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Joseph L. Galloway on McNamara: Reading an Obit With Great Pleasure

by: Joseph L. Galloway  |   McClatchy Newspapers

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Former President John F. Kennedy sits with former Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. (Photo: AP)

"I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow (1857-1938)

    Well, the aptly named Robert Strange McNamara has finally shuffled off to join LBJ and Dick Nixon in the 7th level of Hell.

    McNamara was the original bean-counter - a man who knew the cost of everything but the worth of nothing.

    Back in 1990 I had a series of strange phone conversations with McMamara while doing research for my book We Were Soldiers Once And Young. McNamara prefaced every conversation with this: "I do not want to comment on the record for fear that I might distort history in the process." Then he would proceed to talk for an hour, doing precisely that with answers that were disingenuous in the extreme - when they were not bald-faced lies.

    Upon hanging up I would call Neil Sheehan and David Halberstam and run McNamara's comments past them for deconstruction and the addition of the truth.

    The only disagreement i ever had with Dave Halberstam was over the question of which of us hated him the most. In retrospect, it was Halberstam.

    When McNamara published his first book - filled with those distortions of history - Halberstam, at his own expense, set out on a journey following McNamara on his book tour around America as a one-man truth squad.

    McNamara abandoned the tour.

    The most bizarre incident involving McNamara occurred when he was president of the World Bank and, off on his summer holiday, he caught the Martha's Vineyard ferry. It was a night crossing in bad weather. McNamara was in the salon, drink in hand, schmoozing with fellow passengers. On the deck outside a vineyard local, a hippie artist, glanced through the window and did a double-take. The artist was outraged to see McNamara, whom he viewed as a war criminal, so enjoying himself.

    He immediately opened the door and told McNamara there was a radiophone call for him on the bridge. McNamara set down his drink and stepped outside. The artist immediately grabbed him, wrestled him to the railing and pushed him over the side. McNamara managed to get his fingers through the holes in the metal plate that ran from the top of the railing to the scuppers.

    McNamara was screaming bloody murder; the artist was prying his fingers loose one at a time. Someone heard the racket and raced out and pulled the artist off.

    By the time the ferry docked in the vineyard McNamara had decided against filing charges against the artist, and he was freed and walked away.

  

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In the 1990s, some 3 decades

In the 1990s, some 3 decades too late, McNamara said that the Viet Nam war was wrong. We told him that in the 1960s. Oh, well- de mortuis nil nisi bonum.

Make that three decades,

Make that three decades, 58,000 plus dead, and uncounted maimed of body and spirit too late. And that's only the American troops. Their families' pain and anguish not included. The Vietnamese...merely collateral damage. Will we ever hear Georgie or Dickie or Donnie say the current wars were wrong? Satan will sponsor the winter Olympics long before that happens.

A pleasure to read an honest

A pleasure to read an honest obit about a lying, self-serving SOB.

What makes you think the 7th

What makes you think the 7th level of hell would take him? They have standards too...

I've been to Vietnam and

I've been to Vietnam and Cambodia to see some of the museums and memorials of what horrors we brought there. Yes, he'll rot in hell, but Fog of War is, in my mind, required viewing. I'm not interested in whether he was sincere or just loved being the central narrator in a film. Death of the Author - the work speaks for itself. The so-called lessons he allegedly learned will forever be timely and come from the most credible voice to the hopelessly hopeful warmongers -- those who still swear today we would have "won" if only we had let our boys do their job, etc etc ad nauseum; I say the most "credible" because he was one of their own. All future leaders with the power to commit troops and make war ought to see it. (Though few of them would ever take the wisdom to heart, at least we could say "We told you so" afterward.) Few will ever think to forgive (unlike the incredible Phan Thị Kim Phúc who came to face Vietnam war veterans in DC to do just that), but many are those who will forget, and at the very least that documentary featuring a "We were wrong" from the demon himself can be an ironic underpinning of remembrance. Too little too late? Too late for this page of history, yes. But knowing how the rest of the chapters read up until now, there will be plenty more opportunities to use his own words for something better.

Who was that artist? He was

Who was that artist? He was probably singlehandedly responsible for the subsequent decline in NEA funding ever after that dark and stormy night. I once saw the self-satisfied, tanned and relaxed Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., a co-conspirator of Robert McNamara's, picking up an International Herald Tribune on the Left Bank of Paris one summer day in 1979 and I have never forgotten the rage and disgust I felt. I hope Obama is paying attention, not to fall prey to the alleged best and brightest recruited to be his own advisors.