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<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
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<head>
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<title>walker</title>
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="../CSSstyle.css"/>
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<!--Fill in your link line for CSS and JS in the XSLT here! -->
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</head>
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<body>
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<h1 id="title-index">walker</h1>
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<div id="conspiracy">
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<p> The Strange Case of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker</p>
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<p>General Edwin A. Walker is known to most JFK assassination buffs as
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the man whom Oswald allegedly shot at in April 1963. The general's
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right-wing connections are often noted, as is the fact that he was
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forced out of his command by the Kennedy administration for his
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political indoctrination of his troops. His activities during the
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race riots in Oxford, Mississippi in 1962 are also often mentioned,
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when he was arrested on four federal charges including insurrection.</p>
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<p>His public statement at Oxford was as follows:</p>
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<p> This is Edwin A. Walker. I am in Mississippi beside Gov. Ross
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Barnett. I call for a national protest against the conspiracy
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from within.</p>
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<p> Rally to the cause of freedom in righteous indignation, violent
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vocal protest and bitter silence under the flag of Mississippi
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at the use of Federal troops.</p>
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<p> This today is a disgrace to the nation in 'dire peril,' a
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disgrace beyond the capacity of anyone except its enemies.
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This is the conspiracy of the crucifixion by anti-Christ
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conspirators of the Supreme Court in their denial of prayer
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and their betrayal of a nation.</p>
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<p> [source NYT, 9/30/62]</p>
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<p>The Army ordered General Walker to undergo psychiatric testing.</p>
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<p>The general's case is strange indeed. But another fact, not often mentioned,
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makes his activities in 1961-3 even stranger. Going back to 1957, we find
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him in charge of *enforcing* the desegregation order in Little Rock,
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Arkansas. His public statements on the matter were limited to exhorting
|
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the public to uphold the will of the courts and desegregate peacefully.
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The following article details his biography up to that time.</p>
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<p>============================================================================
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New York Times, September 25, 1957, page 18</p>
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<p> HE GUARDS THE PEACE
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Edwin Anderson Walker</p>
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<p>LITTLE ROCK, Sept. 24 -- Maj. Gen. Edwin Anderson Walker, who will be
|
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responsible for maintaining peace in Little Rock, was described by staff
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||||
officers today as "tough, but fair." A tall, lean-visaged Texan,
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General Walker came to Little Rock only seven weeks ago as commander of
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||||
the Arkansas Military District. He is still a stranger to the city.
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Today, General Walker was at his desk in a downtown office building at
|
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7 A.M. He had not yet received formal orders to take over the Arkansas
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National Guard, but he knew what was coming. Already orders carrying
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his signature were being processed for the deployment of National Guard
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units. He will command a combined force of regulars and Federalized
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Guardsmen.</p>
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<p>He stands 6 feet 3 inches in height. He is a bachelor and has been
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considered a prize for hostesses wherever he has been stationed.
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He was born in Center Point, Texas, on Nov. 10, 1909.</p>
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<p>General Walker's favorite expression is "check," a word he snaps to
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indicate a mission has been accomplished or that he understands his
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||||
orders.</p>
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<p>As a member of the Special Services group, he was required to be a
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paratrooper. At his test, he approached a subordinate and asked:</p>
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<p>"How do you put this thing on?"</p>
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<p>He received a fast five-minute briefing and climbed into an airplane.
