Link
to original article.
Cambridge, Mass.
Over the years I have read with avidity various intellectual
disputes in The New York Review of Books and other literary
journals. But I have never imagined myself being a part of one of
them. However, I found Eric Alterman's December 15 "Stop the
Presses" column on my recent film, The Fog of War, so devoid
of historical scholarship (despite his claim of having worked on his
PhD for eleven years) that I feel compelled to respond.
Alterman called me just after finishing the piece, first leaving
a message with my office that I needed to be "prepared to answer
some difficult questions." I called him. He read me sections of the
piece. In particular, the passage, "After the screening of the
film...[Morris] argued that the popular view of a 'vacillatory
Johnson and advisers like McNamara breathing down his neck' for war
was false. Well, Morris is a brilliant filmmaker, but he is not a
historian." Of course, I didn't care for his suggestion that the
history in the film is flawed. But I am willing to acknowledge my
errors and mistakes. I just would like them to be clearly
elucidated.
Alterman went on to portray McNamara as the prime mover in the
conflict: It is a bellicose McNamara egging on a vacillatory LBJ.
This view is widely held and has become one of the central myths
about the escalation of the war. McNamara, the numbers cruncher, the
statistician, the "IBM machine with legs," goaded LBJ into war, and
then cried alligator tears when it was too damn late. (Last year,
HBO presented The Path to War--Frankenheimer's last
film--with Alec Baldwin playing Robert McNamara. Not surprisingly,
it promoted this same thesis: LBJ vacillatory; McNamara bellicose.)
The only problem with this account is that it is not compatible
with recently released historical documentation--in particular,
JFK's recordings of his Cabinet meetings and LBJ's selective
recordings of his phone conversations.
One of the recordings that most interests me--and that has been
included in The Fog of War--is a JFK Cabinet meeting from
October 2, 1963, that occurred just after McNamara had returned from
an inspection trip to Vietnam. In the meeting, McNamara argues for
the removal of 1,000 US advisers from Vietnam by Christmastime and
the removal of the remaining 15,000 advisers by 1965. McNamara cites
this conversation in his Vietnam opus, In Retrospect, but it
has only recently been released to the public by the Kennedy
library. Here is an exchange between Kennedy and McNamara:
Kennedy: The advantage to taking them out
is?
McNamara: We can say to the Congress and people that
we do have a plan for reducing the exposure of US combat
personnel.
K: My only reservation about it is if the war
doesn't continue to go well, it will look like we were overly
optimistic.
McN: We need a way to get out of Vietnam,
and this is a way of doing it.
Soon after taking office, Lyndon Johnson began covertly recording
his telephone conversations. In one of these conversations, from
February 25, 1964--approximately three months after Kennedy's
assassination--Johnson can be heard chastising McNamara for that
recommendation to remove advisers from Vietnam:
Johnson: I always thought it was foolish for
you to make any statements about withdrawing. I thought it was bad
psychologically. But you and the President thought otherwise, and
I just sat silent.
McN: The problem is...
J:
Then come the questions: how in the hell does McNamara think, when
he's losing a war, he can pull men out of there?
What is important about this conversation is that Johnson is
stating unequivocally that he disagreed (although he remained
silent) with their decision to withdraw advisers starting in 1963,
to culminate in all of them being removed by 1965, after the 1964
presidential election.
In "Exit Strategies" in The Boston Review, James Galbraith
writes about the October 2 meeting and wonders why it has been so
often neglected by historians and journalists. Why indeed? My theory
is that it runs counter to what most people want to hear. (But just
because it isn't what people want to hear doesn't mean it isn't
true.)
My conversation with Alterman was somewhat surreal. I asked him:
How do you account for these conversations? Alterman answered, I
don't have to. I answered, Yes, you do. If you believe that McNamara
pressed a vacillatory Johnson into war, you have to explain what's
going on in this period immediately before and after JFK's
assassination. These conversations are part of it. Alterman
answered, Well, I could pick another set of conversations that prove
the exact opposite. I urged him to do so. He said there are dozens
of conversations that show Johnson confused, hand-wringing,
vacillatory. Finally, he read several from 1965.
I said, Not relevant. The issue is late 1963 and early 1964.
