tv Book TV CSPAN September 15, 2013 3:00pm-4:01pm EDT
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>> the annual festival is hosted by the franklin d. roosevelt presidential library and museum if hyde park, new york. this is about 50 minutes. >> good morning, everyone. >> good morning. >> my name is bob clark, and i'm the supervisory archivist here at the franklin d. roosevelt presidential library and museum, and it is my pleasure to welcome you to the tenth annual roosevelt reading festival.
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we're celebrating the tenth anniversary of the henry a. wallace center, so welcome, very glad to have you. a couple of housekeeping matters before i introduce our speaker.e one is will you, please, all out take out your cell phones,ep pagers, things that beep and the pone and turn them off -- moanda and turny. them off. the second thing is i want to thank our colleagues at c-span who are filming live from hydeou park to the, so thank you to them for h being here andprog supporting our programs.then and finally, let me just go over the format of the session. as those of you who have been here many times before know what our speaker will do is speak for about to 30 minutes, then we'll have 10 or 15 minutes for questions and answers, and i ask would ask that for the questions you would come up and line up and stand at the microphone, and then mr. persico will call ontin you for questions. and then after the question and answer period, we'll escort mr. persico out to the lobbye where he will be happy to sign the books that you will all want to purchase at the new deal
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store. [laughter] and finally, as many of you if f not all of you know, we justst rededicated the library after a three-year renovation and installed all new permanent be exhibits.so so if you will find one of the library staff people and get one of these buttons from them, that will let you see the museum exhibits free of charge. so with that, let me introduce to you our speaker. it is always a pleasure to see s joe persico here at the roosevelt library. he is one of the great gentlemee in the profession. he is a great friend not only tn the library, but he's a good friend of mine. he's the author of his latest book, "roosevelt's centurions: fdr and the commanders he led tr victory in world war ii." he was chief speech writer for new york governor and later u.s. vice president nelson a. rockefeller. he is the author of many books including "the imperial rockefeller." his "roosevelt's secret war,"
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and "franklin and lucy" focus oo franklin d. roosevelt and the roosevelt era.ra he's living proof once you write one book about roosevelt, you will keep coming back for more.k [laughter] he's been a consultant, commentator and writer onr on several documentaries, and twonr of his quotations are inscribed on the world war ii memorial in washington d.c. ladies and gentlemen, joseph persico. [applause] >> bob, thank you for that overgenerous introduction. bob has helped guide me through at least twoou of my three books on fdr, so i'm very much at homt here. there's a certain spell for me to come to this library, i can just feel the history oozing out of the wall, and i've enjoyed ie
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for perhaps 20 years now that i've been speaking. my aim in writing "roosevelt's" centurions" was to examine the fdr this three roles as commander in chiefirs during world world war ii. the first was as recruiter in chief. how able was fdr in his choices of the generals and admirals who were to -- who were to conduct the war. next, fdr as strategist in chief, how did the strategies that he adopted hasten or delay the victory. finally as morale officer, how well did he inspire and motivate a people and a nation at war? today i'm going to talk about that first standard that i mentioned, fdr as recruiter in s
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chief. his main selection was general george c. marshall as chief of s staff. con the nomenclature is sometimes, confusing. he's not ahe staff officer, he d the chief of the army, and that is what george marshall became under fdr. their first serious encounter in the white house did not go all that well. the president was describing a plan that he that had for increasing the output of aircraft, and this was prior to our entering the war, and he was very pleased with it. he turned to general marshall and he saidle don't you think s, george?on and you could't just read marshall's face. he was notha at all pleased with this easy familiarity that a fdr employed almost on first meeting
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anybody. and thereafter roosevelt, picking up on this, they became throughout their association general marshall and mr.l president. now, marshall, never the less, went on in this meeting which i'veed described to criticize te president's plan. roosevelt, he could be surrounded by yemen who were a dime a dozen -- yes men who were a dime a dozen, and he was very impressed by marshall'ss to willingness to stand up to him. and be marshall becomese throughout the war, essentially, fdr's south oak. now, soon after -- stout oak. now, soon after pearl harborhe george marshall brings into they
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war department a very promising officer of whom he has heard he nothing but praise and rave reviews, and that is dwight eisenhower. he and ike develop a plan for fr winning the war against nazi germany very early after pearl harbor. their plan is to conduct a massive buildup of troops in the british isles, americans and brits and other allied forces, and then thrust across the english channel, invade nazi-occupied france and more or less drive the 500 level miles right straight through to to berlin. now, marshall awe sures the 1 president that -- assures the president that this can be donet in 1943, roughly a year or so
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after we've entered the war. roosevelt appears to approve of that project. they have made a sale with him. he then sends george marshall with his closest confidant,on harry hopkins, to london to explain the plan to winston churchill. churchill seems to agree to it, they've made a sale with winston churchill. but to fdr, the promised invasion of 1943 still soundsnds very far off. we're into 1942 at this time. "time" magazine has noted that we've been in the war for six si months and not a single inch of enemy territory has been occupied, nor have we won a victory. fdr wants to engage the germans somewhere in 1942. now, winston churchill had givev lip service to his support of an invasion across the english channel, but his real objectivej was to save the british empire.
