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ENSHRINED PERSONS
DANTE B.
FASCELL
Chairman, United
States House of Representatives
January 3, 1955 - January 3, 1993
Medal of Freedom Recipient -
The Highest Civilian Honor
Presidential
Enshrinement - Spring 2003

Dante B. Fascell was born in Bridgehampton, New
York on March 9, 1917, and moved to Miami in 1925 at the age of eight.
He graduated from the Ponce de Leon High School in Coral Gables, Florida
in 1933, and received his law degree from the University of Miami School
of Law in 1938. After practicing law in Miami for several years, Fascell
entered the Florida National Guard on January 6, 1941, and was
commissioned as a Second Lieutenant on May 23, 1942. He served in the
African, Sicilian, and Italian campaigns of World War II, and earned
three Bronze Battle Stars. He left the service on January 20, 1946 as a
Captain.
Congressman Fascell began his political career
as a legal attaché to the State legislative delegation from Dade County,
Florida from 1947-1950, then as a member of the Florida State House of
Representatives from 1950-1954. Dante Fascell was elected as a Democrat
to the 84th U.S. Congress on January 3, 1955 and served for 38 years as
the representative from the Nineteenth District of Florida, including
parts of Dade and Monroe counties. He was appointed by President Nixon
to represent the United States at the 24th General Assembly of the
United Nations in 1969.
As a member of the U.S. House of
Representatives, Fascell held a wide range of committee assignments. He
is best remembered for his work on the Committee on Foreign Affairs,
where he served as a member for 36 years (from 1957-1993), and as
Chairman from 1984-1993. During his tenure on the committee, he also
served as Chairman of the Subcommittees on: Arms Control, International
Security and Science; International Organizations; International
Political and Military Affairs; Inter-American Affairs; and
International Operations.
Congressman Fascell was also instrumental in
creating, and serving on, the Commission on Security and Cooperation in
Europe (the Helsinki Commission). He was its first Chairman (1976-1984)
and a member of the Commission (1976-1993). In addition, he was a
member of the Select Committee to Investigate Iran-Contra (1987).
Among his many honors, Fascell was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor, by President
Clinton in October 1998. The citation noted that he was a “man of reason
and conscience” who was “courageous in war and public service.”
Congressman Fascell retired from Congress on
January 3, 1993 to enter a private law practice in Miami. He later moved
to Clearwater, Florida, where he lived until his death on November 28,
1998.
WOODROW
WILSON
Twenty-Eight
President of the United States
March 4, 1913 -
March 4, 1921
Founding Father of
the United Nations
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
General
Membership Enshrinement - Spring 2003

Thomas Woodrow Wilson
(December 28, 1856-February 3, 1924) was born in Staunton, Virginia, to
parents of a predominantly Scottish heritage. Since his father was a
Presbyterian minister and his mother the daughter of a Presbyterian
minister, Woodrow was raised in a pious and academic household. He spent
a year at
Davidson College
in North Carolina and three at
Princeton University
where he received a baccalaureate degree in 1879.
After graduating from the Law School of the
University of Virginia, he practiced
law for a year in Atlanta, Georgia, but it was a feeble practice. He
entered graduate studies at
Johns Hopkins University
in 1883 and three years later received the doctorate. In 1885 he
published Congressional Government, a splendid piece of
scholarship which analyzes the difficulties arising from the separation
of the legislative and executive powers in the American Constitution.
Before joining the faculty of Princeton University as a professor of
jurisprudence and political economy, Wilson taught for three years at
Bryn Mawr College
and for two years at
Wesleyan College.
He was enormously successful as a lecturer and productive as a scholar.
As president of Princeton University from 1902 to 1910, Wilson became
widely known for his ideas on reforming education. In pursuit of his
idealized intellectual life for democratically chosen students, he
wanted to change the admission system, the pedagogical system, the
social system, even the architectural layout of the campus. But Wilson
was a thinker who needed to act. So he entered politics and as governor
of the State of New Jersey from 1911 to 1913 distinguished himself once
again as a reformer.
