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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,210 --> 00:00:06,876 - I, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, do solemnly swear 2 00:00:07,043 --> 00:00:08,626 that I will faithfully execute 3 00:00:08,793 --> 00:00:11,251 the Office of President of the United States. 4 00:00:11,376 --> 00:00:13,876 - He was instantly overwhelmed by it. 5 00:00:14,043 --> 00:00:16,293 There were crises mounting. 6 00:00:16,418 --> 00:00:17,918 - The African Americans are asking 7 00:00:18,043 --> 00:00:20,085 the federal government to do its job. 8 00:00:20,210 --> 00:00:22,001 - With Bobby and John Kennedy, 9 00:00:22,085 --> 00:00:23,626 if you don't have the Freedom Rides, 10 00:00:23,751 --> 00:00:25,876 they don't start moving to a position where 11 00:00:26,001 --> 00:00:29,376 they are going to support the Civil Rights movement. 12 00:00:29,543 --> 00:00:31,210 - The idea we could get into a nuclear war 13 00:00:31,335 --> 00:00:33,876 during the '60s was very real. 14 00:00:33,960 --> 00:00:38,501 - And we shall be remembered either 15 00:00:38,585 --> 00:00:43,043 as part of the generation that turned this planet 16 00:00:43,210 --> 00:00:46,335 into a flaming funeral pyre, 17 00:00:46,418 --> 00:00:49,335 or the generation that met its vow 18 00:00:49,460 --> 00:00:53,335 to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war. 19 00:00:53,460 --> 00:00:54,918 ♪ ♪ 20 00:00:55,043 --> 00:00:56,210 - To lead us to a fruitful America 21 00:00:56,335 --> 00:00:58,001 from the state of Massachusetts, 22 00:00:58,085 --> 00:01:02,043 John F. Kennedy. 23 00:01:02,126 --> 00:01:04,210 - John F. Kennedy lived a life that would help 24 00:01:04,418 --> 00:01:06,335 define an entire generation. 25 00:01:06,418 --> 00:01:08,168 ♪ ♪ 26 00:01:08,251 --> 00:01:10,668 - Together we shall save our planet, 27 00:01:10,793 --> 00:01:13,418 or together we shall perish in its flames. 28 00:01:13,543 --> 00:01:15,043 - What was it about that guy? 29 00:01:15,210 --> 00:01:18,001 - Looks, style, 30 00:01:18,168 --> 00:01:21,210 empathy, he was incredibly charming. 31 00:01:21,335 --> 00:01:23,876 - Intellectual, and progressive. 32 00:01:24,001 --> 00:01:25,751 - He was the future. He was next. 33 00:01:25,918 --> 00:01:27,335 ♪ ♪ 34 00:01:27,418 --> 00:01:30,293 - President for just over 1,000 days, 35 00:01:30,376 --> 00:01:35,251 Kennedy navigated events and crises that changed the world. 36 00:01:35,418 --> 00:01:36,876 - Kennedy is feeling the pressure 37 00:01:37,043 --> 00:01:38,293 from the Civil Rights activists. 38 00:01:38,418 --> 00:01:40,876 - This was a country on nuclear war footing. 39 00:01:41,001 --> 00:01:43,043 [dramatic music] 40 00:01:43,085 --> 00:01:44,085 - This could be the last mistake that 41 00:01:44,251 --> 00:01:45,376 anybody makes politically. 42 00:01:45,460 --> 00:01:47,751 ♪ ♪ 43 00:01:47,876 --> 00:01:50,710 - He changed us in the process of his own growth. 44 00:01:50,835 --> 00:01:53,835 - We choose to go to the moon in this decade 45 00:01:53,918 --> 00:01:57,376 and do the other things, not because they are easy, 46 00:01:57,460 --> 00:01:58,585 but because they are hard. 47 00:01:58,710 --> 00:02:00,876 ♪ ♪ 48 00:02:01,043 --> 00:02:03,335 - 60 years after his assassination, 49 00:02:03,460 --> 00:02:06,460 we are still fascinated by the triumphs 50 00:02:06,543 --> 00:02:10,751 and flaws of the youngest president ever elected. 