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James DiEugenio

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Posts posted by James DiEugenio

  1. To abide by Mark, and getting back to the scene.

    If you recall, Oliver, Zach Sklar, Fletcher and John Newman, were all pilloried about this angle--that JFK was getting out of Vietnam and after his murder, LBJ changed the policy and escalated to 540 K combat troops and Rolling Thunder.  

    So the film had two barrels in the shotgun:  Kennedy was killed by a conspiracy., and the media missed a strong possible motive and had been covering that up through shills like Halberstam and Sheehan ever since.

    Then came the ARRB and in late 1997 they declassified the notes of the Sec Def May 1963 conference.  

    Not only was Kennedy getting out of Vietnam, but McNamara was after them to get out even faster then they wanted to leave. And it was all there in Black and White. They couldn't deny it. And so the major papers now had to eat crow, and they did e.g. NY TImes and Philadelphia Inquirer.

    But then the fallback for the loony left e.g. Chomsky was that Kennedy was only doing that in a winning situation.  LOL, ROTF. 

    But then John Newman got hold of McNamara's debriefs.  He explicitly said there that he and Kennedy had decided that once the training mission was over, they were getting out no matter what the situation was.  America could not fight the war for Saigon. End of story.  Stone was right and the MSM was wrong.

    And the field of Vietnam studies has not been the same since.

     

  2. Lori is correct.

    I looked it up in Valenti's book.

    You know, it is not fun driving around LA to these out of the way libraries to find these alleged source books, and then to discover that like a game of telephone, what is in the them was greatly exaggerated and distorted from what it actually says.

     

  3. BTW, let me tell a little story about this scene. From the set.

     

    First, Sutherland was not the first choice.  Oliver Stone wanted Brando.  But there were two problems.  First, he wanted a lot of money.  Second, it was pure dialogue, really a monologue.  There was no way they could have built that many poster boards along the way. Especially since he is supposed to be looking at Garrison.

    Secondly, if you know anything about acting, as the saying does, Sutherland has his character nailed from the start.  To put it mildly, Costner does not. He basically is just flailing about the surface.  So Stone had to coach him up a lot.  Once, Sutherland walked away toward the monument, out of ear shot, and said, "If he know what the heck I was saying maybe that would help!"

     

     

  4. BTW, Andy Purdy is a story and a half.

    He actually worked for Mark Lane as part of his volunteer network.

    He then got Groden to show the Z film to Tom Downing, the congressman from Virginia.  Which was crucial to getting the HSCA off the ground since it was Downing who gave speech after speech on the floor of congress finally bringing it to a vote.  Because of that Purdy was placed on the HSCA as an investigator. 

    But when Sprague and Tanenbaum left, and then Blakey came in, something happened.  Blakey called in Baden, and he then called in Purdy.  Baden was now going to head the medical panel and Purdy was going to be the lead investigator.  When Purdy came out of the office, he told Eddie Lopez, "We're going with the single bullet theory."  Eddie then added, "Jim, from that moment on, Andy Purdy had religion about the Magic Bullet." 

  5. Please note that when Sutherland goes into his speculation, he says words to the effect that a phone call is made to someone, maybe to someone like his superior officer.

    This qualifies the scene as subjective.

    There are very large medium shots of LBJ later,   and there is the thing about NSAM 273, and "just get me elected and I'll give you your war".

    I know Stone does not think LBJ was involved.  But these things work dramatically and, for reasons stated above, this is qualified as subjective.

    Also note how he qualified the actual hit team, could be out of a camp near Athens Greece, Cubans, Mafia hire.

    He was trying to make the point that this must have been a high level plot, not a Mafia hit job, or some Cuban exiles, etc.

    And he was trying to say that VIetnam was a much overlooked possible reason for the murder of Kennedy.

    BTW, the real turnaround in Indochina policy was in March of 1964, with NSAM 288.  But you allow things like that in a dramatic presentation.  And that is what the last part of this is.

  6. First of all, since I wrote a reply to Vince Bugliosi on this, let me say that what is so remarkable about this scene is this:  for the first time in a dramatic feature film that was seen by millions, the public was informed of the crimes of the CIA in overthrowing governments and attempted and successful assassination plots.  All done with first rate skill and impact.  Plus a scene stealing performance by Sutherland.  What ease the man had, exhibiting complete authority and control.

