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- January 5, 1962Man of the Year:John Fitzgerald KennedyA Way with the People
-
-
-
- The taste of victory was fresh and sweet to John Fitzgerald
- Kennedy. Just about a year ago, he sat in the drawing room of his
- Georgetown home and spoke breezily about the office he would
- assume. "Sure it's a big job," he said. "But I don't know anybody
- who can do it any better than I can. I'm going to be in it for
- four years. It isn't going to be so bad. you've got time to think
- -- and besides, the pay is pretty good."
-
- One year later, on a cool, grey day, the 35th President of
- the United States sat at his desk in the oval office of the White
- House and discussed the same subject. "This job is interesting,"
- he said in that combination of Irish slur and broad Bostonese
- that has become immediately identifiable on all the world's
- radios, "but the possibilities for trouble are unlimited. It
- represents a chance to exercise your judgment on matters of
- importance. It takes a lot of thought and effort. It's been a
- tough first year, but then they're all going to be tough."
-
- The words, not particularly memorable, might have come from
- any of a thousand thoughtful executives after a year on the job.
- But here they were spoken by the still-young executive in the
- world's biggest job, and they showed the difference in attitude
- and tone that twelve months in the White House have worked on
- John F. Kennedy.
-
- Jack Kennedy -- Man of the Year for 1961 -- had passionately
- sought the presidency. The closeness of his victory did not
- disturb him; he took over the office with a youth-can-do-anything
- sort of self-confidence. He learned better; but learn he did. And
- in so doing he not only made 1961 the most endlessly interesting
- and exciting presidential year within recent memory; he also made
- the process of his growing up to be President a saving factor for
- the U.S. in the cold war.
-
- Kennedy has always had a way with the people -- a presence
- that fits many moods, a style that swings with grace from high
- formality to almost prankish casualness, a quick charm, the
- patience to listen, a sure social touch, an interest in knowledge
- and a greed for facts, a zest for play matched by a passion for
- work. Today his personal popularity compares favorably with such
- popular heroes as Franklin Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower.
-
- During 1961, Kennedy suffered some major setbacks, including
- one, in Cuba, that might have ruined some Presidents. (Richard
- Nixon has said: "If I had been responsible for failing to make a
- critical decision on the Cuban business which would have brought
- victory, I would have been impeached.") Yet, his popularity has
- remained consistently high, seemingly unaffected by his
- vicissitudes. In the latest Gallup poll, 78% of the American
- people said that they approved of the way he is doing his job.
- But personal popularity, as Kennedy well knows, is not always
- reflected in widespread support of public policy. To translate
- popularity into support is the job of the politician -- and the
- job to which Kennedy has come increasingly to devote his time and
- energy.
-
- In many of the most visible ways, Kennedy has been little
- changed by the presidency. In the White House, he still fidgets
- around, prowling the corridors and offices, putting his feet on
- his chair, pulling up his socks, tapping his teeth, adjusting and
- readjusting the papers on his desk, occasionally answering his
- own telephone or making his own telephone calls. It used to be
- that the telephone salutation, "This is Jack," would bring the
- instinctive question, "Jack who?" But no longer. Now everyone in
- Washington knows who Jack is: he is the man at the other end of
- the line.
-
- At 44, Kennedy's weight remains steady at 175 lbs. He has
- few more grey hairs or wrinkles of care than when he took office
- -- but he somehow looks older and more mature. Indeed he is older
- -- but in a way that the mere month-by-month passage of time
- could not have made him.
-
- Less Than Omnipotent. Kennedy has come to realize that
- national and international issues look much different from the
- President's chair than from a candidate's rostrum. There are
- fewer certainties, and far more complexities. "We must face
- problems which do not lend themselves to easy, quick or permanent
- solutions," he said recently in Seattle. "And we must face the
- fact that the U.S. is neither omnipotent nor omniscient, and that
- we cannot right every wrong or reverse each adversity, and that
- therefore there cannot be an American solution for every world
- problem."
