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- I, John Fitzgerald Kennedy,
do solemnly swear
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that I will faithfully execute
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the Office of President
of the United States.
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- He was instantly
overwhelmed by it.
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There were crises mounting.
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- The African Americans
are asking
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the federal government
to do its job.
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- With Bobby and John Kennedy,
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if you don't have
the Freedom Rides,
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they don't start moving
to a position where
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they are going to support
the Civil Rights movement.
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- The idea we could
get into a nuclear war
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during the '60s was very real.
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- And we shall be
remembered either
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as part of the generation
that turned this planet
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into a flaming funeral pyre,
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or the generation
that met its vow
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to save succeeding generations
from the scourge of war.
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♪ ♪
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- To lead us to a
fruitful America
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from the state
of Massachusetts,
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John F. Kennedy.
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- John F. Kennedy lived
a life that would help
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define an entire generation.
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♪ ♪
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- Together we shall
save our planet,
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or together we shall
perish in its flames.
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- What was it about that guy?
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- Looks, style,
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empathy,
he was incredibly charming.
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- Intellectual,
and progressive.
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- He was the future.
He was next.
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♪ ♪
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- President for just
over 1,000 days,
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Kennedy navigated events and
crises that changed the world.
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- Kennedy is feeling
the pressure
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from the Civil Rights
activists.
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- This was a country
on nuclear war footing.
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[dramatic music]
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- This could be
the last mistake that
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anybody makes politically.
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♪ ♪
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- He changed us in the
process of his own growth.
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- We choose to go to
the moon in this decade
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and do the other things,
not because they are easy,
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but because they are hard.
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♪ ♪
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- 60 years after
his assassination,
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we are still fascinated
by the triumphs
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and flaws of the youngest
president ever elected.
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- I ask you to join us in all
the tomorrows yet to come,
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in building America,
moving America,
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taking this country of ours up,
and sending it into the '60s.
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♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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- After only one year,
it was clear the White House
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had a new, modern,
and youthful atmosphere,
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invigorated by music,
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the arts,
and the contemporary style.
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Jackie later admired
the unique atmosphere
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of the Kennedy White House,
comparing it to Camelot.
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- He and Jackie
created a court.
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There was a court of Camelot.
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- Kennedy is young
and handsome.
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He dresses very well.
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His wife is
a beautiful woman,
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dresses in designer gowns
and clothes.
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They begin to throw
parties and soirees
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and receptions that have
great wine and entertainment.
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♪ ♪
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- I would go to the White
House if they had any sort
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of an affair going on.
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The room was full,
and the music was playing.
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One of the senator's wives
walked over to the president,
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said, Mr. President,
would you like to dance?
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And he said, I would love to.
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And so they walked away,
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and I'm standing there
next to Jackie Kennedy.
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And after about 30 seconds,
she looks at me
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and says, damn it, Lieutenant,
don't just stand there.
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Dance with me.
[laughs]
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And so I danced
with Jackie Kennedy.
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- 31 is very young
to be first lady.
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- She also understood that
culture was very important,
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and she wanted
to make the White House
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a center for these
great cultural events.
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- The White House celebrated
American leadership
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in the arts and sciences
alike.
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In 1962, they held events
whose guests ranged from
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the father of the atomic bomb,
J. Robert Oppenheimer,
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to poet Robert Frost,
to singer Tony Bennett.
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- Shakespeare's plays
are performed.
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Jackie introduces
a French culinary menu
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to White House state dinners.
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There is a new appreciation
for the artist in society.
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- If sometimes
our great artists
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have been the most
critical of our society,
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it is because
their sensitivity.
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Their concern for
justice makes them aware
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that our nation falls short
of its highest potential.
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♪ ♪
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- Long before Camelot
is called Camelot,
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they have created
a celebrity of their own.
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- Upon moving into the
White House in January 1961,
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Jackie began an
ambitious project,
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working to renovate and
restore the historic building
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she called home.
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- She can't believe all these
ugly Victorian mirrors
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and this kind of
ersatz furniture.
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You know,
where's all the real stuff?
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And she goes and finds a lot
of the pieces of furniture
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were just laying on dirt
floors in a warehouse.
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And it was appalling to her.
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And so she made that
her life's work.
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- This house will
always grow and should.
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It just seemed to me
such a shame
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when we came here
to find hardly anything
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of the past in the house.
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- And even today,
much of the White House
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reflects Jackie's
redesign of it.
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It reflects Jackie's aesthetic
in so many ways.
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♪ ♪
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- You know, his wife was this
cultured, articulate,
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multidimensional person,
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who also happened
to be an incredible mom.
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♪ ♪
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- John F. Kennedy's
love for his children
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was a reflection of
his love for family.
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The Kennedy family was tight.
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♪ ♪
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- Jackie tried to protect
her children's privacy,
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but photos of them were
often published in the media.
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- They would occasionally come
running into the Oval Office.
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- Good evening,
ladies and gentlemen.
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I'm speaking to you
from the White House.
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- Dad.
- Wait a minute, John.
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Wait a sec.
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Don't say anything, because
I've got to give this speech.
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Would you just sit down over
there now and be a good boy?
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Come on, now, be a good boy.
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- While Kennedy continued to
enjoy the good-natured chaos
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of his family
in the White House,
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come February,
the nation's eyes
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were once again
focused on the skies.
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- Behind this day stands
years of preparation.
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- When NASA selected its
first group of astronauts,
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the Mercury Seven,
in the spring of 1959,
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only one of them was already
famous, and it was John Glenn.
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♪ ♪
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He'd been a test pilot.
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And he had become something of
a celebrity in the late 1950s
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when he set a
transcontinental speed record
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flying from Los Angeles
to New York
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in a little over three hours.
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The first two Americans
who went into space,
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Alan Shepard and
Gus Grissom,
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flew on what were called
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ballistic flights
or suborbital flights.
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They went up, and they
came down, 15 minutes.
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As it turned out, being
bypassed for the first flight
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and the second flight
actually allowed
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Glenn to become the first
American to orbit the Earth.
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- Shepherd went up, came down,
and he became a hero.
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And Kennedy now recognized,
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any Mercury astronaut
I put up,
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it's going to be seen
as a Kennedy astronaut,
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a Kennedy cadet.
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And the public loves it, and
my public ratings go sky high.
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By the time we're putting up
John Glenn in '62,
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the world's leaning in,
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watching what's going on
at Cape Canaveral.
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- If I use the talents and
capabilities I happen to have
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been given to the
best of my ability,
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I think there is a power
greater than I am
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that will certainly
see that I am taken care of,
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if I do my part
of the bargain.
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- Fine to start VPI on--
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- On February 20, 1962,
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Kennedy and more than
100 million Americans
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gathered around
television screens and radios,
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awaiting news of
Lieutenant Colonel John Glenn,
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the first American
to orbit the Earth.
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[indistinct radio chatter]
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- Mercury capsule, go.
All prestart power--
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- Glenn, a Midwesterner,
who flew 150 combat missions
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in World War II and Korea,
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was about to make history
at age 40.
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- All recorders to
fast T minus 18 seconds
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and counting engine start.
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- Good, Lord,
ride all the way.
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Godspeed, John Glenn.
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[rousing music]
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♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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- After circling
the Earth three times,
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Glenn landed safely
in the ocean near Bermuda.
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- John Glenn of Ohio,
he doesn't just
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go to the White House
or have parades for him.
