President Kennedy: Profile of Power.

AuthorPeters, Charles
PositionBrief Article

This is the best book yet about the Kennedy administration. It is more useful than its most distinguished rivals, Theodore Sorensen's Kennedy and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.'s A Thousand Days, because it is balanced with a much fuller exploration of the administration's negatives. And Reeves, not having been a presidential speechwriter as Sorensen and Schlesinger were, is not subject to the temptation to present speeches he wrote as examples of presidential thought at its most profound.

Reeves tells the whole story, meaning that to the best of my knowledge he includes all the significant facts. His account is also mercifully short of pontification. There are none of the long boring stretches that remind you of love scenes you saw in movies when you were a kid that made you squirm in your seat or run to the popcorn stand. Occasionally, this is frustrating when you want to know more about what Reeves thinks is the meaning of an event. On the other hand, it may be just as well that he didn't do more of this sort of thing, because he tends to fall into error on the few occasions when he does attempt to explain.

Thus when he disagrees with the view held by both Sorensen and Schlesinger that JFK grew dramatically during his presidency, he's dead wrong. If Kennedy hadn't grown between the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis, we wouldn't be here now.

Reeves says Kennedy would have been better off using the Eisenhower decision-making system, which rightly required all the national security officials to be consulted, but wrongly excluded anyone outside that loop. So if JFK had attended to this bureaucratic nicety during the Missile Crisis, for example, Robert Kennedy would not have been...

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