-
- That sober view of the limitations of power and authority is
- far removed from Kennedy's campaign oratory, which often seemed
- to suggest that any problem could be solved if only enough vim
- and vigor were brought to bear on it. Kennedy promised a "New
- Frontier" to "get America moving again." He soon found that it
- was tough enough just to keep the old problems from getting out
- of hand.
-
- Before he came to the White House, Kennedy chose as his
- model the Franklin Delano Roosevelt of the New Deal years. He
- expressed admiration for Roosevelt's ability to "do" things and
- to "get things done," even adopted some of F.D.R.'s speech
- mannerisms (the cocked head, allusions to historical fact).
- Kennedy advisers talked about a Rooseveltian 100 days of dramatic
- success with Congress. But before the azaleas had bloomed in the
- White House garden the Roosevelt image went by the boards -- and
- so did the 100-day notion. "This period," says Kennedy today,
- with just a shade of irritation, "is entirely different from
- Franklin Roosevelt's day. Everyone says that Roosevelt did this
- and that, why don't I?"
-
- Changed Positives. Kennedy has always been a man of positive
- ideas -- but some of the positives have changed. During the 1960
- campaign, he effectively used the charge that U.S. prestige had
- plummeted during Dwight Eisenhower's Administration. In fact, the
- U.S. had under Ike, and retains under Kennedy, a high reservoir
- of good will in the free world -- as Kennedy saw for himself in
- his triumphal trips to London, Paris and, more recently Latin
- America. During the presidential campaign, Kennedy also made much
- of the "missile gap" between the U.S. and the Soviet Union;
- within a few weeks after he took office, the missile gap somehow
- seemed to disappear (although the President was publicly annoyed
- at Defense Secretary Robert McNamara for saying as much at a news
- briefing. Kennedy himself said: "In terms of total military
- strength, the U.S. would not trade places with any nation on
- earth."
-
- As an amateur historian, Kennedy might have realized that no
- new President starts out with a blank book to be filled with
- fresh-ink policies. The reach of current history is such that any
- President's program becomes a continuing part of national
- policy; that policy may be altered, but it can rarely be fully
- reversed. When Kennedy first came to the White House, he resented
- his inheritance, constantly referred to problems "not of our own
- making." But now those old problems tend to become "our
- problems," and the fact that the world is in trouble seems to
- Kennedy less Dwight Eisenhower's fault than he once suspected. At
- a recent meeting of the National Security Council, Kennedy opened
- a folder filled with briefs of U.S. problems. "Now, let's see,"
- he said. "Did we inherit these, or are these our own?" Now,
- Kennedy can even joke to friends: "I had plenty of problems when
- I came in. But wait until the fellow who follows me sees what he
- will inherit."
-
- Key to Power. Behind such subtle, sometimes facetiously
- stated, changes of attitude lies the central story of a U.S.
- President coming of age. Personality is a key to the use of
- presidential power, and John Kennedy in 1961 passed through three
- distinct phases of presidential personality. First, there was the
- cocksure new man in office. Then, after the disastrous, U.S.-
- backed invasion of Cuba (in White House circles, B.C. still means
- Before Cuba), came disillusionment. Finally, in the year's last
- months, came a return of confidence -- but of a wiser, more
- mature kind that had been tempered by the bitter lessons of
- experience.
-
- Kennedy's inaugural address, delivered under a brilliant sun
- after a night of wild snowstorm, rang with eloquence and the hope
- born of confidence. "Let the word go forth from this time and
- place, to friend and foe alike, that the torch has been passed to
- a new generation of Americans . . . In the long history of the
- world, only a few generations have been granted the role of
- defending freedom in its hour of maximum danger. I do not shrink
- from this responsibility -- I welcome it."
