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Wednesday, October 17, 2018

JUDGMENTS OF HISTORY SELDOM COINCIDE WITH TEMPERS OF THE MOMENT

SOVIET NUCLEAR MISSILE BASES IN CUBA MAY BE NEGOTIABLE

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) On October 17, 1962, President John F. Kennedy received a letter from UN Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson  asking him to speak to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev about the presence of nuclear missile bases in Cuba.

Mr. Stevenson wrote...

"(It) should (be) made...clear that the existence of the nuclear missile bases is negotiable.  Because a (U.S.) attack would very likely result in Soviet reprisals...it is important that we have as much of the world with us as possible.  To start...a nuclear war is bound to be divisive at best and the judgments of history seldom coincide with the tempers of the moment."


According to James M. Lindsay on "The Water's Edge,"  EXCOM met at 8:30 a.m. in the State Department while the President did not attend this meeting, most of the participants believed Khrushchev had put the missiles in Cuba to put pressure on our position in West Berlin

SOURCES

"The Kennedys:  A Chronological History," by Harvey Rachlin, World Almanac, New York, 1986.

"TWE Remembers:  JFK Solicits Ike's Advisers, Cuban Missile Crisis Day 2," www.blogs.cfr.org