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He jumped, landed safe and snapped to the test officer: "Check."</p>
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<p>General Walker is a combat officer. He has seen action in World War II
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and in Korea. He has carried out a number of unusual and hazardous
|
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assignments, particularly during World War II.</p>
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<p>He started his military career as an artillery officer after he
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graduated from West Point in 1931. But he switched to commando
|
||||
operations during the war and led a special force of Canadians and
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Americans, in Italy and in France.</p>
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<p>This outfit, trained for airborne, amphibious, mountain and ski
|
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operations, was called the Special Services Force.</p>
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<p>General Walker led the Third Regiment, First Special Service Force,
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in its initial operation at Kiska during the Aleutians campaign. When
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the commandos were transferred to the Italian campaign, General Walker
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led the first Special Service Force in tough mountain fighting up the
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Italian peninsula and at Anzio beachhead.</p>
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<p> A Surprise Landing</p>
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<p>In August, 1944, his men made a surprise landing on the Hyeres Islands
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off the French Riviera and killed or captured a strong German garrison
|
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that could have jeopardized the Seventh Army landings on the mainland
|
||||
near by.</p>
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<p>With the Hyeres occupied, his troops rejoined the main invasion force
|
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and moved up the Rhone Valley. Toward the end of the war he was detached
|
||||
from the commandos and placed in command of the 417 Infantry Regiment,
|
||||
a separate force attached to the Third Army. At V-E Day he was commanding
|
||||
a special task unit in Oslo.</p>
|
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<p>Returning to the United States in January, 1946, General Walker served as
|
||||
assistant director of the combined arms department, Field Artillery
|
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School, Fort Sill, Okla. He was in charge of the Greek desk at the
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Pentagon during the Greek civil war and made an official visit to Greece
|
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and Turkey.</p>
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<p>During the Korean War, General Walker commanded the Seventh Regiment
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of the Third Infantry Division and later was senior adviser to
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Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. His last assignment before coming to
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Little Rock was as commanding general at the Twenty-fifth Artillery
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Division in Hawaii.</p>
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<p>He holds the Silver Star and the Bronze Star with oak leaf cluster.
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============================================================================</p>
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<p>This is the man arrested on four federal charges in Mississippi in 1962?</p>
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<p>Those charges were:</p>
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<p> Section 111-- For assault and resisting or other opposing Federal
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officers, including marshals, in the performance of their duty.</p>
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<p> Section 372-- For conspiracy to prevent a Federal officer from
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discharging his duties.</p>
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<p> Section 2383-- For inciting or engaging in an insurrection
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against the United States.</p>
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<p> Section 2384-- For conspiracy to overthrow or oppose by force
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the execution of the laws of the United States.</p>
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<p>A conspiracy is defined legally as including two or more persons.</p>
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<p>On October 7, 1962, Walker posted $50000 bond and returned home to
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Dallas amid 200 cheering supporters carrying signs like "Welcome
|
||||
Home, General Walker," "Win With General Walker," and "President '64." </p>
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<p>On January 21, 1963, a federal grand jury in Oxford, Mississippi adjourned
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without indicting Walker on any of the four counts against him.</p>
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<p>The Justice Department dismissed the charges "without prejudice" after
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the grand jury failed to indict. The dismissal "without prejudice"
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meant that the charges could be reinstated before the five year statute
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of limitations expired.</p>
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<p>Walker and his supporters then went on the offensive. On April 2, 1963,