-
- Man of Destiny. Such was Kennedy's performance during the
- inauguration ceremonies that the late Sam Rayburn was moved to
- remark: "He's a man of destiny." Poet Robert Frost, then 86,
- obviously thought so, too, and his proud reading of one of his
- poems at the inaugural set a tone of expectation. After a few
- weeks in the Presidency, Kennedy told a friend: "This is a damned
- good job." He was fascinated by the perquisites of his office and
- his sudden access to the deepest secrets of government. He
- explored the White House, poked his head into offices, asked
- secretaries how they were getting along. He propped up pictures
- of his wife and children in office wall niches, while Jackie
- rummaged through the cellar and attic, charmed with the treasures
- she found there and already determined to make the White House
- into a "museum of our country's heritage."
-
- The Kennedy "style" came like a hurricane. For a while, the
- problems of the world seemed less important than what parties the
- Kennedys went to, what hairdo Jackie wore. Seldom, perhaps never,
- has any President had such thorough exposure in so short a time.
- At one point, Theodore Sorensen, Kennedy's special counsel,
- reminded the president of Kennedy's old campaign line: that he
- was tired of getting up every morning and reading what Khrushchev
- and Castro were doing; instead, he wanted to read what the
- President of the U.S. was doing. Replied Kennedy: "That's so, and
- I've been hearing some criticism about it. People are saying that
- they are tired of getting up every morning and reading what
- Kennedy is doing. They want to read what Khrushchev and Castro
- are doing."
-
- First Realization. On the home front realization came
- quickly to Jack Kennedy that not everything was going to come up
- roses. The 87th Congress had convened with lopsided Democratic
- majorities -- but those majorities were deceptive, particularly
- in the House of Representatives where conservative Democrats
- (mostly from the South) and Republicans saw Kennedy's squeaky win
- over Dick Nixon as less than a national mandate. The first major
- fight in Congress was over the Kennedy Administration's all-out
- effort to liberalize the House Rules Committee. The resolution
- carried by a scant five votes -- and right then and there
- President Kennedy, a veteran vote counter, concluded that his
- domestic programs were in for trouble.
-
- He was absolutely right. During the year, in 66 messages to
- Capitol Hill, the President made 355 specific legislative
- requests. Of those, the Congress approved 172. In general, the
- Congress gave the President almost everything he wanted in the
- field of national security. After desperate fights, it approved
- Kennedy Administration requests for the biggest housing bill in
- history, an increased minimum wage and new federal highway
- financing. But such pet Kennedy programs as aid to education and
- medical care for the elderly never even came to House votes. And
- in one of the bitterest blows of all President Kennedy got for
- his vital foreign aid a half-loaf that did not meet his urgent
- demands for long-term borrowing authority.
-
- Naive Request. In foreign affairs, understanding of the
- difficulties came more slowly to the President. At the outset
- Kennedy naively conveyed a request for a six-month moratorium on
- Communist troublemaking while the new Administration got its
- house in order. In response, Communist guerrillas began gobbling
- even more hungrily at faraway Laos. Russian Foreign Minister
- Andrei Gromyko came to the White House to sound out the new
- President. In the Rose Garden, Kennedy sternly warned Gromyko of
- the danger of pushing the U.S. too far in a situation where its
- prestige was at stake. Gromyko listened -- and the guerrillas
- kept advancing in Laos. As the situation worsened, Kennedy went
- on national TV at a press conference to declare that a Communist
- takeover in Laos would "quite obviously affect the security of
- the U.S."
-
- The plain implication of Kennedy's statement was that the
- U.S. would send arms and, if necessary, troops to defend the
- security that had been equated with its own. But nothing could
- have been further from Kennedy's intention, and only a few days
- later State Department officials and White House aides began
- downgrading the importance of Laos. Kennedy himself said, in a
- qualification that counted Laos out: "We can only defend the
- freedom of those who are ready to defend themselves." Actually,
- the new President had been caught in a talk-tough bluff aimed, at
- best, at achieving a pallid, precarious truce in Laos.
-
- But Laos did not diminish Jack Kennedy's self-confidence.
