Ultimate Sacrifice: John and Robert Kennedy, the Plan for a Coup in Cuba, and the Murder of JFK

Ultimate Sacrifice: John and Robert Kennedy, the Plan for a Coup in Cuba, and the Murder of JFK

Ultimate Sacrifice: John and Robert Kennedy, the Plan for a Coup in Cuba, and the Murder of JFK

Ultimate Sacrifice: John and Robert Kennedy, the Plan for a Coup in Cuba, and the Murder of JFK

eBookRevised Edition (Revised Edition)

$14.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

A landmark in historical research, tying the Mafia and Cuba to the assassination of JFK—updated to reveal the role of Cuban Commander Juan Almeida.

Recent revelations by the U.S. government point to Cuba’s former number three official—Commander Juan Almeida—as secretly working with President John F. Kennedy in November 1963 to overthrow Fidel Castro. This updated edition of Ultimate Sacrifice tells the full story for the first time—complete with new photos and documents. The authors obtained the story from almost two dozen associates of John and Robert Kennedy, starting in 1990 with JFK’s Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Their accounts are supported by thousands of newly released files at the National Archives.

A “palace coup,” set for December 1, 1963, was to be backed up by U.S. forces “invited” in by Commander Almeida, then Chief of the Cuban Army. However, three Mafia bosses being targeted by Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy used several CIA assets to infiltrate the secret plot and murder JFK. The new edition explains why Almeida was not a double agent, why Fidel suspected Almeida’s ally Che Guevara, and what Fidel did in 1990 when he finally found out about Almeida’s work for JFK.

“How well do the authors make their case? With a relentless accumulation of detail, a very thorough knowledge of every political and forensic detail and the broad perspective of historians rather than assassination theorists.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“At last, the mysteries surrounding JFK’s death are fully explained by the startling revelations in this book.” —William W. Turner, former FBI agent and author of Deadly Secrets

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781582439938
Publisher: Catapult
Publication date: 10/10/2008
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 960
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Lamar Waldron's groundbreaking research has been cited in media outlets ranging from Vanity Fair and The New Republic to the History Channel and USA Today. His work has been acknowledged by authors such as Anthony Summers and Gus Russo, historians like Dr. John Newman and John H. Davis, and former goverment investigators Gaeton Fonzi and FBI veteran WIlliam Turner. Waldron received both undergraduate and graduate degrees from Georgia State University and lives in Atlanta.

Thon Hartmann is the award–winning, best–selling author of fourteen books currently in print in over a dozen languages. An internationally known speaker, his most recent books are The Edison Gene, The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight, Unequal Protection, We the People: A Call to take Back America, and What Would Jefferson Do? His nationally syndicated radio show is currently on Air America and Sirius Satellite Radio.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

The Cuban Missile Crisis Leads to C-Day

ALTHOUGH THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS is largely remembered as a stunning success for the United States, the little-known reality is that it left President John F. Kennedy and his brother Bobby with a sense of unfinished business and the need for a permanent solution to the problem of Cuba. In fact, the Missile Crisis was never fully resolved, because of Fidel Castro's refusal to allow UN inspections for nuclear weapons, to ensure that all the Soviet missiles had been removed. However, decades of misinformation about JFK's supposed pledge not to invade Cuba to end the Crisis is so pervasive that it is important to finally put it to rest. This chapter not only documents that JFK made no such pledge, but shows how the failure to fully resolve the crisis led to the creation of the C-Day coup plan the following year.

JFK's Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, explained to us in 1990 that JFK never agreed not to invade Cuba, because Castro refused to allow UN weapons inspectors into Cuba in the fall of 1962. Those inspections had been part of JFK's deal with Russia's Nikita Khrushchev to end the tense nuclear standoff of the Cuban Missile Crisis. At the time, we were surprised to hear this from Rusk, because almost every history book or news report about the Cuban Missile Crisis cited JFK's so-called no-invasion pledge as a key reason for ending the Crisis. However, we quickly found confirmation of what Rusk had told us.

A transcript of President Kennedy's November 20, 1962 prime-time TV news conference provided the first confirmation. That night, JFK declared that he would "give assurances against an invasion of Cuba" only when "adequate arrangements for [UN] verification had been established." JFK emphasized that "the Cuban Government has not yet permitted the United Nations to verify whether all offensive weapons have been removed" and that "serious problems remain." (While researching JFK's comments, we also found that he had been the first president to use the term weapons of mass destruction, as well as the concept of "UN inspections" for them, and he used both phrases during the Missile Crisis.)