51 00:02:10,918 --> 00:02:15,293 - I ask you to join us in all the tomorrows yet to come, 52 00:02:15,418 --> 00:02:17,918 in building America, moving America, 53 00:02:18,085 --> 00:02:21,835 taking this country of ours up, and sending it into the '60s. 54 00:02:21,960 --> 00:02:28,751 ♪ ♪ 55 00:02:35,001 --> 00:02:40,835 ♪ ♪ 56 00:02:40,960 --> 00:02:43,751 - After only one year, it was clear the White House 57 00:02:43,876 --> 00:02:47,126 had a new, modern, and youthful atmosphere, 58 00:02:47,251 --> 00:02:49,085 invigorated by music, 59 00:02:49,251 --> 00:02:53,543 the arts, and the contemporary style. 60 00:02:53,668 --> 00:02:56,543 Jackie later admired the unique atmosphere 61 00:02:56,626 --> 00:03:00,918 of the Kennedy White House, comparing it to Camelot. 62 00:03:01,043 --> 00:03:03,835 - He and Jackie created a court. 63 00:03:03,960 --> 00:03:06,043 There was a court of Camelot. 64 00:03:06,210 --> 00:03:07,835 - Kennedy is young and handsome. 65 00:03:07,918 --> 00:03:09,335 He dresses very well. 66 00:03:09,501 --> 00:03:12,126 His wife is a beautiful woman, 67 00:03:12,251 --> 00:03:15,376 dresses in designer gowns and clothes. 68 00:03:15,543 --> 00:03:18,710 They begin to throw parties and soirees 69 00:03:18,835 --> 00:03:23,085 and receptions that have great wine and entertainment. 70 00:03:23,210 --> 00:03:25,168 ♪ ♪ 71 00:03:25,293 --> 00:03:28,418 - I would go to the White House if they had any sort 72 00:03:28,543 --> 00:03:30,376 of an affair going on. 73 00:03:30,501 --> 00:03:33,418 The room was full, and the music was playing. 74 00:03:33,543 --> 00:03:37,543 One of the senator's wives walked over to the president, 75 00:03:37,668 --> 00:03:40,210 said, Mr. President, would you like to dance? 76 00:03:40,376 --> 00:03:41,751 And he said, I would love to. 77 00:03:41,876 --> 00:03:43,835 And so they walked away, 78 00:03:43,960 --> 00:03:47,710 and I'm standing there next to Jackie Kennedy. 79 00:03:47,835 --> 00:03:51,876 And after about 30 seconds, she looks at me 80 00:03:51,918 --> 00:03:55,085 and says, damn it, Lieutenant, don't just stand there. 81 00:03:55,251 --> 00:03:57,376 Dance with me. [laughs] 82 00:03:57,543 --> 00:04:02,001 And so I danced with Jackie Kennedy. 83 00:04:02,126 --> 00:04:06,543 - 31 is very young to be first lady. 84 00:04:06,585 --> 00:04:09,210 - She also understood that culture was very important, 85 00:04:09,335 --> 00:04:11,293 and she wanted to make the White House 86 00:04:11,418 --> 00:04:15,543 a center for these great cultural events. 87 00:04:15,668 --> 00:04:18,168 - The White House celebrated American leadership 88 00:04:18,293 --> 00:04:21,043 in the arts and sciences alike. 89 00:04:21,085 --> 00:04:25,710 In 1962, they held events whose guests ranged from 90 00:04:25,793 --> 00:04:29,376 the father of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer, 91 00:04:29,501 --> 00:04:34,251 to poet Robert Frost, to singer Tony Bennett. 92 00:04:34,418 --> 00:04:36,126 - Shakespeare's plays are performed. 93 00:04:36,251 --> 00:04:38,085 Jackie introduces a French culinary menu 94 00:04:38,251 --> 00:04:40,460 to White House state dinners. 95 00:04:40,585 --> 00:04:44,501 There is a new appreciation for the artist in society. 