- Neither did the space flight of Russia's Yuri Gagarin. To that,
- Kennedy reacted in a manner characteristic of his first months in
- the White House. First he called in his space experts, demanded
- that they come up with answers about when, how and at what cost
- the U.S. could catch up with the U.S.S.R. in man-in-space
- prowess. "I don't care where you get the answers," said Kennedy.
- "If the janitor over there can tell us, ask him." Next Kennedy
- appeared before the Congress to deliver an unusual midyear State
- of the Union message. He asked for a $9 billion program to put a
- man on the moon by 1971, and he placed that request, in a manner
- smacking more of Hollywood and Vine than of 1600 Pennsylvania
- Avenue, close to the top of the U.S. cold war priority list.
-
- Dark Night. Then there was Cuba. It was a tragedy, but if
- nothing else it served the function of a hickory stick in the
- presidential education of John Kennedy. Kennedy had inherited the
- unpleasant fact of Communist Fidel Castro's rule over an enclave
- within 90 miles of U.S. shores. He also inherited from Dwight
- Eisenhower a specific plan for the U.S. to back, with air cover
- and logistical support, an anti-Castro invasion of Cuba by
- Cubans. But Kennedy decreed that the U.S. should not provide some
- of the necessary ingredients to that plan -- such as air cover by
- U.S. planes. The result was disaster at the Bay of Pigs.
-
- On the night when the Cuba failure became apparent, the
- scene at the White House was memorable. President Kennedy,
- doffing the white tie and tails he had worn to a legislative
- reception, returned to the Executive Wing while the unhappy news
- was pouring in. At 2:30 a.m., orders were given to the State
- Department's Latin American expert, Adolf Berle Jr., and White
- House Aide Arthur Schlesinger Jr. to fly to Miami to confer with
- anti-Castro Cuban invasion leaders. Black coffee was being rushed
- about. Berle (since eased out of his State Department office)
- stood around in an overcoat complaining of the cold. Schlesinger
- was haggard and unshaven. Finally, Berle and Schlesinger left,
- and so did most others of the White House coterie. Abruptly,
- President Kennedy walked out into the White House Rose Garden.
- For 45 minutes he stayed alone, thinking.
-
- Cuba made the first dent in John Kennedy's self-confidence.
- When the invasion first began to go sour, the President called
- his brother, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, who was making a
- speech in Williamsburg, Va., at the time. "Why don't you come
- back," said Jack, "and let's discuss it." Bobby flew back and, in
- the midst of crisis, his was the profile pictured against the
- late-burning White House lights. In Cuba's immediate aftermath,
- it was Bobby who moved into the White House, spearheaded an
- investigation of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, became a
- moving spirit at National Security Council meetings.
-
- At the moment of nadir in the Cuba disaster, a White House
- aide watched President Kennedy and said: "This is the first time
- Jack Kennedy ever lost anything." The fact of defeat was jolting,
- and the President showed it. In the weeks that followed, he
- seemed unsure of himself and willing to attempt almost anything
- that, by any conceivable stretch of the imagination, might recoup
- the B.C. position. He even got himself involved in the ill-
- advised attempt to trade U.S. tractors off for captured Cuban
- rebels.
-
- On to Vienna. But it is in the nature of Kennedy to strike
- when things seem worst. It was in that sense that after Cuba the
- President -- despite campaign criticism of summitry -- decided to
- go to Vienna to meet Nikita Khrushchev. He hoped, he said, to
- size up Khrushchev and to warn him against miscalculating U.S.
- determination in the cold war. He knew beforehand that Khrushchev
- was tough -- but only at Vienna did he discover how tough. "The
- difficulty of reaching accord was dramatized in those two days,"
- he says today. There was no shouting or shoe banging, but the
- meeting was grim. At one point Kennedy noted a medal on
- Khrushchev's chest and asked what it was. When Khrushchev
- explained that it was for the Lenin Peace Prize, Kennedy coldly
- replied: "I hope you keep it."
