Robert F. Kennedy’s handwritten notes about the missile crisis were released Thursday.
Boston.com/ Bryan Bender*
WASHINGTON — Hours earlier an American U-2 spy plane had been shot
down while snapping photos of nuclear missiles secretly placed by the
Soviet Union in Cuba, just 90 miles from US shores. Despite a US naval
blockade, Soviet cargo ships carrying more military supplies were
steaming toward the Caribbean island.
It was Oct. 27, 1962, “the most difficult and tense time” of the
Cuban missile crisis, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy scribbled on a
legal pad after huddling with his brother, President John F. Kennedy,
and his closest advisers.
“This was the moment we had prepared for which we hoped would never
come,” he continued. “We had to either intercept [the Soviet ships] or
announce we were bluffing.”
The sense of impending danger “hung like a cloud over us all. And no one more than the president.”
The attorney general’s handwritten notes from these around-the-clock meetings 50 years ago this month are part of more than
2,700 pages of
his personal and confidential files made public Thursday by the John F.
Kennedy Library and Museum in Dorchester with the approval of his
family.
Although they do not appear to contain any blockbuster revelations,
the documents spotlight the central role — a highly unusual one — that
the attorney general played in foreign policy, including helping the
United States and Soviet Union step back from the brink of nuclear
holocaust.
The files contain several early drafts of his memos to the president
as he served as a go-between with Soviet diplomats. The efforts
ultimately defused the crisis with a public US pledge not to invade Cuba
if the Soviets removed their missiles, and with a private pledge to
dismantle American missiles in Europe.
The seven boxes of newly released files are among the 62 covering
Kennedy’s three-year tenure as attorney general that researchers have
been angling to see for decades. The Kennedy family, which was granted
unusual purview over the collection by the National Archives after
Robert Kennedy’s assassination in 1968, pledged in a statement Wednesday
to work with the government to declassify and release the remaining 55.
Many of the newly declassified files on Cuba, which cover 1961 to
1963, are marked “top secret” or “ultrasensitive” or “eyes only.” They
provide insight into how Robert Kennedy presided over a maze of
US-sponsored efforts to overthrow the regime of Cuban leader Fidel
Castro, from the failed CIA-backed Bay of Pigs invasion to renewed
efforts after the missile crisis.
His handwritten notes hint at how the Bay of Pigs fiasco staggered
the young administration. One dated May 11, 1961, days after the
failure, contains doodles of triangles, a reference to the CIA, and the
line: “If we do not get back to a position where nations have some
respect, and even fear [illegible], we shall never beat these bastards.”
At one point in May 1963, after he met with a leader of the Bay of
Pigs operation and other Cuban exiles, an aide warned him about the
potential implications of his continued role. A CIA report had recounted
that exiles were dropping his name while building support for plans to
remove Castro.
“It seems to me the CIA report presents the question of whether your
name should be circulated in general like this,” the aide wrote.
Historians called the newly available documents invaluable to
understanding the full role of Robert Kennedy in Cuba policy and the
wider Cold War.
“The anomaly of Robert Kennedy was that the attorney general of the
United States was moonlighting as director of covert operations against
Cuba,” said Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archive, a research
center at George Washington University, and an expert on Cuba and the
Cold War.
Kornbluh said the initial covert efforts Kennedy oversaw to remove
Castro — collectively called Operation Mongoose — were halted after the
missile crisis but were revived in 1963. “The Cuban exiles are in some
way reporting to Robert Kennedy,” he said.
For example, the documents show that months after the United States
vowed publicly it would not try to remove Castro, RFK presided over a
secret meeting on May 14, 1963, in the White House Situation Room to
discuss potential opportunities to take stronger action in Cuba. One
possibility involved exposing US spy planes to enemy fire in an attempt
to provoke an incident for political purposes.
Kennedy biographer Larry Tye said “the documents show that long after
the Bay of Pigs and missile crisis Bobby continued playing CIA chief,
counterinsurgency boss, and chief provocateur.”
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