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FEATURES: The Politics of Personal Self-Destruction
By Arnold Beichman
Stevenson and McCarthy as anti-leaders
In analyzing leadership
or in studying individuals who have been leaders, particularly political
leaders, one finds a peculiar phenomenon: the individual who could lead and
yet does not, the individual who destroys his potential without seeming
purpose — the individual with that special grace to influence people,
whether for moral or immoral ends, who loses faith in his own charisma, who
subverts himself and, in so doing, seeks the subversion of an entire
society or seeks to undermine a superordinate leader to no apparent
purpose, to no rational end. History is full of leaders — Danton,
Trotsky, Nkrumah — who seemed to arrange their own destruction as
Raskolnikov arranged his own exposure in Crime
and Punishment. The line between success and
failure in leadership is narrow. If there is a typology for leaders, can
there be a typology for anti-leaders? How does a leader become an
anti-leader?
I want to examine in some detail the history and
career of two men who, politically, once personified the polarities of
contemporary American politics: Adlai Stevenson and Joseph McCarthy. In the
case of Stevenson, I will deal with his years as United States Ambassador
to the United Nations, because it was during this time that his behavior
came to trouble his closest associates. In the case of McCarthy, I will
deal with the five years during which he was magnified into an
“-ism,” larger than life in both a positive and negative sense.
The anti-leader is a type that may be identified and
understood from the standpoint of abnormal psychology. The anti-leader type
is the man (or woman) who has led and lost. He is that rare individual who
can still evoke grand memories even as he now sounds an uncertain trumpet,
stimulating a half-hearted and foredoomed charge. Continually flirting with
self-destruction, he lives his private nightmares in public places. While
winning, he plans his defeat. He suddenly loses his will to prevail at
precisely the moment when one lightning-flash stroke would grant all he
might have willed.
In more precise terms — the terms set by Sidney
Hook1 —
the anti-leader as leader is not only an “eventful” man; he is
also an “event-making” man “whose actions are the
consequence of outstanding capacities of intelligence, will and character
rather than accidents of position.” He does not seek the
leader’s usurpation but rather arranges to usurp himself out of even
the minor captaincy he may have achieved in a legal-rational accession. The
anti-leader needs the limelight to demonstrate his daily destructiveness.
It is against the leader who arranges his limelight that he turns his scorn
and derision and announces great coups d’etat which in fact amount to
little more than minnowlike nibbles.
Finally, the anti-leader is someone who no longer has
faith in himself but believes in history.2 He is opposed to his own charisma and seeks to
undermine its epiphany. His life as an anti-leader becomes
extrainstitutional while he insists on living within the institution.
Still, his raison d’être is moral, in his view; his deeds are
moral; his words are moral; his life is moral.
Adlai Stevenson
Adlai Stevenson is an excellent example of the anti-leader. The qualities
that made him one of the most attractive political personalities of
twentieth-century American history — intellect, wryness,
self-deflation, uncertainty, humor, and, above all, charisma — were
the very qualities that forced him in the end to accept as dismal a fate as
was ever accorded any man who has reached out for greatness.
Stevenson wanted and won the Democratic nomination for
president of the United States, running twice for that office, in 1952 and in 1956, against General Eisenhower. He
was defeated both times. Unable to make up his mind in 1960 whether to seek the nomination for
a third time, he rejected a request from the Kennedy family that he
nominate John F. Kennedy for the presidency. That rejection cost him
appointment as secretary of state, something he could have had for the
price of a nominating speech and which he wanted badly.3
In the event, he reluctantly took what was offered
— the post of U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. During the next
four years, until his sudden death in 1965 on a street in London’s Grosvenor Square, he was
humiliated publicly on at least two occasions by President Kennedy and on a
third occasion by someone close to the president.
What might have happened between the president and the
ambassador had Kennedy not been assassinated we cannot know. But the plain
fact of the matter is that Stevenson was lied to during the Bay of Pigs
controversy in April 1961 and found himself therefore unwittingly lying himself, denying
before the un that
America was involved in the invasion.4 President Kennedy later suggested to him that this had
been a “failure of communications.” What was the effect of all
this on Stevenson? Mrs. Edison Dick, a longtime friend, talked to him
during the Bay of Pigs crisis and reports that when she asked him what was
wrong,
he said quietly: “You heard my speech [at the un] today? Well, I did not tell
the whole truth; I did not know the whole truth. I took this job at the
President’s request on the understanding that I would be consulted
and kept fully informed on everything. I spoke in the United Nations in
good faith on that understanding. Now my credibility has been compromised,
and therefore my usefulness. Yet how can I resign at this moment and make
things still worse for the President?”