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He'll go all over the
world as an ambassador.
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His Friendship 7 capsule
tours the planet,
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00:10:02,668 --> 00:10:04,376
and people wait up
like they would to see
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00:10:04,543 --> 00:10:06,543
something rare in the Louvre.
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00:10:06,626 --> 00:10:08,210
- This is Colonel Glenn.
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00:10:08,418 --> 00:10:10,960
- Oh, listen, Colonel,
we're really proud of you.
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And I must say,
you did a wonderful job.
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00:10:13,835 --> 00:10:16,376
- Thank you, Mr. President.
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- Kennedy has turned
the space race
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into what, in many ways,
it is.
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00:10:20,918 --> 00:10:23,751
It's a great adventure.
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00:10:23,918 --> 00:10:26,668
- Glenn's flight was a
triumphant step for a nation
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determined to go to the moon.
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However, Kennedy knew
this accomplishment
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did not lessen the looming
threat of the Cold War.
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In 1962, he would
need to be vigilant
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00:10:39,126 --> 00:10:41,751
as the Soviet Union
attempted to best
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00:10:41,918 --> 00:10:44,126
the United States
here on Earth.
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- As he had in his youth,
Kennedy continued
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to read feverishly during
his time in office.
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00:10:55,043 --> 00:10:59,585
In mid-1962, as excitement
over astronaut John Glenn's
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00:10:59,751 --> 00:11:03,043
achievement continued,
Kennedy's imagination
221
00:11:03,168 --> 00:11:05,876
was caught by
a best-selling book,
222
00:11:06,001 --> 00:11:10,501
Barbara Tuckman's
"The Guns of August."
223
00:11:10,585 --> 00:11:12,501
The book chronicles
the events
224
00:11:12,585 --> 00:11:15,085
that led to World War I
and documents
225
00:11:15,210 --> 00:11:18,543
how easily missteps
and miscalculations
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00:11:18,668 --> 00:11:22,001
spiraled out of control.
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00:11:22,085 --> 00:11:25,335
- If you're a president burned
in your first major
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00:11:25,460 --> 00:11:26,960
foreign policy initiative,
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00:11:27,043 --> 00:11:29,085
a book about
how little mistakes,
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00:11:29,210 --> 00:11:31,543
miscommunications,
or small steps
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00:11:31,626 --> 00:11:34,835
can lead into
terrible mistakes,
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00:11:34,960 --> 00:11:36,668
it's going to be attractive.
233
00:11:36,793 --> 00:11:38,876
I think that's why it was
attractive to Kennedy.
234
00:11:39,001 --> 00:11:41,626
- Kennedy felt so
strongly about the book
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00:11:41,751 --> 00:11:44,043
and its analysis of
global conflicts,
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00:11:44,168 --> 00:11:47,835
that he distributed copies
to his staff and his generals
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00:11:48,001 --> 00:11:50,126
as a reading assignment.
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00:11:50,251 --> 00:11:52,960
To Kennedy, the themes
of "The Guns of August"
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00:11:53,085 --> 00:11:55,793
could not be more relevant.
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00:11:55,918 --> 00:11:59,335
On October 30, 1961,
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00:11:59,418 --> 00:12:02,710
the Soviet Union tested
the largest nuclear bomb
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00:12:02,835 --> 00:12:06,460
in history, at 58 megatons.
243
00:12:06,585 --> 00:12:11,543
It was 4,000 times larger
than the bomb in Hiroshima.
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00:12:11,710 --> 00:12:18,835
♪ ♪
245
00:12:19,168 --> 00:12:21,751
[rumbling]
246
00:12:21,876 --> 00:12:24,001
The Soviet explosion
was so violent,
247
00:12:24,126 --> 00:12:28,460
it shattered windows
over 500 miles away.
248
00:12:28,585 --> 00:12:33,251
- The Soviet Union callously
broke the moratorium
249
00:12:33,376 --> 00:12:39,210
with a two months' series of
tests of more than 40 weapons.
250
00:12:39,251 --> 00:12:42,543
In response to the
escalating Soviet program,
251
00:12:42,710 --> 00:12:44,626
Kennedy announced
the United States
252
00:12:44,751 --> 00:12:47,543
would restart
its nuclear testing.
253
00:12:47,668 --> 00:12:51,126
- I have today authorized
the Atomic Energy Commission
254
00:12:51,251 --> 00:12:53,668
and the Department of Defense
255
00:12:53,793 --> 00:12:57,460
to conduct a series
of nuclear tests.
256
00:12:57,585 --> 00:13:01,501
- Both Kennedy and Khrushchev
controlled nuclear arsenals
257
00:13:01,626 --> 00:13:03,210
capable of killing millions
258
00:13:03,293 --> 00:13:07,210
and rendering the world
uninhabitable.
259
00:13:07,376 --> 00:13:10,710
As this reality set in,
the themes from
260
00:13:10,793 --> 00:13:13,460
"The Guns of August"
rang clear.
261
00:13:13,585 --> 00:13:17,001
The book made explicit that
patience and clear thinking
262
00:13:17,126 --> 00:13:21,251
were key to preventing
another world war.
263
00:13:21,335 --> 00:13:24,751
- In essence, there was no way
to fight a nuclear war
264
00:13:24,876 --> 00:13:26,543
on a small scale.
265
00:13:26,668 --> 00:13:29,751
Invariably, it was going to
lead to global destruction.
266
00:13:29,918 --> 00:13:32,293
And by the mid-1950s,
that was the case.
267
00:13:32,418 --> 00:13:34,376
So when Kennedy comes
into office as president,
268
00:13:34,585 --> 00:13:36,043
he realizes that the moment
269
00:13:36,210 --> 00:13:38,543
the first mushroom cloud
appears,
270
00:13:38,668 --> 00:13:40,168
it's game over.
271
00:13:40,293 --> 00:13:42,043
And I mean that for
all of civilization.
272
00:13:42,210 --> 00:13:45,251
♪ ♪
273
00:13:45,376 --> 00:13:48,043
- The themes explored
in "The Guns of August"
274
00:13:48,126 --> 00:13:51,710
would have a pivotal role in
the conflict on the horizon.
275
00:13:51,835 --> 00:13:54,043
♪ ♪
276
00:13:57,126 --> 00:14:00,293
Dealing with the ongoing
threat of a nuclear disaster,
277
00:14:00,376 --> 00:14:03,668
there was one place that
offered comfort and stability
278
00:14:03,835 --> 00:14:08,210
to Kennedy, Hyannis Port.
279
00:14:08,335 --> 00:14:11,210
Like many Americans,
the president and his family
280
00:14:11,376 --> 00:14:15,710
eagerly awaited
their vacation.
281
00:14:15,835 --> 00:14:17,751
Because of her
equestrian background,
282
00:14:17,918 --> 00:14:20,043
Jackie preferred trips
to Virginia,
283
00:14:20,126 --> 00:14:23,835
with the scenic
Blue Ridge Mountains.
284
00:14:23,960 --> 00:14:26,835
While Jackie rode her
horses or sunbathed,
285
00:14:26,918 --> 00:14:29,460
and John Junior
explored the grounds,
286
00:14:29,585 --> 00:14:33,251
four-year-old Caroline
played with Macaroni,
287
00:14:33,376 --> 00:14:37,168
the Pony gifted to her by
Vice President Lyndon Johnson.