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a group called the Citizens Congressional Committee filed a petition
|
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with the Senate Judiciary Committee requesting an investigation of the
|
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treatment of "America's fearless patriot on the occasion of his
|
||||
incarceration at the instigation of the Department of Justice."</p>
|
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<p>Nine days later, on April 9, Walker was sitting at his desk at home when
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||||
the famous shooting incident occurred.</p>
|
||||
<p>Meanwhile, the American Medical Association was receiving "a volume of
|
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letters from individual physicians" charging Dr. Charles E. Smith, the
|
||||
Army psychiatrist -- who commented on Walker's mental state at the time
|
||||
of the Oxford violence -- with unethical conduct: that he made an improper
|
||||
diagnosis without a personal examination. Dr. Smith was cleared by the
|
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AMA on July 4, 1963. He said that news stories of Walker's "reported
|
||||
behavior reflects sensitivity and essentially unpredictable and seemingly
|
||||
bizarre outbursts of the type often observed in individuals suffering
|
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with paranoid mental disorder." The society had received 2500 letters
|
||||
from physicians alleging unethical conduct by Dr. Smith. Nevertheless,
|
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the board unanimously ruled in Smith's favor.</p>
|
||||
<p>Walker then took his case to court, filing a total of $23 million dollars
|
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in libel damages against numerous media outlets alleging that they had
|
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made "false statements" and that their "suppression of truth was motivated
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by malice and a desire to hurt and harm him in his good reputation and
|
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blacken his good name." The statements in question were that he "led a
|
||||
charge of students against Federal marshals on the Ole Miss campus"
|
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and various other statements attributing to him a very active role in leading
|
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the insurrection such as "Walker assumed command of the crowd." A jury
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in Fort Worth awarded an $800000 judgment against the Associated Press,
|
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ruling that malice was intended.</p>
|
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<p>The offensive was also being taken up by Republicans in Congress in an
|
||||
alliance with Southern Democrats, who wanted to embarrass Attorney
|
||||
General Robert Kennedy because of his civils rights activities. The House
|
||||
Judiciary Committee voted on September 1, 1964 by a margin of 18 to 14 to
|
||||
open an investigation of the Justice Department's handling of cases
|
||||
including, but not limited to, those of Jimmy Hoffa, Roy M. Cohn, and
|
||||
former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker. The vote among Republican and Southern
|
||||
Democratic committee members was 16-2; that of non-Southern Democrats
|
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was 2-12. </p>
|
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<p>Meanwhile, a Louisiana jury awarded Walker $3 million in damages in another
|
||||
one of his libel suits.</p>
|
||||
<p>His luck started to turn sour however, and finally on June 12, 1967, the
|
||||
Supreme Court ruled 9-0 extending the constitutional protection of
|
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freedom of the press to libelous falsehoods about private individuals
|
||||
who willingly take part in public affairs. Such protections were already in
|
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place concerning libel against political officials, but this was a landmark
|
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case extending the applicability to private individuals who willingly
|
||||
venture into the public arena. Walker's awards were overturned.</p>
|
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<p>Chief Justice Warren explained, "Our citizenry has a legitimate and
|
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substantial interest in the conduct of such persons... Freedom of the
|
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press to engage in uninhibited debate about their involvement in public
|
||||
issues should be subject to derogatory criticism, even when based on
|
||||
false statements."</p>
|
||||
<p>Walker's name occasionally surfaced in the press after this, usually
|
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in connection with anti-UN activities or in connection with the
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||||
presidential campaign of George Wallace.</p>
|
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<p>APPENDIX</p>
|
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<p>These articles concern the controversy about right-wing extremism in the
|
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military in the early Sixties, specifically related to General Walker and
|
||||
the Kennedy administration.</p>
|
||||
<p>=============================================================================
|
||||
New York Times, June 18, 1961, page 1</p>
|
||||
<p> Right-Wing Officers Worrying Pentagon</p>
|
||||
<p> by Cabell Philips</p>
|
||||
<p>WASHINGTON, June 17 -- The Pentagon is having its troubles with
|
||||
right-wingers in uniform.</p>
|
||||
<p>A number of officers of high and middle rank are indoctrinating their
|
||||
commands and the civilian population near their bases with political
|
||||
theories resembling those of the John Birch Society. They are also
|
||||
holding up to criticism and ridicule some official policies of the
|
||||
United States Government.</p>
|
||||
<p>The most conspicuous example of some of these officers was Maj. Gen.