96 00:04:44,626 --> 00:04:46,335 - If sometimes our great artists 97 00:04:46,460 --> 00:04:49,501 have been the most critical of our society, 98 00:04:49,585 --> 00:04:51,918 it is because their sensitivity. 99 00:04:52,085 --> 00:04:55,626 Their concern for justice makes them aware 100 00:04:55,751 --> 00:04:59,668 that our nation falls short of its highest potential. 101 00:04:59,751 --> 00:05:01,751 ♪ ♪ 102 00:05:01,918 --> 00:05:04,751 - Long before Camelot is called Camelot, 103 00:05:04,918 --> 00:05:10,001 they have created a celebrity of their own. 104 00:05:10,085 --> 00:05:14,043 - Upon moving into the White House in January 1961, 105 00:05:14,210 --> 00:05:16,751 Jackie began an ambitious project, 106 00:05:16,876 --> 00:05:20,710 working to renovate and restore the historic building 107 00:05:20,835 --> 00:05:22,710 she called home. 108 00:05:22,751 --> 00:05:26,043 - She can't believe all these ugly Victorian mirrors 109 00:05:26,168 --> 00:05:28,335 and this kind of ersatz furniture. 110 00:05:28,418 --> 00:05:30,585 You know, where's all the real stuff? 111 00:05:30,668 --> 00:05:34,543 And she goes and finds a lot of the pieces of furniture 112 00:05:34,668 --> 00:05:37,876 were just laying on dirt floors in a warehouse. 113 00:05:38,043 --> 00:05:39,543 And it was appalling to her. 114 00:05:39,710 --> 00:05:42,918 And so she made that her life's work. 115 00:05:43,043 --> 00:05:46,168 - This house will always grow and should. 116 00:05:46,251 --> 00:05:47,668 It just seemed to me such a shame 117 00:05:47,793 --> 00:05:50,085 when we came here to find hardly anything 118 00:05:50,168 --> 00:05:53,460 of the past in the house. 119 00:05:53,626 --> 00:05:56,210 - And even today, much of the White House 120 00:05:56,335 --> 00:05:59,918 reflects Jackie's redesign of it. 121 00:06:00,043 --> 00:06:02,126 It reflects Jackie's aesthetic in so many ways. 122 00:06:02,293 --> 00:06:04,751 ♪ ♪ 123 00:06:04,918 --> 00:06:07,918 - You know, his wife was this cultured, articulate, 124 00:06:08,043 --> 00:06:10,376 multidimensional person, 125 00:06:10,501 --> 00:06:12,585 who also happened to be an incredible mom. 126 00:06:12,710 --> 00:06:15,001 ♪ ♪ 127 00:06:15,126 --> 00:06:16,710 - John F. Kennedy's love for his children 128 00:06:16,793 --> 00:06:19,168 was a reflection of his love for family. 129 00:06:19,293 --> 00:06:21,043 The Kennedy family was tight. 130 00:06:21,168 --> 00:06:23,543 ♪ ♪ 131 00:06:23,668 --> 00:06:26,668 - Jackie tried to protect her children's privacy, 132 00:06:26,835 --> 00:06:31,001 but photos of them were often published in the media. 133 00:06:31,085 --> 00:06:35,418 - They would occasionally come running into the Oval Office. 134 00:06:35,585 --> 00:06:38,043 - Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. 135 00:06:38,168 --> 00:06:40,043 I'm speaking to you from the White House. 136 00:06:40,168 --> 00:06:41,376 - Dad. - Wait a minute, John. 137 00:06:41,543 --> 00:06:43,585 Wait a sec. 138 00:06:43,710 --> 00:06:45,585 Don't say anything, because I've got to give this speech. 139 00:06:45,710 --> 00:06:46,626 Would you just sit down over there now and be a good boy? 140 00:06:46,710 --> 00:06:48,668 Come on, now, be a good boy. 141 00:06:52,918 --> 00:06:56,210 - While Kennedy continued to enjoy the good-natured chaos 142 00:06:56,335 --> 00:06:58,710 of his family in the White House, 143 00:06:58,835 --> 00:07:01,376 come February, the nation's eyes 144 00:07:01,460 --> 00:07:05,168 were once again focused on the skies. 