288
00:14:37,293 --> 00:14:44,168
♪ ♪
289
00:14:48,126 --> 00:14:50,876
While Virginia was
a beautiful destination,
290
00:14:51,043 --> 00:14:53,001
as far as Kennedy
was concerned,
291
00:14:53,085 --> 00:14:57,710
it was no Hyannis Port.
292
00:14:57,876 --> 00:15:00,043
Hyannis Port was
where he had grown up,
293
00:15:00,126 --> 00:15:01,960
where his family
was situated,
294
00:15:02,085 --> 00:15:05,960
and of course,
there was water.
295
00:15:06,085 --> 00:15:08,710
- He just loved the Atlantic
seaboard and the Coast.
296
00:15:08,835 --> 00:15:10,710
Part of it, it soothed him.
297
00:15:10,876 --> 00:15:12,710
It was like medicine for him.
298
00:15:12,876 --> 00:15:15,376
♪ ♪
299
00:15:15,501 --> 00:15:17,876
And Jackie, his wife,
knew that.
300
00:15:18,001 --> 00:15:22,376
She'd drawn watercolors
of the Coast for him.
301
00:15:22,501 --> 00:15:24,210
And even in key moments
of decision,
302
00:15:24,335 --> 00:15:26,501
he would draw sailboats.
303
00:15:26,626 --> 00:15:33,376
♪ ♪
304
00:15:33,501 --> 00:15:37,043
That seafaring tradition
of John F. Kennedy
305
00:15:37,126 --> 00:15:39,501
is, I think, a big part of him.
306
00:15:39,626 --> 00:15:42,418
♪ ♪
307
00:15:42,543 --> 00:15:46,501
- For him, being on the water
was natural and relaxing.
308
00:15:46,626 --> 00:15:49,293
♪ ♪
309
00:15:49,418 --> 00:15:53,668
It was only so long before it
was back to the White House.
310
00:15:53,793 --> 00:15:57,793
♪ ♪
311
00:15:57,918 --> 00:16:01,376
September 30, 1962,
312
00:16:01,543 --> 00:16:04,043
another crisis flared
in the ongoing
313
00:16:04,168 --> 00:16:06,501
American Civil Rights
struggle.
314
00:16:06,585 --> 00:16:10,001
James Meredith,
an African American man,
315
00:16:10,085 --> 00:16:12,085
attempted to enroll
at the all white
316
00:16:12,168 --> 00:16:14,376
University of Mississippi.
317
00:16:14,501 --> 00:16:16,251
♪ ♪
318
00:16:16,376 --> 00:16:18,876
- I think Mississippi
is the hardest
319
00:16:19,001 --> 00:16:21,710
of the hard-core
segregationist states.
320
00:16:21,835 --> 00:16:24,501
♪ ♪
321
00:16:24,585 --> 00:16:27,585
- James Meredith applied to
the University of Mississippi
322
00:16:27,710 --> 00:16:33,043
in January 1961,
but was denied admission.
323
00:16:33,168 --> 00:16:36,335
With the help of the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund,
324
00:16:36,460 --> 00:16:38,918
Meredith filed a lawsuit
against the University,
325
00:16:39,085 --> 00:16:42,376
alleging
racial discrimination.
326
00:16:42,460 --> 00:16:46,835
In September 1962,
the U.S. Supreme Court
327
00:16:46,960 --> 00:16:50,001
ruled in Meredith's favor.
328
00:16:50,085 --> 00:16:55,043
- James Meredith had
talked about taking on
329
00:16:55,168 --> 00:16:58,460
this whole barrier
of white supremacy
330
00:16:58,626 --> 00:17:01,210
when he was a student
at Jackson State.
331
00:17:01,293 --> 00:17:03,710
But it's a whole nother thing
different in terms of
332
00:17:03,876 --> 00:17:05,293
filling out this application
333
00:17:05,418 --> 00:17:07,626
and then going through
this entire process,
334
00:17:07,751 --> 00:17:09,876
that he actually went
through to integrate
335
00:17:10,001 --> 00:17:12,376
the University of Mississippi.
336
00:17:12,460 --> 00:17:14,543
- Trying to integrate
a notoriously
337
00:17:14,626 --> 00:17:18,210
all white University was
a life-threatening endeavor.
338
00:17:18,335 --> 00:17:21,543
Meredith knew the danger
he was putting himself in,
339
00:17:21,585 --> 00:17:24,710
but he was determined
to enroll at the University.
340
00:17:24,835 --> 00:17:26,460
♪ ♪
341
00:17:26,585 --> 00:17:28,376
- And he understood that
from day one,
342
00:17:28,418 --> 00:17:30,876
that you can't be
average to do this.
343
00:17:31,001 --> 00:17:33,210
You've got to be
willing to say,
344
00:17:33,293 --> 00:17:37,293
hey, if I'm going to start
this, I cannot give up.
345
00:17:37,418 --> 00:17:39,251
I've got to stick through it
the whole way.
346
00:17:39,418 --> 00:17:41,126
And if it costs me my life,
it costs me my life.
347
00:17:45,460 --> 00:17:47,460
- James Meredith had been
granted admission
348
00:17:47,585 --> 00:17:49,585
to the University
of Mississippi.
349
00:17:49,710 --> 00:17:53,293
But the process of
enrolling would not be easy.
350
00:17:53,418 --> 00:17:55,543
In the fall of 1962,
351
00:17:55,626 --> 00:17:58,210
Mississippi Governor
Ross Barnett
352
00:17:58,335 --> 00:18:01,043
defied federal rulings
and personally
353
00:18:01,210 --> 00:18:03,293
interfered with
Meredith's attempts
354
00:18:03,418 --> 00:18:06,418
to register on campus.
355
00:18:06,501 --> 00:18:08,626
- He was a die-hard
segregationist,
356
00:18:08,751 --> 00:18:13,168
and he was militantly opposed
to Meredith's entrance.
357
00:18:13,251 --> 00:18:16,085
- They say now they're
enthusiastically supporting
358
00:18:16,210 --> 00:18:18,210
this platform, and
they're going to integrate
359
00:18:18,293 --> 00:18:21,210
all of the schools by 1963.
360
00:18:21,335 --> 00:18:25,043
And that's something
that we just can't take.
361
00:18:25,168 --> 00:18:26,543
- Governor Barnett
362
00:18:26,668 --> 00:18:28,251
and Attorney General
Robert Kennedy
363
00:18:28,376 --> 00:18:31,835
reached a deal to allow
Meredith to enroll.
364
00:18:31,918 --> 00:18:36,043
However,
on September 30, 1962,
365
00:18:36,168 --> 00:18:38,168
when Meredith arrived
on campus,
366
00:18:38,335 --> 00:18:41,001
escorted by U.S. marshals
who were sent
367
00:18:41,085 --> 00:18:42,918
by the Kennedy
administration,
368
00:18:43,085 --> 00:18:46,376
a racist mob
was waiting for him.
369
00:18:46,460 --> 00:18:49,418
[distant discordant voices]
370
00:18:49,543 --> 00:18:51,626
♪ ♪
371
00:18:51,751 --> 00:18:54,835
- And it's a federal presence
on the campus at Ole Miss,
372
00:18:54,918 --> 00:18:58,293
with people ready for this,
coming in from other states,
373
00:18:58,418 --> 00:19:01,710
crowding the campus
to resist and fight
374
00:19:01,876 --> 00:19:03,376
the entry of Meredith.
