Robert McNamara Dies

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ANNE GEARAN | July 6, 2009 10:39 PM EST | AP

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FILE - In a July 8, 1961 file photo, President John Kennedy, right, walks with Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara towards a pier to board the Kennedy family cruiser on at Hyannis Port, Mass. Former Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara died Monday, July 6, 2009, according to his wife. He was 93. (AP Photo/John Rous, File)

WASHINGTON — Robert S. McNamara, the brainy Pentagon chief who directed the escalation of the Vietnam War despite private doubts the war was winnable or worth fighting, died Monday at 93.

McNamara revealed his misgivings three decades after the American defeat that some called "McNamara's war."

"We of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations acted according to what we thought were the principles and traditions of our country. But we were wrong. We were terribly wrong," McNamara told The Associated Press in 1995, the year his best-selling memoir appeared.

McNamara died at 5:30 a.m. at his home, his wife Diana told the AP. She said he had been in failing health for some time.

Closely identified with the war's early years, McNamara was a forceful public optimist. He predicted that American intervention would enable the South Vietnamese, despite internal feuds, to stand by themselves "by the end of 1965." The war ground on until 1975, with more than 58,000 U.S. deaths.

Lawyerly and a student of statistical analysis, McNamara was recruited to run the Pentagon by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 from the presidency of the Ford Motor Co. _ where he and a group of colleagues had been known as the "whiz kids."

He stayed in the defense post for seven years, longer than anyone else since the job's creation in 1947. He left on the verge of a nervous breakdown and became president of the World Bank. In the new post, he threw himself into the intricacies of international development and argued that improving lives was a more promising path to peace than building up arms and armies.

McNamara was a distinctive figure, with frameless glasses and slicked-back hair. Anti-war critics ridiculed him as an out-of-touch technocrat and made much of the fact that his middle name was "Strange." Simon and Garfunkel worked his name into a ditty about an overbearing government, and he once had to flee an appearance at Harvard through underground utility tunnels.

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By the end of his Pentagon tenure, McNamara had come to doubt the value of widespread U.S. bombing, and he was fighting with his generals. President Lyndon Johnson lost faith or patience in him; McNamara would later write that he didn't know if he quit or was fired.

In the Kennedy administration, McNamara was a key figure in both the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of April 1961 and the Cuban missile crisis 18 months later. The missile episode was the closest the world came to a nuclear confrontation between the Soviet Union and the United States, and historians have pointed to McNamara's role in steering internal debate away from a U.S. airstrike.

Reticent, McNamara long resisted offers to give a detailed accounting of his role in Vietnam. His son, who had protested the war his father helped to run, once said it was not within McNamara's "scope" to be reflective about the war.

McNamara's eventual mea culpa won him admiration from some former opponents of the war. Others said it was not enough, and three decades too late.

"Where was he when we needed him?" a Boston Globe editorial asked.

Ted Sorensen, a speechwriter and adviser who worked with McNamara in both the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, said the criticism missed the mark.

"Most military chieftains _ presidents or Cabinet members or otherwise _ don't admit error, ever," Sorensen said. "At least Bob had the courage and commitment to truth to put out that he was wrong and why it was wrong so that we could all learn the lessons from that."

Defense Secretary Robert Gates called McNamara "a patriot and dedicated public servant who took on grave duties during a period of great consequence. Having also held this post in a time of war, I have a special appreciation of the burdens and responsibilities he faced."

Gates said McNamara "implemented visionary reforms that fundamentally changed the way this department does business _ reforms that long outlasted his tenure at the Pentagon."

McNamara's book, "In Retrospect: The Tragedy and Lessons of Vietnam," appeared in 1995. McNamara disclosed that by 1967 he had deep misgivings about Vietnam _ by then he had lost faith in America's capacity to prevail over guerrillas who had driven the French from the same jungle countryside.

Despite those doubts, he had continued to express public confidence that the application of enough American firepower would cause the Communists to make peace. In that period, the number of U.S. casualties _ dead, missing and wounded _ went from 7,466 to over 100,000.

McNamara wrote later that he and others had not asked five basic questions: "Was it true that the fall of South Vietnam would trigger the fall of all Southeast Asia? Would that constitute a grave threat to the West's security? What kind of war _ conventional or guerrilla _ might develop? Could the U.S. win with its troops fighting alongside the South Vietnamese? Should the U.S. not know the answers to all these questions before deciding whether to commit troops?"

He discussed similar themes in the 2003 documentary "The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara." With the U.S. in the first year of the war in Iraq, it became a popular and timely art-house attraction and won the Oscar for best documentary feature.

McNamara served as the World Bank president for 12 years. He tripled its loans to developing countries and changed its emphasis from grandiose industrial projects to rural development before retiring in 1981.

He was born June 9, 1916, in San Francisco, son of the sales manager for a wholesale shoe company. At the University of California at Berkeley, he majored in mathematics, economics and philosophy.

As a professor at the Harvard Business School when World War II started, he helped train Army Air Corps officers in cost-effective statistical control. In 1943, he was commissioned an Army officer and joined a team of young officers who developed a new field of statistical control of supplies.

McNamara and his colleagues sold themselves to the Ford organization as a package and revitalized the company. The group became known as the "whiz kids" and McNamara was named the first Ford president who was not a descendant of Henry Ford.

A month later, the newly elected Kennedy invited McNamara, a registered Republican, to join his Cabinet. Taking the $25,000-a-year job cost McNamara $3 million in Ford stocks and options.

As defense chief, McNamara reshaped America's armed forces for "flexible response" and away from the nuclear "massive retaliation" doctrine espoused by former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. He asserted civilian control of the Pentagon and applied cost-accounting techniques and computerized systems analysis to defense spending.

Early on, Kennedy regarded South Vietnam as an area threatened by Communist aggression and a proving ground for his new emphasis on counterinsurgency forces. A believer in the domino theory _ that countries could fall to communism like a row of dominoes _ Kennedy dispatched U.S. "advisers" to bolster the Saigon government. Their numbers surpassed 16,000 by the time of his assassination.

Following Kennedy's death, President Johnson retained McNamara as "the best in the lot" of Kennedy Cabinet members and the man to keep Vietnam from falling as the war escalated.

At a Feb. 29, 1968, retirement ceremony, McNamara was overcome with emotion and could not speak. Johnson put an arm around his shoulder and led him from the room.

McNamara's first wife, Margaret, whom he met in college, died of cancer in 1981; they had two daughters and a son. In 2004, at age 88, he married Italian-born widow Diana Masieri Byfield.

___

Associated Press writers Glen Johnson in Boston and Warren Levinson in Washington contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — Robert S. McNamara, the brainy Pentagon chief who directed the escalation of the Vietnam War despite private doubts the war was winnable or worth fighting, died Monday at 93. McNam...
WASHINGTON — Robert S. McNamara, the brainy Pentagon chief who directed the escalation of the Vietnam War despite private doubts the war was winnable or worth fighting, died Monday at 93. McNam...
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I also watched "The Fog Of War" fascinated that McNamara finally, as others here have noted, saw the error of his ways, except for one big omission, no apology for the ongoing horror of agent orange..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 07/09/2009

I'm 65 years old and spent years of my life protesting the Vietnam War. I lost a couple relatives and a couple friends to that war. My husband suffered from untreated PTS and became violent in our marriage so I lost a husband to that war also. It was common knowledge that a lot of the 'high' ranking politicians JFK, McNamara, even Johnson were not sure we should be in this war but they all felt their hands were tied by the commitments made by Eisenhower and the pressure from such military genuises as

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 AM on 07/09/2009

Statistical oppression!
The impact of introducing statistical management techniques into the pentagon is the thing people should pay attention to. The officers trained in these techniques went into business when the left the army. We are into the forth or fifth generation of these officers. They carried the techniques into politics.

You can fool all of the people some of the time (statistically just how many?)
And some of the people all of the time (once again, statistically how many?)
But you can't fool all of the people all of the time. (Statistically just how many and for how long is the question to ask. You only have to fool them for the 1 minute it takes to vote)

I don't think Bobby Mac intended to create this paradigm, but he made it possible by introducing the techniques into the military. The world hasn't been the same since.

You can bet on it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 07/07/2009
- BikeFreak I'm a Fan of BikeFreak 30 fans permalink
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I say good riddance.

Somethings just cannot be forgiven.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 AM on 07/07/2009
- NetProphet I'm a Fan of NetProphet 2 fans permalink
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I was only looking at the History Channel's "JFK Assasination" report over the July 4th weekend and noticed saying, "Gee, he's (McNamara) still living." Not one day later did he prove me wrong. Always admired him for having outlived the Kennedy men.

Those were some years we went thru - the SIXTIES - both very good & very bad. I believe Kennedy's men are all gone now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 PM on 07/06/2009
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What strikes me so much is a man is allowed to live into his 90s by somebody as they say (Up There)While so many of our young men and women never got to live into there 20s or 30s. I am really happy First Lady Obama is getting involved with the military families thr brave men and women leave behind.It is about time. That is what bothers me is all the Hoopla surrounding the military such as we support our troops. People mean well but very few know the struggles the military families have.I have never gone through this as I was single when I served but please First Lady Obama don't give up the help after the hostilities stop

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 07/06/2009
- Rosey I'm a Fan of Rosey 6 fans permalink

After having a friend come home paralyzed from a dumdum bullet and after 50,000+++ other deaths, Agent Orange cancers, Post-traumatic stress syndrome victims and others in the same state of non-life as my late friend, I am not sure I can ever forgive McNamara and his cronies. I am not sure his Fog of War was honest....altho I was so angry watching it that I could not finish.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 07/06/2009
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As a toddler for Tet I never really felt I grasped the national ignorance of that enterprise until "Fog of War".

"National" Security is media code for bi-party patty cake protection.

Shake your money maker, unless that is, it is the false flag of war.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 07/06/2009

As a 3 year combat veteran of the Vietnam War, I am so glad this sob is finally dead. I would love to have been there to see it. He was responsible for the deaths of more than 50,000 Americans and the architect of the no win policy. Those of us who fought in that war wanted to win but he wouldn't let us. It was so frustrating and so confusing. I went over there a patriot and came back confused, betrayed and messed up the rest of my life. I hope he suffered greatly before he died.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 07/06/2009

Nobody's life is improved by the suffering of others.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 PM on 07/06/2009
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Thank you for your service to our country. I agree with you whole-heartedly - I'm glad he's dead, I only wish he would have died before my Dad (USMC Viet Nam vet) died so we could have toasted his death the way we did Westmoreland's.

In my humble opinion you were a patriot then and you still are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 PM on 07/06/2009
- BikeFreak I'm a Fan of BikeFreak 30 fans permalink
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Agreed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 AM on 07/07/2009
- NotGuilty I'm a Fan of NotGuilty 7 fans permalink
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The architect of the Vietnam War, republican, dead. So what?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 07/06/2009
- Tunghoy I'm a Fan of Tunghoy 31 fans permalink

"he had lost faith in America's capacity to prevail over a guerrilla insurgency that had driven the French from the same jungled countryside...a seemingly endless string of official 'light at the end of the tunnel' predictions of American success..."

Fast-forward to 2009. Appropriately, as they say in France: the more things change, the more they stay the same.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 07/06/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 77 fans permalink

Myself being one of those who had served in Vietnam I can say with some authority that I question the judgement of Presidents that enlist the advice or services of men who have a great deal of experience working for Corporations, have backgrounds in Mathematics, economics and Philosophy and absolutely none about Warfare or apparently other nations. This seems to be a trend with our Presidents. War is a Racket and just because some President makes the claim that it is in our countries national Security interests to start a war doesn't make it so or the truth. People lie and so do Presidents and their advisers. Unfortunately many people die, rather permanently because of their stupid decisions. That is why there should be a World Court to punish those decisions. Somebody needs to put a stop to the insanity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 AM on 07/06/2009

Amen.

When the Vietnam War ended and when Nixon left office after Watergate, I was of a forgiving frame of mind, knowing that the lessons learned would prevent similar recurrences. How wrong I was! I now believe that criminals in the Bush Administration who lied to go to war, profited from war, and who cooked up rationales and new definitions to sanction torture need to be punished, not for vindictive reasons, but so that the lessons might be longer remembered.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 07/06/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 77 fans permalink

Nixon should have been punished so as to set an example that might have prevented later criminal behavior such as what we recently witnessed under the Bush Administration. But, Nixon really wasn't alone in creating the 'Vietnam Debacle" . That was something that at least five presidents had a hand in. Starting with Truman and ending with Nixon. Read the Pentagon Papers. What Nixon should have been punished for was for the Watergate issue and having taken excessive liberties with his office just as Reagan, Bush Sr and Bush Jr. did. The fact that these last three did it is because Nixon got away easy and wasn't punished as he should have been.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 PM on 07/06/2009
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Good post. I'm sure your'e familiar with Smedley Butler:
http://www.warisaracket.com/
It still resonates today. And it's certainly no secret that the previous administration lied us into war, and that Bush and Cheney never saw military service (I don't think Bush's apocryphal Guard service counts). And it's also pretty evident that they ignored the advice of nearly every military expert in order to pursue a political agenda that had nothing to do with national security-and I continue to be amazed that there are still people out there who believe that their actions actually made the world safer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 PM on 07/06/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 77 fans permalink

Yes I am familiar with Smedley Butler. He is one Marine officer that I do admire just because of his integrity and honesty. Everyone should read "War is a Racket". Unfortunately Right Wingers/Co­rporatists have managed to make it obscure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 07/06/2009

What carnage the man left in his wake, from WW II through Vietnam. He, apparently and belatedly, and at great cost, learned something from his experience, though he failed to transmit those lessons to his successors.

May he rest in peace.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 07/06/2009
- leonel I'm a Fan of leonel 4 fans permalink

McNamara was emblematic of what is wrong with American politics, a basic flaw with operation of federal government that can lead to disasters in foreign policy. As the article states, the Vietnam War was a huge disaster and it can be traced in good part to how Kennedy ran the White House. He ran independently of the Democratic Party. He used his father's money and influence to win the election. The theory is that ever since presidential candidates have set up somewhat independent personal organizations to win office and appoint their advisers. The short of it that it creates risk that president will appoint major advisers based on personal views mainly and result in inexperienced or questionable policies. This is what is said of Kennedy, he plucked McNamara out of running a car company. Also, a Harvard Dean, and so on, and they misunderstood Vietnam because it was mainly a nationalistic and not a communist driven rebellion.

Obama is a lot better than Kennedy but the system is the same and not easy to fix. There is even more reliance on private funding of elections and Congress is farther down the road to relying on lobbyists. If things go wrong, not that likely but possible, the corrupt, elitist, and imperialistic Republican Party could reclaim the White House in one or two national elections. This would be absolute disaster for the US and the entire world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 AM on 07/06/2009
- Artos I'm a Fan of Artos 77 fans permalink

You are correct about how the system is not easy to fix. The reasons are many and it is not just our leadership which is often to blame but many times whole segments our Population cause the problems as well. I think that the reason we have ventured since WWII into so many of these Police actions and quasi declared wars is because we have become the victims of not only our previous Successes but our mythology as well. Because WWII specifically was such a "Good War" we began thinking that America will always be successful and admired for our High Ideals. This we have found out to our chagrin has not been the case. We also had a huge burst of society changing growth and wealth that enhanced many lives. Now people think that when we experience an economical downturn that a good war can give us a business spurt. At least some of our society seems to believe that. With this attitude is it surprising in the least that Many Americans are not averse to getting into these military debacles.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 07/07/2009
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