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July 6, 2008
Two weeks ago I wrote at length about Richard Holbrooke's cheap shot at the Bush administration in the conclusion of his Times Book Review piece on a new book by Michael Dobbs covering the Cuban missile crisis. Holbrooke wrote: Life does not offer us a chance to play out alternative history, but it is not unreasonable to assume that the team that invaded Iraq would have attacked Cuba. And if Dobbs is right, Cuba and the Soviet Union would have fought back, perhaps launching some of the missiles already in place. One can only conclude that our nation was extremely fortunate to have had John F. Kennedy as president in October 1962. Like all presidents, he made his share of mistakes, but when the stakes were the highest imaginable, he rose to the occasion like no other president in the last 60 years — defining his goal clearly and then, against the demands of hawks within his administration, searching skillfully for a peaceful way to achieve it.I noted that Holbrooke failed to observe that there would not have been a Cuban missile crisis if Kennedy's pathetic performance in one foreign policy situation after another hadn't caused Khruschev to conclude the United States was led by an inexperienced weakling who was susceptible to bullying. The Cuban missile crisis thus presents a timely lesson, if not the one that Holbrooke chose to present. To my surprise, today's Times Book Review carries two letters making points compatible with the one I sought to make here: At the end of his review of Michael Dobbs’s “One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War” (June 22), Richard Holbrooke says it is “hard to read this book without thinking about what would have happened if the current administration had faced such a situation.” His plain suggestion is that the result would have been a nuclear holocaust.It is to the Times's credit that these letters have seen the light of day in the paper's pages. To comment on this post go here. |