Robert McNamara
The former Defense Secretary, who died in his sleep this morning at the age of 93, will always be remembered as the architect of a failed strategy. Here, in a 1995 interview with C-SPAN's Brian Lamb, Robert McNamara discusses the great mistake that was the Vietnam War:
You can read the transcript here.
-
1
The problem, of course, is that we don't know what would have happened had we (a) never intervened or (b) had continued the fight. It is somewhat clear that had we done (b), millions of Khmer would not have been killed.
.
We should also not forget just how evil North Vietnam was. Despite the bleatings of John F. Kerry (who should have known better, given Hue), millions of South Vietnamese were persecuted by that horrible regime. Communism was and still is evil to the core. -
2
Highly recommend "The Fog of War" for those interested in a fuller story about McNamara during that period.
-
3
I was about to recommend The Fog of War.
He will be missed.
-
4
McNamara, RIP
-
5
And clearly the neocons have still not learned the lesson. Cheney claims we're planning to leave too soon, but the truth is any return to violence will be the continuation of the civil dispute between the Kurds, Shia and Sunni's. For all the talk about the surge working that the media helped drive, the civil agreements were never made and as an outside force there is nothing we can do about this brewing civil unrest.
-
6
Even more than "Fog of War," I'd recommend "Imperial Brotherhood: Gender and the Making of Cold War Foreign Policy" by Robert D. Dean. The late 90's and early 2000's have brought a welcome introduction of gender (particularly masculinity) into foreign policy history that I imagine most commenters weren't fortunate enough to get in their high school/college history courses.
-
7
Have often wondered how someone in McNamara's position, who believes he made mistakes that cost a great many lives, can get to sleep at night. I mean this genuinely. It must have taken a great deal of emotional energy to keep pushing this knowledge to the back of the mind. Yet this is a remarkable interview (thanks for including the transcript), and for all his mistakes I think it took genuine courage to explore the decisions the way he did. The interview reads like he's a person from a different generation, as we was.
.
We of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations who participated in the decisions on Vietnam acted according to what we thought were the principles and traditions of this nation. We made our decisions in the light of those values...Yet we were wrong, terribly wrong. We owe it to future generations to explain why... we made mistakes and the nation paid a terrible price...I go on to say, "I want Americans to understand why we made the mistakes we did and to learn from them," and I hope we will. -
8
Thanks, KT. Transferring skills can be tricky, as McNamara tried from Ford to DD. Even Peter Drucker praised his management efforts in his books...before the war's revelations. Real life's not so easily covered by six sigma, etc., alas.
-
10
Will Cheney (Wolfowitz, Bolton) ever have the humility and integrity to admit to being the architect of a failed strategy in Iraq?
-
11
pintortwo:
No. Those disciples of priapism as foreign policy lack the character McNamara displayed in exercising his tragic hindsight
-
12
"Tragic hindsight", good call, Flown. McNamara was the Satan of my 60s youth, but he had the wisdom and humility to recognize and admit his mistakes. Wonder if any of our recent warmongers will ever see the light?
-
13
McNamara on mass slaughter as a test of concept:
" .. (McNamara) did not think the bombing of North Vietnam — the biggest bombing campaign in history up to that time — would work but he went along with it "because we had to try to prove it would not work, number one, and (because) other people thought it would work." -
14
Wow. Everyone must read Paul Dirks' link.
-
Doomed to repeat it.
-
McNamera had a business background-- he eventually was honest enough to recognize what he'd done wrong. But the architects of the Iraq occupation are all products of the conservative bubble-- political correctness is the only virtue there, so cutting taxes and invading countries, regardless of context, is always the response. Reality simply isn't part of their calculus. They will not have a moment of honestly as McNamera did. -
15
Seems like McNamara and LBJ's great flaw was running scared of the conservatives. They were so worried about being perceived as soft on Communism, that they forgot that their first job was to be strong on America.
.
They knew Vietnam was unwinnable, yet they pursued the war because they were worried what Richard Nixon and William F Buckley Jr would say. Nixon and Kissinger fell into the same trap. They knew the war couldn't be won regardless of the number or type of bombs we dropped, yet they were worried about what the right wing would say.
.
The Dems are making the same mistake today. They are more concerned about what William Kristol and Mitch McConnell (who have never been right about anything) will say rather than taking a stand and doing what is right. -
16
Thanks for the oracle vision, Elvis.
-
17
McNamara: " .. I want Americans to understand why we made the mistakes we did and to learn from them," and I hope we will. .."
And have we? Fallujah, Mosul, My Lai, Kirkuk, Abu Ghraib, Auschwitz, Guantanamo, .... "bomb them back to stone age", "shock and awe", ...