Wilson won the presidential election of 1912 when
William Howard Taft
and
Theodore Roosevelt
split the Republican vote. Upon taking office he set about instituting
the reforms he had outlined in his book The New Freedom,
including the changing of the tariff, the revising of the banking
system, the checking of monopolies and fraudulent advertising, the
prohibiting of unfair business practices, and the like.
But the attention of this man of peace was forced to turn to war. In the
early days of World War I, Wilson was determined to maintain neutrality.
He protested British as well as German acts; he offered mediation to
both sides but was rebuffed. The American electorate in 1916, reacting
to the slogan "He kept us out of war", reelected Wilson to the
presidency. However, in 1917 the issue of freedom of the seas compelled
a decisive change. On January 31 Germany announced that "unrestricted
submarine warfare" was already started; on March 27, after four American
ships had been sunk, Wilson decided to ask for a declaration of war; on
April 2 he made the formal request to Congress; and on April 6 the
Congress granted it.
Wilson never doubted the outcome. He mobilized a nation - its manpower,
its industry, its commerce, its agriculture. He was himself the chief
mover in the propaganda war. His speech to Congress on January 8, 1918,
on the "Fourteen Points" was a decisive stroke in winning that war, for
people everywhere saw in his peace aims the vision of a world in which
freedom, justice, and peace could flourish.
Although at the apogee of his fame when the 1919 Peace Conference
assembled in Versailles, Wilson failed to carry his total conception of
an ideal peace, but he did secure the adoption of the Covenant of the
League of Nations. His major failure, however, was suffered at home when
the Senate declined to approve American acceptance of the League of
Nations. This stunning defeat resulted from his losing control of
Congress after he had made the congressional election of 1918 virtually
a vote of confidence, from his failure to appoint to the American peace
delegation those who could speak for the Republican Party or for the
Senate, from his unwillingness to compromise when some minor compromises
might well have carried the day, from his physical incapacity in the
days just prior to the vote.
The cause of this physical incapacity was the strain of the massive
effort he made to obtain the support of the American people for the
ratification of the Covenant of the League. After a speech in Pueblo,
Colorado, on September 25, 1919, he collapsed and a week later suffered
a cerebral hemorrhage from the effects of which he never fully
recovered. An invalid, he completed the remaining seventeen months of
his term of office and lived in retirement for the last three years of
his life.
ROBERT
STRANGE McNAMARA
8th Secretary of
Defense
January 21, 1961 -
February 29, 1968
Kennedy and Johnson Administration
Medal of Freedom
Recipient - The Highest Civilian Honor
Presidential
Enshrinement - Fall 2002

Defense issues, including the missile gap,
played a prominent role in the campaign of 1960. President-elect
Kennedy, very much concerned with defense matters although lacking
Eisenhower's mastery of the issues, first offered the post of secretary
of defense to former secretary Robert A. Lovett. When Lovett declined,
Kennedy chose Robert S. McNamara on Lovett's recommendation.
McNamara was born on 9 June 1916 in San
Francisco, where his father was sales manager of a wholesale shoe firm.
He graduated in 1937 from the University of California (Berkeley) with a
degree in economics and philosophy, earned a master's degree from the
Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration in 1939, worked a
year for the accounting firm of Price, Waterhouse in San Francisco, and
then in August 1940 returned to Harvard to teach in the business school.
He entered the Army Air Forces as a captain in early 1943 and left
active duty three years later with the rank of lieutenant colonel.
In 1946 McNamara joined Ford Motor Company as
manager of planning and financial analysis. He advanced rapidly through
a series of top-level management positions to the presidency of Ford on
9 November 1960 -one day after Kennedy's election. The first company head
selected outside the Ford family, McNamara received substantial credit
for Ford's expansion and success in the postwar period. Less than five
weeks after becoming president at Ford, he accepted Kennedy's invitation
to join his cabinet.
Although not especially knowledgeable about
defense matters, McNamara immersed himself in the subject, learned
quickly, and soon began to apply an "active role" management philosophy,
in his own words "providing aggressive leadership questioning,
suggesting alternatives, proposing objectives and stimulating progress."