A year after we talked to Dean Rusk, presidential historian Michael Beschloss discussed the supposed "no-invasion pledge" in his 1991 book, The Crisis Years. Making use of the new documents about the Missile Crisis that were being declassified, Beschloss was one of the first major historians to question the existence of the pledge. He said JFK "may have deliberately avoided such an unambiguous commitment," and that JFK "watered down the pledge" by adding conditions that "had the effect of neutralizing" it. Beschloss concluded that JFK did not "rule out further American efforts to topple the Castro regime, including invasion."

More documents about the Missile Crisis and the socalled no-invasion pledge continued to be declassified, and by 1992 it was clear that the pledge had never gone into effect, as Rusk had said. The National Security Archive, located at George Washington University and the world's largest nongovernmental library of declassified documents, was a major force in getting the new files released. The Archive published the documents in a massive volume called The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 that included an analysis by historians Laurence Chang and Peter Kornbluh.

Chang and Kornbluh confirm that "for almost thirty years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, the myth persisted that Kennedy had struck a secret deal with Khrushchev binding the US to a commitment not to invade Cuba. But the recent declassification of the remaining correspondence between Kennedy and Khrushchev, and of internal State Department memoranda, reveals that no such deal was ever made." They explain that "President Kennedy's pledge not to invade Cuba ... was conditioned on the implementation of adequate inspection and verification procedures." They quote JFK's letter to Khrushchev on October 27, 1962, in which JFK said that "upon the establishment of adequate arrangements through the United Nations to ensure ... these commitments ... [the US would] give assurances against an invasion of Cuba." But as Chang and Kornbluh document, "Cuba did not allow on-site inspection" to verify that all the Russian missiles had been removed, so the pledge never took effect.

The National Security Archive historians present many pages of declassified documents confirming what Dean Rusk told us in 1990. The documents are especially interesting in light of the recent events in Iraq: The actions of George W Bush, Saddam Hussein, and UN Secretary General Kofi Anan in the fall of 2002 regarding weapons of mass destruction parallel very closely the actions — and even the words — of JFK, Fidel Castro, and UN Secretary General U Thant in the fall of 1962.

The documents show that Dean Rusk was one of the US officials who encouraged JFK not to make a firm no-invasion pledge in 1962, in order to allow the US more flexibility in getting rid of Castro. As the book states, "Internal State Department memoranda declassified in April 1992 reveal that US officials who saw the Missile Crisis as a great opportunity to overthrow Castro lobbied hard against any pledge that would inhibit future US policy toward Cuba." A strategy paper from Rusk's State Department dated November 7, 1962 called for "maximal US strategy ... directed at the elimination ... of the Castro regime," even as the Missile Crisis was winding down. Chang and Kornbluh say that Rusk's position was that "the latitude to overthrow Castro ... was more important than a concrete resolution to the most dangerous international crisis of the twentieth century." During the crisis, Rusk wrote to JFK adviser John McCloy — appointed to the Warren Commission a year later — saying "Our interest lies in ... avoiding the kind of commitment that unduly ties our hands in dealing with the Castro regime while it lasts."

As the days passed in November 1962, neither JFK nor Khrushchev wanted to return to the tense standoff of October, but neither man was able to find a solution to the problem. JFK complained in a letter to Khrushchev on November 15, 1962 that "There has been no United Nations verification that other missiles were not left behind and, in fact, there have been many reports of their being concealed in caves and elsewhere, and we have no way of satisfying those who are concerned about these reports."

At his November 20, 1962 prime-time press conference, JFK was asked: "Is it your position, sir, that you will issue a formal no-invasion pledge only after satisfactory arrangements have been made for [UN] verification?" After JFK made it clear that that was indeed the case, he was asked by a reporter "If we [the US] wanted to invade Cuba ... could we do so without the approval of the United Nations?" JFK essentially said yes, replying that the US "has the means as a sovereign power to defend itself ... in a way consistent with our treaty obligations, including the United Nations Charter." JFK said that while he hoped "to always move in concert with our allies," he reserved the right to act "on our own if that situation was necessary to protect our survival or integrity or other vital interests."