    When they sit down after that walk he then begins to inform Garrison about the Cuba project, MONGOOSE, and then Vietnam.  That segment about Vietnam utterly enraged the MSM and academia. Because hacks like Halberstam and Sheehan had been selling this BS about Johnson's policy being a continuation of Kennedy's policy. Which was complete and utter horse dung, and Johnson was part of that BS.  When X references NSAM 263 and 273, those were shockers: that in the space of a few days, LBJ had more or less cancelled 263 and said he was not going to let Vietnam go the way China did.  Can you imagine comparing South Vietnam with China?  All of this is true.  Even the scene with the generals talking about Kennedy like they did, that was borne out with the declassification of the Missile Crisis tapes.

    If anything, the film did not go far enough in that regard since work by others--Goldstein, Kaiser, Blight-- has furthered what Prouty and Newman did with Stone. And Newman has gone further also in the second edition of his book.  There is a scene in that book where Kennedy comes into a meeting he called, he was deliberately late.  This took place right after the debate on NSAM 111 had concluded.  JFK sat down, made some small talk and then declared "Once policy is decided those on the spot either implement it or they get out."  He paused and then said, "Now who is going to implement my policy on Vietnam?"  And McNamara raised his hand. This is why Johnson says in the film, you control McNamara and you control Kennedy. Everything said about Vietnam is pretty much dead on.  And this is what made the MSM go into a spastic state since what they had been preaching for decades was shown up as pure myth.  Plus this provided a reason for JFK's murder.

    As per Lansdale, Stone always said that Lansdale was a dramatic device, that someone like Lansdale was enlisted to draw up a plan.  But since he had been running MONGOOSE he was a pretty good figure to use.  Was it him?  Who knows.  

    What is really surprising  about Stone's film is how close he got without the ARRB.

    BTW, that Washington scene did not really need to be done with Mr. X, Fletcher Prouty.  If I had been advising Stone at the time, I would have used Nagell in the park, and then I would have had Garrison flying home and opening up a letter from a history professor at Ohio U. The guy wrote him a 26 page handwritten essay about the death of Kennedy and the escalation of the VIetnam War. Can you imagine what a scene that would have been?  With Garrison smoking his pipe, one light on in his study,  a narrator reciting the letter, intercutting scenes of him reading with the scenes in Indochina of Rolling Thunder and combat troops arriving.

    Too many people who know little or nothing about New Orleans or the film--who have not even read The Book of the Film-- have a tendency to pontificate about both subjects, to the point they sound like Dan Rather, Edward Epstein or Tom Brokaw.

     

    PS. The NSAMs 55-57 were designed to begin to turn over the larger covert actions of the CIA to military intel. This is one reason why the DIA was created.

     

     

  7. Len Osanic is putting together a two week tribute to Cyril Wecht.

    This week will be Gary Aguilar, Dawna Kauffman, and me.

     

    Next week I think will be David Mantik, Mike Cheeser and I think Vince. 

    Big maybes are Tanenbaum and Oliver Stone.

    No one does it like Black Op Radio. Thanks Len. Cyril deserves it.

     

  8. Johnny Cairns hits another double off the wall.

    Its always good to be reminded of just how bad the DPD was. The JFK critical community knew that but it was not really exposed until Errol Morris' The Thin Blue Line.  Then the Innocence Project came along and exposed the fact that they convicted more innocent people than many states did. And let us not forget the late Craig Watkins who condemned the Wade legacy..  Fritz and Wade were public disgraces.  Never forget the DA office motto: Any lawyer can convict a guilty man, it takes a great lawyer to convict an innocent man.

    What does the DPD become when J. Edgar Hoover says Oswald's civil rights were violated?  The Texas Gestapo?  Anyway Johnny does the honors.

    https://www.kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-articles/the-dallas-police-convicted-oswald-without-a-trial-part-1

  9. The latest written review of The JFK Assassination Chokeholds.

    This one is by distinguished essayist and college professor Ed Curtin.  I think this is the best written review I have seen of the book.  Ed is such an underrated writer. He really does justice to this effort.  And since he appears in other venues, they will be carrying this also.  Thanks Ed.

    https://edwardcurtin.com/the-jfk-assassination-chokeholds-that-inescapably-prove-there-was-a-conspiracy/

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