He rejected radical organizational changes, such as those proposed by a
group Kennedy appointed, headed by Sen. W. Stuart Symington, which would
have abolished the military departments, replaced the Joint Chiefs of
Staff with a single chief of staff, and established three functional
unified commands. McNamara accepted the need for separate services but
argued that "at the end we must have one defense policy, not three
conflicting defense policies. And it is the job of the Secretary and his
staff to make sure that this is the case."
Initially the basic policies outlined by
President Kennedy in a message to Congress on 28 March 1961 guided
McNamara in the reorientation of the defense program. Kennedy rejected
the concept of first-strike attack and emphasized the need for adequate
strategic arms and defense to deter nuclear attack on the United States
and its allies. U.S. arms, he maintained, must constantly be under
civilian command and control, and the nation's defense posture had to be
"designed to reduce the danger of irrational or unpremeditated general
war." The primary mission of U.S. overseas forces, in cooperation with
allies, was "to prevent the steady erosion of the Free World through
limited wars." Kennedy and McNamara rejected massive retaliation for a
posture of flexible response. The United States wanted choices in an
emergency other than "inglorious retreat or unlimited retaliation," as
the president put it. Out of a major review of the military challenges
confronting the United States initiated by McNamara in 1961 came a
decision to increase the nation's limited warfare capabilities.
The Kennedy administration placed particular
emphasis on improving ability to counter Communist "wars of national
liberation," in which the enemy avoided head-on military confrontation
and resorted to political subversion and guerrilla tactics. As McNamara
said in his 1962 annual report, "The military tactics are those of the
sniper, the ambush, and the raid. The political tactics are terror,
extortion, and assassination." In practical terms, this meant training
and equipping U.S. military personnel, as well as such allies as South
Vietnam, for counterinsurgency operations. Later in the decade, U.S.
forces applied these counterinsurgency techniques with mixed success in
Vietnam.
Increased attention to conventional strength
complemented these special forces preparations. The Berlin crisis in
1961 demonstrated to McNamara the need for more troops. In this instance
he called up reserves and also proceeded to expand the regular armed
forces. Whereas active duty strength had declined from approximately
3,555,000 to 2,483,000 between 1953 (the end of the Korean conflict) and
1961, it increased to nearly 2,808,000 by 30 June 1962. Then the forces
leveled off at around 2,700,000 until the Vietnam military buildup began
in 1965, reaching a peak of nearly 3,550,000 by mid-1968, just after
McNamara left office.
McNamara played a much larger role in the
formulation of nuclear strategy than his predecessors. In part this
reflected both the increasing sophistication of nuclear weapons and
delivery systems and Soviet progress toward nuclear parity with the
United States. Central in McNamara's thinking on nuclear policy stood
the NATO alliance and the U.S. commitment to defend its members from
aggression. In a widely-noticed speech at Ann Arbor, Michigan, in June
1962, McNamara repeated much of what he had told a NATO ministers'
meeting in Athens several weeks earlier, especially about the importance
of NATO to U.S. security and the proper response to a surprise Soviet
nuclear attack on the Western allies. Basic NATO strategy in such an
unlikely event, McNamara argued, should follow the "no-cities" concept.
"General nuclear war," he stated, "should be approached in much the same
way that more conventional military operations have been regarded in the
past. That is to say, principal military objectives, in the event of a
nuclear war stemming from a major attack on the Alliance, should be the
destruction of the enemy's military forces, not of his civilian
population."
With his principal goal deterrence to convince
Moscow that a nuclear attack against the Western allies would trigger
U.S. retaliation against Soviet forces, perhaps eliminating their
ability to continue military action. McNamara also wanted to provide the
Russians with an incentive to refrain from attacking cities. "The very
strength and nature of the Alliance forces," he said in the Ann Arbor
speech, "make it possible for us to retain, even in the face of a
massive surprise attack, sufficient reserve striking power to destroy an
enemy society if driven to it."