375
00:19:03,543 --> 00:19:06,335
♪ ♪
376
00:19:06,460 --> 00:19:09,293
- Meredith was quickly
moved into a dormitory
377
00:19:09,460 --> 00:19:11,751
for his own protection
as the conflicts
378
00:19:11,876 --> 00:19:14,710
between the violent mob
and federal marshals
379
00:19:14,793 --> 00:19:16,626
came to a head.
380
00:19:16,751 --> 00:19:19,043
- Meredith's on campus.
He's gone in secretly.
381
00:19:19,210 --> 00:19:21,585
He's in his dorm room.
He's safe.
382
00:19:21,710 --> 00:19:23,168
And the order is
given to the marshals
383
00:19:23,251 --> 00:19:25,710
not to shoot unless
it is to protect
384
00:19:25,835 --> 00:19:27,085
the life of James Meredith.
385
00:19:27,251 --> 00:19:29,418
So a full-scale riot
breaks out,
386
00:19:29,543 --> 00:19:32,001
with the mob targeting
the marshals.
387
00:19:32,085 --> 00:19:34,501
[distant siren]
388
00:19:34,626 --> 00:19:37,918
- White mobs began
lobbing bricks and acid
389
00:19:38,043 --> 00:19:41,335
at federal marshals stationed
outside the University's
390
00:19:41,460 --> 00:19:43,376
Lyceum building.
391
00:19:43,501 --> 00:19:45,710
The marshals
responded by throwing
392
00:19:45,835 --> 00:19:49,251
tear gas into the crowds.
393
00:19:49,376 --> 00:19:52,460
- It was as though they had
394
00:19:52,585 --> 00:19:55,793
you know, swatted a beehive.
395
00:19:55,918 --> 00:20:01,168
And once tear gas now is shot,
canisters are thrown back.
396
00:20:01,293 --> 00:20:04,001
And then once
it becomes dark,
397
00:20:04,126 --> 00:20:06,543
and then people began
to shoot guns.
398
00:20:06,585 --> 00:20:09,543
And the marshals now,
several marshals are wounded.
399
00:20:09,668 --> 00:20:12,376
♪ ♪
400
00:20:12,460 --> 00:20:17,043
- Soon the mobs grew
to hundreds in size.
401
00:20:17,168 --> 00:20:20,710
- State police had
blocked the campus.
402
00:20:20,876 --> 00:20:25,126
Nobody could get on
the campus without an ID.
403
00:20:25,210 --> 00:20:30,668
But hundreds of these
Klansmen, hate groups,
404
00:20:30,793 --> 00:20:34,210
were masked here
in Oxford off campus,
405
00:20:34,293 --> 00:20:38,668
ready to take up the fight.
406
00:20:38,751 --> 00:20:40,460
- At the height of
the riots,
407
00:20:40,585 --> 00:20:42,460
the mob tried to gain
control of vehicles,
408
00:20:42,585 --> 00:20:44,751
like fire trucks,
which they intended
409
00:20:44,918 --> 00:20:48,418
to ram into the crowds
of demonstrators.
410
00:20:48,543 --> 00:20:51,960
- 14, 13, 14-year-old kids
picking up concrete blocks,
411
00:20:52,126 --> 00:20:54,710
throwing them at us.
412
00:20:54,835 --> 00:20:56,626
- It was just crazy.
413
00:20:56,751 --> 00:21:02,210
I stayed out there on the edge
of watching it from a distance
414
00:21:02,335 --> 00:21:04,460
until I realized
I could get killed out here
415
00:21:04,585 --> 00:21:06,335
because so many bullets
are flying around.
416
00:21:27,543 --> 00:21:30,251
- And then Kennedy is
made aware of all of this.
417
00:21:30,418 --> 00:21:32,168
- Kennedy worked to
bring about order,
418
00:21:32,251 --> 00:21:34,751
speaking to Barnett on the
phone from the White House.
419
00:22:01,626 --> 00:22:04,543
- The governor refused to
follow up with firm efforts
420
00:22:04,626 --> 00:22:07,168
to help quell
the violence in Oxford.
421
00:22:07,293 --> 00:22:09,793
♪ ♪
422
00:22:09,918 --> 00:22:11,751
Amidst the chaos,
Kennedy activated
423
00:22:11,876 --> 00:22:15,710
the Mississippi
National Guard.
424
00:22:15,835 --> 00:22:19,585
The violence continued
unabated for hours
425
00:22:19,751 --> 00:22:23,460
and well into the early
morning of October 1st,
426
00:22:23,585 --> 00:22:28,501
when federal troops finally
arrived and crushed the riot.
427
00:22:28,585 --> 00:22:31,710
Two people were killed,
hundreds were wounded,
428
00:22:31,835 --> 00:22:36,293
and many were arrested
during the riots.
429
00:22:36,418 --> 00:22:40,710
At last,
on October 1, 1962,
430
00:22:40,876 --> 00:22:44,001
Meredith was able
to register for courses.
431
00:22:44,126 --> 00:22:46,918
He was the first
African American student
432
00:22:47,043 --> 00:22:52,335
registered at the
University of Mississippi.
433
00:22:52,460 --> 00:22:55,168
- When you have that
kind of tenacity,
434
00:22:55,293 --> 00:22:57,043
and you've got
internal fortitude,
435
00:22:57,210 --> 00:22:58,876
you've got this courage.
436
00:22:59,085 --> 00:23:01,418
He's a tremendous model
437
00:23:01,501 --> 00:23:04,251
for what it means
to be an American.
438
00:23:04,376 --> 00:23:06,001
- James Meredith's integration
439
00:23:06,126 --> 00:23:08,876
at the University
of Mississippi showed Kennedy
440
00:23:09,001 --> 00:23:10,751
the deadly consequences
441
00:23:10,918 --> 00:23:14,210
of trying to negotiate with
figures like Ross Barnett.
442
00:23:14,335 --> 00:23:16,335
♪ ♪
443
00:23:16,460 --> 00:23:18,001
In the future,
his administration
444
00:23:18,126 --> 00:23:20,501
would have to be quicker,
more vigilant,
445
00:23:20,585 --> 00:23:22,293
and less patient
446
00:23:22,460 --> 00:23:25,918
to prevent chaos
like that of Oxford.
447
00:23:26,043 --> 00:23:27,668
- He was cautious.
448
00:23:27,793 --> 00:23:29,585
I think on a lot of issues,
449
00:23:29,751 --> 00:23:33,126
Kennedy was very hesitant
to take bold action.
450
00:23:33,293 --> 00:23:36,460
He was scared of
either overseas
451
00:23:36,585 --> 00:23:39,460
causing a problem
that would turn
452
00:23:39,543 --> 00:23:42,418
into a major and
deadly conflict.
453
00:23:42,501 --> 00:23:44,418
And here in the States,
he was often scared
454
00:23:44,543 --> 00:23:45,835
to use his political capital.
455
00:23:45,918 --> 00:23:47,501
He was worried
about re-election.
456
00:23:47,626 --> 00:23:50,210
He was worried about
angering conservatives
457
00:23:50,335 --> 00:23:52,918
in his own party.
458
00:23:53,043 --> 00:23:57,001
- Kennedy was not,
by nature, a big risk taker.
459
00:23:57,085 --> 00:24:01,418
But he was by nature
a responsible leader.
460
00:24:01,585 --> 00:24:03,668
He was one of those
that took a long time
461
00:24:03,751 --> 00:24:06,251
to make a decision.