-
- Kennedy managed to wangle out of Khrushchev a paper
- agreement on the need for an "effective cease-fire" in Laos and
- for a neutral and independent Laos (Communist guerrillas
- nonetheless continued to violate the cease-fire), but the two got
- nowhere on other matters. Then Kennedy insisted on a last,
- unscheduled session with Khrushchev. "We're not going on time,"
- he snapped to his staff. "I'm not going to leave until I know
- more." He found out more. At that final session Khrushchev
- growled that his decision to sign a peace treaty with East
- Germany by the end of December was "firm" and "irrevocable." "If
- that is true," replied Kennedy, "it is going to be a cold
- winter."
-
- High over the Atlantic Ocean, flying back to the U.S. the
- next night, John Kennedy sat in his shorts, surrounded by his key
- aides. He was dead tired; his eyes were red and watery; he
- throbbed with the ache of a back injury that the nation did not
- yet know about but that had forced him to endure agonies on his
- European trip. Several times he stared down at his feet, shook
- his head and muttered how unbending Khrushchev had been. He
- hugged his bare legs and wondered what would come next.
-
- Aides in the White House agree that August and September
- were the most critical months so far in the personal and
- political life of John Kennedy. The first thing that Kennedy did
- when he got back to the White House was to call for an estimate
- of the number of Americans who might die in an atomic war; it was
- 70 million. Kennedy and those close to him felt that war was a
- very real possibility. The President became moody, withdrawn,
- often fell into deep thought in the midst of festive occasions
- with family and friends. He sat up late in the White House and
- talked about war. To one intimate associate he said: "It really
- doesn't matter as far as you and I are concerned. What really
- matters is all the children."
-
- But at some point, in some way, the President passed through
- his period of personal crisis. He decided that words could be
- effective only when backed by the plain willingness to perform
- deeds. "We do not want to fight," he told the U.S., "but we have
- fought before. We cannot and will not permit the Communists to
- drive us out of Berlin, either gradually or by force."
-
- Kennedy had uttered such bold words before -- but this time
- he intended to support them with action. The Communist Wall in
- Berlin caught the U.S. by surprise, and President Kennedy had no
- ready response. "There's no reason why we should do everything,"
- he said. But he did decide, even if it meant war, to insist upon
- the maintenance of three basic Allied rights in Berlin: 1) the
- presence of Allied forces, 2) access to Berlin, and 3) a free and
- viable city as part of West Germany.
-
- Turning Point. It was to demonstrate that determination in
- the only language that Communism can understand that Kennedy
- ordered an armored U.S. troop convoy to travel the Autobahn from
- West Germany through East German territory to West Berlin. The
- journey made for some dramatic headlines, but its real
- significance was somehow diluted by the flood of international
- crises. Kennedy well recognized that if the convoy were stopped,
- the shooting might start. "Talking to Kennedy was like talking to
- a statue," recalls a White House aide. "There was the feeling
- that this mission could very well escalate into shooting before
- morning."
-
- The battle group was to be sent along the Autobahn in
- serials of 60 trucks each. General Bruce Clarke, Commander in
- Chief, U.S. Army, Europe, set up headquarters in the woods about
- one-half mile from Helmstedt. He was in near-instant
- communication with the White House. President Kennedy had
- postponed a weekend trip to Cape Cod; his military aide, Army
- Major General Ted Clifton, was ordered to remain on duty all
- night in case of trouble, Kennedy himself stayed up until
- midnight, then turned in. When he arose at 8 a.m., he was told
- that the convoy's first group had passed safely through the gate
- into West Berlin.
-
- Thus, the incident itself did not amount to much, but it was
- a turning point in the presidential year. For the first time
- Kennedy had backed up his urgent words with urgent action -- and
- was psychologically ready for more. Gone was the old feeling of
- complete cockiness. Gone too was that period of doubt -- which
- had been so devastating to a man who had never before known
- doubt.
-
- From the beginning of his Administration, Kennedy had been
- concerned about establishing "credibility" with Khrushchev. But,
- in retrospect, it was not until after the Autobahn voyage that
- Khrushchev began to believe that the new U.S. President might
- really back up his brave words with daring deeds. Given that
- inch, Kennedy began to make mileage.