McNamara soon deemphasized the no-cities
approach, for several reasons: public fear that planning to use nuclear
weapons in limited ways would make nuclear war seem more feasible;
increased Air Force requirements, after identifying additional targets
under the no-cities strategy, for more nuclear weapons; the assumption
that such a policy would require major air and missile defense,
necessitating a vastly expanded budget; and negative reactions from the
Soviets and NATO allies. McNamara turned to "assured destruction,''
which he characterized as the capability "to deter deliberate nuclear
attack upon the United States and its allies by maintaining a highly
reliable ability to inflict an unacceptable degree of damage upon any
single aggressor, or combination of aggressors, even after absorbing a
surprise first strike." As defined by McNamara, assured destruction
meant that the United States would be able to destroy in retaliation 20
to 25 percent of the Soviet Union's population and 50 percent of its
industrial capacity. Later the term "mutual assured destruction" meant
the capacity of each side to inflict sufficient damage on the other to
constitute an effective deterrent. In conjunction with assured
destruction, McNamara stressed the importance of damage limitation,
the use of strategic forces to limit damage to the nation's population
and industrial capacity by attacking and diminishing the enemy's
strategic offensive forces.
To make this strategy credible, McNamara
speeded up the modernization and expansion of weapon and delivery
systems. He accelerated production and deployment of the solid-fuel
Minuteman ICBM and Polaris SLBM missiles and by FY 1966 had removed from
operational status all of the older liquid-fuel Atlas and Titan I
missiles. By the end of McNamara's tenure, the United States had
deployed 54 Titan II and 1,000 Minuteman missiles on land, and 656
Polaris missiles on 41 nuclear submarines. The size of this long-range
strategic missile force remained stable until the 1980s, although the
number of warheads increased significantly as the MIRV (multiple
independently target-able reentry vehicle) system emerged in the late
1960s and the 1970s.
McNamara took other steps to improve U.S.
deterrence posture and military capabilities. He raised the portion of
SAC strategic bombers on 15-minute ground alert from 25 percent to 50
percent, thus lessening their vulnerability to missile attack. In
December 1961 he established the Strike Command (STRICOM). Authorized to
draw forces when needed from the Strategic Army Corps, the Tactical Air
Command, and the airlift units of the Military Air Transport Service and
the military services, Strike Command had the mission "to respond
swiftly and with whatever force necessary to threats against the peace
in any part of the world, reinforcing unified commands or . . . carrying
out separate contingency operations." McNamara also increased long-range
airlift and sealift capabilities and funds for space research and
development. After reviewing the separate and often uncoordinated
service efforts in intelligence and communications, McNamara in 1961
consolidated these functions in the Defense Intelligence Agency and the
Defense Communications Agency (the latter originally established by
Secretary Gates in 1960), having both report to the secretary of defense
through the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In the same year, he set up the
Defense Supply Agency to work toward unified supply procurement,
distribution, and inventory management.
McNamara's institution of systems analysis as a
basis for making key decisions on force requirements, weapon systems,
and other matters occasioned much debate. Two of its main practitioners
during the McNamara era, Alain C. Enthoven and K. Wayne Smith, described
the concept as follows: "First, the word 'systems' indicates that every
decision should be considered in as broad a context as necessary . . . .
The word 'analysis' emphasizes the need to reduce a complex problem to
its component parts for better understanding. Systems analysis takes a
complex problem and sorts out the tangle of significant factors so that
each can be studied by the method most appropriate to it." Enthoven and
Smith said they used mainly civilians as systems analysts because they
could apply independent points of view to force planning. McNamara's
tendency to take military advice into account less than had previous
secretaries contributed to his unpopularity with service leaders.
The most notable example of systems analysis
was the Planning-Programming-Budgeting System (PPBS) instituted by DoD
Comptroller Charles J. Hitch. McNamara directed Hitch to analyze defense
requirements systematically and produce a long-term, program-oriented
Defense budget. PPBS evolved to become the heart of the McNamara
management program. According to Enthoven and Smith, the basic ideas of
PPBS were: "the attempt to put defense program issues into a broader
context and to search for explicit measures of national need and
adequacy"; "consideration of military needs and costs together";
"explicit consideration of alternatives at the top decision level"; "the
active use of an analytical staff at the top policymaking levels"; "a
plan combining both forces and costs which projected into the future the
foreseeable implications of current decisions"; and "open and explicit
analysis, that is, each analysis should be made available to all
interested parties, so that they can examine the calculations, data, and
assumptions and retrace the steps leading to the conclusions."