|
||||
Edwin A. Walker, who was officially "admonished" for his activities
|
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by the Secretary of the Army earlier this week.</p>
|
||||
<p>General Walker's offense was in saying that a number of prominent
|
||||
Americans, as well as elements of the newspaper and television industries,
|
||||
were tainted with Communist ideology.</p>
|
||||
<p>He did this in the course of a continuing effort that the general said
|
||||
was "designed to develop an understanding of the American military and
|
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civil heritage, responsibility toward that heritage and the facts and
|
||||
objectives of those enemies who would destroy it."</p>
|
||||
<p>General Walker was the commander of the Twenty-Fourth Infantry Division
|
||||
in Germany at the time...</p>
|
||||
<p>The problem for the Pentagon arises out of the fact that a number of its
|
||||
higher ranking officers have participated in or publically lent their
|
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support to a variety of so-called forums, schools, and seminars,
|
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ostensibly focused on the issues of national security. However, many of
|
||||
those groups -- at least incidentally -- are preoccupied with radically
|
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right-wing political philosophies.</p>
|
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<p> Stress on Anti-Communism</p>
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<p>The chief ingredient of these philosophies is often a militant
|
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anti-communism. The argument is that Communist subversion today is rife
|
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among the schools, the churches, labor unions, Government offices, and
|
||||
elsewhere.</p>
|
||||
<p>In this argument, liberalism is equated with socialism and socialism with
|
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communism. Thus it opposes most welfare legislation, many programs for
|
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international cooperation such as foreign aid and disarmament
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conferences...</p>
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<p>The genesis of this program goes back to the so-called "cold war policy"
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evolved by the National Security Council in the summer of 1958...</p>
|
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<p> Cold War Widened</p>
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<p>President Eisenhower and his top policy leaders decreed that the "cold
|
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war" could not be fought as a series of separate and often unrelated
|
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actions, as with foreign aid and propaganda. Rather, it must be fought
|
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with a concentration of all the resources of the Government and with
|
||||
the full understanding and support of the civilian population. It was
|
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decided, in particular, that the military should be used to reinforce
|
||||
the "cold war" effort.</p>
|
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<p>This was the substance of the still-classified "cold-war policy" paper
|
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of the National Security Council...</p>
|
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<p>Of the hundreds of military bases here and abroad, only a score have
|
||||
become involved in these programs to the point that they have caused
|
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alarm among the new civilian team in the Pentagon. Officials suspect,
|
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however, that the trend is somewhat more widespread than their reports
|
||||
currently indicate. They are quietly trying to find out how widespread
|
||||
it is.</p>
|
||||
<p>A typical example about which they do know is a seminar labeled Project
|
||||
Action.</p>
|
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<p>This was held at the Naval Air Station, Wold-Chamberlain Field,
|
||||
Minneapolis, on April 28 and 29 of this year. Capt. Robert T. Kieling
|
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is the commanding officer of the station. He was a co-sponsor of the
|
||||
program in collaboration with a committee of the Minneapolis-St. Paul
|
||||
Chamber of Commerce.</p>
|
||||
<p>The official announcement described the program as follows:</p>
|
||||