Pierre Salinger adds:
Governor Stevenson later told me that this had been
the most “humiliating experience” of his years in government
service. He was only partially mollified by President Kennedy’s
explanation. . . . Stevenson felt that he had been seriously damaged. . . .
On the Saturday [April 8, 1961], a week before the invasion [Arthur M.] Schlesinger and a top
operative of the cia
went to New York and gave Stevenson a partial briefing. Stevenson later
told me, however, that “I was never told of the full extent of the
plan.”5
It should be noted that Schlesinger — friend,
admirer, and confidant of Stevenson — had been assigned the official
role of White House liaison with the ambassador. Clayton Fritchey, then usun’s public affairs
officer, saw Stevenson almost daily and recalls:
Stevenson’s worst moment perhaps was the Bay of
Pigs when he unwittingly found himself making misleading statements to the
General Assembly over the air attacks on Cuba.6
Salinger’s description of Stevenson as
“seriously damaged”; Fritchey’s calling this
“Stevenson’s worst moment”; Stevenson’s own
declarations that his “credibility has been compromised and,
therefore, my usefulness” and that he had been misinformed by his
friend and confidant, Arthur Schlesinger — all of them indicate that
as far as the president was concerned, Stevenson had no standing.
And what was Stevenson’s reaction to all this?
“Yet how can I resign at this moment and make things still worse for
the President?” Or, as the political columnist Mary McGrory remembers
it:
Some time after the Bay of Pigs, when on instructions
he denied flatly any American complicity, I saw him as he came away from a
White House meeting. “That young man,” he said, shaking his
head, “he never says ‘please’ and he never says
‘I’m sorry.’”
Why would a two-time candidate for president, an
acknowledged, admired spokesman for that loose coalition which calls itself
the liberal-left, a man with an international reputation, have accepted
such “a damn’d defeat”?
It should be remembered that the U.S. ambassador to
the un had become an
important personage in the government foreign policy process.
Stevenson’s two predecessors were distinguished Republicans —
Warren Austin, who gave up a Senate seat to serve as our first full-fledged
spokesman at the un
from 1947 to 1952, and Henry Cabot Lodge, who
served from 1953 to 1960, when he resigned to run for
vice president on the Nixon ticket. Particularly during the Lodge period, usun had developed a startling
will to autonomy and at times enjoyed an actual autonomy.7 Yet throughout the Austin
and the Lodge incumbencies, the relationship between the un representatives and the two
presidents — Truman and Eisenhower — were cordial and close.
With Stevenson, there began a definite estrangement
between usun and the
White House.8 On the surface, everything was correct. Like Lodge,
Stevenson was considered a member of the president’s Cabinet —
but the Cabinet rarely met, and when it did its decisions were hardly
significant. Real decision-making power was in the hands of the National
Security Council, whose sessions Stevenson rarely attended — except
during the second Cuban missile crisis.
Even then, when he sat in the National Security
Council during those fateful days in October 1962, he was subjected to a humiliation before the American
public of such proportions that it is difficult to think of another
instance in recent history.
Stevenson, of course, had no illusions about where he
stood with Kennedy. For a president who would be seeking reelection in 1964, every vote would count (his
victory in 1960 had
been by 0.1 percent
of the popular vote). Stevenson was a national leader with a loyal
constituency and had to be tolerated. Yet there were men around the
president who, for a variety of motives, felt that Stevenson had to be
destroyed as a political force.
Their weapon was a leak, an article in the Saturday Evening Post in the
aftermath of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.9 The article, written by two journalist friends of President
Kennedy, suggested that Stevenson was an advocate of appeasing the Soviets
and quoted “a non-admiring official” as saying that
“Adlai wanted a Munich.” It was the “inside story”
of what had gone on in the weeks before the confrontation with Khrushchev,
not only within the National Security Council but also within its inner
core, the “ExComm,” the Executive Committee. In a Newsweek story (December 17, 1962) on how the Post had obtained its
exclusive report, Kennedy was described as having approved the piece and
given the okay for his close friends Stewart Alsop and Charles Bartlett to
write it. Kenneth G. Crawford, a well-informed Washington correspondent at
the time, wrote that a widely circulated theory that the president wanted
to rid himself of Stevenson “was more or less supported by the
failure of the White House in two reaffirmations of the president’s
confidence in Stevenson, to repudiate the Bartlett-Alsop version of events
leading up to the decisions to set up a naval blockade of Cuba.”