Among the management tools developed to
implement PPBS were the Five Year Defense Plan (FYDP), the Draft
Presidential Memorandum (DPM), the Readiness, Information and Control
Tables, and the Development Concept Paper (DCP). The annual FYDP was a
series of tables projecting forces for eight years and costs and
manpower for five years in mission-oriented, rather than individual
service, programs. By 1968, the FYDP covered 10 military areas:
strategic forces, general purpose forces, intelligence and
communications, airlift and sealift, guard and reserve forces, research
and development, central supply and maintenance, training and medical
services, administration and related activities, and support of other
nations.
The DPM, intended for the White House and
usually prepared by the systems analysis office, was a method to study
and analyze major Defense issues. Sixteen DPMs appeared between 1961 and
1968 on such topics as strategic offensive and defensive forces, NATO
strategy and force structure, military assistance, and tactical air
forces. OSD sent the DPMs to the services and the Joint Chiefs of Staff
for comment; in making decisions, McNamara included in the DPM a
statement of alternative approaches, force levels, and other factors.
The DPM in its final form became a decision document.
The Development Concept Paper examined
performance, schedule, cost estimates, and technical risks to provide a
basis for determining whether to begin or continue a research and
development program. The Readiness, Information, and Control Tables
provided data on specific projects, more detailed than in the FYDP, such
as the tables for the Southeast Asia Deployment Plan, which recorded by
month and quarter the schedule for deployment, consumption rates, and
future projections of U.S. forces in Southeast Asia.
PPBS was suspect in some quarters, especially
among the military, because it was civilian-controlled and seemed to
rely heavily on impersonal quantitative analysis. As Enthoven and Smith
observed, "Much of the controversy over PPBS, particularly the use of
systems analysis, is really an attack on the increased use of the legal
authority of the Secretary of Defense and an expression of a view about
his proper role." In spite of the criticism, the system persisted in
modified form long after McNamara had left the Pentagon.
McNamara relied heavily on systems analysis to
reach several controversial weapon decisions. He canceled the B-70
bomber, begun during the Eisenhower years as a replacement for the B-52,
stating that it was neither cost-effective nor needed, and later he
vetoed its proposed successor, the RS-70. McNamara expressed publicly
his belief that the manned bomber as a strategic weapon had no long-run
future; the intercontinental ballistic missile was faster, less
vulnerable, and less costly.
Similarly, McNamara terminated the Skybolt
project late in 1962. Begun in 1959, Skybolt was conceived as a
ballistic missile with a 1,000-nautical mile range, designed for
launching from B-52 bombers as a defense suppression weapon to clear the
way for bombers to penetrate to targets. McNamara decided that Skybolt
was too expensive, not accurate enough, and would exceed its planned
development time. He asserted that other systems, including the Hound
Dog missile, could do the job at less cost. Toward the end of his term
McNamara also opposed an antiballistic missile (ABM) system proposed for
installation in the United States, arguing that it would be too
expensive (at least $40 billion) and ultimately ineffective, because the
Soviets would increase their offensive capability to offset the
defensive advantage of the United States. Under pressure to proceed with
the ABM program after it became clear that the Soviets had begun a
similar project, McNamara finally agreed to a "thin" system, but he
never believed it wise for the United States to move in that direction.
Despite serious problems, McNamara initiated
and continued the TFX (later F-111) aircraft. He believed that Navy and
Air Force requirements for a new tactical fighter could best be met by
development of a common aircraft. After extensive study of the
recommendations of a joint Air Force-Navy evaluation board, McNamara
awarded the TFX contract to General Dynamics. The decision, based on
cost-effectiveness and efficiency considerations, irritated the chief of
naval operations and the Air Force chief of staff, both of whom
preferred separate new fighters for their services and Boeing as the
contractor. Because of high cost overruns, trouble in meeting
performance objectives, flight test crashes, and difficulties in
adapting the plane to Navy use, the TFX's future became more and more
uncertain. The Navy dropped its version in 1968. Some of McNamara's
critics in the services and Congress labeled the TFX a failure, but
versions of the F-111 remained in Air Force service two decades after
McNamara decided to produce them.
