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Word: mcnamara (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Vietnam, of course, the American public is likely to be far more vigilant when any President begins a piecemeal commitment of American forces to small, strife-torn countries several thousand miles away., It should be recalled, of course, that the post-1965 stage of U.S. involvement in Vietnam saw McNamara make a number of rosy--and utterly specious--predictions about the future of our operations there...

Author: By J. A. Herfort, | Title: Seven Years of McNamara | 11/30/1967 | See Source »

Despite his erratic track record on Vietnam, McNamara probably did more to illuminate publicly the complex strategic problems of the nuclear age than any American official since 1945. He demonstrated with compelling logic and eloquence the need for a strong "second-strike" nuclear capability--and noted, with accuracy, the need for forces to fight non-nuclear wars once it was clear that the U.S. and U.S.S.R. could not longer use nuclear weapons against each other without risking mutual destruction...

Author: By J. A. Herfort, | Title: Seven Years of McNamara | 11/30/1967 | See Source »

...Similar logic, according to Adam Yarmolinsky '43, his former top aide, McNamara recently backed the development of a "thin" anti-ballistic missile system to protect the Chinese,--who lacking a "second strike" or "comeback" nuclear capability, are more likely than America or Russia to use nuclear weapons rashly...

Author: By J. A. Herfort, | Title: Seven Years of McNamara | 11/30/1967 | See Source »

...remains McNamara's tragedy, perhaps, despite the power of his arguments that he has frequently failed to appreciate the political consequences of his decisions. For his deployment of a thin ABM system may in time generate pressure to build a far more costly, unnecessary "thick" system to defend against the Russians...

Author: By J. A. Herfort, | Title: Seven Years of McNamara | 11/30/1967 | See Source »

Similarly, McNamara demonstrated political insensitivity in his dealings with Congress and the career military. He apparently felt that intelligence, reason, and eloquence were adequate compensation for skilled bureaucratic diplomacy. In seizing perquisites from Armed Services committees, admirals, and generals, he cultivated so many enemies throughout Washington that his influence in the past year could not do anything but wane...

Author: By J. A. Herfort, | Title: Seven Years of McNamara | 11/30/1967 | See Source »

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