145 00:07:05,251 --> 00:07:08,501 - Behind this day stands years of preparation. 146 00:07:08,585 --> 00:07:11,960 - When NASA selected its first group of astronauts, 147 00:07:12,085 --> 00:07:15,793 the Mercury Seven, in the spring of 1959, 148 00:07:15,918 --> 00:07:19,043 only one of them was already famous, and it was John Glenn. 149 00:07:19,168 --> 00:07:21,168 ♪ ♪ 150 00:07:21,293 --> 00:07:23,126 He'd been a test pilot. 151 00:07:23,251 --> 00:07:26,376 And he had become something of a celebrity in the late 1950s 152 00:07:26,501 --> 00:07:28,668 when he set a transcontinental speed record 153 00:07:28,751 --> 00:07:31,251 flying from Los Angeles to New York 154 00:07:31,418 --> 00:07:33,376 in a little over three hours. 155 00:07:33,501 --> 00:07:36,710 The first two Americans who went into space, 156 00:07:36,835 --> 00:07:38,418 Alan Shepard and Gus Grissom, 157 00:07:38,501 --> 00:07:39,876 flew on what were called 158 00:07:40,043 --> 00:07:42,376 ballistic flights or suborbital flights. 159 00:07:42,460 --> 00:07:45,751 They went up, and they came down, 15 minutes. 160 00:07:45,918 --> 00:07:49,501 As it turned out, being bypassed for the first flight 161 00:07:49,585 --> 00:07:51,960 and the second flight actually allowed 162 00:07:52,085 --> 00:07:55,043 Glenn to become the first American to orbit the Earth. 163 00:07:55,126 --> 00:07:59,210 - Shepherd went up, came down, and he became a hero. 164 00:07:59,293 --> 00:08:00,876 And Kennedy now recognized, 165 00:08:01,001 --> 00:08:04,501 any Mercury astronaut I put up, 166 00:08:04,585 --> 00:08:06,960 it's going to be seen as a Kennedy astronaut, 167 00:08:07,085 --> 00:08:09,126 a Kennedy cadet. 168 00:08:09,293 --> 00:08:13,626 And the public loves it, and my public ratings go sky high. 169 00:08:13,751 --> 00:08:17,460 By the time we're putting up John Glenn in '62, 170 00:08:17,585 --> 00:08:19,418 the world's leaning in, 171 00:08:19,543 --> 00:08:22,043 watching what's going on at Cape Canaveral. 172 00:08:22,168 --> 00:08:25,085 - If I use the talents and capabilities I happen to have 173 00:08:25,251 --> 00:08:27,418 been given to the best of my ability, 174 00:08:27,543 --> 00:08:29,085 I think there is a power greater than I am 175 00:08:29,168 --> 00:08:31,918 that will certainly see that I am taken care of, 176 00:08:32,043 --> 00:08:34,293 if I do my part of the bargain. 177 00:08:34,418 --> 00:08:36,001 - Fine to start VPI on-- 178 00:08:36,126 --> 00:08:39,376 - On February 20, 1962, 179 00:08:39,501 --> 00:08:42,376 Kennedy and more than 100 million Americans 180 00:08:42,585 --> 00:08:45,835 gathered around television screens and radios, 181 00:08:45,918 --> 00:08:49,085 awaiting news of Lieutenant Colonel John Glenn, 182 00:08:49,251 --> 00:08:51,751 the first American to orbit the Earth. 183 00:08:51,876 --> 00:08:54,001 [indistinct radio chatter] 184 00:08:54,085 --> 00:08:56,710 - Mercury capsule, go. All prestart power-- 185 00:08:56,835 --> 00:09:00,710 - Glenn, a Midwesterner, who flew 150 combat missions 186 00:09:00,835 --> 00:09:03,043 in World War II and Korea, 187 00:09:03,126 --> 00:09:07,251 was about to make history at age 40. 