Camera Roll #609 coming up. And we're on take five. Mr.
McPherson.
Tone.
McPherson:
By
mid-March I had written about five
drafts of the speech, and I was beginning to meet, with some regularity,
with the President, Secretary of State, Defense, and others, talking
over what was going on in Vietnam, and what we ought to be saying. At
this point the speech had, ah, in it, elements about the economy, about
some troop increases, enough at least to refill the...missing gaps in
our lines in Vietnam.
And
uh, on about a week before the President was to make that speech I went
to a luncheon in the White House...with Secretary Rusk, Clifford, General Wheeler the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Johnson, Secretary Fowler of the Treasury. And
the question was put to Dean
Rusk...what would happen if we stopped the bombing altogether?
And
you know by this time we had had half a dozen bombing pauses,
conditional pauses. What would happen if we stopped it altogether? Rusk said that outside of the
problems this would give us with our South Vietnamese friends, he
thought that the North Vietnamese would say that if there were any
condition whatever attached to...ah a bombing cessation, that it would
have no effect whatever.
He
said, “I’m afraid that is a nonstarter.” And he seemed genuinely
distressed by that fact. I went back to my...fifth, sixth or seventh
draft of this speech – it was like being an engineer running an erector
set to put this speech together and send it out to everybody. And it
just occurred to me to send Johnson a memorandum that said, “Why don’t we just stop the
bombing north of the 20th parallel.” That was about...oh, that was at
the top of the Demilitarized
Zone.
It
would mean we’d still be bombing three degrees of North Vietnam, but
would not be bombing
Hanoi,
Hai Phong or any of the main
industrial areas – urban areas. Why don’t we do that and then say we’ve
sent our emissaries to
Rangoon
and
Vienna, and we’ll await you
there, and we’ll stop it altogether. We’ll quit bombing everything,
including the Demilitarized
Zone, if you will not send troops down through it – if you can
guarantee us that you won’t use that bombing cessation to jump us
in...South Vietnam.
I
sent it off with no real hopes for it. That afternoon, late, I got word
that Johnson wanted
other copies of it, and I was very excited, because he had obviously
given his copy to somebody. And then at, ah, one of the most...ah,
interesting meetings that I ever attended in my life, several days
later, three or four days before the speech that President Johnson made, I mentioned
having said it to Secretary Rusk. He said, “Yes, we sent that out to
Saigon – that idea out,
and they said they could live with it.” So I felt pretty excited...
On,
about three days before the speech...still very dissatisfied with the
speech, but doing the best I could – the speech at this point three days
before March 31st was still an effort at
a Churchillian Speech – it was a strong “we will be in there, we will be
fighting, they will not drive us out, we will save Vietnam” speech.
There was a meeting in Secretary Rusk’s office. Rusk, Clifford,
Bill Bundy, the
Assistant Secretary for the Far East; Rostow, and me.
Clifford said,
“The speech is a disaster. The speech is a signal for more of the same.”
He said, “I have talked to people, men of affairs, throughout the
country about this war consistently...for the last...several years. They
once supported it, because they’re inclined to support whatever the
President of the United States believes is essential to do. But they’ve
now withdrawn their support. They believe it is a morass, and that the
United States must begin to get out. This speech tells them there will
be more of the same. We must change the speech.”