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and his conviction was that the lifeline of the british empiremp wasi the mediterranean sea. and if you wanted to control the mediterranean, you had to control north africa. now, at this time north africa was essentially controlled by by the french, you had the three colonies, morocco, algeria and tunisia, all french colonies. these colonies were run by the visual chi french government, the government that essentially surrendered to nazi germany in 1940 when france fell, and they were allowed under the terms of that armistice to hold on to their colonies in north africa. so presumably when we invade nort ih africa in november of gi 1942, we're going to be facing french troops, ironically. now, fdr hears churchill's
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arguments for, first, setting our troops against the germans in north africa, and he agrees. george marshall, when he finds out that m the president has abandoned the original plan for the cross-channel invasion in 1943, is appalled. he realizes that if all of the men t and material are sucked of of that campaign that's best arranged out of europe across the channel that you'll never by ready by 1943 and, indeed, d-day, the invasion of formanty' doesn't take place -- normandy, doesn't take place until '44. when eisenhower learns that the president has been persuaded byo churchill to abandon the cross-channel strategy, he describes it as the blackest day in history. but as the point arrives in which the continent is to be
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invaded, the big question is who will command the allied forces?r who will be the supreme commander? now, everybody knows that thish is going to be george par shall. marshall. winston churchill knows it, josef stalin knows it, "the new york times" knows it. [laughter] and mrs. marshall knows it,it. she's already packing accordingly. and george marshall has every reason to expect that the command will be his. in a few minutes, i'll get down to story of how fdr fools them all. the rule the navy is admiral errest king, a crusty sea dog de with a mercurial temper. his wife described her father as
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the most even-tempered man she ever knew, he was always mad.o [laughter] his philosophy was to chew his subordinates out in public and s praise them in private which isa not considered good personnel policy. but fdr had seen in ernie king a real scrapper.crap king was so tough that fdr used to joke that he shaved himself with a blow torch. [laughter] in some respects fdr was ahead of his navy chief. in 1942 the sinkings of merchans vessels which were keeping great britain alive were severely threatened by u-boat attacks sinkingre sometimes three and four ships in a single day. roosevelt wanted a convoy system where warships would attract, would protectwo the merchant vessels. king just didn't move along fast enough on that, and roosevelt literally drew him, dragged him into the convoy system whichwhic
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resulted in the fact that ship sinkings started to plummet soon after the adoption of the convoy system. now, there's another naval officer that, in my judgment, would have been every bit asudgm good as ernie king as the navy chief, and that's admiral the chester nimitz. just days after pearl harbor, fdr summonses nimitz to his office and says i want you to go out to the hawaiian islands, and i don't want you to come back until we've defeated the b japanese. so admiral king ruled, essentially, through fear.ea nimitz wasr, a beloved and reved skipper within the navy.thin i think he could have conducted the leadership of the navy in the war with great deal less wear and tear than ernie king an inflicted on his subordinates.n nimitz was also a very als open-minded officer. at one point a rather mid-levela officer who runs the coding
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operation, decoding operation in the pacific, a chap by the name of joe joe rochefort, asked to e the admiral, and he tells nimitz that his codebreakers have intercepted japanese messages, decoded them, and they can pinpoint where a japanese fleetn is steaming toward the island os midway, preliminary to mounting an invasion on the hawaiianng islands. hawaiian islands. roquefort assures the admiral that he can tell where that japanese fleet is going to be and at what time at any particular moment. nimitz gambles on this intelligence, okays a raid against this fleet, and there is a rendezvous between the japanese fleet -- unintended from their standpoint -- and american bombers who within five minutes sink four of the most
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vaunted carriers of the japanese navy. now, after six months of doom and gloom in the pacific, the loss of wake island, the loss of guam and the utterly humiliating surprise attack that succeeds against pearl harbor, after our success at midway, the war in the pacific turns around, and we will never really look back until victory. running the air force, the president picked general henry "hap" arnold. he's known as "hap" because through some facial anomaly, his lip is always curled in what appears to be a smile, but he's a tough guy apart from that. hap arnold went so far back in american aviation history that he was taught to fly by the wright brothers. [laughter]