-
- The U.S. continued building up its nuclear and conventional
- forces to strengthen its military might around the world. The
- Army stated raising its strength from eleven to a planned 16
- combat divisions, got a badly needed infusion of modern
- equipment. Draft calls were increased, and some 156,000
- reservists and National Guardsmen were called to active duty
- (some of them have been screaming ever since). Down to the
- smallest detail, Kennedy himself discussed ways in which the U.S.
- might combat Communist guerrillas in strategic areas of the
- earth. In a meeting with military leaders to decide which weapons
- ought to be sent to pro-Western forces in Southeast Asia, he
- personally called for specimens of several. He tried the new M-
- 14, then the new Armalite. Then he hefted the old, World War II
- carbine and said: "You know, I like the old carbine. You aren't
- going to see a guy 500 yards in the jungle."
-
- Kennedy once again conferred with Gromyko in the White House
- to discuss East-West tensions, and this time the President made
- it clear that he was through with offering U.S. compromises in
- return for continuing Russian intransigence. Said Kennedy: "You
- have offered to trade us an apple for an orchard. We don't do
- that in this country." Before long, diplomatic pouches were
- bringing word back that Khrushchev now felt that his young
- American antagonist might be much more than a pup. In evidence
- Khrushchev amid belligerent yowlings, backed away from his year-
- end deadline about the settlement, forced or otherwise, of the
- Berlin question.
-
- The Image. Slight and temporary though it may have been, the
- relaxation that Kennedy won in the tensions about Berlin gave him
- a chance to perfect and polish his image as a U.S. political
- leader. Part of that image was, and is, the youth, vigor and
- attractiveness of the Kennedy family. Few diplomats have scored
- more triumphs than Jacqueline Kennedy in her year as the nation's
- First Lady. She has charmed Britain's Macmillan, France's
- De Gaulle, Germany's Adenauer and, for that matter, Khrushchev
- himself (said Khrushchev of Jackie's gown: "It's beautiful!").
- "Jackie wants to be as great a First Lady in her own right as
- Jack wants to be a great President," says a friend. Toward that
- end, Jackie has worked hard and effectively. She has done over
- the White House with unexceptionable taste. She has introduced
- into the White House, for the first time in years, good food,
- great music, Shakespeare, warmth and informality -- all along
- with a deep respect for American tradition. In so doing, she has
- managed to stay very much herself.
-
- Jackie Kennedy refuses to be falsely humble. She wore her
- apricot dress and coat of silk and linen to speak to farmers in a
- Venezuelan barnyard. She declines to honor all the petty requests
- that pour into the White House, ignores most of the President's
- political rallies, turns down invitations from women's groups who
- are constantly nagging her for an appearance. She water-skis,
- rides, plays golf, and yet remains an attentive mother to her
- children.
-
- "Who's Crying?" The Kennedys try to shield Daughter Caroline
- from too much publicity. But despite all her parents efforts,
- Caroline is a real Kennedy: she makes news. She came clutching
- her mother's shoes into a presidential press conference at Palm
- Beach. Carefully rehearsed, she was on hand to proffer a fresh
- rose to an enchanted Nehru at Newport. Once, Kennedy had to break
- off a TV filming to go and wipe Caroline's offstage tears ("Who's
- crying in this house?" he demanded). Again the President of the
- U.S., spending a weekend at Glen Ora, was heard to say
- impatiently: "Hurry up, Caroline. I want to use the phone."