By clever public relations, Stevenson won a good deal
of editorial support in response. His public affairs officer, Clayton
Fritchey, telephoned editors throughout the country, arguing that the issue
was not whether or not they liked Adlai but whether there should be leaks
out of the National Security Council. According to sources at usun, there were some 5,000 letters received in
the aftermath of this affair, most of them favorable to Stevenson. A friend
of Stevenson’s who was at the mission at this time told me:
Adlai was furious at the story because it was an
obvious plant. Yet he had shown he had a constituency with all the letters,
telegrams and editorials. The Administration couldn’t ditch him
thereafter. The article actually strengthened his position. The
Administration realized they needed Adlai and his role in future
policy-making was strengthened and his views were taken more into account.
At no time did President Kennedy repudiate publicly
the Bartlett-Alsop story. What did Stevenson do? He gave an interview to
Murray Kempton in the London Spectator a few weeks later, and what he said was quite
remarkable:
[Stevenson’s] summary of the last two
years’ performance of the United States delegation here is full of
reminders of his own pressure on the President: “Mr. Kennedy, at our
insistence, has been closer to the United Nations than any President before
him. . . . We have kept the Administration’s nose to the line on the
Congo.”10
Stevenson was described as wondering why “Mr.
Kennedy is so sensitive about his popularity, so obsessed with what the
newspapers say about him, and so concerned with the appeasement of hostile
domestic elements.” More striking was a long paragraph that disclosed
“a recent conversation with the President” during which
Stevenson had discussed Cuba and the “Administration advisers who
were for an immediate strike against Cuba.” According to Kempton,
[Stevenson] did not, he said, agree with their advice
but he had considered it, under the existing circumstances, a defensible
one. But now, after the attacks on him, he wondered what these people had
wanted then and might want still. The most important lesson he could offer
the President from this incident was that it would be perilous to disregard
the existence of a war party.
This was rather unusual behavior for a man in
Stevenson’s position, for a man of his strong views. Having twice
been humiliated by the White House, and with the lack of presidential
confidence overt and demonstrable, he could have resigned and carried his
plight to the general public.
Instead, he stayed in his job, allowing his gnawing
doubts and his ever-mounting insecurities to find an outlet in the
occasional newspaper interview. These interviews exemplify what I mean by
anti-leadership. Had they been consistent, organized, and aimed at creating
a counter-public opinion to be swayed by Stevenson, they might have made
sense. But they only confused his audiences — as, apparently, his own
position confused Stevenson himself. He found it necessary, to keep himself
intact, to separate his identity from an administration that neither
trusted nor wanted him.
The death of John Kennedy and the passing of the
presidency to Lyndon Johnson changed little. Stevenson, remaining at the un, isolated himself from the new
administration, engineering a coup of sorts over the enforcement of Article
19 of the un Charter. This section of the
Charter says that a country in arrears in the payment of its contributions
to the un loses its
vote after two years unless the General Assembly grants a dispensation. The
U.S. government decided the Article 19 sanction should be enforced, with an agreement worked out
by President Kennedy and, later, Johnson, Secretary of State Dean Rusk,
Assistant Secretary of State Harlan Cleveland, and Stevenson himself. A
circular telegram was sent to American embassies all over the world
instructing U.S. ambassadors to warn host governments to stand with the
American position on Article 19 or risk negatively affecting American relations with
their countries.
Although the decision to enforce Article 19 had been taken in full
consultation with Stevenson and the un Mission, Stevenson, on his own initiative and with no word
to Secretary Rusk or the president, did something that completely reversed
the policy of enforcement. He called on Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Federenko
Friday afternoon, November 20, 1964, and after some preliminary discussion, proposed a voteless
General Assembly. Thus, the annual meeting could be held with a tacit
agreement on all sides that there would be no call for a roll call or voice
vote.
Not until that night, when Stevenson sent a
telegraphic report to Washington, did the State Department learn of his
proposal to Federenko. A confidential source of high reliability told me:
“in effect, the strategy agreed to in months of meetings between the
Mission and the Department — the position to which the U.S. had
committed itself unambiguously in repeated public statements — was
suddenly changed.”