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and yet in 40 years, which is a short span as history is mentioned, he is in charge of an air force that launches flotillas of a thousand heavy bombers against german cities including berlin. arnold's talents had been spotted by elliott roosevelt, the president's son who was a great aviation enthusiast. and arnold started out on a very high plane. at in this point -- at this point the air force is phone as the u.s. army air corps, so it's subordinate to the army. so, in effect be, hap arnold serves under general marshall. but roosevelt gives hap arl hold in a seat on the joint chiefs of staff, that is marshall for the army, king for the navy, admiral leahy is the general staff commander of this group. so by giving hap arnold a seat
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on the joint chiefs of staff, he has, in effect be, elevated the air force to equal status with the other services. hap arnold describes this move where he's able to sit down on an equal level with king and with marshall as the magna carta of the u.s. air force, and it's granted by franklin roosevelt. now, these two men -- the president and hap arnold -- had rather similar free-wheeling management styles. as one aide of president roosevelt put it, the president would give one man is six jobs to carry out, or he would give six men one job to carry out. it was something of the president's leadership style. hap arnold, similarly, would go to the airplane manufacturers, and he would say you've got to start producing more planes because my air force is training
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more pilots. then he would go to his training staff, and he would say you've got to turn out more pilots because the aircraft industry is producing more planes. [laughter] now we will discuss two interesting figures in the american echelon during world war ii, two men who circled each other like wary lions. that military peacock general douglas mcarthur -- [laughter] and that political lion, fdr. shortly before becoming president while roosevelt was still governor of new york, he remarked to some of his associates that there were two dangerous men in the united states. one, he said, was the demagogic senator from louisiana, huey long. and his staff asked him, you know, who is the other dangerous
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figure in america if and he said douglas mcarthur. nevertheless, after the president enters office in 1933, mcarthur is then running the army as chief of staff, and his term is about to expire. but fdr keeps him on. in the middle of the '30s, mcarthur retires from active service. he goes on the inactive list, and he goes to the philippines which he's always loved. he then begins the cushiest chapter in his military career. he is named by the philippine government as a field marshal in the philippine army. now this appointment, to me, has something of a comic opera overtone. and he very likely could have been left to sink in obscurity as a field marshal in the philippine army. but as the war appears to be
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approaching and the united states will be drawn in, the president puts mcarthur back on the active list, and he gives him complete command of all the troops in the philippines, americans and filipinos. soon after pearl harbor, the japanese invade the philippine islands. they sweep across and drive mcarthur and his forces out of manila down the peninsula down onto this rocky island. the japanese are going to succeed in conquering the philippines, and mcarthur faces three fates. he could either be killed, he could kill himself, or he would wind up as a prize prisoner to be paraded in tokyo before the victorious japanese. now,izen our at this point -- eisenhower at this point is still in the war department in
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washington, and his view is that, yes, you should leave mcarthur there on the island. [laughter] eisenhower had worked under mcarthur and still apparently felt the sting, and his view knowing the mcarthur theatrical personality was leave him there, it would suit mcarthur's martyr complex. but the president still has great faith in mcarthur's military genius, and he wants him rescued. consequently, mcarthur is plucked from the philippines. he goes to australia, and roosevelt gives him command of the southwest pacific area. that is roughly half of the pacific war zone. the other half goes to admiral chester nimitz who i mentioned earlier. after mcarthur leaves the philippines, he is plagued with doubt, plagued with humiliation, and he then makes his famous
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battle cry regarding the philippines: i sal return. i shall return. by mid 1944 there is a competition, a controversy between two forces as to how to win the war in the pacific. admiral nimitz and his forces have been conducting an island campaign. they've jumped from guadalcanal, they island hopped to saipan, eventually to iwo jima and okinawa, and it's brilliant strategy because it leaves other well-fortified japanese bases to wither on the vine as he hop scotches across the pacific. and nimitz's point of view is that we can continue to do this, we'll eventually surround the japanese, strangle them economically which will obviate the necessity of a very bloody invasion.
