart attack at the age of 77 72 Legacy EditIn 1969 he was presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Lyndon Johnson one of 20 to receive the medal in the last 24 hours of Johnson s presidency in January 1969 73 Bundy was later included on President Richard Nixon s Enemies List his compilation of political opponents Views of Bundy s role in the Vietnam War changed over the decades Gordon Goldstein s 2008 book Lessons in Disaster McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam was reported in late September 2009 as the must read book among President Barack Obama s war advisers as they contemplated the alternative courses ahead in Afghanistan Richard C Holbrooke who had reviewed the book in late November 2008 was a member of the team of presidential advisers in 2009 1 74 Publications EditArticles To Cap the Volcano Foreign Affairs vol 48 no 1 October 1969 pp 1 20 JSTOR 20039419 doi 10 2307 20039419 Available online at the Foreign Affairs archives The Issue Before the Court Who Gets Ahead in America The Atlantic Monthly vol 240 no 5 November 1977 pp 41 54 Books On Active Service in Peace and War Co authored by Henry Stimson New York Harper amp Brothers 1947 Danger and Survival Choices about the Bomb in the First Fifty Years New York Vintage Books 1988 ISBN 0 394 52278 8 Media EditAppearances Cuban Missile Crisis Revisited Produced for The Idea Channel by the Free to Choose Network 1983 Phase I U1015 January 22 1983 Featuring McGeorge Bundy Richard Neustadt Edwin Martin Dean Rusk amp Donald Wilson in Atlanta Georgia Phase II Part I U1016 June 27 1983 Featuring McGeorge Bundy Richard Neustadt Robert S McNamara George W Ball amp U Alexis Johnson in Washington D C Phase II Part II U1017 June 27 1983 Featuring McGeorge Bundy Richard Neustadt Robert S McNamara George W Ball amp U Alexis Johnson in Washington D C At the Brink War and Peace in the Nuclear Age Episode 105 WBGH March 20 1986 Full transcript available Portrayal in other mediaBundy and his role have been featured in feature and TV films He was played by James Olson in the made for TV film The Missiles of October 1974 In the 2000 film Thirteen Days McGeorge Bundy is portrayed by Frank Wood In the 2002 HBO film Path to War Bundy is portrayed by Cliff DeYoung In the 2013 TV film Killing Kennedy Bundy was portrayed by Ray Nedzel See also EditThe Best and the Brightest by David Halberstam Bundy Report Ford Foundation Carnegie Corporation Council on Foreign RelationsBooks and articles EditLangguth A J 2000 Our Vietnam The War 1954 1975 Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0743212312 References Edit a b The Doves Were Right Review by Richard C Holbrooke of Goldstein Gordon M Lessons in Disaster McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam The New York Times Book Review 28 November 2008 Retrieved 7 7 09 a b c d Langguth 2000 p 231 Kenneth W Hechler 5 January 1953 Memorandum on the Potsdam Conference to David D Lloyd www nuclearfiles org Daniel J Kevles March 1990 The Politics of Atomic Reality Reviews in American History 18 1 a b c d Mark Danner Members of the Club Review of Kai Bird s THE COLOR OF TRUTH McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy Brothers in Arms A Biography The New York Times April 1999 accessed 22 November 2014 Halberstam David 1972 The Best and the Brightest Random House p 51 ISBN 978 0 394 46163 2 Peter W Cookson Jr Caroline Persell 1987 1969 quotation of David Halberstam inAmerica s Elite Boarding Schools Basic Books published 1985 ISBN 0 465 06269 5 OCLC 660054698 OL 18166618W Wikidata Q108671720 a b c d e f Langguth 2000 p 230 Goldstein Gordon M 2008 Lessons in Disaster McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam Henry Holt ISBN 9780805079715 Douglas Martin March 2 2007 Arthur M Schlesinger Jr a Partisan Historian of Power Is Dead at 89 The New York Times Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Shattuck Gives Support to Bundy for City Council The Boston Daily Globe August 16 1941 Annual Report of the Election Department Boston Election Dept 1941 p 41 McGeorge Bundy Advisor to Two Presidents in 1960s Los Angeles Times 17 September 1996 Retrieved 29 November 2012 When Bundy Says The President Wants paid archive The New York Times December 2 1962 Partial quote After V J Day Bundy spent a year and a half working on the Stimson book Retrieved July 7 2009 Langguth 2000 p 231 Covert CIA side to the Marshall Plan see Bird Kai 1998 The Color of Truth McGeorge and William Bundy Brothers in Arms A Biography New York Simon and Schuster p 106 ISBN 0 684 80970 2 Goldstein Gordon M Lessons in Disaster Mcgeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam New York Times Books Henry Holt and Co 2008 Kabaservice Geoffrey 2004 The Guardians Kingman Brewster His Circle and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment New York Henry Holt amp Co pp 136 140 ISBN 0 8050 6762 0 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter B PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 6 April 2011 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2022 04 07 Langguth 2000 p 42 43 Langguth 2000 p 143 a b Langguth 2000 p 318 Langguth 2000 p 115 Miller James E 2001 Foreign Relations 1964 1968 Volume XII United States Government Printing Office Langguth 2000 p 152 Langguth 2000 p 205 Langguth 2000 p 237 Langguth 2000 p 248 Langguth 2000 p 250 Langguth 2000 p 254 a b Langguth 2000 p 261 Langguth 2000 p 265 Langguth 2000 p 266 Langguth 2000 p 267 Langguth 2000 p 293 Langguth 2000 p 297 Langguth 2000 p 305 Langguth 2000 p 276 277 a b Langguth 2000 p 277 a b Langguth 2000 p 407 Langguth 2000 p 317 318 a b Langguth 2000 p 327 Langguth 2000 p 328 Langguth 2000 p 328 329 Langguth 2000 p 336 337 a b c Langguth 2000 p 337 Langguth 2000 p 338 a b c Langguth 2000 p 340 Langguth 2000 p 342 a b c d Langguth 2000 p 353 Langguth 2000 p 354 a b Langguth 2000 p 354 355 a b Langguth 2000 p 358 Langguth 2000 p 359 a b c d Langguth 2000 p 367 Langguth 2000 p 367 368 a b c d e Langguth 2000 p 368 a b c d Langguth 2000 p 369 a b Langguth 2000 p 373 a b Langguth 2000 p 374 a b Langguth 2000 p 370 Langguth 2000 p 371 372 a b c d Langguth 2000 p 372 a b c d Langguth 2000 p 386 a b c d e f Langguth 2000 p 394 a b Langguth 2000 p 416 Langguth 2000 p 423 People in the News Bundy Takes Over The Des Moines Register March 3 1966 Langguth 2000 p 526 2 Former Kennedy Aides Deny Assassination Plots The New York Times 12 July 1975 Goldstein Gordon 2008 Lessons in Disaster McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam New York Times Books p 3 ISBN 978 0 8050 7971 5 Sanger David E War Figures Honored With Medal of Freedom limited no charge access The New York Times December 15 2004 Rich Frank September 26 2009 Op ed Obama at the Precipice The New York Times retrieved September 27 2009Further reading EditExternal video Presentation by Kai Bird on The Color of Truth at the JFK Presidential Library October 15 1998 C SPANBellah Robert N 2005 McCarthyism at Harvard The New York Review of Books Vol 52 no 2 Retrieved September 7 2018 Bird Kai The Color of Truth McGeorge and William Bundy Brothers in Arms A Biography New York Simon and Schuster 1998 ISBN 0 684 80970 2 Gardner Lloyd Harry Hopkins with Hand Grenades McGeorge Bundy in the Kennedy and Johnson Years in Behind the Throne Servants of Power to Imperial Presidents 1898 1968 ed Thomas J McCormick and Walter LaFeber Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1993 pp 204 229 ISBN 0 299 13740 6 Goldstein Gordon M Lessons in Disaster McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam New York Henry Holt amp Co 2008 pp 300 ISBN 0 8050 9087 8 Halberstam David The Very Expensive Education of McGeorge Bundy Harper s Magazine 239 no 1430 July 1969 pp 21 41 Kabaservice Geoffrey The Guardians Kingman Brewster His Circle and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment New York Henry Holt amp Co 2004 pp 136 140 ISBN 0 8050 6762 0 Nunlist Christian Kennedys rechte Hand McGeorge Bundys Einfluss als Nationaler Sicherheitsberater auf die amerikanische Aussenpolitik 1961 63 Zurich Center for Security Studies 1999 ISBN 3 905641 61 5 Preston Andrew The Little State Department McGeorge Bundy and the National Security Council Staff 1961 65 Presidential Studies Quarterly vol 31 no 4 December 2001 pp 635 659 doi 10 1111 j 0000 0000 2001 00191 x Preston Andrew The War Council McGeorge Bundy the NSC and Vietnam Cambridge Harvard University Press 2006 ISBN 0 674 02198 3 External links EditInterview about the Cuban Missile Crisis for the WGBH series War and Peace in the Nuclear Age Review of biography of brothers William and McGeorge Bundy Point of View of Nuremberg Trial Prosecutor Telford Taylor on McGeorge Bundy at the Library of Congress Web Archives archived 2001 12 03 Pentagon papers Telegram From the Ambassador in Vietnam Lodge to McGeorge Bundy on US Options With Respect to a Possible Coup mentioning the term plausible denial Archived 2005 02 17 at the Wayback Machine Alternative link Pentagon papers Telegram 216 same cable Annotated bibliography for McGeorge Bundy from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues NY Times Obituary Oral History Interviews with McGeorge Bundy from the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library at archive today archived 2012 12 15 Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byGordon Gray National Security Advisor1961 1966 Succeeded byWalt Rostow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McGeorge Bundy amp oldid 1138363320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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