Why engineer a coup on Article 19? It was an odd choice, given how
little he did to follow up on other issues that purportedly troubled him
like Vietnam, for example, or the U.S. invasion of the Dominican Republic.
Why accept public humiliation at the hands of President Kennedy on major
issues with no counterattack, except for a few newspaper or magazine
interviews, and then suddenly initiate a crisis over Article 19?
What we see here is a sudden power grab by a leader
turned anti-leader moved by impulses we can only guess about today. It is
not unusual for political figures to seek power. But ordinarily in such a
case, there is some visible design — even if it is only power for
power’s sake and not for the sake of a policy or an ideology. It is
hard to see what Stevenson’s coup was intended to accomplish, except
perhaps to assure himself that there was a Stevenson identity and a
Stevenson presence. As an anti-leader, Stevenson was his own prison-keeper
with his own key to his own cell. His was a constituency-in-being which he
could not call upon, any more than Coriolanus could seek the votes of the
mob. Stevenson did not seek to institutionalize opposition with himself at
the head. Instead he sought to balk power with his latent prospect of
power. In the end his coup seems to have led nowhere — except to a
momentary weakening of the existing White House leadership.
Joseph McCarthy
Joseph mccarthy, though utterly different from Stevenson, nevertheless also
conformed to the ideal type of the anti-leader. He had, to quote Danton, “L’audace, encore de l’audace, toujours de
l’audace.” In a matter of four
years he became one of the most amazingly powerful men in the American
government. One can say of him that he was the most gifted and successful
demagogue the country has ever known.
In Senator Joe McCarthy, Richard Rovere describes McCarthy as a man who
“usurped executive and judicial authority whenever the fancy struck
him,” held “two Presidents captive” — Truman and
Eisenhower — and had an “enormous impact on American foreign
policy at a time when that policy bore heavily on the course of world
history.” He was not a totalitarian, Rovere says, or even a
reactionary, but rather a nihilist, “an essentially destructive
force, a revolutionist without any revolutionary vision, a rebel without a
cause.” He was the first American “ever to be actively hated
and feared by foreigners in large numbers.”
The author distinguishes Hitler, with whom McCarthy
was frequently compared, from the junior Senator from Wisconsin:
Hitler had a program for the coming millenium;
McCarthy had no program for tomorrow morning. Hitler’s aim was to win
control of the machinery of the state; it is still arguable as to whether
McCarthy was up to anything of quite this magnitude. He never encouraged
direct action by his followers; he did not organize uniformed groups or
even raggle-taggle street fighters. Politically, he never tried to organize
outside the existing party structure, and there are reasons for supposing
that he never intended to do so. . . . Because McCarthyism had no real grit
and substance as a doctrine and no organization, it is difficult to deal
with as a movement.11
McCarthy was a one-man movement who said what he
pleased about anyone he pleased. While it may seem hyperbolic to suggest
sedition, he was really seditious about the values of a democratic society.
McCarthy in his four years became an extra-legal sharer of powers with the
coordinate executive branch. Rovere quotes former New York Times military
correspondent Hanson Baldwin: “Whether President Eisenhower realizes
it or not, Senator McCarthy is now sharing with him command of the
Army.”
And yet, as Rovere points out, McCarthy
“revealed no lust or greed for power; he never seemed — to me
at least — to be consciously moving toward the American summit, the
Presidency.” What, then, was he? “He was a chronic
oppositionist, a dissenter for dissent’s sake; he had to depart every
majority and to attack every authority.”
Perhaps the most interesting part of Rovere’s
book is his citation of the report of an anonymous “eminent”
psychiatrist, whom he quotes extensively. The report, which was prepared in
1954, looked at
McCarthy’s behavior through the eyes of a clinician:
. . . extraordinary intensity of his neurotic
drives, shrewd and apparently excellent intellect and, until recently, the
asset of extraordinary physical stamina. . . . Although at times, McCarthy
seems to have gone beyond the borders of sanity, he has a remarkable
resilience.
Rovere relies as well on the work of psychoanalyst
Robert Mitchell Lindner, whose study of a psychopathic personality, Rebel Without A Cause (Grove, 1944), has particular
appositeness here:
[The] psychopath is a rebel without a cause, an
agitator without a slogan, a revolutionary without a program: in other
words, his rebelliousness is aimed to achieve goals satisfactory to himself
alone. . . . All his efforts, hidden under no matter what disguise,
represent investments designed to satisfy his immediate wishes and desires.