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the contrary opinion is taken by mcarthur who says that the way to defeat japan is to let him invade the philippines, to liberate the philippines and then use that as a jumping board for the invasion of the japanese homeland. also, if he can win the president's approval for going back to the philippines, he fulfills his promise: i shall return. now, the president in the summer of 1944 he summons mcarthur to the philippines and nimitz, and he if a sense is going to referee -- in a sense is going to referee between these two gentlemen as to which strategy is going to be adopted, island hopping or going up through the philippines. he hears both their arguments. mcarthur makes a brilliant defense of his position without a note in his hand. nimitz is piled high with books and maps and makes a very
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convincing argument for his case. fdr solves this dilemma in typical roosevelt fashion. he approves both approaches. [laughter] he will allow the island hopping, which he thinks is a brilliant strategy, to continue, and he also okays mcarthur's wish to invade the philippines. now, after that something happens which is brazen even by douglas mcarthur's behavior. here we are in the midst of war, and he makes it known clear to republican leaders in the united states that he would gladly accept a draft, their nomination to run for president. this would pit him against his commander in chief in the midst of war. apparently, mcarthur the
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military hero fares a great deal better than mcarthur the politician because when the republicans meet that summer at their convention to pick a candidate, among 1,046 delegate votes cast, douglas mcarthur receives one. [laughter] i'd like now to talk about how fdr regarded general eisenhower. you know, after eisenhower became president he was caricatured as a man who mangled the english language, a man who was inarticulate. and the interesting thing is this irony, that when he was first brought into the war plans department by general marshall soon after pearl harbor, ike initially made his name by the cogenesee -- cojencs, and sound
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papers he did many of which went before president roosevelt. so clearty the obfuscation was a smoke screen to conceal the things that he did not want to say. now, as i said earlier in my talk, everybody knows that president roosevelt would back george marshall to be the supreme commander when the time came to invade europe. it would have been the logical capstone to george marshall's career. even the president himself pointed out that every school kid could name a civil war battlefield commander; lee, grant, sherman, stonewall jackson. but who remembered from the civil war era who would have been chief of staff of the army which was the position that marshall now held? but fdr had observed something that captured his imagination about eisenhower.
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he saw eisenhower as a skilled political general in the best sense of that word. now, when the time came to invade north africa, the colonies -- as i mentioned, algeria, due tease ya and morocco -- were under control of the french government. in command of north africa and its colonies at that point was a french admiral by the name of francois darlan, a known nazi sympathizer. but eisenhower dealt with him, something of a pact with the devil, for which he was roundly criticized in the united kingdom and the united states. i mean, what was this war all about? weren't we fighting fascists and nazis? why do we have an american commander dealing with him? fdr backed eisenhower completely
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in his dealings with darlan in north africa. the president realized that what ike was doing was cutting a deal with the devil to reduce the resistance of french troops when we finally invaded these colonies, which was the case. the french fought for about three days, and that was it. so as a result of the deal that eisenhower cut with the admiral, many thousands of lives or were saved. eisenhower saw -- excuse me, the president saw eisenhower perform again in north africa. the president went to the conference at cat blank ca in -- casablanca in 1943, and he met at this oint be eisenhower, and the president always had an eye for a pretty woman. and he noticed that eisenhower was chaufferred around by a very comely britisher, a witty woman, very attractive, by the name of kay sommers by. at this point in the upper
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levels of the allied command, the rumors are fairly rampant asking the question how close is dwight eisenhower to kay sommersby, his driver? admiral marshall is dead on any suggestion of hanky-panky of people under his command. he had a commander in the middle east, and he'd heard a rumor this commander was involved in a dalliance with his secretary. and he contacts that general and said i want her sent back to the states pronto. fdr's utterly unconcerned with eisenhower's private life. hehe has seen in eisenhower a leader who can bring together strong-willed national leaders; churchill, de gaulle and his own president and unify them for a concerted attack during the
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war against nazi germany. he's able to do the same thing with very competitive generals like general montgomery, patton, his own supporters. so the president very much appreciates this absolutely critical talent. i like one of eisenhower's subordinates said best about the rumors regarding kay sommersby, he said eisenhower's bearing crushing burdens. if kay sommersby is helping to relieve some of those burdens, i'm all for it. leave him alone. [laughter] now, who does the president she can to be the -- select to be the supreme commander? november 1943, it's getting a little late in the day, it's about time he decided who he supported to be the supreme commander for the liberation of europe. in cairo he summons george marshall to his suite, just the two of them. and as marshall described this
