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McNamara strove to do the right thing at the Pentagon

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In 1961, at the start of the Kennedy administration, I went to work for Defense Secretary Robert McNamara. Just as FDR attracted a small army of bright young lawyers and domestic policy-makers to his New Deal in 1932, McNamara (who had insisted as a condition of taking the Pentagon job that President John F. Kennedy give him authority to make all appointments in the department) recruited an energetic young team to wrestle with the Pentagon behemoth.

The press quickly dubbed the group McNamara's "whiz kids." I was proud to be among them, but to the top military brass, "whiz kids" was a term of disdain.

McNamara was determined to control a fractious department that no secretary had yet mastered. When I arrived as a young lawyer, Cy Vance told me, "Bob intends to reorganize the Pentagon from top to bottom. Your job is to find legal authority for whatever he wants to do."

Known for his extraordinary intelligence, McNamara was also a shrewd political manager. From day one, all White House requests had to go through his office. When he set deadlines for comments on his reorganization proposals, he never extended them. To set the stage for consolidating procurement of common items in a Defense Supply Agency, in order to strengthen the department's bargaining power, he had me hang on peg boards in his conference room all the hats, belts, shirts, ties, underwear and even toilet seats of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps as a backdrop for his meeting with the service chiefs. After a few seconds of embarrassment, everyone knew that the Defense Supply Agency would be established.

McNamara was devoted to the Kennedys. When the president was assassinated and Robert Kennedy picked the gravesite at Arlington National Cemetery, McNamara said, "Joe, I want to tie up that land for President Kennedy so that no one can ever take it away. I want to make damn sure we own it."

"It's in the middle of Arlington Cemetery."

"I don't give a damn. Get a title search made. Write a legal opinion nailing the title down. I want to sign the deed that sets this land aside forever." (Ramsey Clark, then head of the Justice Department's Lands Division, did the title search.)

Several minutes later, McNamara called again. "Mrs. Kennedy wants an eternal torch above the grave. Set up a temporary one so it can be lit at the burial. Make sure the temporary gas pipe is deep enough so some woman in spike heels can't puncture it," he said.

I watched the war consume Bob McNamara. From being the most hawkish adviser, McNamara gradually changed; in the fall of 1967, he went public with his doubts about the effectiveness of bombing in Southeast Asia.

By that time I was working in the White House, and President Lyndon Johnson told me, "That man can't take this pressure of the war. I've got to make Vietnam my war, not McNamara's. I need him functioning."

In late 1967, after a Cabinet meeting, Bob stopped by my office and said, "I may be recommended to head the World Bank. If so, don't tell the president I'm indispensable."

In early 1968, I got a call from journalist Robert Novak. "The Financial Times says McNamara is being considered for the World Bank. Anything to it?"

I fudged an answer and called Bob. "Tell the president I'm on the way over to see him," he said. That day McNamara and the president holed up in the Oval Office until late afternoon, when they issued an exchange of resignation letters.

"To this day," Bob told me a few months ago, over the last dinner I had with him and his wife, Diana, "I don't know whether I quit or was fired."

Joseph A. Califano Jr., chairman of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, served in the Pentagon from 1961 to 1965. He was President Lyndon Johnson's special assistant for domestic affairs from 1965 to 1969.

/opinion/commentary

3 comments:

  • avatar roller137 (205) posts 11:28 am

    Thanks for the correction, didnt see that on the bio.

  • avatar Chesterfield (4) posts 12:54 pm

    Actually, McNamara served in the Air Force during World War 2. One of his responsibilities was the analysis of U.S. bombers' efficiency and effectiveness, especially the B-29 forces commanded by Major General Curtis LeMay in China and the Mariana Islands. He left active duty in 1946 with the rank of lieutenant colonel and with a Legion of Merit. I do not know if he was the smartest or not, but he definitely served contrary to your claim.

  • avatar roller137 (205) posts 7:01 am

    McNamara thought he was the smartest soldier never to serve. he treated our military professionals with contempt and viewed them as idiots. He convinced Pres Johnson to escalate the Vietnam conflict, and then micro-managed the war fighting from Washington. His Style of war fighting needlessly caused the death of thousands of American and ARVN soldiers. Flawed Intelligence, and cultural ignorance made him a total failure as Secretary of Defense.

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