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Monday, March 12, 2018

NO SINGLE DECISION OF THIS ADMINISTRATION HAS BEEN MORE THOUGHTFULLY WEIGHED

JFK RESUMES NUCLEAR TESTING IN THE ATMOSPHERE

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) On March 12, 1962, Newsweek magazine reported on President John F. Kennedy's recent "grinding decision" to order resumption of United States nuclear testing in the atmosphere.

In his announcement the previous Friday, the President said...

"No single decision of this Administration has been more...thoughtfully weighed."

Privately, JFK described his final decision had been building up "like a coral reef" since the USSR launched their atmospheric nuclear tests in the fall.  In polling the National Security Council, there was unanimous agreement that the U.S. had to resume the tests.

Arguments against the decision came from from scientists like Nobel Prize winning Linus Pauling* who said that 20 million unborn children would suffer damage as a result.  2000 protesters made known their opposition to JFK's decision in New York's Time Square.

*Linus Carl Pauling (1901-1994) was born in Portland, Oregon & earned his B.S. at Oregon State University & PhD at the California Institute of Technology in 1925.  LCP won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1954 & is rated one of the top 20 scientists of all time.

JFK+50 NOTE

In August 1963, JFK signed the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty which outlawed nuclear testing in outer space, under water and in the atmosphere.

SOURCES

"March 12, 1961:  The Decision To Resume Nuclear Testing", Newsweek, www.newsweek.com/

"The Grinding Decision--"Built Like Coral", Newsweek Magazine, March 12, 1962.


Types of Nuclear Testing
by User: Fastfission
www.commons.wikimedia.org/