Posted on 05/09/2010 7:18:25 AM PDT by Kaslin
Whatever his obvious faults and flaws, it is somewhat understandable that Richard Nixon would ruminate about how Jack Kennedy got away with a lot during his assassination-shortened presidency. And there is no doubt that the 37th President of the United States saw all of the Camelot hype as mythology born of cynical public relations. While Nixon was being criticized for conducting a purported Imperial presidency by the likes of Arthur Schlessinger (a pro-Kennedy historian), he no-doubt resented the cult of personality that survived his old rivals violent death.
RN would be 97 todayJFK would be 93 in a couple of weeks. Its hard to envision the forever-young Kennedy as an old man, though we saw Nixon live into his 80s. They were friends at first, with Nixon the early-on transcendent figure. Then came the rivalry marked by increased and enduring bitterness. But it was always more complicated than that.
Americans too young to remember either man have been taught the party line that Kennedy was a great man and Nixon was a bad man. JFK was the hero of the Cuban Missile CrisisNixon was the villain of Watergate. JFK had charisma; Nixon had no charmand so it goes.
The truth is actually quite different.
The History Channel is moving forward with production of an eight-part mini-series scheduled to air next year called, The Kennedys. Greg Kinnear (Little Miss Sunshine) will play JFK and Katie Holmes will play Jacqueline. The producer is a man named Joel Surnow, who is the creator of the highly successful and soon to expire series, 24.
Surnow is also reputed to have politically conservative tendencies (Gasp! Horrors!). Reportedly, the upcoming dramatic portrayal of the years of the New Frontier will include material about some of Kennedys flawsand the guardians of his image are mobilized to stop the smears.
I say its about time that popular culture is exposed to the truth about the man behind the Camelot mythbefore fact is fossilized.
The John F. Kennedy who will be portrayed in the new series will, reportedly, be a real life characterwarts and all. And some of those warts had the potential to morph into cancer. In fact, there is a credible case to be made that had Kennedy lived beyond that fateful fall day in 1963, and managed to be reelected in 1964, he may not have survived a second term, legally and politically. Thats right. As Hugh Sidey suggested before his death in 2005the same Hugh Sidey, who as an editor at Time Magazine during the Kennedy years, was also a Camelot insiderJFKs various and sundry moral, ethical and judgmental pecadillos might very well have led to his actual impeachment.
Was the Kennedy administration a Watergate waiting to happen?
Possibly this new mini-series will popularize information that has long lain dormant in histories that are hardly read anymore. All the pieces of the puzzle are long established matters in the public domainhiding in plain sight, but obscured by the powerful rays of cultish brilliance. But finally, those pieces are being assembled in a way that may accurately characterize a man who was likely guilty of actions much worse than what brought Mr. Nixon down in 1974.
From the improper use of the FBI in matters of surveillance and investigation in matters not at all related to national security, to misuse of the Secret Service, to his affair with a mistress of a major crime boss with its attendant compromises, Mr. Kennedy played by his own rules against the backdrop of the last gasp of an age of media mercy. He lived on the edge, from his monumental sexual addiction, to his experimentation with illicit drugs, to his dependence on substances that, while not illegal, seemed grayishJohn F. Kennedys time was running out. People were always covering for him (some of the same ones still are). But was it only a matter of time before someone broke rank?
If Watergate taught us anything, it was that it is hard to keep a lid on a big storyeven in the White House.
The story of Jacks faults is, though, more than the tale of a bad boyhe may very well have compromised national security. Mr. Kennedys fascination in 1963 with an unfolding scandal in Great Britain likely had to do with the fact that he was beginning to worry about his own bailiwick. British Prime Minister Harold MacMillans government was then being rocked by a sex scandal involving one John Profumo, the Minister for War, and a notorious woman named Christine Keeler who had at least two boyfriends: Profumo and a Soviet naval attaché named Yevgeny Ivanov. And there were other women.