Consider the current open-ended war on islam and the troop surges - with predictions of an ill-defined 'win':
"McNamara visited Vietnam — the first of many trips — and returned predicting that American intervention would enable the South Vietnamese, despite internal feuds, to stand by themselves "by the end of 1965."
That was an early forerunner of a seemingly endless string of official "light at the end of the tunnel" predictions of American success. Each was followed by more warfare, more American troops, more American casualties, more American bombing, more North Vietnamese infiltration — and more predictions of an early end to America's commitment."Like the many who died in that war in Vietnam, McNamara is no more ...
Life is a tale told by ... -
18
RIP.
.
I'd recommend "Imperial Brotherhood: Gender and the Making of Cold War Foreign Policy" by Robert D. Dean.
.
I second that.
.
I was thinking recently about the irony of Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon all forming their Vietnam policy with the goal of not "losing" Vietnam like Truman "lost" China: no one blames Truman for China anymore but those four Presidents are all blamed to varying extents for Vietnam. -
19
Blamed by whom Rose? Blamed by unrepentant imperialists for losing a nation? How does one country lose another sovereign nation, right? Or blamed by lefties like me for ever getting involved in the first place, let alone the slaughter that followed. Not to mention the 2001 US-Vietnam Bilateral Trade Agreement. Communism, the scourge of the planet, unless, of course, it's in our economic interest. Autocratic regimes, yet another scourge, yet the Kingdom is our BFF.
~
Unfortunately, for every repentant figure like McNamara, we have countless others in high office who feel the need to reshape the world in their own twisted image, merely to maintain our privileged position in the world. "Doomed to repeat" is a lovely concept, but for the cabal running state/the pentagon "doom" is a wholly inaccurate term. That implies that their are consequences to geopolitical hubris, that lessons were learned in SE Asia, and have been applied since. This, we can all agree (to this day, Af-Pak Obama, anyone?) is a ludicrous notion. These folks know the history perfectly but warp it to strive after the same ends. -
20
I also liked "Fog of War"
-
21
I feel a bit left out of this discussion, having only come into this mortal coil long after McNamara had departed the Johnson Administration. Nevertheless I know the name and will have to watch "Fog of War" now.
-
22
As I recall, McNamara's son was a soldier in Viet Nam and later died of cancer that was attributed to his son's exposure to Agent Orange. After watching "The Fog of War" I realized that his personal loss was never mentioned. He had the strength to admit being wrong and the classiness to not obtain sympathy via his own child's death.
.
On the news tonight they mentioned his family had hosted war protesters in their home during the war - including one of his own children.
.
Imagine Cheney or Rumsfeld doing any of these things...can't, because they're not even fit to kiss this man's boots.
.
RIP -
23
Not to put too fine a point on it, but McNamara "died peacefully in his bed," as did Dick Nixon, and as will in all likelihood one day Henry Kissinger and Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld.
.
There's a lesson here that's not too hard to figure out.
. -
24
BTW: for those of you too young to have been around, McNamara was DESPISED by anti-war Americans during Vietnam. Magnify by 1000 the vitriol directed at GWB/Cheney/Rummy during the last 9 years and you still don't even get close to how people felt about McNamara.
-
25
Yes, Slowp, how's that for karma!? The other day a student was explaining to me her belief in that nebulous force, and it took all my resistance not to shatter her faith.
Most Popular »
- "Personal Sins Should Not Require Press Releases"
- Congress's Tepid Reaction to Obama's Afghanistan Plan
- False Economy: Think You're Saving Money? Think Again
- The 'Alice' Interview: A Very Different Brand of Wonderland
- Tiger Speaks
- State Dinner, Uh, Fashion
- Gleeks and Shrieks: Fox Unveils Midseason, Glee Gone Until April
- White House Hypocritical Attack on Politico
- The Dreaded X
- First Look: 'Lovely Bones' and Peter Jackson's Virtuoso Vistas
- Can Attack Dogs Be Rehabilitated?
- Helicopter Parents: The Backlash Against Overparenting
- Rachel Uchitel: Tiger Woods' Alleged Affair Connection
- Italian Town Dreams of a White (No Foreigners) Christmas
- Europe's Secret Nuclear Weapons: What Should NATO Do?
- Why Fritz Henderson Resigned as GM's CEO
- Ireland: Lack of New Catholic Priests Spurs Campaign
- The End of the 2000s: Goodbye to a Decade from Hell
- Study: Loneliness Can Be Contagious
- Could White House Party Crashers the Salahis Go to Jail?














RSS