Sure, Johnson was given to self-pity, self-doubt, hand-wringing
about his decisions to escalate, but as the historian Fredrik
Logevall wrote in his 1999 work Choosing War: The Lost Chance for
Peace and the Escalation of War in Vietnam: "Johnson's doubts,
though considerable...centered on whether the war effort would be
successful rather than on whether it should be undertaken." (There
is also the important question of whether it suited Johnson to
portray himself publicly as being reluctant to escalate, in spite of
what his real intentions may have been in the matter.)
The February 25, 1964, conversation between Johnson and McNamara
provides evidence that Johnson had no intention of losing the war in
Vietnam. It also reveals that Johnson's intention to escalate in
Vietnam was formulated before Kennedy's assassination and Diem's
assassination, as early as October 2, 1963, and probably before. I
urged Alterman to read Galbraith's piece. He told me he didn't have
to. He had read other pieces Galbraith has written.
The story of McNamara as told in The Fog of War certainly
does not let him off the hook. It is a different story, not a better
one. If McNamara was skeptical of increased US involvement in
Vietnam, why did he support bombing North Vietnam in March 1965 and
the 100,000-man troop increase in July 1965? Why did he publicly
support the Vietnam War if he was afflicted with private doubts? Did
his loyalty to Johnson, to the presidency, trump his better
inclinations? Or did he reassess the dangers to the United States of
a unified, Communist Vietnam?
It is not my intention to exonerate McNamara for his involvement
in the planning of the Vietnam War. What I do intend is to help
correct a common misconception that President Johnson was bullied
into a war that he had no intention of fighting. Is this important?
Does this matter? Yes, because what we are now faced with is this
question: What do you do if you serve a bellicose President who
wants to go to war no matter what? What protections are provided for
this contingency within our system of government? What recourse does
a Cabinet member have if he disagrees with the President's policies?
Should he go to Congress? To the public? Or should he stay and try
to change policy within the government? These are particularly
pertinent questions that unfortunately are not being asked. I'm not
at all certain that we can learn from history, but we certainly
can't learn from it if it is ignored. Santayana is well-known for
saying, Those that are unfamiliar with history are condemned to
repeat it. He is less known for a far more interesting quote:
History is wrong, and always has to be rewritten. In recent years,
the transcripts of Kennedy's executive committee meetings on the
Cuban missile crisis have been transcribed, edited and annotated by
Ernest May and Philip Zelikow. Likewise, the Johnson telephone
conversations (which have been released in some instances in the
last few months) provide new information on Johnson, McNamara and
the Vietnam War. I believe that The Fog of War has used this
information to shed new light on complex historical events.
Alterman was kind enough to inform me that he is writing the
"definitive" book on the Gulf of Tonkin and the Cuban missile
crisis. Interesting of him to decide this in advance of publication.
Forgive me if I seem skeptical.
ERROL MORRIS
ALTERMAN REPLIES
New York City
It is with a heavy heart that I respond to the confusions,
misunderstandings and mistaken allegations in Errol Morris's letter,
as I greatly admire his work as a documentarian and intended my
column on The Fog of War to reflect that admiration. Clearly,
in the mind of Morris, I failed in this regard. So it now falls upon
me to correct the angry and misplaced insinuations in his letter,
one by one.
(1) Morris writes that I called his office saying that he needed
to be "prepared to answer some difficult questions." This is
apparently a mistaken transcription by his assistant. I said the
questions were "complicated," which is why I did not want to leave a
message about their content. All the questions I had for Morris
dealt with the interviews he conducted with Robert McNamara
addressing the issue of McNamara's false claim to have had secret
"intercepts" proving that a second Gulf of Tonkin attack took place.
This is a matter of considerable historical import because while
McNamara now admits that there was no second attack, he has never
explained what these secret intercepts showed that he insisted for
decades proved the opposite. At the screening of The Fog of
War, Morris informed me that he had questioned McNamara about
these intercepts and had much material with regard to them that did
not make it into the film. As a historian who is about to publish a
book dealing with this matter, I was naturally eager to see them.
Alas, during the course of our phone conversation, Morris told me
that he did not have any such material. If only...
(2) Morris complains that my view of the
Johnson/McNamara relationship "is not compatible with recently
released historical documentation." I beg to differ. Morris points
to a couple of transcripts of phone conversations he says prove his
point. What I told him was that I could point to probably dozens of
other conversations and historical documentation that prove the
opposite. Since he is not trained as a historian, Morris lacks the
ability to weigh the value of one conversation against another,
considering context, hidden motives and persons present. No one in
American history requires more careful treatment in that regard than
those two pathological liars Lyndon Johnson and Robert McNamara. I
see from his letter, for instance, that Morris has relied for his
research on the edited transcripts of Philip Zelikow and Ernest May.