McNamara's staff stressed systems analysis as
an aid in decision-making on weapon development and many other budget
issues. The secretary believed that the United States could afford any
amount needed for national security, but that "this ability does not
excuse us from applying strict standards of effectiveness and efficiency
to the way we spend our defense dollars . . . . You have to make a
judgment on how much is enough." Acting on these principles, McNamara
instituted a much-publicized cost reduction program, which, he reported,
saved $14 billion in the five-year period beginning in 1961. Although he
had to withstand a storm of criticism from senators and representatives
from affected congressional districts, he closed many military bases and
installations that he judged unnecessary to national security. He was
equally determined about other cost-saving measures.
Nonetheless, mainly because of the Vietnam War
buildup, total obligational authority increased greatly during the
McNamara years. Fiscal year TOA increased from $48.4 billion in 1962 to
$49.5 billion in 1965 (before the major Vietnam increases) to $74.9
billion in 1968, McNamara's last year in office. Not until FY 1984 did
DoD's total obligational authority surpass that of FY 1968 in constant
dollars.
In the broad arena of national security
affairs, McNamara played a principal part under both Presidents Kennedy
and Lyndon B. Johnson, especially during international crises. The first
of these occurred in April 1961, when a Cuban exile group with some
support from the United States attempted to overthrow the Castro regime.
The disastrous failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion, carried through by
the Kennedy administration based on planning begun under Eisenhower,
proved a great embarrassment. When McNamara left office in 1968, he told
reporters that his principal regret was his recommendation to Kennedy to
proceed with the Bay of Pigs operation, something that "could have been
recognized as an error at the time."
More successful from McNamara's point of view
was his participation in the Executive Committee, a small group of
advisers who counseled Kennedy during the Cuban missile crisis of
October 1962. McNamara supported the president's decision to quarantine
Cuba to prevent Soviet ships from bringing in more offensive weapons.
During the crisis the Pentagon placed U.S. military forces on alert,
ready to back up the administration's demand that the Soviet Union
withdraw its offensive missiles from Cuba. McNamara believed that the
outcome of the missile crisis "demonstrated the readiness of our armed
forces to meet a sudden emergency" and "highlighted the importance of
maintaining a properly balanced Defense establishment." Similarly,
McNamara regarded the use of nearly 24,000 U.S. troops and several dozen
naval vessels to stabilize a revolutionary situation in the Dominican
Republic in April 1965 as another successful test of the "readiness and
capabilities of the U.S. defense establishment to support our foreign
policy."
The Vietnam conflict came to claim most of
McNamara's time and energy. The Truman and Eisenhower administrations
had committed the United States to support the French and native
anti-Communist forces in Vietnam in resisting efforts by the Communists
in the North to control the country. The U.S. role, including financial
support and military advice, expanded after 1954 when the French
withdrew. During the Kennedy administration, the U.S. military advisory
group in South Vietnam steadily increased, with McNamara's concurrence,
from just a few hundred to about 17,000. U.S. involvement escalated
after the Gulf of Tonkin incident in August 1964 when North Vietnamese
naval vessels reportedly fired on two U.S. destroyers. President Johnson
ordered retaliatory air strikes on North Vietnamese naval bases and
Congress approved almost unanimously the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution,
authorizing the president "to take all necessary measures to repel any
armed attack against the forces of the U.S. and to prevent further
aggression."
In 1965, in response to stepped up military
activity by the Communist Viet Cong in South Vietnam and their North
Vietnamese allies, the United States began bombing North Vietnam,
deployed large military forces, and entered into combat in South
Vietnam. Requests from top U.S. military commanders in Vietnam led to
the commitment of 485,000 troops by the end of 1967 and almost 535,000
by 30 June 1968. The casualty lists mounted as the number of troops and
the intensity of fighting escalated.