But Khrushchev was unable to get Fidel Castro to allow the UN inspections. A leading Cuban journalist at the time, Carlos Franqui, said that Castro "could never accept the idea of an inspection of any kind by any agency ... because that would have finished him off" by making him look weak. So, on November 21, 1962, JFK notified Khrushchev that the Missile Crisis was over — but with the issues of UN inspections and a no-invasion pledge still unresolved. JFK wrote Khrushchev that "I am now instructing our negotiators [at the UN] in New York to move ahead promptly with proposals for a solution of the remaining elements in the Cuban problem," meaning the UN inspections in Cuba. JFK said: "I regret that you have been unable to persuade Mr. Castro to accept a suitable form of [UN] inspection or verification in Cuba ... but, as I said yesterday, there need be no fear of any invasion of Cuba while matters take their present favorable course." As The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 notes, "in the end there was no formal resolution of the Missile Crisis."

Since there never were any UN inspections in Cuba, JFK and his cabinet made it clear, both in their private meetings and to a Congressional committee, that there wasn't a no-invasion pledge. As Dean Rusk told us, without the UN inspections, the Cuban Missile Crisis never really ended. JFK and members of his administration felt that they had to do something to make sure all the missiles were gone and wouldn't be reintroduced, since their UN efforts had proven fruitless. By the spring of 1963, JFK and his key advisers were looking at new ways to topple Castro. However, Rusk agreed that the American public — and possibly the Soviets — had assumed that there was such a pledge, which made the Kennedys' efforts in 1963 all the more risky. That's why they needed a legitimate — or seemingly legitimate — "coup," not just an assassination or a full-out US invasion while Castro was still in power. They didn't want to risk a nuclear confrontation with the Soviets, so any US military action against Cuba would have to take place under very special circumstances. It would have to appear to be a peacekeeping mission, in response to a "palace coup" against Castro, to quote a recently declassified memo. As Dean Rusk explained to us, Castro's refusal to allow the UN inspections led directly to what became the Kennedys' C-Day plan for a coup.

The problem of Cuba remained a growing thorn in the side of JFK into the spring and summer of 1963. The New York Times reported on May 10, 1963 that a Senate subcommittee said that at least 17,000 Soviet troops remained in Cuba, including 5,000 combat troops. Worse, the report said that concealed missile sites were "quite possible," a charge that JFK couldn't completely refute without the UN inspections that Castro wouldn't allow. Hawkish subcommittee chairman John Stennis was demanding that JFK take "positive" steps to make getting the Communists out of Cuba his highest priority.

A few weeks later, the Times reported that CIA Director John McCone had testified to Congress that "only onsite [UN] inspection can completely confirm" the "end of the [Cuban] missile threat." A June 14, 1963 secret National Intelligence Estimate said that while it was "unlikely that the USSR" would "reintroduce strategic [nuclear] missiles into Cuba ... we cannot, however, rule out such an attempt." Moreover, the US might not be able to find the missiles if they were reintroduced, since the report said it would be "possible" for the Soviets "to adopt improved measures of concealment and deception ... to avoid providing many of the indicators that US intelligence would be relying on" to detect any new missiles. We could not always depend on U-2 spy planes to do the job, since they were now sometimes being approached by Soviet MiG jets. This forced the U-2s to abort, since procedures "call for aborts when Cuban aircraft [come] within 40 miles of U-2 and at altitude in excess of 40,000 feet." Finally U-2s were useless if new Soviet missiles were put in caves or underground sites.

However, JFK had already been planning to take some type of action to prevent the reintroduction of Soviet missiles into Cuba and to resolve the problems with Castro once and for all. White House memos declassified just a few years ago show that in late April 1963, the Kennedy administration was beginning a major push to eliminate Castro, setting the stage for C-Day. The April 23, 1963 notes from a National Security Council subcommittee on Cuba say that Defense "Secretary McNamara ... made clear his belief that the elimination of the Castro regime was a requirement." McNamara suggested a program that would create "such a situation of dissidence within Cuba as to allow the US to use force in support of anti-Castro forces without leading to retaliation by the USSR on the West." Then "the Attorney General proposed ... a list of measures we would take following ... the death of Castro" and "a program with the objective of overthrowing Castro in eighteen months." JFK adviser Ted Sorenson listed one of the "objectives raised at the meeting" as being to "develop a program to get rid of Castro." Another objective was to provide "support for dissident elements in Cuba." This was the second meeting of the "Standing Group of the National Security Council," a subcommittee recently formed to focus solely on Cuba. It was just one of several such groups, all under the control of Bobby Kennedy.