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meeting, the president beats around the bush at great length, ad nauseam, before he gets down to what he wants to sew marshall -- to see marshall about. and be he finally just says what do you think about the supreme command? now, george marshall hungers for this command, as i've said. this would mark the capstone of his career. and any general worth his salt wants to be a battlefield commander, not a paper push or. pusher. but he's also a monumentally modest man. what does he tell the president? he says, i'll do whatever you say, whatever you think good for the country. at that point the president indicates that their meeting is over. marshall rises and heads toward the door, and just at that moment roosevelt says to him, i wouldn't be at ease without you in washington. george marshall knows that he is not to get the supreme command,
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and it goes to eisenhower. eisenhower after the war is viewed as the liberator of europe. he's elected president once, he's elected president again. george marshall, a truly great man, his image in the public consciousness has dimmed seriously since that period. let's talk a little bit about, perhaps, the most flamboyant pirg in the u.s. army -- figure in the u.s. army and maybe all the armies engaged in world war ii, general george s. patton. george patton's a brilliant battlefield commander, but he can be a terrible, terrible human being. nevertheless, fdr holds him in very high esteem because he's impressed by the boldness, the dash, the package nation of a george patton -- the imagination of a george patton. so just before the campaign in north africa in which patton will play a very serious part, the president invites him to the
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white house. patton is an old cavalryman, and the president says to patton, george, are you going to slap tank -- excuse me, he said, are you going to slap a saddle on that tank of yours and go in with your saber raised? he just finds patton a fascinating character. they have a very cozy chat, and afterward the president writes a memo longhand describing this meeting, and he wants this memo deposited here at hyde park among his papers. and he ends it saying george patton is a joy. not long afterward, patton gets in hot water. it's during the siciliano campaign. he goes -- siciliano campaign. he goes into two military hospitals in sicily, and he slaps two shell-shocked g.i.s. when this story is revealed, there is a huge cry back in the
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united states for patton's scalp. the president nevertheless sticks with george patton. and when he is asked by a reporter about the patton incident, slapping of the g.i.s, the president doesn't answer directly, he answers as he often does, with a parable. the parable here of the relationship between lincoln and general ulysses grant. and he points out that the president was criticized for elevating grant to such high status because grant was known to be a drunkard. abe lincoln looks at this winning general and says, well, let's find out what it is that he drinks. [laughter] patton is viewed, essentially, in the same way. patton is like a star athlete who breaks all the training rules. he stays out all night, he gambles, he winches, but he wins ball games. and this is not a player that fdr is going to bench regardless
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of the furor created over patton's activities. i think at one point in patton's behavior during world war ii occurs at a point when his forces have driven across france. they've now entered germany. and patton knows that his son-in-law -- an officer by the name of john waters -- is a p.o.w. held by the germans in this camp not far distant. so he orders a rescue mission in which 300 men approximately are sent as a forward group to go into germany, reach the walls -- breach the walls of this camp and snatch his son-in-law. colonel waters. as a result of this mission, 25 g.i.s are either killed
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outright or presumed missing and presumed dead. very expensive price to pay for trying to rescue his son-in-law. and that mission does not succeed. one more centurion i'd like to talk about is general omar bradley. bradley when the invasion of europe takes place, d-day, the normandy invasion, has half of the forces under his command in the south and the other half is general bernard montgomery. eisenhower has shown very great, good judgment at giving this command to omar bradley. and you have this irony. at the beginning of the war, bradley is a subordinate of patton. but eisenhower sees that omar bradley might have the same battlefield dash and boldness
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that patton has displayed, but he sees him as a better overall manager of men, manager of command. so their roles are reversed. patton now becomes a subordinate to omar bradley. there's an interesting interlude between omar bradley and the president. it's just after the sicilian campaign, and the president knows that omar bradley is back in washington briefly, and he summons him to the white house. and they discuss the sicilian campaign. and then suddenly the president starts to tell omar bradley about this extraordinary project that is taking place out in the sands of new mexico, and he starts describing the manhattan project, the development of the a-bomb. bradley is amazed by this because at this point even officers above his level,