462
00:24:06,418 --> 00:24:08,418
- You know,
caution has its limits,
463
00:24:08,543 --> 00:24:10,543
and it can be incredibly
problematic.
464
00:24:10,626 --> 00:24:12,876
But I think there is something
to it that's important,
465
00:24:13,043 --> 00:24:15,793
even when the stakes
are intense,
466
00:24:15,918 --> 00:24:19,335
and deadly,
and every minute counts.
467
00:24:19,418 --> 00:24:22,751
- Over time, Kennedy would
learn the presidency could
468
00:24:22,876 --> 00:24:26,710
only be a tool for change if
the one who held the office
469
00:24:26,918 --> 00:24:29,043
had the courage to act.
470
00:24:29,126 --> 00:24:33,751
And soon, a situation in Cuba
would force his hand.
471
00:24:38,085 --> 00:24:43,335
♪ ♪
472
00:24:43,418 --> 00:24:44,751
- Just weeks
after the crisis
473
00:24:44,918 --> 00:24:47,085
at the University
of Mississippi,
474
00:24:47,210 --> 00:24:49,376
the world was catapulted into
475
00:24:49,501 --> 00:24:53,001
the most dangerous chapter
in its history.
476
00:24:53,126 --> 00:24:55,793
As early as August 1962,
477
00:24:55,918 --> 00:24:59,085
director of Central
Intelligence John McCone
478
00:24:59,210 --> 00:25:04,293
began to receive unusual
intelligence reports.
479
00:25:04,418 --> 00:25:06,876
These reports
described Russian ships
480
00:25:07,001 --> 00:25:11,418
transporting Soviet soldiers
and technicians to Cuba,
481
00:25:11,585 --> 00:25:14,210
which was governed
by dictator Fidel Castro.
482
00:25:14,251 --> 00:25:16,001
- [speaking Spanish]
483
00:25:16,126 --> 00:25:19,418
- The Cuban Coast was only
90 miles from Florida.
484
00:25:19,585 --> 00:25:22,751
- Many Soviet ships were
crossing the Atlantic.
485
00:25:22,876 --> 00:25:24,835
That was, you know,
very obvious.
486
00:25:24,918 --> 00:25:28,668
We were tracking the ships,
and it soon became clear
487
00:25:28,793 --> 00:25:30,793
that they were not just
taking agricultural equipment
488
00:25:30,918 --> 00:25:32,585
and food supplies to Cuba.
489
00:25:32,710 --> 00:25:34,126
They were taking
military equipment.
490
00:25:34,251 --> 00:25:37,043
And we picked up from
electronic intelligence
491
00:25:37,210 --> 00:25:39,626
signals the fact that
they were deploying
492
00:25:39,751 --> 00:25:44,126
a anti-aircraft system all
around the periphery of Cuba.
493
00:25:44,251 --> 00:25:45,960
♪ ♪
494
00:25:46,085 --> 00:25:48,876
- On August 22,
it was reported that
495
00:25:49,001 --> 00:25:52,376
as many as 20 Soviet
vessels may have arrived
496
00:25:52,501 --> 00:25:55,085
in Cuba with military cargo.
497
00:25:55,168 --> 00:25:58,210
- These new shipments
do not constitute
498
00:25:58,376 --> 00:26:02,876
a serious threat to any other
part of this hemisphere.
499
00:26:03,043 --> 00:26:06,918
If, at any time,
the Communist buildup in Cuba
500
00:26:07,085 --> 00:26:11,793
were to endanger or interfere
with our security in any way
501
00:26:11,918 --> 00:26:16,751
or become an offensive military
base of significant capacity
502
00:26:16,876 --> 00:26:19,460
for the Soviet Union,
then this country
503
00:26:19,585 --> 00:26:23,668
will do whatever must be done
to protect its own security
504
00:26:23,751 --> 00:26:26,126
and that of its allies.
505
00:26:26,251 --> 00:26:29,168
It is under our most
careful surveillance.
506
00:26:29,293 --> 00:26:31,251
♪ ♪
507
00:26:31,376 --> 00:26:33,960
- That became a debate
in the U.S. government,
508
00:26:34,085 --> 00:26:37,126
actually, largely between
the head of the CIA
509
00:26:37,210 --> 00:26:39,710
and other people
in the government about
510
00:26:39,793 --> 00:26:41,960
what the Soviets were up to.
511
00:26:42,085 --> 00:26:45,918
And then the U.S. also had
people on the ground
512
00:26:46,043 --> 00:26:48,793
who were sending reports
back to Washington
513
00:26:48,918 --> 00:26:52,210
about these strange objects
that were trundling through
514
00:26:52,418 --> 00:26:55,751
Cuban towns, you know,
long, tube-like things.
515
00:26:55,835 --> 00:26:58,710
Career people in the
CIA didn't believe
516
00:26:58,835 --> 00:27:02,626
that Khrushchev would
gamble so heavily
517
00:27:02,710 --> 00:27:04,835
as to send nuclear missiles
to Cuba.
518
00:27:04,918 --> 00:27:08,043
They thought this was some other
kind of military equipment.
519
00:27:08,168 --> 00:27:11,793
- And the only way to
check its reliability
520
00:27:11,960 --> 00:27:14,543
was by sending U-2 spy planes.
521
00:27:14,710 --> 00:27:18,876
♪ ♪
522
00:27:19,043 --> 00:27:21,001
- The Americans,
of course, were flying
523
00:27:21,126 --> 00:27:25,918
U-2 high altitude spy aircraft
over Cuba routinely.
524
00:27:26,043 --> 00:27:29,085
- There's an area that's
not far from Havana,
525
00:27:29,251 --> 00:27:33,710
where a spy has
provided information
526
00:27:33,835 --> 00:27:36,876
that is very, very worrisome.
527
00:27:37,001 --> 00:27:39,168
And so the intelligence
community convinces
528
00:27:39,335 --> 00:27:41,585
Bobby Kennedy, who was the
president's representative
529
00:27:41,751 --> 00:27:44,043
on the group that
decides these U-2 flights,
530
00:27:44,210 --> 00:27:46,751
convinces him and convinces
the National Security Advisor
531
00:27:46,918 --> 00:27:49,626
McGeorge Bundy to take
the risk of one more flight.
532
00:27:49,751 --> 00:27:53,876
♪ ♪
533
00:27:54,043 --> 00:27:56,876
- They sent a U-2 over Cuba.
534
00:27:57,043 --> 00:28:01,210
They took photographs and
were able to measure precisely
535
00:28:01,293 --> 00:28:03,085
the length of these tubes.
536
00:28:03,251 --> 00:28:06,376
And they discovered
that they were,
537
00:28:06,460 --> 00:28:08,043
in fact, nuclear missiles.
538
00:28:08,085 --> 00:28:11,043
[tense music]
539
00:28:11,168 --> 00:28:13,043
♪ ♪
540
00:28:13,126 --> 00:28:16,376
This material was being
shipped to Cuba by the Soviets
541
00:28:16,501 --> 00:28:18,293
for two main reasons--
542
00:28:18,418 --> 00:28:21,376
to defend Castro and his
regime against another attack
543
00:28:21,543 --> 00:28:23,001
like the Bay of Pigs,
544
00:28:23,126 --> 00:28:26,543
and to retaliate
against the United States.
545
00:28:26,668 --> 00:28:29,460
The U.S. had Jupiter
missiles stationed
546
00:28:29,543 --> 00:28:33,376
in Turkey within firing
distance of the Soviet Union.