The notes from a different Cuba subcommittee two days later develop the plans further. These April 25, 1963 notes say that CIA Director McCone talked about creating "a feasible climate for a successful attempt to fragment the Castro organization." The CIA's point man on Cuba, Desmond FitzGerald, said at the meeting that "we will have to be able to assure" high Cuban officials who might be willing to overthrow Castro for the US "that the US will be sympathetic to possible successors" to Castro "even though such people maybe have been former Castro supporters." FitzGerald also discussed "support to selected Cuban exile groups ... as being one of the key points of the possible new program."

The third of the seven government committees that investigated aspects of the JFK assassination was the Rockefeller Commission, which found that "McCone once stated one ultimate objective of our policy toward Cuba should be to "'encourage dissident elements in the military ... to bring about the eventual liquidation of the Castro/Communist encourage and the elimination of the Soviet presence from Cuba'" [emphasis in original]. In directing the Cuban subcommittees in these actions to topple Castro, Bobby Kennedy was not acting on his own. Investigative journalist Gus Russo, who has numerous CIA sources, documented that "although Robert Kennedy assumed the task of dealing with the nuts and bolts of policy implementation, this by no means implies that the younger brother was operating without JFK's implicit agreement. When Robert Kennedy issued his April 23, 1963 directive seeking studies aimed at overthrowing Castro in 1964, he was merely echoing the President's own words."

A "Memorandum for the President" from that time period foreshadows many of the key elements of the C-Day coup plan. Though addressed to President Kennedy, the memo also had a section where the Defense Department, the CIA, and Bobby Kennedy's Justice Department could all check their "concurrences" with the policy. This 1963 memo — finally declassified in 1997, due to our efforts and those of other researchers — makes it clear that the administration's "ultimate objective with respect to Cuba remains the overthrow of the Castro/Communist regime and its replacement by one compatible with the objectives of the US." The memo foreshadowed C-Day, saying "We should seek to create conditions conducive to incipient rebellion to which we could then respond" [emphasis in original]. The memo makes it clear that after a "rebellion," the US should "respond with open military support ... and Special Forces, up to the full range of military forces." This would come in response "to a request for assistance from any anti-Castro ... group ... in Cuba which demonstrates an ability to survive, [and] which seriously threatens the present [Castro] regime." The memo notes that "US military forces employed against Cuba should be accompanied by US military-trained free Cubans." Cuban exiles trained by the US military would soon be a key part of C-Day.