Why would this discomfit JFK? Well, because he had been flying rather close to the same kind of flame at the time. In fact, among the other women involved in the British scandal were two trollops, Suzy Chang and Maria Novotny. Both had been involved romantically with Kennedy. So it was quite possible that the scandal that eventually led to MacMillans government being voted out in 1964 might have by that time tarnished the name of the President of the United States.
Interestingly, while John F. Kennedy visited the United Kingdom and broke bread with MacMillan one Saturday in the summer of 1963, a story was beginning to break stateside. It appeared briefly in the New York Journal-American (Hearst paper) and spoke cryptically of a man who holds very high elective office who was involved with some of the women being mentioned in the Profumo matter.
The story was pulled after one edition following pressure from U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy.
But beyond this, there was actually another bimbo problem plaguing JFK, and this one had to do with a German girl by the name of Ellen Rometsch. Said to strongly favor actress Elizabeth Taylor, she was a 27-year old prostitute who regularly serviced Mr. Kennedy in 1963.
Rometsch was from East Germany and had been a member of the Communist Party and many thought she was, in fact, a spy. She was paid by JFK for sex and participated in what could only be described as orgies in the White House pool. The party girl visited Kennedy at least ten times that spring and summer. When confronted by J. Edgar Hoover, Director of the FBI, about the fact that Rometsch was likely a spy, Bobby Kennedy worked feverishly to have her deportedand she was soon en route to her homeland behind the Iron Curtain.
The story went away, but not all that far away. Less than a month before Kennedys fateful trip to Dallas, one Iowa newspaper broke a story: U.S. Expels Girl Linked to Officials. In the article was the tidbit that this woman had been involved with some prominent New Frontiersmen from the executive branch of the government. But those were the days before White House reporters went for the jugular asking tough questions.
Why is any of this important now? It matters simply because there tends to be a measure of selective amnesia when it comes to iconic figures. If a myth better serves current political purposes this trumps truth.
Had John F. Kennedy lived and had his shortcomings been investigated and written about with Woodward-Bernstein-like passion, he may not have been reelected in 1964. And if he did manage to win that race, and investigators did their jobs, JFK might very well have been impeached or brought to the place of resignation.
Then again, that may be fantasy, because it was unlikely that Ben Bradlee, editor of the Washington Post in those days, and inbred Kennedy crony, would have allowed any such story to go forward. At any rate, it all went away that sad November day, and we are left with a legend that does history, not to mention the American people, a disservice.
Stephen Kronish is the screenwriter for upcoming mini-series, The Kennedys, and he insists that they are not out to destroy the sacred cow. But as Gene Healy, author of The Cult of the Presidency, recently wrote: In an age when Americans periodically swoon for imperial presidents, a little sacred cow-tipping would be a pu
No one will ever believe it.
But I’M going to buy a copy and incorporate it into my kids history curriculum.
As opposed to nowadays? Unless it is a Republican of course, then they go after the jugular over 14 yearl old parking tickets.
My late father was a newspaperman back then, and most reporters knew about about Kennedy’s shenanigans but kept it quiet which really bothered my Republican Father.
95% of today’s,and yesterday’s reporters and publishers ,want to mold opinion;and they are so enamored with democratics socialism that they will cover its weaknesses while attacking viciously that which threatens it.
—bflr—
His death seemingly set his brothers off on a quest to destroy the country, perhaps in some unconscious desire for revenge. Bobby, formerly an anti-communist crusader with McCarthy, became a far left Senator. Teddy in the mid-60s gave us the immigration bill that is a very large part of the fracturing of American society, and went on to be a long serving member of the anti-American, socialist, anti-religious, pro-abortion left.
Had JFK lived, would he and his brothers have "evolved" along with the Dems of today, or was his death a big part of why the Dems became loonie lefties? I guess we'll never know.
I always thought that Camelot was a odd choice for a paradise on earth. The story didn’t have a happy ending.
“Camelot” was coined before his death.
Are you sure? I read it was something Jackie cooked up afterward, out of whole cloth. She claimed the soundtrack of Camelot was the last thing Jack liked to listen to at night. A total fabrication, but dutifully reported by the press. Fwiw.
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