<p>"The purpose of Project Action is to inspire the citizens of this area
|
||||
to take an active part in the war against the danger that threatens our
|
||||
freedom and American way of life."</p>
|
||||
<p>"The program of talks and presentations by nationally-known leaders for
|
||||
the cause of democracy will bring to light facts and figures concerning
|
||||
the rising crime rate, juvenile delinquency, drug addiction, the general
|
||||
degradation of morals, the complacent attitude toward patriotism, and
|
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the tremendous gains the Communist conspiracy is making in this
|
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country..."</p>
|
||||
<p>The United States Naval Air Station is making facilities available for
|
||||
the seminar at the request of the Twin Cities Council for American
|
||||
Ideals...</p>
|
||||
<p>Among the scores of letters concerning Project Action that reached the
|
||||
Pentagon in the following days was one from a newspaper editor. It said
|
||||
in part:</p>
|
||||
<p>"Perhaps someone can clear up for us our lack of understanding as to just
|
||||
how co-sponsorship of such activities fits in with the Navy mission, or
|
||||
the overall military mission, for that matter. It must be admitted that
|
||||
the local Project Action is politically partisan in a very real sense,
|
||||
although the partisanship is not that of the party label type." ...</p>
|
||||
<p>Among numerous other incidents that have been brought to the attention
|
||||
of the Defense Department is the "Fourth Dimensional Warfare Seminar"
|
||||
held in Pittsburgh on April 15. Among those listed as giving "assistance
|
||||
and support" to the program were Lieut. Gen. Ridgely Gaither, Commanding
|
||||
General, Second Army, and Maj. Gen. Ralph C. Cooper, Commanding General
|
||||
of the Twenty-First Army Corps, and their respective staffs...</p>
|
||||
<p>"This sort of thing, if carried far enough among susceptible people,
|
||||
can breed a wave of vigilantism and witch-hunting," one Pentagon official
|
||||
said. "Even Mr. Hoover of the F.B.I., whom nobody would call 'soft on
|
||||
communism,' deplores these self-appointed counter-spies." ...</p>
|
||||
<p>Reinforcing his point, he took from his desk a memorandum from Secretary
|
||||
of Defense Robert S. McNamara, which has been circulated as "guidance"
|
||||
throughout the services. In part, it said:</p>
|
||||
<p>"After the President has taken a position, has established a policy, or
|
||||
after appropriate officials in the Defense Department have established a
|
||||
policy, I expect that no member of the department, either civilian or
|
||||
military, will discuss that policy other than in a way to support it
|
||||
before the public." ...</p>
|
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<p>=============================================================================
|
||||
New York Times, September 8, 1961</p>
|
||||
<p> McNamara Refuses to Identify Individual Censors in Pentagon</p>
|
||||
<p> But He Gives Senators a List of Security Staff --
|
||||
Thurmond Voices Criticism of Policy on Anti-Red Speeches</p>
|
||||
<p>WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 -- Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara refused today
|
||||
to give the name of the person in the Pentagon immediately responsible
|
||||
for deleting anti-Communist statements from speeches by an Army general.</p>
|
||||
<p>He did provide a roster of the twelve-man security and review staff,
|
||||
which clears speeches. But he declined to identify particular individuals
|
||||
in the section who had made specific deletions.</p>
|
||||
<p>The demand for this information was made by Senator Strom Thurmond,
|
||||
Democrat of South Carolina, at the close of hearings before the Senate
|
||||
Armed Services Committee on his resolution for a full investigation of
|
||||
charges that military officers have been "muzzled." ...</p>
|
||||
<p>It was also learned today that Gen. Edwin A. Walker, deposed last spring
|
||||
from his command in Europe because of the nature of his troop
|
||||
indoctrination program, had pleaded the military equivalent of the Fifth
|
||||
Amendment's guarantee against self-incrimination during the investigation
|
||||
of his case by the Army Inspector General...</p>
|
||||
<p>The entire transcript of the proceedings involving General Walker, which
|
||||
runs to more than 900 pages, is in the process of being declassified by
|
||||
the Department of Defense...</p>
|
||||
<p>Senator Thurmond's inquiry today related to a speech prepared for delivery
|
||||
last March by Gen. Arthur G. Trudeau, Chief of Army Research. In
|
||||
testimony today it was indicated that the excisions had the effect of