I assume he means Ernest R. May and Philip Zelikow, eds., The
Kennedy Tapes: Inside the White House During the Cuban Missile
Crisis. As any historian who kept up with the debates on the
topic could have informed him, this is a serious mistake. Sheldon
Stern, former chief archivist in the John F. Kennedy Presidential
Library, notes in his superb new study, Averting "The Final
Failure": John F. Kennedy and the Secret Cuban Missile Crisis
Meetings, that these transcriptions are "marred by serious
errors." A far more accurate rendering of the transcripts of the
tapes can be found in The Presidential Recordings: John F.
Kennedy: Volumes 1-3, The Great Crises, Philip Zelikow, Timothy
Naftali and Ernest May, eds. For Stern's original critique, Morris
should consult "What JFK Really Said," Atlantic Monthly (May
2000); and Sheldon Stern, "The 1997 Published Transcripts of the JFK
Cuban Missile Crisis Tapes: Too Good to Be True?" Presidential
Studies Quarterly (September 2000).
(3) Morris is mistaken, once again, when he says I read him
conversations that took place in early 1965. The two I remember
quoting to him took place on the same day in May 1964, more than
sixty days before the Tonkin Gulf incidents. In one, Johnson tells
his Adviser for National Security Affairs, McGeorge Bundy, "I stayed
awake last night thinking of this thing.... It looks to me like
we're getting into another Korea.... I don't think that we can fight
them 10,000 miles away from home.... I don't think it's worth
fighting for. And I don't think that we can get out. It's just the
biggest damned mess that I ever saw." When Bundy replies that he too
thinks it an "awful mess," Johnson volunteers that he'd been
observing his valet, Kenneth Gaddis, that day, a man with "six
little old kids, and he's getting out my things. And I just thought
about ordering his kids in there. And what in the hell am I ordering
him out there for? What the hell is Vietnam worth to me?... What is
it worth to this country?" Johnson continues, "It's damned easy to
get in a war but it's gonna be awfully hard to ever extricate
yourself if you get in." In the other, Johnson tells Richard
Russell, powerful chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee who
was also (unlike McNamara) urging him to avoid the "quicksand" of
Vietnam, that he does not "think the people of the country know much
about Vietnam and I think they care a hell of a lot less." Had I
been more on the ball, I would also have read him the June 1964
conversation in which Johnson notes that he is hearing advice that
might justify a withdrawal, and McNamara immediately
counters--"pressing very hard" in the judgment of historian Michael
Beschloss--"I just don't believe we can be pushed out of
there, Mr. President. We just can't allow it to be done.
You wouldn't want to go down in history as having----" The
President interrupts, in accord, "Not at all." There are plenty more
of these, alas.
(4) Morris also mischaracterizes my words regarding James
Galbraith's Boston Review article. I did not say I had read
"other articles" by Galbraith. I said I had read what I understood
to be another version of the same article in Salon
that he had read in the Review, but that I would check to
make sure. Indeed, I did.
(5) And Morris mischaracterizes my remarks about my own work. I
would never (no decent historian ever should) characterize my book
as the "definitive" study of anything. Regarding the Gulf of Tonkin
I may have recommended that Morris take a look at Edwin Moise's
study Tonkin Gulf and the Escalation of the Vietnam War,
which I take to be definitive until something better comes along.
The historiography of the Cuban missile crisis is so vast and
rapidly expanding that I hesitate to recommend a single book, but I
do think Morris's understanding of the crisis could be enhanced by
consulting the work of Barton Bernstein, Mark White, Raymond
Garthoff, Timothy Naftali and Alexandr Fursenko, Philip Zelikow, as
well as the aforementioned Stern. I never claimed that my own modest
contribution will be "definitive." It will, however, be improved if
Morris shares with me the material he promised to send that will
allow me to weigh his own historical discoveries against my eleven
years of research. I look forward to receiving these materials so
that my work might reflect Morris's substantial contribution to the
historical record--our differences of interpretation
notwithstanding.
ERIC ALTERMAN