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officers like eisenhower and mcarthur, don't know anything about development. so he assumes that the president has just been carried away for the moment, goes back to europe to continue the war, never breathes a word to anybody including his superior, eisenhower. that this project is advancing in the sands of new mexico. which will produce an atom bomb. on the subject of the bomb, there's a misconception that i would like to clarify. after the war president roosevelt and ari truman -- harry truman were criticized for the use of the bomb. the charge is that we would not have used the bomb against a white nation like germany, but we would have used it against a yellow nation like the japanese. however, during the battle of
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the bulge the president is very concerned about the heavy casualties. before the battle of the bulge is over, 19,000 american g.i.s will die. so roosevelt at this time calls general leslie groves to the white house. groves is in charge of the manhattan project. and he tells groves that he wants to use that weapon. groves is rather surprised and explains that they are nowhere near ready, it'll be months before they even test the atomic bomb. but it's very clear in my mind that roosevelt had every intention of using it as long as the german resistance couldn'ted at the level that it did during the battle of the bulge. interesting thing about roosevelt's centurions is that the team was very stable. the people that he put in charge of the military at the beginning of the war were still there at the end, a time when winston
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churchill was firing generals left and right. so i would have to give a very high grade to fdr as the recruiter in chief. the figures that he selected still resonate in history; marshall, admiral king, admiral nimitz, dwight eisenhower, hap arnold, and it's hard to quarrel with a winning team. by the time of fdr's death in april of 1945, his battles have essentially been won. cruelly, he does not live long enough to see the defeat of germany which takes place just shortly thereafter or the defeat of the japanese. but when we consider the impediment that he bore, the polio that made of him a paraplegic, the suffering and pain that he went through, the heights that this man rose to as commander in chief during world war ii can only be described as heroic.
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when liberty-loving americans all over the world needed a giant, fdr stepped forth. in my judgment, the president ranks with the immortals, he ranks with washington, he ranks with lincoln as a great president in time of peace and as a magnificent commander in chief in this time of war -- in time of war. thank all of you. prison -- [applause] >> we have time for a few questions if you want to come and line up here. you need to line up, ask your question to joe so that c-span can catch your question on the microphone. >> winston churchill has frequently been criticized for meddling too much in the actual
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military planning in considering himself a military planner and leader, and that's always contrasted with roosevelt who, as far as i know, left much of the military planning to his generals. could you make any comments as to why roosevelt took a path in military decision making that seems to be quite contrasting from that of churchill? >> this is true that the president left the day-to-day conduct of the war to his military figures. but he was the strategist in chief. he made the big strategic decisions. it was fdr even after the united states had been attacked by japan and and the american people were seething with rage against the japanese, e made this initial strategic -- he made the initial strategic decision that our first objective must be to defeat nazi germany.
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was he realized -- because he realized that the defeat of nazi germany would ultimately bring about the defeat of japan. but the defeat of japan would never insure the defeat of nazi germany. another major strategic decision that he made in january 1943, casablanca conference, he surprised everybody by insisting that the war must be terminated in only one way, and that is by the unconditional surrender of our enemies. major strategic decision can, very much criticized in quarters at that time. so throughout the war while he does not meddle with the generals, he is our strategist in chief. any other questions? >> thank you. what about the story, i think it's actually a fact, that the president of the philippines
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actually gave mcarthur a quarter of a million dollars while he was in our army, and some of his subordinates also got like 25, $30,000. is that true? >> the only thing i can say about the point that you've raised is that you were off by a quarter of a million dollars -- [laughter] president quezon even after his island had been invaded came through on a deal that he had cut earlier with mcarthur, and he got a half a million dollars at that point in the war. another question? >> mr. persico, in world war ii you mentioned all men. in today's war there are women there. the only female that you mentioned was kay.
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why was she picked? you know, i'm looking at it from are mamie eisenhower. wasn't it a bit embarrassing? why was she picked as a female? >> it was interesting to me that after ike gets the command to invade europe, he's the supreme commander in europe, general marshall -- who as i pointed out if my remarks was death on any kind of hank can key spank key -- hanky-panky -- he cooks up a reason to send ike back to states. he's been separated from his wife, mamie, for something like a year and a half. and he sends him back ostensibly to have meetings with the president and other figures, but he mainly wants to get ike and mamie together for a while to make sure this marriage survives and it doesn't interfere with eisenhower's command of the other forces in the europe.