The psychopath, like a child, cannot delay the pleasure of gratification:
and this trait is one of his underlying, universal characteristics. . . .
He cannot wait upon the development of prestige in society; his egoistic
ambitions lead him to leap into headlines by daring performances.
There are psychopaths and psychopaths. There are those
whose rebellions consist, perhaps, in catatonia — total withdrawal
into total blankness. There are those who, somehow, seek their assertion of
personality in politics or culture. There are those who are leaders in one
area of their followers’ lives and become anti-leaders when they seek
to move their followers away from what Amitai Etzioni has called their
“normative orientations.”
As far as one can judge, McCarthy had no interest in
political success. Or perhaps he had a different concept of what success
meant. He was able to defeat eight senators who crossed him; and if one
were to argue post hoc ergo propter hoc, then the eight senators who succeeded them surely believed
McCarthy had elected them. Powerful men certainly quailed before McCarthy
at his most outrageous.
The end came for McCarthy in an unfavorable Senate
censure vote, but it needn’t have come at all. According to Rovere,
“there existed for a time the possibility of avoiding the issue of
censure by a compromise.” This would have involved “nothing
costlier than a small speech of apology by McCarthy to some of those he had
called ‘handmaidens of Communism’ and a pledge of better
behavior in the future.” Rovere argues that McCarthy refused to
accept the compromise because he didn’t want to “hurt”
his two Senate supporters, William Jenner and Herman Welker. I find this
explanation simplistic: It hardly describes the action of a man who had
triumphed using nonrational behavior techniques.
In every anti-leader there is a quality of
self-destructiveness that is never far from the surface of seething action.
Hitler the leader became an anti-leader and subverted his own leadership.
Danton, who might have triumphed over Robespierre, welcomed in the end his
own decapitation with this admonishment to his executioner: Tu montreras ma tete au peuple, elle en vaut bien la peine. (“You will show my head to the people: It is worth
the trouble.”)
To call McCarthy a charismatic leader is to leave
unanswered instrumental questions. One can accept the demagogue who,
whether or not he has an ideological base, pretends to live by certain
principles, defined or undefined; but McCarthy had no consistent pattern of
public behavior, despite his putative anti-communism. (He was elected to
his first term in the Senate with support from the communist-controlled
United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, cio, which preferred the unknown McCarthy to the anti-communist
Robert M. La Follette.) Yet people — 50 percent of the respondents had a generally “favorable
opinion” of him, according to a January 1954 Gallup poll — endorsed him, cooperated with him,
or just ignored him.
The similarity in opposites
So different, so totally different was Adlai Stevenson from Joseph McCarthy
that one must work to see the resemblance. Yet there is one. The Stevenson
credo is generally accepted as “liberal,” but in his public
addresses in the 1952 and 1956
campaigns he expressed modest ideas about civil rights that dissatisfied
black voters. His mild criticism of anti-labor legislation offended trade
unions, which expected strong words from him. He demonstrated a sad
opportunism with respect to foreign policy during the 1956 campaign, whose climax
coincided with the Hungary and Suez crises. And yet, somehow, his charisma
was such that to hundreds of thousands of people he remained the white
knight, above fear and reproach.
Thus, the liberal Americans for Democratic Action
created their political credo and then announced it as Stevenson’s.
Thereafter, no matter what he said or what he did to repudiate that credo,
they remained loyal. When, writing in Newsday in 1960, he defended the French position in Algeria, those of his
admirers who were anti-colonial explained it all away. Similarly, whatever
McCarthy did benefitted from the doctrine that to understand all is to
forgive all. Why did these men have such followings regardless of their
actions, their defeats, their fecklessness? Do anti-leaders create
“anti-followers”?
I think in answering this question we may find the key
to the anti-leader: He is born to be martyred or to give the appearance of
a permanent progression to his own crucifixion, which he accepts as
warranted, just as Kafka’s Joseph K. accepted his fate. The more he
is denounced and betrayed, the more he is humiliated, the more he feels his
vindication; and the more he feels his vindication, the more he arranges
his defeat. McCarthy could never understand why people he had pilloried or
whose careers he had destroyed disliked him or would not shake his hand.
And Stevenson wondered aloud why and how he could work for somebody who
never said “please” or “I’m sorry.”