-
- Even beyond his immediate household circle, the President
- remains a family man. A brother, sisters and brothers-in-law have
- flocked to Washington in convenient concentration, all willing to
- help the President with his work and eager to help him relax
- after hours. Bobby is still Kennedy's right-hand man. Sargent
- Shriver Jr. -- Eunice Kennedy's husband -- is head of the Peace
- Corps. Stephen Smith -- Jean Kennedy's husband -- is special
- assistant to the head of the White House "Crisis Center." Actor
- Peter Lawford -- Pat Kennedy's husband -- helped pay off
- Democratic debts by co-producing an inaugural extravaganza, still
- shows up at Kennedy conclaves, sometimes with the Hollywood Rat
- Pack in tow. Until he suffered a stroke last month, Father Joe
- was in regular touch with the President, offering encouragement
- and loyalty. And it was Multimillionaire Joe who negotiated the
- movie contract for Robert Donovan's book on Kennedy's wartime
- days, PT 109. It came to a tidy $150,000 -- some $2,500 for each
- of the old PT crew members or their widows and $120,000 for
- Donovan.
-
- The Treatment. Whether with his family, at a casual dinner
- with friends, or working among his trusted aides, Kennedy has one
- overwhelming interest that shapes all his actions: politics. By
- instinct and training, he is a political creature who works 25
- hours a day at politics.
-
- Kennedy's front-line political weapon is his own power of
- political persuasion. He courts Congressmen, inviting them to the
- White House for intimate social gatherings, calling them on the
- telephone to hash over old times on the Hill, remembering their
- birthdays with personal notes, carrying a tiny pad on which to
- jot down their political problems.
-
- Where Harry Truman delighted in denouncing "special
- interest" groups, Kennedy tries to win them over. He places great
- emphasis on the power of the press, and no other U.S. President
- has granted so many private interviews to journalists of many
- levels. It goes without saying that organized labor is friendly
- to Democrat Kennedy, but the President has also gone all-out to
- relieve big business of its suspicions about his Administration.
- He has sent his economic advisers all over the country to preach
- that big business is a respected Administration partner, slipped
- such business leaders as U.S. Steel Chairman Roger Blough into
- the White House for long, earnest chats.
-
- Kennedy's persuasive personality has also been turned on
- foreign dignitaries. The President has received 30 chiefs of
- state and heads of government since his inauguration, sent most
- of them away grateful for the treatment they received and
- impressed by Kennedy's broad knowledge and willingness to listen
- to their problems. Among his Western Allies, Kennedy gets along
- splendidly with Britain's Harold Macmillan. Germany's Chancellor
- Konrad Adenauer recently left the White House declaring: "I've
- never left this house feeling better." Even France's difficult
- Charles de Gaulle trusts and respects Kennedy -- up to a point.
- From De Gaulle aides after Kennedy's spring trip to Paris came
- word of a characteristic De Gaulle declaration. In his long
- lifetime, said De Gaulle, he had met only two real statesmen:
- Adenauer and Kennedy. But Adenauer was too old, he said, and
- Kennedy was too young.
-
- Where persuasion fails, Kennedy is perfectly willing to use
- power -- in his own way. In the early days of his Administration,
- he realized that he had picked the wrong man for Under Secretary
- of State. Chester Bowles, who was supposed to be tending to
- administrative work in the State Department, was instead obsessed
- with big-think solutions to world problems; beyond that, Bowles
- committed the ultimate sin of disloyalty by letting it be known,
- after the fact, that he had been against the Cuba venture all
- along. Kennedy decided to get Bowles out. He invited Bowles down
- for a swim in the White House pool. Then the two had lunch while
- Kennedy explained that he had a new job, outside Washington, in
- mind for Bowles. Bowles not only refused to bite at Kennedy's
- bait, but went out and stirred up protests among his cultist
- liberal following. In the face of a fuss, Jack Kennedy backed
- away -- but anyone who knew him also knew that it would not be
- for long. Last November, when nobody was looking, he shifted
- Bowles into a high-sounding but peripheral job as a presidential
- adviser, tossed in nearly a dozen other White House and State
- Department switches for good measure -- and managed it all with
- hardly a murmur of complaint from anyone.
