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Page 14 THE VILLADOM TIMES IV • November 20, 2013
The hero under the fading whitewash
At one great moment in history, John F. Kennedy may
have saved the world from a nuclear catastrophe.
Unknown to the American public, a U.S. pilot named
Rudolph Anderson had been shot down and killed over
Cuba by Soviet hot-heads. Some of Kennedy’s advisers -
- the same sort of people who bombed Germany and Japan
into rubble when the issue was no longer in doubt and killed
thousands of French and Korean civilians -- urged a massive
air strike on Cuba. Kennedy, an independent thinker who
used his advisers as advisers and not as mentors, decided
to keep talking. He brokered a deal with the Soviets that
got the Soviet missiles out of Cuba and caused them to lose
some face. (He quietly took our own missiles out of Turkey,
but nobody knew about it while he was alive.)
The alternative Kennedy wisely rejected -- a bomb-
ing that could easily have gone nuclear -- would not have
destroyed America, just the major American cities at a cost
of tens of millions of American. Check out some photo-
graphs of what Germany and Japan looked like in 1946 to
imagine what it would have looked like. European Russia
and urban China, however, would also have been totaled
and the nuclear fallout would have contaminated the entire
Eurasian continent.
Russian joke: “When the sirens sound, go to the subway
and take your bed sheets. There is sure to be a shortage of
shrouds.” Kennedy may have saved world civilization. He deserves
a hero’s honor for that. The rest of his career consisted of
bold bungles long covered by a coat of whitewash thick
enough to plaster the fossilized bones of a tyrannosaurus
rex. We need to remember that.
The four-hour broadcast of “JFK” chips off some large
bits of the whitewash and leaves others in place. Advance
warning: Evan Thomas is one of the writers brought in as
a talking head, and since we worked at the same newspa-
per 40 years ago and his books sell a lot better than mine,
my dark blue eyes may occasionally flash green with
envy. Having read his books while glowering and sulking,
I grudgingly admit that Evan never deliberately distorts
facts. He just makes more money than I do, and that, of
course, is unforgivable.
Now let us chip some whitewash. Joe Kennedy comes
off as ambitious, but his ambition is somewhat normalized
by PBS. He is shown as being anti-interventionist when
some people argue that he was anti-British. Franklin Delano
Roosevelt took him off the case as ambassador to the United
Kingdom because he objected to FDR’s moves to get the
U.S. into the war. It was worse than that according to Sey-
mour Hersch, who reports that when anti-Nazi Germans
asked for American political support to overthrow Hitler,
Joe Kennedy betrayed the German anti-Nazi group to their
own government. This would have been a death sentence,
except that Joe Kennedy reported them to the Abwehr
(military intelligence), which was also involved in plotting
against Hitler. The anti-Nazi Germans were spared for four
more years until they tried to kill Hitler and were hanged.
Did Joe cost us a chance to get rid of Hitler without getting
into another war? That should have been mentioned.
The show tells us that John Kennedy’s first willful col-
lege choice was Princeton, but his father insisted on Har-
vard. JFK actually started Princeton, but could not cut the
academics. My daughter, an honors graduate of Princeton,
says everybody there knows the real story. JFK’s father then
wangled his son’s way into Harvard. FDR also attended
Harvard. According to Thomas Fleming, FDR thought our
enemies were the Prussian militarists -- the same people
who wanted to bump off Hitler, and the same men Hitler
later hanged. PBS skipped that one.
JFK, under his father’s wing, wrote a book called “Why
England Slept,” which praised Neville Chamberlain for
buying time by knuckling under to Hitler at Munich. Bogus!
In 1938, the Germans would have gotten a very bloody nose
had they attacked the Czech border fortresses if Britain and
France rallied to attack Germany in the West. Instead, the
best “German” tanks used to invade France two years later
were Czech-made, while the German-made tanks could not
stand up to the much better French tanks.
Militarily, the Germans should have lost the Battle of
France. They won because the Hitler-Stalin Pact turned the
French Left against their own government and because the
French ultra-Right was anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi. Blather
about mighty German tanks is a useless cliché. The best
World War II tanks were Russian, then French.
The heroic personal aspects of JFK are amply and accu-
rately covered. He was a sickly boy who made himself
worse by taking all sorts of medications that further under-
mined his health, but he had tremendous courage in the
face of pain and the prospect of an early death. While more
people than we care to remember lied to get out of World
War II, JFK lied to get into the Navy and then passed up a
safe job in military intelligence to seek out combat.
PT-109 got some mild paint chipping. PBS shows PT-
109 in combat. Kennedy’s actual combat before that awful
night when the boat was rammed was almost nil. The narra-
tor, however, questioned Kennedy’s seamanship in getting
a small 70-knot PT boat rammed by a big 40-knot Japanese
destroyer, but appropriately honored his courage and initia-
tive in saving most of his crew with an arduous three-mile
swim. A fair assessment would be that Kennedy was a bun-
gler before the ramming of PT-109, but a hero afterward.
He got two medals for clumsily losing a boat and two men,
but saving 10 others. This may have started a pattern ful-
filled during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.
Kennedy’s political career was marked by the same
courage. He had to climb stairs by putting first one foot,
then another, on the same step, while his back hurt terribly,
but he shook hands from dawn to dusk running for Con-
gress. He collapsed in the street at the Bunker Hill Parade,
but was on his feet the day after and won the Democratic
primary, then easily carried the Congressional election. He
was 29.