I realize I am talking in deterministic terms when I
say “they are born to be martyred,” and I am particularly
mindful of Lewis J. Edinger’s words:
Neither individual character structure nor the
contextual configuration can by itself explain a leader’s behavior;
but careful analysis of their interaction, in as many instances as
possible, may reveal certain patterns and facilitate understanding.12
Edinger was discussing Kurt Schumacher, who, had he
lived, might well have been the anti-leader with his public insistence on
the guilt of the German people. Yet one must concede that unless one has
made a thoroughly documented study of the subject’s life, there is
always a greater risk of choosing “as many instances as
possible” to suit the thesis. In Stevenson’s case, however, the
expectations placed upon him by his followers, his admirers, his
“masses” were at total variance with his behavior in his role.
His friends would tell you privately that deep down “Adlai” (as
he was most often called, in this warm, intimate way, even by those who
only half-knew him) disagreed with American foreign policy, particularly on
Vietnam. Yet one half-hour before he died, he recorded a talk in bbc’s London Studios in
which he said:
There has been a great deal of pressure on me in the
United States from many sources to take a position — a public
position — inconsistent with that of my government. Actually, I
don’t agree with those protestants. My hope in Vietnam is that
resistance there may establish the fact that changes in Asia are not to be
precipitated by outside forces.
Nevertheless, the impression was abroad in the world
that Adlai’s “opposing self” was on the side of the
liberal angels; so, too, Joe McCarthy — rough though he could get
— was regarded by his supporters as being on the side of the angels. As
intelligent and perceptive a reporter as Eric Sevareid wrote about the
“personal humiliations” visited on Stevenson, the effect of
“frustration” created by Washington policies he didn’t
approve of. Yet Stevenson remained on the job, speaking for a cause
definably not his own, for a president he did not like, and refused to join
the dissenters while giving the impression he would dissent if he could.
Once he was a center of gravity, as once McCarthy was, too, and they
bestrode their separate worlds like colossi. But they let power dribble
away from them like sand from a rusted beach-pail.
1 Sidney Hook, The Hero in History: A Study in Limitation and Possibility (John Day Company, 1943), 153.
2 Here are the
words of Leon Trotsky: “The Party in the last analysis is always
right because the Party is the single historic instrument given to the
proletariat for the solution of its fundamental problems. . . . I know that
one must not be right against the Party. One can be right only with the
Party, and through the Party, for history has created no other road for the
realization of what is right.” Quoted in Merle Fainsod, How Russia Is Ruled (Harvard
University Press, 1965), 149.
3 Arthur
Schlesinger Jr. confirmed this in a conversation with me.
4 Edward P.
Doyle, ed., As We Knew Adlai (Harper & Row, 1966), 263. Francis T. P. Plimpton, deputy Ambassador to the un at the time, writes:
“In April 1961, a young cia representative came into the then usun gloomy offices and guardedly indicated to Stevenson and top
usun personnel that
something was likely to happen on the shores of the erstwhile republic. The
financing was to be Cuban emigres; no U.S. facilities were to be involved.
When what did happen happened, usun was as surprised as anyone else. Stevenson accepted as true
the cia photos of
the defecting Castro pilots bombing Castro airfields which in good faith he
showed to the un General
Assembly’s First Committee. The disclosures that these were fakes
caused him wounds over which the scar tissues were never healed.”
5 Pierre
Salinger, With Kennedy (Doubleday, 1966), 147.
6 “Our
Heroes at the U.N.,” Harper’s (February 1967).
7 Robert Murphy,
in Diplomat Among Warriors (Doubleday, 1964), chapter 25, “Difficulties at the United Nations,” discusses this
“autonomy.” See also Arnold Beichman, The “Other” State Department (Basic Books, 1969).
8 Theodore
Sorenson, Kennedy
(Bantam Books, 1966),
284. The
relationship between the two men began badly: “[Kennedy] was, for
example, irritated by Stevenson’s delay in deciding on the un Ambassadorship and
publicly announced that it had been offered in order to make rejection all
the more difficult.”
9 Stewart Alsop
and Charles Bartlett, “In Time of Crisis,” Saturday Evening Post (December 8, 1962).
10 Columbia
University Forum (Spring 1963), 4. Kempton’s article is quoted.
11 Richard
Rovere, Senator Joe McCarthy (Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1959), 4
et passim.
12 Lewis J.
Edinger, Kurt Schumacher: A Study in
Personality and Political Behavior (Stanford
University Press, 1965), 4n.
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