547
00:28:33,418 --> 00:28:38,543
And the Soviet Premier decided
it was time to even the score.
548
00:28:38,626 --> 00:28:40,335
- The missiles
looks like the way
549
00:28:40,460 --> 00:28:44,585
to deal with both problems,
the issue of the losing
550
00:28:44,751 --> 00:28:46,876
the arms race to
the United States
551
00:28:46,960 --> 00:28:49,793
and establish his
position as the leader
552
00:28:49,918 --> 00:28:51,501
of the Communist world.
553
00:28:51,668 --> 00:28:54,001
- For the Soviet Union
554
00:28:54,126 --> 00:28:58,126
to have a Communist government
555
00:28:58,251 --> 00:29:01,501
90 miles
from the United States
556
00:29:01,626 --> 00:29:03,626
in the Western hemisphere
557
00:29:03,751 --> 00:29:06,001
was a tremendous advantage.
558
00:29:06,126 --> 00:29:08,168
♪ ♪
559
00:29:08,251 --> 00:29:11,710
- He was just simply fed up
with seeing America
560
00:29:11,876 --> 00:29:13,543
kind of flex its muscles.
561
00:29:13,585 --> 00:29:16,001
The way he thought
he would get even
562
00:29:16,126 --> 00:29:20,210
was to station nuclear missiles
563
00:29:20,335 --> 00:29:23,293
right next
to the United States in Cuba.
564
00:29:23,418 --> 00:29:25,501
So he thought he could
push Kennedy around.
565
00:29:25,626 --> 00:29:29,085
- [speaking Russian]
566
00:29:33,251 --> 00:29:35,835
- The CIA estimated
that there were
567
00:29:35,960 --> 00:29:39,335
10,000 Soviet troops in Cuba.
568
00:29:39,418 --> 00:29:41,543
There were 42,000.
569
00:29:41,668 --> 00:29:43,793
♪ ♪
570
00:29:43,918 --> 00:29:46,460
[crowds cheering]
571
00:29:46,585 --> 00:29:49,293
- Khrushchev saw his
572
00:29:49,418 --> 00:29:53,335
secret deployment
of missiles to Cuba
573
00:29:53,460 --> 00:29:57,210
as the most dramatic
574
00:29:57,335 --> 00:30:01,460
and potentially
successful action
575
00:30:01,585 --> 00:30:04,585
of his entire career.
576
00:30:04,751 --> 00:30:06,876
♪ ♪
577
00:30:07,001 --> 00:30:10,168
- The United States government
now had definitive proof
578
00:30:10,251 --> 00:30:13,918
from hundreds of photographs
taken by U.S. spy planes
579
00:30:14,043 --> 00:30:15,876
that the Soviets
were installing
580
00:30:15,960 --> 00:30:19,043
missile launching sites
in Cuba.
581
00:30:19,210 --> 00:30:22,668
The photos showed a series
of newly-built installations
582
00:30:22,751 --> 00:30:25,168
in the Cuban countryside.
583
00:30:25,335 --> 00:30:28,543
The man who took these photos,
Major Richard Heiser,
584
00:30:28,626 --> 00:30:31,751
later remarked that he was
worried his photographs
585
00:30:31,876 --> 00:30:35,501
would start a war.
586
00:30:35,626 --> 00:30:40,001
On October 15, the CIA
observed launchers, missiles,
587
00:30:40,085 --> 00:30:43,460
and transport trucks
amid active construction
588
00:30:43,585 --> 00:30:45,210
at the launching sites.
589
00:30:45,376 --> 00:30:48,835
Shipments to the island
included nuclear weapons
590
00:30:48,960 --> 00:30:52,126
within firing distance
of major U.S. cities,
591
00:30:52,251 --> 00:30:57,001
like Washington, DC,
and New York City.
592
00:30:57,085 --> 00:30:59,751
The might of Soviet
nuclear power
593
00:30:59,918 --> 00:31:02,126
was now on America's doorstep.
594
00:31:06,585 --> 00:31:10,876
♪ ♪
595
00:31:10,960 --> 00:31:13,085
- On the morning of the 16th,
596
00:31:13,251 --> 00:31:17,335
Kennedy's National Security
Advisor McGeorge Bundy
597
00:31:17,460 --> 00:31:20,668
knocks on his bedroom door
and says,
598
00:31:20,793 --> 00:31:23,168
we've discovered
missiles in Cuba.
599
00:31:23,293 --> 00:31:26,668
♪ ♪
600
00:31:26,835 --> 00:31:30,751
- What had seemed impossible
was now a stark reality.
601
00:31:30,876 --> 00:31:32,960
♪ ♪
602
00:31:33,085 --> 00:31:36,085
- Kennedy creates a committee
of his closest advisors,
603
00:31:36,210 --> 00:31:37,543
which they call
the Executive Committee
604
00:31:37,668 --> 00:31:40,168
of the National Security
Council, or the EXCOMM.
605
00:32:48,251 --> 00:32:50,751
- Too much aggression
could start a war,
606
00:32:50,918 --> 00:32:53,585
but doing nothing
was not an option.
607
00:32:53,751 --> 00:32:55,543
Kennedy had a choice to make--
608
00:32:55,668 --> 00:32:59,835
attack the Soviet missile
sites, launch an invasion,
609
00:32:59,918 --> 00:33:04,585
or install a blockade
around the island.
610
00:33:04,710 --> 00:33:07,168
- There were some in the
Kennedy administration,
611
00:33:07,293 --> 00:33:10,043
notably Curtis LeMay,
who was advocating,
612
00:33:10,168 --> 00:33:11,960
we just need to bomb Cuba.
613
00:33:12,085 --> 00:33:13,876
We need to attack and
wipe out these missiles
614
00:33:14,043 --> 00:33:17,335
before they can become
operational.
615
00:33:17,418 --> 00:33:21,251
- According to Ted Sorensen,
Vice President Lyndon Johnson
616
00:33:21,376 --> 00:33:23,501
voiced his support
for bombing.
617
00:33:23,585 --> 00:33:29,168
- The Joint Chiefs of Staff are
unified in their determination
618
00:33:29,251 --> 00:33:32,043
that we should bomb
and we should invade.
619
00:33:32,168 --> 00:33:35,460
And they keep pressing
that position.
620
00:33:35,585 --> 00:33:37,501
♪ ♪
621
00:33:37,626 --> 00:33:40,376
- Kennedy was worried
because the blockade
622
00:33:40,460 --> 00:33:43,293
didn't remove the missiles
that were already there.
623
00:33:43,418 --> 00:33:45,710
The blockade would
only prevent
624
00:33:45,835 --> 00:33:48,960
more missiles
from coming there.
625
00:33:49,085 --> 00:33:50,793
He's holding out
the possibility
626
00:33:50,918 --> 00:33:52,251
of launching an airstrike.
627
00:33:52,418 --> 00:33:54,543
But he goes to the
Air Force and he says,
628
00:33:54,710 --> 00:33:58,335
can you assure me
that you can get all of them?
629
00:33:58,460 --> 00:34:01,335
And they say to him,
we have, for the records,
630
00:34:01,460 --> 00:34:04,251
no, Mr. President, we can't.
631
00:34:04,376 --> 00:34:07,376
Secondly, we don't know
if we will actually
632
00:34:07,501 --> 00:34:09,418
hit all the targets
in our first airstrike.