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any other questions? >> all right, mr. persico, thank you. but it did not answer my question. [laughter] >> i was always concerned about the this decision in the pacific command where after the gawptless surrenders, but at that point they then expand the command further down, and when wainwright vendors -- surrenders, he loses over half a million men, places they haven't even begun to fight. who makes that decision to expand? >> well, mcarthur assumed that after he was plucked from the philippines that wainwright would carry on almost to the death. wainwright sees his forces essentially starving, outmanned, and he surrenders nothing like the figure of half a million, but he surrenders them. and mcarthur publicly says thereafter that wainwright carried on a heroic battle to
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the very end, but as he makes clear to his inner sickle, he is -- circles, he is outraged that wainwright surrendered in the philippines. anybody else? >> time for two more questions. >> i want to play off the relationship further between fdr and mcarthur. was fdr uptight about mcarthur? was fdr inherently hostile towards mcarthur? i mean, i ask this in a certain context. when the japanese attacked pearl harbor, the commander and chief of the pacific fleet, when the japanese attacked the philippines, mcarthur was not only plucked -- as you put it -- out and taken to australia, he was given the congressional medal of honor of all things for his role. what can you elaborate on? i realize it could be the subject of an entire talk, but what can you elaborate on in
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terms of the relationship, the psychology between fdr and mcarthur and perhaps particularly in terms of mcarthur's inordinate compulsion to retake the philippines? >> well, as i pointed out in my remarks, the two men circled each other like wary lions. mcarthur, i think, behaved with a considerable amount of disloyalty and a lack of appreciation for the fact that the president rescued him in the philippines, gave him this very important command even though mcarthur was driven out of the philippines, and the president undoubtedly as we try to read his mind is saying this man is a military peacock, he's filled with arrogance and hubris. but in the long run, he's a great soldier, and i'm going to have to depend on him. >> i was wondering how would you
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compare roosevelt's ability to manage or deal with his generals as compared to, say, lincoln, or would you say roosevelt was just luckier in his recruiting abilities up to a point where, for instance, lincoln until he was able to get grant in the place? >> well, the only thing i could say here which may have some relevance is abraham lincoln is facing these choices for the first time, and some of his appointments failed like mcdowell and several others and that roosevelt was a student of the civil war, a very clean student. perhaps he learned from lincoln's experience, and he was, as i say, a recruiter this chief of a remarkable team. these people are there from pearl harbor to the japanese surrender aboard the missouri in tokyo bay. >> so his background like in the navy was the difference, do you think? >> more military experience and, as i say, more knowledge of history.
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>> let's give a hand to joseph persico. [applause] >> for more information, visit the author's web site, jostpersico.com -- josephpersico.com. >> all we ever had to go on and what's been accepted by everybody is what manson himself wants to tell people. illegitimate son of a teenage prostitute mother who cared so little about her child that she once tried to sell him for a pitcher of beer, how as a child he was abused by the uncles she would have move in to their home one after another, how when he was 9 or 10, she was so tired of having to even try to per feng to havely -- per funk to havely take care of him, that she threw
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him into the juvenile justice system, and from there his life turned bad. he didn't know who his father was, he didn't think his mother knew who his father was, so he learned even as a child that the street was his father and prison was his mother. and that's what everybody pretty much accepted. i decided to check it out. so the first part is let's look at the man's whole life, how did he get there. second question, where was he and what kind of things were happening in our culture that made it possible for a charles manson to recruit a few dozen followers who would do these kinds of god awful things? again with, history doesn't happen in a vacuum. and i'm kind of convinced that if charles manson had been paroled from prison in nebraska and ended up in omaha instead of los angeles and he tried these things, he'd have been impaled
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on a pitchfork and stuck up in a field as a scare you. scarecrow. he was in the right places at the right time. how did that happen? so what i thought i'd do, because you folks tonight, you've heard over and over during the years people's different versions of what happened on the nights of august 9th and 10th, 1969. i will tell you there's some new material in my book because in the course of my interviewing quite a few people including especially patricia cent winkle who was -- cent winkle who was involved in both nights and who, besides a couple sound bites, on the 25th anniversary of the murders has never given a full account of it. she explained it all in such depth with such honesty, with such clarity that she ended up answering the final couple questions that the lapd's had about the murders all these years. so, yes, there's some new things. but most of all, if it's okay
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with you, i'd like to talk very briefly about four parts of this book, "charles manson: his life and the world he grew up in." let's begin with his chide -- childhood. we talked just a minute ago about all the things manson claims. guess what? they're all lies. and it's all documentable. i put 21,000 miles on my car in the last couple of years, and i went every place he went. a lot of the lies can be proven with simple visits to county courthouses. charles manson was not illegitimate. his mother, kathleen -- when she was 15 -- was unhappy with her fundamentalist christian mother nancy who believed that girls should not cut their hair, shouldn't wear makeup and above all, should not do that terribly sinful thing that led to every evil in the world, and that, of course, is dancing.
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we know now kathleen's side of the story for the first time because charles manson's sister nancy, never before interviewed anywhere -- and i found her, and she told her mother's side of the story for the first time -- gave me dates and places that i could go try to look. so here's what happened, and this is what everybody in the family knew, the real manson family, including charles himself. when she's 15, kathleen maddux, living in kentucky, crosses bridge over the river to a town called ironton. she sneaks out, goes to ironton because there are some clubs there where people can dance. and at one of these clubs, ritzy ray's is the name of it, she meets a man, an exciting older man. 29 years old, his name is colonel scott. colonel is his given name, not a
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military rank. but the colonel doesn't mind letting the 15-year-old girl think he's a war hero. of course, he actually works in a factory, is married and has two children. that's the part he leaves out. not long later kathleen becomes pregnant. she's 15. and she tells colonel scott. the colonel announces that he's going to do the right thing for her, but he's just been called away by the army. he's going to come back in just a couple weeks. they'll take care of everything. and so kathleen goes to her mother, says she's pregnant, the father is going to marry her. you can imagine her mother's reaction, but nancy really does love kathleen, and so she says she'll stick with her, they'll
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all get through this, it's not the child's fault. and colonel scott never comes back. and kathleen is furious. there's another fellow in kathleen's life who would like to get her attention. his name's william manson. he's a common laborer whose dream is to be a dry cleaner. and knowing kathleen is pregnant with another man's child, he marries her about five months before the birth. there was never any question that charles manson was an ill legitimate baby. his birth certificate was filed a few days after -- a few weeks after his birth. william manson listed at the father. but the whole family and charles himself knew throughout that the real father was colonel scott. no doubt whatsoever. so the later rumors that manson hated and feared blacks because he had a black father, for
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instance, never, folks. never, ever. manson and kathleen's marriage lasts a couple years. he divorces her. she's still a young girl, she's trying to run around and have a little fun. her son is never left with strangers or offered for a pitcher of beer. instead, she does what many young women that age do and sticks him with her mother or her sister and her husband and daughter. but he's cared for always. kathleen and her brother luther, spectacularly botch an attempted robbery. they try to use a ketchup bottle saying it's a gun. the newspapers have a great time calling them the greatest cuppedderheads who ever attempted a crime, and kathleen gets five years in prison in west virginia. luther gets ten. yes, that's on kathleen's record.
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never once anywhere before then or in the next 15 years was there any record she was arrested for prostitution, every warned about being a prostitute. she bungled a crime. she never should have tried to commit it, but charles manson was not the child of a prostitute. not then, not ever. he goes to live in west virginia, a little factory town. with his uncle bill, aunt and cowz sin joanne who is three years older. i found joanne who's never talked before. and if any of you get a chance to look in the book tonight, you will see that photo session includes pictures of charles manson from his baby pictures through his wedding album. those came from joanne and his sister nancy. they tell the real story. here's an interesting one joanne told me about charlie. she said from the time he came
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to live with them 5 years old, he's scary. he's violent, he lies about everything. the first person he ever physically attacked was joanne. he picked up a sickle in the backyard, tried to stab her with it. her parents stopped him. his explanation, she made me do it. it wasn't my fault, she's older than me, i was defending myself. in first grade not only told to me by jo anne, but corroborated by other people who were in school with manson at the time, first grade he organizes some girls in his class to beat up a boy he doesn't like. the principal comes looking for charlie. his explanation? the girls were doing what they wanted to do out of their own -- that's what they wanted. you can't blame me. same defense he uses all the years later with tate,
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labianca. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. >> you're watching booktv. next, george morgan tells the story of his mother, mary sherman morgan, the first female rocket scientist in the united states and inventer of the propellant that boosted america's first satellite into orbit. the program mary morgan worked on was highly secret, so her family had very little idea of her accomplishments until after her death. this is about 45 minutes. [applause] enter thank you very much. i'd like to thank fro match's bookstore for inviting us here this evening. i have a few prepared remarks which will include reading a few passages from the book. and these remarks will basically tell you a little bit about my mother and how her story and the book came to be.
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