188 00:09:07,335 --> 00:09:10,460 - All recorders to fast T minus 18 seconds 189 00:09:10,585 --> 00:09:12,293 and counting engine start. 190 00:09:12,376 --> 00:09:14,501 - Good, Lord, ride all the way. 191 00:09:14,668 --> 00:09:17,168 Godspeed, John Glenn. 192 00:09:17,293 --> 00:09:20,126 [rousing music] 193 00:09:20,251 --> 00:09:27,085 ♪ ♪ 194 00:09:36,418 --> 00:09:42,793 ♪ ♪ 195 00:09:42,918 --> 00:09:45,293 - After circling the Earth three times, 196 00:09:45,376 --> 00:09:49,418 Glenn landed safely in the ocean near Bermuda. 197 00:09:49,543 --> 00:09:52,210 - John Glenn of Ohio, he doesn't just 198 00:09:52,376 --> 00:09:54,918 go to the White House or have parades for him. 199 00:09:55,085 --> 00:09:58,543 He'll go all over the world as an ambassador. 200 00:09:58,626 --> 00:10:02,501 His Friendship 7 capsule tours the planet, 201 00:10:02,668 --> 00:10:04,376 and people wait up like they would to see 202 00:10:04,543 --> 00:10:06,543 something rare in the Louvre. 203 00:10:06,626 --> 00:10:08,210 - This is Colonel Glenn. 204 00:10:08,418 --> 00:10:10,960 - Oh, listen, Colonel, we're really proud of you. 205 00:10:11,085 --> 00:10:13,710 And I must say, you did a wonderful job. 206 00:10:13,835 --> 00:10:16,376 - Thank you, Mr. President. 207 00:10:16,501 --> 00:10:18,751 - Kennedy has turned the space race 208 00:10:18,918 --> 00:10:20,751 into what, in many ways, it is. 209 00:10:20,918 --> 00:10:23,751 It's a great adventure. 210 00:10:23,918 --> 00:10:26,668 - Glenn's flight was a triumphant step for a nation 211 00:10:26,793 --> 00:10:29,543 determined to go to the moon. 212 00:10:29,710 --> 00:10:32,043 However, Kennedy knew this accomplishment 213 00:10:32,168 --> 00:10:35,251 did not lessen the looming threat of the Cold War. 214 00:10:35,418 --> 00:10:39,043 In 1962, he would need to be vigilant 215 00:10:39,126 --> 00:10:41,751 as the Soviet Union attempted to best 216 00:10:41,918 --> 00:10:44,126 the United States here on Earth. 217 00:10:48,210 --> 00:10:50,126 - As he had in his youth, Kennedy continued 218 00:10:50,251 --> 00:10:54,876 to read feverishly during his time in office. 219 00:10:55,043 --> 00:10:59,585 In mid-1962, as excitement over astronaut John Glenn's 220 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 226 00:11:18,668 --> 00:11:22,001 spiraled out of control. 227 00:11:22,085 --> 00:11:25,335 - If you're a president burned in your first major 228 00:11:25,460 --> 00:11:26,960 foreign policy initiative, 229 00:11:27,043 --> 00:11:29,085 a book about how little mistakes, 230 00:11:29,210 --> 00:11:31,543 miscommunications, or small steps 231 00:11:31,626 --> 00:11:34,835 can lead into terrible mistakes, 232 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 235 00:11:41,751 --> 00:11:44,043 and its analysis of global conflicts, 236 00:11:44,168 --> 00:11:47,835 that he distributed copies to his staff and his generals 237 00:11:48,001 --> 00:11:50,126 as a reading assignment. 238 00:11:50,251 --> 00:11:52,960 To Kennedy, the themes of "The Guns of August" 239 00:11:53,085 --> 00:11:55,793 could not be more relevant. 240 00:11:55,918 --> 00:11:59,335 On October 30, 1961, 241 00:11:59,418 --> 00:12:02,710 the Soviet Union tested the largest nuclear bomb 242 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. 244 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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