633
00:34:09,543 --> 00:34:11,668
And then Kennedy asked, well,
what happens if you don't?
634
00:34:11,793 --> 00:34:14,751
And they say to him,
about 30 million people
635
00:34:14,876 --> 00:34:17,251
in the southeast of the
United States are in jeopardy.
636
00:34:17,376 --> 00:34:24,043
♪ ♪
637
00:34:24,126 --> 00:34:25,376
- The first thing
that I think about
638
00:34:25,543 --> 00:34:27,210
when I think about
the Cuban Missile Crisis
639
00:34:27,335 --> 00:34:29,918
is how much worse
the situation was
640
00:34:30,001 --> 00:34:33,668
than the people
at the time knew.
641
00:34:33,751 --> 00:34:37,335
- Kennedy's administration did
not know that Soviet missiles
642
00:34:37,460 --> 00:34:40,418
were already prepared to fire.
643
00:34:40,543 --> 00:34:43,543
♪ ♪
644
00:34:43,585 --> 00:34:46,543
- Now, can you imagine
our 90,000 troops
645
00:34:46,668 --> 00:34:49,835
hitting the beaches,
parachuting in,
646
00:34:49,960 --> 00:34:52,001
and being blown off
the beaches
647
00:34:52,126 --> 00:34:54,626
by tactical nuclear weapons?
648
00:34:54,751 --> 00:34:59,418
How could the United States
not respond in some way?
649
00:34:59,585 --> 00:35:02,835
And then how could
the Soviets not respond
650
00:35:02,960 --> 00:35:04,585
to the United States' response?
651
00:35:04,751 --> 00:35:07,210
- This was--
652
00:35:07,335 --> 00:35:08,835
this was not just
the last mistake
653
00:35:08,960 --> 00:35:10,210
he would make politically.
654
00:35:10,335 --> 00:35:11,710
This was--
could be the last mistake
655
00:35:11,876 --> 00:35:14,168
that anybody makes politically.
656
00:35:14,293 --> 00:35:15,876
- It would have been very easy
657
00:35:16,001 --> 00:35:17,876
for a "Guns of August"
situation,
658
00:35:18,001 --> 00:35:21,460
where this escalates quickly
into a nuclear confrontation.
659
00:35:21,585 --> 00:35:23,876
And there's lessons
we can take,
660
00:35:24,001 --> 00:35:26,418
even without romanticizing
661
00:35:26,543 --> 00:35:28,460
how perfect Kennedy was
during this.
662
00:35:28,585 --> 00:35:31,335
One is the importance
of deliberation.
663
00:35:31,418 --> 00:35:35,543
I mean, it is remarkable
that the president,
664
00:35:35,668 --> 00:35:37,626
in these moments
of heightened crisis,
665
00:35:37,751 --> 00:35:39,293
doesn't always act first.
666
00:35:39,418 --> 00:35:43,210
He thinks.
He listens. He analyzes.
667
00:35:43,293 --> 00:35:45,418
- Had he been impatient,
668
00:35:45,543 --> 00:35:48,251
he would have gone with
his first instinct,
669
00:35:48,418 --> 00:35:51,210
which was the first
instinct of his advisors.
670
00:35:51,335 --> 00:35:56,001
But he looked at Khrushchev
not as a madman,
671
00:35:56,085 --> 00:35:58,543
but as a fellow politician
672
00:35:58,668 --> 00:36:02,085
who has gotten himself
in a pretty rough spot.
673
00:36:02,251 --> 00:36:04,960
And it is my job,
Jack Kennedy,
674
00:36:05,085 --> 00:36:06,543
president of
the United States,
675
00:36:06,626 --> 00:36:10,043
to help him
get out of this place.
676
00:36:10,210 --> 00:36:14,501
And I need to do it patiently.
677
00:36:14,585 --> 00:36:18,585
- I think we were very lucky
that it was Kennedy.
678
00:36:18,751 --> 00:36:22,126
Because there's no question
in my mind
679
00:36:22,251 --> 00:36:27,126
that whether it was Johnson
or Nixon or Eisenhower,
680
00:36:27,210 --> 00:36:31,668
they would have invaded Cuba.
681
00:36:31,793 --> 00:36:35,043
- And Kennedy was not
convinced that a blockade
682
00:36:35,168 --> 00:36:38,043
would lead to the Soviets
withdrawing their missiles.
683
00:36:38,126 --> 00:36:40,668
There was no reason
to believe that.
684
00:36:40,751 --> 00:36:43,335
But he recognized,
and that's what makes him
685
00:36:43,460 --> 00:36:45,293
such an interesting leader.
686
00:36:45,418 --> 00:36:48,585
He recognized that he
had no better options.
687
00:36:48,751 --> 00:36:50,293
- A blockade could
be considered
688
00:36:50,418 --> 00:36:52,251
a declaration of war.
689
00:36:52,376 --> 00:36:55,710
But Kennedy saw it as
the best path forward.
690
00:36:55,876 --> 00:36:59,126
With the president's decision
made and millions of lives
691
00:36:59,251 --> 00:37:02,168
on the line, the two
most powerful countries
692
00:37:02,251 --> 00:37:06,210
in the world stared each other
down at point blank range.
693
00:37:09,960 --> 00:37:12,960
- We stood on the
brink of a nuclear war.
694
00:37:13,085 --> 00:37:17,585
We could not be certain
what the Soviet response
695
00:37:17,751 --> 00:37:22,085
would be to the actions
taken by the president.
696
00:37:22,210 --> 00:37:24,626
There were times when it
looked as though it would be
697
00:37:24,751 --> 00:37:28,335
a violent response,
in which case
698
00:37:28,460 --> 00:37:33,210
he was determined to go ahead,
come what may.
699
00:37:33,335 --> 00:37:40,043
♪ ♪
700
00:37:40,210 --> 00:37:43,585
- One of the problems, when
we think about nuclear war,
701
00:37:43,751 --> 00:37:46,710
is the fact that we've only
ever seen nuclear bombs
702
00:37:46,918 --> 00:37:49,210
used twice during war,
703
00:37:49,335 --> 00:37:51,376
once in Hiroshima
and once in Nagasaki.
704
00:37:51,543 --> 00:37:56,251
And the reality is, in 1945,
those were two comparatively
705
00:37:56,376 --> 00:37:59,710
tiny, experimental
prototype weapons,
706
00:37:59,835 --> 00:38:02,876
that did, yes, of course,
devastating amount of damage--
707
00:38:03,043 --> 00:38:05,335
about a radius of four miles
of Hiroshima
708
00:38:05,418 --> 00:38:07,251
was wiped off the map.
709
00:38:07,418 --> 00:38:11,168
But 20 years later,
by the 1960s,
710
00:38:11,251 --> 00:38:15,460
nuclear weapons had become
exponentially more powerful.
711
00:38:15,585 --> 00:38:17,418
These weren't
city killers anymore,
712
00:38:17,543 --> 00:38:19,210
as the Hiroshima bomb was.
713
00:38:19,335 --> 00:38:20,960
These were country killers.
714
00:38:21,085 --> 00:38:25,210
♪ ♪
715
00:38:25,376 --> 00:38:28,251
- Instead of 20,000 tons
of TNT equivalent,
716
00:38:28,418 --> 00:38:32,543
you're talking about
30 or 40 million tons of TNT.
717
00:38:32,626 --> 00:38:35,251
So the destructive power
of this stuff was enormous.