|
||||
softening the general's blunt criticism of Soviet policies and tactics.</p>
|
||||
<p>Mr. McNamara said that the justifications for the changes was that
|
||||
negotiations were then going on with the <span class="NORP" title="NORP">Russians</span> for release of the
|
||||
downed RB-47. It was regarded as impolitic at the time, he explained,
|
||||
to provoke the <span class="NORP" title="NORP">Russians</span> unnecessarily...</p>
|
||||
<p>=============================================================================
|
||||
New York Times, November 19, 1961, page 1</p>
|
||||
<p> KENNEDY ASSERTS FAR-RIGHT GROUPS PROVOKE DISUNITY</p>
|
||||
<p> Attacks Birch Society and 'Minutemen' at a Party Dinner in Los Angeles</p>
|
||||
<p> Spread of Fear Scored</p>
|
||||
<p> President Says Real Threat Comes From Without, Not Within</p>
|
||||
<p>by Tom Wicker</p>
|
||||
<p>LOS ANGELES, Nov. 18-- President Kennedy spoke out tonight against the
|
||||
right-wing John Birch Society and the so-called Minutemen in a speech
|
||||
at a Democratic Party dinner here.</p>
|
||||
<p>The President mentioned neither group by name but left no doubt whom he
|
||||
meant.</p>
|
||||
<p> [In Atlanta, Senator Barry Goldwater, Arizona Republican, attacked
|
||||
the "radicals in the White House." At a news conference, he called
|
||||
President Kennedy the "wagon master" who is "riding on the left
|
||||
wheel all the time."]</p>
|
||||
<p>The President, in his talk at the Hollywood Palladium, also made his
|
||||
first public response to Edward M. Dealey, publisher of the Dallas
|
||||
Morning News. Mr. Dealey attacked the President at a White House
|
||||
luncheon for "riding Caroline's tricycle" instead of being "a man on
|
||||
horseback."</p>
|
||||
<p> Some 'Escape Responsibility'</p>
|
||||
<p>"There have always been those fringes of our society who have sought to
|
||||
escape their own responsibility by finding a simple solution, an appealing
|
||||
slogan or a convenient scapegoat," Mr. Kennedy said.</p>
|
||||
<p>Now, he continued, "men who are unwilling to face up to the danger from
|
||||
without are convinced that the real danger comes from within."</p>
|
||||
<p>"They look suspiciously at their neighbors and their leaders," he declared.
|
||||
"They call for a 'man on horseback' because they do not trust the people.
|
||||
They find treason in our finest churches, in our highest court, and even
|
||||
in the treatment of our water."</p>
|
||||
<p>"They equate the Democratic Party with the welfare state, the welfare
|
||||
state with socialism, and socialism with communism. They object quite
|
||||
rightly to politics' intruding on the military -- but they are anxious
|
||||
for the military to engage in politics." ...</p>
|
||||
<p>Mr. Kennedy chose a region in which the John Birch Society has some of
|
||||
its strongest support to make his third and sharpest attack on what he
|
||||
called tonight "the discordant voices of extremism."</p>
|
||||
<p>In the first two speeches, at Chapel Hill, N. C., and Seattle, he also
|
||||
warned against left-wing and pacifist extremists. His remarks tonight
|
||||
were directed to far-right groups and individuals.</p>
|
||||
<p>The reference to "armed bands of civilian guerillas" appeared to be
|
||||
directed at the Minutemen, individual groups of which are being
|
||||
organized and armed in some parts of the country. The organization
|
||||
is reputed to be particularly strong in California.</p>
|
||||
<p>Los Angeles is regarded as almost the heartland of the Birch Society.
|
||||
Two Republican Representatives from its urban districts, John H.
|
||||
Rousselot and Edgar W. Hiestland, are avowed members. ...</p>
|
||||
<p>=============================================================================
|
||||
New York Times, November 19, 1961, page 54</p>
|
||||
<p> RIGHTISTS PICKET KENNEDY SPEECH</p>
|
||||
<p> 3000 Parade in Los Angeles in Orderly Demonstration</p>
|
||||
<p>LOS ANGELES, Nov. 18-- Raucous picketing took place outside the Hollywood
|
||||
Palladium where President Kennedy spoke.</p>
|
||||
<p>For nearly an hour, 3000 persons paraded, carrying signs and chanting
|
||||
and singing their protests over a variety of issues.</p>
|
||||
<p>The demonstration, which started rather mildly five hours before the
|
||||
President spoke, was suddenly stepped up by an apparent influx of
|
||||
rightists.</p>
|
||||
<p>Some of the signs carried by men and women wearing red, white, and blue
|
||||
paper hats, read: "Unmuzzle the Military," "Clean Up the State
|
||||
Department," "Veto Tito," "Disarmament is Suicide," and "CommUNism is
|
||||
Our Enemy."</p>
|
||||
<p>The marchers sporadically chanted "Test the Bomb," and, "No Aid to Tito."