-
- Crab Grass & Berets. In the White House, Kennedy is still a
- man in near-perpetual motion, interested in everything that goes
- on about him and casual enough to take a hand in anything that
- interests him. Amid his other duties, he had time to notice crab
- grass on the White House lawn and order it removed, and to order
- the Army's Special Forces to put back on the green berets that
- had earlier been banned ("They need something to make them
- distinctive"). When he wanted a haircut a few weeks ago after a
- hard day of work, he simply had his secretary summon a barber to
- his White House office. There, the barber neatly spread a white
- cloth in front of the presidential desk, lifted a chair onto the
- cloth and began snipping away. The President of the U.S. tilted
- back his chair, picked up his afternoon paper, and smiled
- happily. "Now," he said, "I'm going to read Doris Fleeson."
-
- Kennedy is a buff for physical fitness for himself and
- others, at one point suggested that his aides all lose at least
- five pounds -- and that portly Press Secretary Pierre Salinger
- lose a good deal more. He swims twice a day in the heated White
- House pool, has taken up a rigorous series of calisthenics under
- the direction of New York University's Dr. Hans Kraus to help his
- ailing back. He does his nip-ups in the White House gym, in his
- bedroom, even on board the big presidential jet while flying off
- to important meetings.
-
- The Uncertain Art. Kennedy exercises his intellect by
- demanding diverse position papers on many topics; he relaxes it
- by letting his mind range over history and politics. But for
- getting work done, he has come more and more to depend on the
- political pros and the able technicians: Brother Bobby, Defense's
- McNamara, State's Dean Rusk, Treasury's Douglas Dillon and
- Speechwriter Ted Sorensen. Kennedy's greatest respect is reserved
- for men who get things done, rather than those who just think
- about them. "We always need more men of ability who can do
- things," he says. "We need people with good judgment. We have a
- lot. But we never have enough." He has nothing but scorn for
- academicians who offer criticism without an alternate course of
- action. "Where does he sit?" snapped Kennedy in reaction to one
- scholarly critic. "At that university, not here where decisions
- have to be made."
-
- John Kennedy is acutely aware that he, and he alone, sits
- where the decisions have to be made -- and there are plenty yet
- to be made. Berlin remains a city of chronic crisis, and Kennedy
- faces choices far harder than that of sending fresh troops down
- the Autobahn. He has yet to get down to making the final but
- necessary decision to go ahead with nuclear testing in the
- atmosphere. Other problems lie ahead in Southeast Asia, in
- Congress, in NATO, in the United Nations. With full realization
- of what he faces, and the experience of the year behind, Kennedy
- speaks today of the "uncertainties" of statecraft. "You can't be
- sure," he says. "It's not science. It is an uncertain art."
-
- In the spirit of history that so moved him, Kennedy last
- week, on the 105th anniversary of Woodrow Wilson's birthday,
- hailed the 28th U.S. President as the "shaper of the first
- working plan for international cooperation among all peoples of
- the world. 'What we seek,' Wilson said, 'is the reign of law,
- based upon the consent of the governed and sustained by the
- organized opinion of mankind.' Every subsequent effort to create
- a stable world order has gone back for inspiration to his efforts
- and has owed much to his vision." The Wilson papers now being
- prepared for publication, said Kennedy, will serve as a reminder
- that "the twentieth century has not been lacking in the highest
- quality of leadership."
-
- To that quality of leadership John Kennedy aspires with all
- the intense ambition that he brought to winning the presidency.
- "Before my term has ended," he said in his State of the Union
- message last January, "we shall have to test anew whether a
- nation organized and governed such as ours can endure." In the
- years since Wilson, Americans and their Presidents have
- vanquished many threats from those who would abolish the "consent
- of the governed." But the test that faces the youngest elected
- and the most vigorous President of the 20th century -- and all
- those who live under his leadership -- is far greater: to meet
- and battle, in a time of great national peril, the marauding
- forces of Communism on every front in every part of the world. In
- his first year as President, John Fitzgerald Kennedy showed
- qualities that have made him a promising leader in that battle.
- Those same qualities, if developed further, may yet make him a
- great President.
-
-