718
00:38:35,418 --> 00:38:37,210
The ability to deliver it
through missiles
719
00:38:37,293 --> 00:38:38,751
meant that the warning time
was a matter
720
00:38:38,918 --> 00:38:40,501
of minutes, not hours.
721
00:38:40,626 --> 00:38:43,710
- If we begin this blockade,
722
00:38:43,793 --> 00:38:46,626
then we will continue
the surveillance.
723
00:38:46,751 --> 00:38:48,793
I would anticipate two
or three things-- first,
724
00:38:48,918 --> 00:38:51,668
that Khrushchev will make
a statement that any attack
725
00:38:51,793 --> 00:38:54,376
upon Cuba will be
regarded as an attack
726
00:38:54,460 --> 00:38:55,960
upon the Soviet Union
and be responded to
727
00:38:56,126 --> 00:38:59,168
by all the weapons at
their command, number one.
728
00:38:59,293 --> 00:39:01,543
Number two is
we have to assume,
729
00:39:01,626 --> 00:39:05,001
that as this surveillance
continues, with the U-2s,
730
00:39:05,126 --> 00:39:07,251
that these SAM sites
may shoot one down.
731
00:39:07,418 --> 00:39:10,210
At that point, then,
we were just
732
00:39:10,335 --> 00:39:12,376
discussing what action
we will take
733
00:39:12,501 --> 00:39:14,168
in attacking the SAM site.
734
00:39:14,293 --> 00:39:15,876
So I would assume
that this will only
735
00:39:16,001 --> 00:39:17,835
be the first of a rather--
736
00:39:17,960 --> 00:39:20,460
of an increasing
number of steps.
737
00:39:20,585 --> 00:39:23,210
We're not going to be in
any position to carry out
738
00:39:23,376 --> 00:39:24,876
an invasion
for some days because
739
00:39:25,001 --> 00:39:27,876
we have to move those troops
around from San Diego.
740
00:39:28,001 --> 00:39:30,710
But we're going to do all
those things, and as I say,
741
00:39:30,876 --> 00:39:34,168
we can anticipate that it
will be getting more intense.
742
00:39:34,293 --> 00:39:36,918
- In the words of writer
Mark Twain,
743
00:39:37,085 --> 00:39:41,251
history doesn't repeat
itself, but it often rhymes.
744
00:39:41,376 --> 00:39:44,668
As speechwriter Ted Sorensen
prepared Kennedy's speech
745
00:39:44,751 --> 00:39:48,543
on the Cuban Missile Crisis,
he referenced Woodrow Wilson's
746
00:39:48,626 --> 00:39:52,585
World War I and Franklin
Roosevelt's World War II
747
00:39:52,751 --> 00:39:54,876
declaration of war speeches.
748
00:39:54,960 --> 00:39:59,710
Sorensen drafted each word
with the utmost caution.
749
00:39:59,876 --> 00:40:02,251
Like the Bay of Pigs
the year before,
750
00:40:02,418 --> 00:40:05,085
a dark cloud of
stress and anxiety
751
00:40:05,210 --> 00:40:06,960
settled over the White House.
752
00:40:07,085 --> 00:40:08,501
During discussions,
753
00:40:08,626 --> 00:40:10,710
Kennedy turned
to his old rival,
754
00:40:10,793 --> 00:40:15,168
now Senate Majority Whip
Hubert Humphrey.
755
00:40:15,293 --> 00:40:17,751
If I'd known the job was
this tough, said Kennedy,
756
00:40:17,918 --> 00:40:22,043
I wouldn't have beaten you
in West Virginia.
757
00:40:22,210 --> 00:40:25,501
After days of preparation,
including countless meetings
758
00:40:25,626 --> 00:40:28,168
with his brother Bobby,
Ted Sorensen,
759
00:40:28,251 --> 00:40:32,001
and other close advisors,
Kennedy decided it was time
760
00:40:32,085 --> 00:40:35,418
to address the nation
as the country prepared
761
00:40:35,543 --> 00:40:39,210
for a full-scale nuclear war.
762
00:40:39,293 --> 00:40:42,043
♪ ♪
763
00:40:42,210 --> 00:40:45,668
- In terms of how
dangerous the situation is,
764
00:40:45,751 --> 00:40:49,043
and at this point, we were
at one step from going to war.
765
00:40:49,168 --> 00:40:51,876
♪ ♪
766
00:40:52,001 --> 00:40:54,710
- On the evening
of October 22,
767
00:40:54,793 --> 00:40:57,960
Kennedy sat behind his desk
in the Oval Office,
768
00:40:58,085 --> 00:41:01,543
surrounded by cameras
and members of the press.
769
00:41:01,668 --> 00:41:04,376
Finally, he spoke.
770
00:41:04,460 --> 00:41:07,210
- Good evening,
my fellow citizens.
771
00:41:07,335 --> 00:41:11,751
This government, as promised,
has maintained the closest
772
00:41:11,918 --> 00:41:15,210
surveillance of the
Soviet military buildup
773
00:41:15,335 --> 00:41:17,376
on the island of Cuba.
774
00:41:17,543 --> 00:41:20,751
Within the past week,
unmistakable evidence
775
00:41:20,918 --> 00:41:23,710
has established the
fact that a series
776
00:41:23,835 --> 00:41:28,126
of offensive missile sites
is now in preparation
777
00:41:28,251 --> 00:41:30,043
on that imprisoned island.
778
00:41:30,168 --> 00:41:33,293
♪ ♪
779
00:41:33,418 --> 00:41:36,835
My fellow citizens,
let no one doubt
780
00:41:36,960 --> 00:41:40,376
that this is a difficult
and dangerous effort
781
00:41:40,543 --> 00:41:43,751
on which we have set out.
782
00:41:43,918 --> 00:41:48,710
Many months of sacrifice
and self-discipline lie ahead,
783
00:41:48,835 --> 00:41:51,210
months in which
both our patience
784
00:41:51,335 --> 00:41:53,376
and our will
will be tested.
785
00:41:53,501 --> 00:41:56,751
[drums beating]
786
00:42:00,126 --> 00:42:02,918
- I have directed the
armed forces to prepare
787
00:42:03,085 --> 00:42:04,835
for any eventuality.
788
00:42:04,918 --> 00:42:07,710
- That's the only time I felt
as though it could be over.
789
00:42:07,876 --> 00:42:11,085
- The two sides were close
to nuclear war.
790
00:42:11,251 --> 00:42:12,710
- We must labor on,
791
00:42:12,793 --> 00:42:14,585
not towards a strategy
of annihilation,
792
00:42:14,751 --> 00:42:16,626
but towards
a strategy of peace.
793
00:42:16,751 --> 00:42:18,251
- Kennedy is feeling
the pressure
794
00:42:18,418 --> 00:42:19,626
from the Civil Rights
activists.
795
00:42:19,751 --> 00:42:22,168
- I say, segregation now,
796
00:42:22,335 --> 00:42:24,126
segregation tomorrow,
797
00:42:24,293 --> 00:42:26,585
and segregation forever.
798
00:42:26,668 --> 00:42:29,293
- George Wallace says,
I will bar James Hood
799
00:42:29,418 --> 00:42:33,210
and Vivian Malone from this
citadel of white supremacy,
800
00:42:33,335 --> 00:42:34,335
the University of Alabama.
801
00:42:34,418 --> 00:42:37,043
♪ ♪
61799
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