PBS left out the part about the Kennedy family’s intense
admiration for Senator Joseph McCarthy, the accused witch
hunter of communists in the U.S. government. Bobby Ken-
nedy was one of McCarthy’s top legal advisors. Many, if
not most of the people McCarthy accused, were actually
guilty. JFK was absent from McCarthy’s censure hearing,
as Lyndon Johnson pointed out. This was no accident, nor
was it sheer laziness.
By this time, JFK had been diagnosed with Addison’s
disease, an adrenal failure associated with low energy
and early death, but when his jealous rival for the White
House, Johnson, had this reported, the documentary hon-
estly reports that the Kennedy family lied about it, and
the American people fell for it. Joe Kennedy, meanwhile,
brought in Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. -- one of FDR’s sons
-- to proclaim that he and JFK were both five-year service
veterans during World War II while Hubert Humphrey was,
at least by implication, a World War II draft dodger. Things
like that mattered in the 1950s. Humphrey, who had a fine
record on labor rights and civil rights, lost out.
The PBS show mentions that Chicago and West Virginia
were close in the election and that Kennedy won by one-
quarter of one percent. In fact, Joe Kennedy put the fix in
with the Chicago Mob and West Virginia crooks and that
is probably why Jack got elected. This has been reported
many times and confirmed. Nixon might have won on a
recount in 1960, but passed up the chance.
The show honestly reports that JFK was not much inter-
ested in civil rights except as the violent mistreatment of
African Americans played into the hands of Soviet pro-
pagandists, PBS implies that the credit he received for the
Cuban Missile Crisis was perhaps overstated: Khrushchev
had already turned back the Soviet blockade-buster ships
when JFK reached out to make a deal. The fact that JFK
instinctively declined to invade Cuba when the Russians
had 43,000 soldiers and tactical nuclear weapons there is
clearly to his credit. That shining moment cannot be taken
from him, nor can his enormous physical courage in push-
ing his sickly body through what must have been absolute
torture. His last year as president saw progress in civil
rights and a sanctioned coup in Vietnam that led to a war
where 58,000 Americans later died and Johnson and Nixon
-- who actually brought the civil rights legislation onto the
books -- got to take the all the blame for Vietnam and little
or none of the credit for ending segregation.
The American Experience “JFK” is a whole lot more
accurate and responsible than the Oliver Stone feature film
of the same name, where Kennedy is murdered with the
complicity of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, corporate war con-
tracts, Cuba exiles, and a segment of the gay community.
The American Experience, in fact, simply shows Jack and
Jackie taking a second honeymoon in Dallas followed by
the news of his death, and the assessment that he might
have been a great president had he not been murdered. Tune
in next week to find out who probably killed him.
Letters to the Editor
Grateful for donations
Dear Editor:
On behalf of Ramsey Responds, I would like to thank
everybody who so generously participated in our Winter
Coat Drive, which was held this year on Nov. 2. Through
the tremendous outpouring of support, we were able to
provide Ramsey families in need with winter coats, boots,
sweaters, scarves, mittens, bedspreads, blankets, comfort-
ers, and other needed items. Thank you all who contributed
to making our drive a success and bring a little warmth to
families in need in our community.
We particularly would like to give thanks to Saint Paul’s
Church for opening its doors to allow us to use its premises
for our drive, the Ramsey schools, our corporate partners --
like Minolta -- for their wonderful donations, and each and
every person in the community who so generously donated.
We look forward to continuing to be able to serve those
members of the community who may be in need of assis-
tance and your support and donations make it all possible.
Thank you again. We wish you a happy holiday season.
Harris Recht, President
Ramsey Responds
Vets seek donations
Dear Editor:
The American Legion Posts of the Bergen County
American Legion organization have voted to spearhead a
fundraising project to purchase a new bus for the Paramus
Veterans Home.
The home presently has three buses which are used
to transport the residents to off-premise affairs hosted by
the Legion, VFW, Knights of Columbus, Elks, and other
organizations. These buses are old and in constant need of
repairs. In fact, during the past six months at least two and
sometimes all three have been in the repair shop, and the
residents of the Paramus Veterans Home have been denied
the pleasure of attending numerous events.
The Veterans Administration has this issue on its radar
and will be replacing the existing buses over time, but even
the three buses that are up and running are insufficient.
The Legion Posts of Bergen County have started a fund-
raising effort and the goal is to raise $80,000 in order to buy
a fourth bus. This bus would be new, and therefore more
reliable, and would supplement the existing buses until they
are replaced, which will be over a period of time. We are
asking that you help by making a donation. We are a regis-
tered 501(C)(19) organization.
Please send donations payable to Bergen County Ameri-
can Legion, c/o Bob Salvini, 54 Thiem Avenue, Rochelle
Park, NJ 07662 and include in the memo line that it is for
the Paramus Vets Home Bus. This will help improve the
social life and spirits of our less fortunate comrades.
All organizations donating $1,000 or more and any
individual donating more than $500 will be included on a
plaque (that will be donated by BCAL and not come from
funds raised for the bus). Thank you in advance.
Should you have any questions, please reach out to me
at bobsalvini@att.net.
Bob Salvini, Commander
Bergen County American Legion