These April 1963 meetings were not the first time the Kennedys had targeted Castro with a broad plan of covert action. The previous year, President Kennedy and the National Security Council had approved "OPERATION MONGOOSE," a large program involving the US military and other agencies including the CIA. Bobby Kennedy was actively involved, though he did not dominate it to the extent he would dominate C-Day the following year. For decades, OPERATION MONGOOSE has been described as primarily a relentless and escalating campaign of sabotage and small Cuban exile raids that would somehow cause the overthrow of Castro. Only in recent years have newly released documents and accounts shown that MONGOOSE also included plans for an invasion of Cuba in the fall of 1962. The military was heavily involved with MONGOOSE, and suggested a variety of often outrageous plans to justify the military invasion, such as blaming the sinking of a ship or the crash of an airliner — or a US space capsule — on the Cubans, or staging a phony attack on Guantanamo. In recent years, historians have begun to focus on the Soviet and Cuban response to MONGOOSE, and whether it actually helped to trigger the Cuban Missile Crisis. MONGOOSE was quietly terminated by early 1963 after a demonstrable lack of results.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Ultimate Sacrifice"
by .
Copyright © 2006 Lamar Waldron.
Excerpted by permission of Counterpoint.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Title Page,
Dedication,
Introduction,
PART ONE,
CHAPTER • ONE - The Cuban Missile Crisis Leads to C-Day,
CHAPTER • TWO - Harry Williams and Commander Almeida,
CHAPTER • THREE - The C-Day "Plan for a Coup in Cuba",
CHAPTER • FOUR - AMWORLD: The CIA's Portion of C-Day,
CHAPTER • FIVE - The Kennedys Keep Control: Vance, Haig, and Califano,
CHAPTER • SIX - Harry Williams, RFK, and Almeida,,
CHAPTER • SEVEN - The "Plan for a Coup in Cuba" on December 1, 1963,
CHAPTER • EIGHT - The Cuba Contingency Plans,
CHAPTER • NINE - "Playing with Fire",
CHAPTER • TEN - The Countdown for C-Day Begins: November 22, 1963,
CHAPTER • ELEVEN - Harry Williams and the Cuban Exiles,
CHAPTER • TWELVE - Manuel Artime: Conspiratorial Tranquillity,
CHAPTER • THIRTEEN - Manolo Ray: Integrity Makes Him a Target,
CHAPTER • FOURTEEN - Eloy Menoyo: Targe ted by Trafficante,
CHAPTER • FIFTEEN - Tony Varona: Selling Out to Rosselli and Trafficante,
CHAPTER • SIXTEEN - Cuban-American Troops at US Military Bases,
CHAPTER • SEVENTEEN - Almeida and Che: Disaffected Revolutionaries,
CHAPTER • EIGHTEEN - The Other Plots Against Castro,
CHAPTER • NINETEEN - US "Assets into Cuba",
CHAPTER • TWENTY - The Chicago and Tampa Assassination Attempts and C-Day,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-ONE - Did Bobby Feel Responsible?,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-TWO - Infiltrating C-Day: Banister and Ferrie; Martino and Cain,
PART TWO,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-THREE - Marcello, Trafficante, and Rosselli,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-FOUR - Ruby, Hoffa, Heroin, and Gunrunning,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-FIVE - Nixon, Havana, and Assassinating an Attorney General,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-SIX - Guatemala: The Mafia Assassinates a President,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-SEVEN - The Kennedys Go on the Attack,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-EIGHT - Ruby, the Mafia, and the CIA Help Castro,
CHAPTER • TWENTY-NINE - 1959: CIA-Mafia Plots and Coup Attempts,
CHAPTER • THIRTY - The CIA Turns to Hoffa,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-ONE - Menoyo, Morales, and Phillips Plan a Coup,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-TWO - Ruby Visits Trafficante; the Kennedys and "Jack La Rue",
CHAPTER • THIRTY-THREE - September 1959: Artime, Varona, and Ruby Target Castro,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-FOUR - 1960 and 1961: New CIA-Mafia Plots, the Bay of Pigs, ...,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-FIVE - War Against the Godfathers and Hoffa Targets RFK,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-SIX - Shifting the Target to JFK,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-SEVEN - The CIA-Mafia Plots, Operation Mongoose, Invasion ...,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-EIGHT - 1963: Targeting Castro, while the Mob Targets JFK,
CHAPTER • THIRTY-NINE - Someone to Take the Fall: Lee Harvey Oswald,
CHAPTER • FORTY - Three Oswald Riddles Explained,
CHAPTER • FORTY-ONE - David Atlee Phillips and Fair Play for Cuba, Marcello and ...,
CHAPTER • FORTY-TWO - Targeting Harry Williams,
CHAPTER • FORTY-THREE - The French Connection Heroin Network and the Plan to ...,
CHAPTER • FORTY-FOUR - C-Day Explains Four Oswald Mysteries from the Summer of 1963,
CHAPTER • FORTY-FIVE - David Atlee Phillips and Oswald's Next Assignment,
CHAPTER • FORTY-SIX - Oswald in Mexico City: A CIA Operation Compromised,
CHAPTER • FORTY-SEVEN - Fall 1963: Rosselli, Bobby Kennedy, and Ruby,
CHAPTER • FORTY-EIGHT - More Kennedy Pressure on the Godfathers,
CHAPTER • FORTY-NINE - The Godfathers' Plan to Kill the President,
PART THREE,
CHAPTER • FIFTY - Laying the Groundwork for Killing JFK in Chicago,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-ONE - The Cuba Contingency Plan and the Phony Cuban Agent,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-TWO - Three Weeks Before Dallas: The Chicago Assassination Attempt,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-THREE - JFK's Chicago Motorcade: Cancelled at the Last Minute,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-FOUR - Laying the Groundwork for Killing JFK in Tampa,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-FIVE - Mid-November 1963: President Kennedy Prepares a Message ...,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-SIX - November 18, 1963: The Attempt to Assassinate JFK in Tampa,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-SEVEN - November 19-21: The Mafia Regroups for Dallas,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-EIGHT - November 22: JFK Is Murdered,
CHAPTER • FIFTY-NINE - Bobby's Suspicions and C-Day Is Put on Hold,
CHAPTER • SIXTY - Another Mob Hit in Dallas Devastates Bobby,
CHAPTER • SIXTY-ONE - Legacy of Secrecy,
Acknowledgments,
NOTES,
INDEX,
Copyright Page,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews