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National Security Archive Update
November 24, 2003
KENNEDY SOUGHT DIALOGUE WITH CUBA
INITIATIVE WITH CASTRO ABORTED BY ASSASSINATION, DECLASSIFIED
DOCUMENTS SHOW
Oval Office Tape Reveals Strategy to hold clandestine Meeting
in
Havana; Documents record role of ABC News correspondent Lisa
Howard as secret intermediary in Rapprochement effort
For more information contact:
Peter Kornbluh - 202/994-7116
email - pkorn@gwu.edu
http://www.nsarchive.org/NSAEBB/NSAEBB103/index.htm
Washington D.C. - On the 40th anniversary of the assassination
of John F. Kennedy, and the eve of the broadcast of a new
documentary film on Kennedy and Castro, the National Security
Archive today posted an audio tape of the President and his
national security advisor, McGeorge Bundy, discussing the
possibility of a secret meeting in Havana with Castro. The
tape, dated only seventeen days before Kennedy was shot in
Dallas, records a briefing from Bundy on Castro's invitation
to a U.S. official at the United Nations, William Attwood,
to come to Havana for secret talks on improving relations
with Washington. The tape shows President Kennedy's approval
if official U.S. involvement could be plausibly denied.
The possibility of a meeting in Havana evolved from a shift
in the
President's thinking on the possibility of what declassified
White House records called "an accommodation with Castro"
in the aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Proposals from
Bundy's office in the spring of 1963 called for pursuing "the
sweet approach…enticing Castro over to us," as
a potentially more
successful policy than CIA covert efforts to overthrow his
regime. Top Secret White House memos record Kennedy's position
that "we should start thinking along more flexible lines"
and that "the president, himself, is very interested
in [the prospect for negotiations]." Castro, too, appeared
interested. In a May 1963 ABC News special on Cuba, Castro
told correspondent Lisa Howard that he considered a rapprochement
with Washington "possible if the United States
government wishes it. In that case," he said, "we
would be agreed to
seek and find a basis" for improved relations. The untold
story of the Kennedy-Castro effort to seek an accommodation
is the subject of a new documentary film, KENNEDY AND CASTRO:
THE SECRET HISTORY, broadcast on the Discovery/Times cable
channel on November 25 at 8pm. The documentary film, which
focuses on Ms. Howard's role as a secret intermediary in the
effort toward dialogue, was based on an article -- "JFK
and Castro: The Secret Quest for Accommodation" -- written
by Archive Senior Analyst Peter Kornbluh in the magazine,
Cigar Aficionado. Kornbluh served as consulting
producer and provided key declassified documents that are
highlighted in the film. "The documents show that JFK
clearly wanted to change the framework of hostile U.S. relations
with Cuba," according to Kornbluh. "His assassination,
at the very moment this initiative was coming to fruition,
leaves a major 'what if' in the ensuing history of the U.S.
conflict with Cuba."
Please follow the link below:
http://www.nsarchive.org/NSAEBB/NSAEBB103/index.htm
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research institute and library located at The George Washington
University in Washington, D.C. The Archive collects and publishes
declassified documents acquired through the Freedom of Information
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