|
||||
They sang, among other things, "God Bless America" and "The Battle Hymn
|
||||
of the Republic."</p>
|
||||
<p>A much smaller contingent of pacifist marchers was elbowed out. Most of
|
||||
these carried signs urging the end of all atomic testing...</p>
|
||||
<p>=============================================================================
|
||||
New York Times, November 19, 1961, page 54</p>
|
||||
<p> Eisenhower Travels Aloft With Kennedy</p>
|
||||
<p>SHERMAN, Tex. Nov. 18 (AP) -- President Kennedy and former President Dwight
|
||||
D. Eisenhower rode together to Perrin Air Force Base near here by helicopter
|
||||
today after attending the funeral of Sam Rayburn at near-by Bonham.</p>
|
||||
<p>Senator Carl Hayden, Democrat of Arizona, was also on the helicopter.</p>
|
||||
<p>Mr. Kennedy and General Eisenhower stood together talking by the side of
|
||||
the aircraft for about two minutes. Mr. Kennedy gestured repeatedly with
|
||||
his left hand and appearing to be explaining something to General
|
||||
Eisenhower. General Eisenhower listened intently and shook his head
|
||||
affirmatively several times.</p>
|
||||
<p>They shook hands. Mr. Kennedy then walked briskly to his plane and General
|
||||
Eisenhower got into an Air Force automobile.</p>
|
||||
<p>=============================================================================
|
||||
New York Times, November 24, 1961, page 1</p>
|
||||
<p> Eisenhower Says Officers Should Stay Out of Politics</p>
|
||||
<p> Assails Extremists In TV Interview</p>
|
||||
<p>Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower last night urged officers of the
|
||||
armed services to shun partisan politics.</p>
|
||||
<p>Speaking as a General of the Army, he declared it was "bad practice --
|
||||
very bad" for an officer, even when testifying under oath before a
|
||||
committee of Congress, to express opinions "on political matters or
|
||||
economic matters that are contrary to the President's." ...</p>
|
||||
<p>The former President was blunt in discussing the recent "rise of
|
||||
extremists" in the country.</p>
|
||||
<p>"I don't think the United States needs super-patriots," he declared.
|
||||
"We need patriotism, honestly practiced by all of us, and we don't
|
||||
need these people that are more patriotic than you or anybody else."</p>
|
||||
<p>His definition of extremists embraced those who would "go back to
|
||||
eliminating the income tax from our laws and the rights of people to
|
||||
unionize... [and those] advocating some form of dictatorship." It
|
||||
also included those who "make radical statements [and] attack people
|
||||
of good repute who are proved patriots."</p>
|
||||
<p>At that point, Walter Cronkite of the C.B.S. news staff, who conducted
|
||||
the interview, asked about the "military man's role in our modern
|
||||
political life." He did not cite, but obviously referred to, the case
|
||||
of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, who stirred up a controversy that led to
|
||||
his "admonishment" for the political nature of the indoctrination of
|
||||
his troops. General Walker lated resigned from the Army.</p>
|
||||
<p>"I believe the Army officer, Navy officer, Air officer," General
|
||||
Eisenhower said, "should not be talking about political matters,
|
||||
particularly domestically, and never in the international field, unless
|
||||
he is asked to do so because of some particular position he might
|
||||
hold." ...</p>
|
||||
<p>The general declared there was hope for disarmament and better
|
||||
East-West relations. As the <span class="NORP" title="NORP">Russian</span> standard of living improves, the
|
||||
<span class="NORP" title="NORP">Russian</span> people will begin to understand that there is another way of
|
||||
life, he said...
|
||||
=============================================================================
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
</div>
|
||||
</body>
|
||||
</html>
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