Although he loyally supported administration
policy, McNamara gradually became skeptical about whether the war could
be won by deploying more troops to South Vietnam and intensifying the
bombing of North Vietnam. He traveled to Vietnam many times to study the
situation firsthand. He became increasingly reluctant to approve the
large force increments requested by the military commanders. The Tet
offensive of early 1968, although a military defeat for the enemy,
clearly indicated that the road ahead for both the United States and the
South Vietnamese government was still long and hard. By this time
McNamara had already submitted his resignation, chiefly because of his
disillusionment with the war.
As McNamara grew more and more controversial
after 1966 and his differences with the president and the Joint Chiefs
of Staff over Vietnam policy became the subject of public speculation,
frequent rumors surfaced that he would leave office. Yet there was great
surprise when President Johnson announced on 29 November 1967 that
McNamara would resign to become president of the World Bank. The
increasing intensity of the antiwar movement in the United States and
the approaching presidential campaign, in which Johnson was expected to
seek reelection, figured heavily in explanations of McNamara's
departure. So also did McNamara's alleged differences with the Joint
Chiefs of Staff over the bombing of North Vietnam, the number of U.S.
troops to be assigned to the ground war, and construction along the 17th
parallel separating South and North Vietnam of an anti-infiltration
ground barrier, which McNamara favored and the Joint Chiefs of Staff
opposed. McNamara's resistance to deployment of a major ABM system also
upset the military chiefs. The president's announcement of McNamara's
move to the World Bank stressed his stated interest in the job and that
he deserved a change after seven years as secretary of defense, much
longer than any of his predecessors.
McNamara left office on 29 February 1968; for
his dedicated efforts, the president awarded him both the Medal of
Freedom and the Distinguished Service Medal. He served as head of the
World Bank from 1968 to 1981. Shortly after he departed the Pentagon, he
published The Essence of Security, discussing various aspects of
his tenure and his position on basic national security issues. He did
not speak out again on defense issues until after he left the World
Bank. In 1982 McNamara joined several other former national security
officials in urging that the United States pledge not to use nuclear
weapons first in Europe in the event of hostilities; subsequently he
proposed the elimination of nuclear weapons as an element of NATO's
defense posture. His book, In Retrospect, published in 1995,
presented an account and analysis of the Vietnam War that dwelt heavily
on the mistakes to which he was a prime party and conveyed his strong
sense of guilt and regret.
Evaluations of McNamara's long career as
secretary of defense vary from glowing to negative and sometimes
scathing. One journalist reported criticism of McNamara as a "'human IBM
machine' who cares more for computerized statistical logic than for
human judgments." On the other hand, a congressman who had helped shape
the National Security Act in 1947 stated when McNamara left the Pentagon
that he "has come nearer [than anyone else] to being exactly what we
planned a Secretary of Defense to be when we first wrote the Unification
Act." Former Secretary of State Dean Acheson wrote, "Except for General
Marshall I do not know of any department head who, during the half
century I have observed government in Washington, has so profoundly
enhanced the position, power and security of the United States as Mr.
McNamara." Journalist Hanson W. Baldwin cited an impressive list of
McNamara accomplishments: containment of the more damaging aspects of
service rivalry; significant curtailment of duplication and waste in
weapon development; institution of systems analysis and the PPBS;
application of computer technology; elimination of obsolescent military
posts and facilities; and introduction of a flexible strategy, which
among other things improved U.S. capacity to wage conventional and
limited wars. Although McNamara had many differences with military
leaders and members of Congress, few could deny that he had had a
powerful impact on the Defense Department, and that much of what he had
done would be a lasting legacy.
JAMES EARL CARTER, Jr.
Thirty-ninth president of
the United States
January 20, 1977 to January 20, 1981
Medal of Freedom Recipient -
The Highest Civilian Honor
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
General Membership
Enshrinement - Fall 2002

Jimmy Carter (James Earl Carter, Jr.),
thirty-ninth president of the United States, was born October 1, 1924,
in the small farming town of Plains, Georgia, and grew up in the nearby
community of Archery. His father, James Earl Carter, Sr., was a farmer
and businessman; his mother, Lillian Gordy, a registered nurse.
He was educated in the Plains public schools,
attended Georgia Southwestern College and the Georgia Institute of
Technology, and received a B.S. degree from the United States Naval
Academy in 1946. In the Navy he became a submariner, serving in both the
Atlantic and Pacific fleets and rising to the rank of lieutenant. Chosen
by Admiral Hyman Rickover for the nuclear submarine program, he was
assigned to Schenectady, N.Y., where he took graduate work at Union
College in reactor technology and nuclear physics, and served as senior
officer of the pre-commissioning crew of the Seawolf.
On July 7, 1946, he married Rosalynn Smith.
When his father died in 1953, he resigned his naval commission and took
his family back to Plains. He took over the Carter farms, and he and
Rosalynn operated Carter's Warehouse, a general-purpose seed and farm
supply company. He quickly became a leader of the community, serving on
county boards supervising education, the hospital authority, and the
library. In 1962 he won election to the Georgia Senate. He lost his
first gubernatorial campaign in 1966, but won the next election,
becoming Georgia's 76th governor on January 12, 1971. He was the
Democratic National Committee campaign chairman for the 1974
congressional elections.
On December 12, 1974, he announced his
candidacy for president of the United States. He won his party's
nomination on the first ballot at the 1976 Democratic National
Convention, and was elected president on November 2, 1976.
Jimmy Carter served as president from January
20, 1977 to January 20, 1981. Significant foreign policy accomplishments
of his administration included the Panama Canal treaties, the Camp David
Accords, the treaty of peace between Egypt and Israel, the SALT II
treaty with the Soviet Union, and the establishment of U.S. diplomatic
relations with the People's Republic of China. He championed human
rights throughout the world. On the domestic side, the administration's
achievements included a comprehensive energy program conducted by a new
Department of Energy; deregulation in energy, transportation,
communications, and finance; major educational programs under a new
Department of Education; and major environmental protection legislation,
including the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act.
Mr. Carter is the author of sixteen books, many
of which are now in revised editions: Why Not the Best? 1975,
1996; A Government as Good as Its People, 1977, 1996;
Keeping Faith: Memoirs of a President, 1982, 1995; Negotiation:
The Alternative to Hostility, 1984; The Blood of Abraham,
1985, 1993; Everything to Gain: Making the Most of the Rest of Your
Life, written with Rosalynn Carter, 1987, 1995; An Outdoor
Journal, 1988, 1994; Turning Point: A Candidate, a State, and a
Nation Come of Age, 1992, Talking Peace: A Vision for the Next
Generation, 1993, 1995; Always a Reckoning, 1995; The
Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer, illustrated by Amy Carter, 1995;
Living Faith, 1996; Sources of Strength: Meditations on
Scripture for a Living Faith, 1997; The Virtues of Aging,
1998; An Hour before Daylight: Memoirs of a Rural Boyhood,
2001; and Christmas in Plains: Memories, 2001.
In 1982, he became University Distinguished
Professor at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, and founded
The Carter
Center in Atlanta. Actively guided by
President Carter, the nonpartisan and nonprofit center addresses
national and international issues of public policy. Carter Center
fellows, associates and staff join with President Carter in efforts to
resolve conflict, promote democracy, protect human rights, and prevent
disease and other afflictions. Through the Global 2000 program, the
Center advances health and agriculture in the developing world.
The permanent facilities of The Carter
Presidential Center were dedicated in October, 1986, and include the
Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, administered by the
National Archives
and Records Administration . Also open
to visitors is the
Jimmy Carter National Historic Site
in Plains and Jimmy Carter's
boyhood farm in
Archery, administered by the National Park Service.
President Carter and Rosalynn are regular
volunteers for Habitat for Humanity, a nonprofit organization that helps
needy people in the United States and in other countries renovate and
build homes for themselves. He also teaches Sunday School and is a
deacon in the Maranatha Baptist Church of Plains. For recreation, he
enjoys fly-fishing, woodworking, jogging, cycling, tennis and skiing.
On October 11, 2002, the Norwegian Nobel
Committee announced it was awarding the Nobel Peace Prize for 2002 to
Mr. Carter "for his decades of untiring effort to find peaceful
solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human
rights, and to promote economic and social development."
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