Camera Roll 725. Take four.
Claps.
Warnke:
It
seemed to me that President
Johnson was schizoid about Vietnam. In the first place he was
too realistic, too practical, too cynical a man to really believe that
we could create a replica of American democracy in the lower part of the
Indochinese Peninsula.
But, yet, at the same time he found himself in a situation in which he
had made a massive American commitment of money, of the lives of
American troops, and he hated the idea that he might be a loser so that
part of the time he was pessimistic, part of the time he was gung-ho,
and I think that that's reflected in the events of 1967-1968. I think right up through
the end of 1967 he had some hope that the
light, in fact, at the end of the tunnel was real and that we were going
to be able to uh, to find it.
But, then, came along Tet which militarily I've been told, was told at the time, was a
defeat for the Viet Cong and
the North Vietnamese. But, nonetheless, it shattered the illusion that
we were making steady progress towards winning the hearts and minds of
the people.
And, then, you remember that he made his speech at the end of March of 1968 in which he announced a cutback
of the bombing of North Vietnam and then ended by announcing his own
unwillingness to run again. Well, if you look at what happened after
that, I think you can see that he was, in fact, of two minds about
Vietnam.
Although he never said in the speech that this was putting a permanent
lid on American participation in Vietnam, nonetheless he never corrected
the later statements of Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford, who by that time had taken over
from McNamara.
It
was almost as though he was letting Secretary Clifford put up a trial balloon and
see if anybody would shoot it down, and yet at the same time he couldn't
bring himself to ah bring about a total cessation of the bombing of
North Vietnam even though the North Vietnamese were giving signals
during all of that period of time that this could bring about ah prompt
and productive negotiations.