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CubanMissileCrisisCIA
Page 268
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80. {Continued}
Questions were then raised concerning the attitude of our
Allies. The President advised steps taken to inform our major
Allies. He then read the message received from the Prime
Minister which in effect agreed to support us in the United Nations
and then raised many warnings including the dangers to Berlin,
Turkey, Pakistan, Iran, etc., atc.
Senator Saltonstall brought up the question of the legality:.
of the blockade. A great many Senators expressed concern over the
proposed action with the OAS, indicating that they felt the OAS would
delay rather than act. Saltonstall then asked whether a blockade
would be legal if the OAS did not support it. The President
answered that it probably would not; however we would proceed
anyway.
Fulbright then atated that in his opinion the blockade was the
worst of the alternatives open to us and it was a definite affront to
Russia and that the moment that we had to damage or sink a Soviet
ship because of their failure to recognise or respect the blockade
we would be at war with Russia and the war would be caused
because of our own initiative. The President disagreed with this
thinking. Fulbright then repeated his position and stated in his
opinion it would be far better to launch an attack and to take out the
bases from Cuba. McNamara stated that this would involve the
spilling of Russian blood since there were so many thousand Russians
manning these bases. Fulbright responded that this made no
difference because they were there in Cuba to help on Cuban bases.
These were not Soviet bases. There was no mutual defense pact
between the USSR and Cuba. Cuba was not a membor of the Warsaw
Pact. Therefore he felt the Soviets would not react if some Russians
got killed in Cuba. The Russians in the final analysis placed little
value on human life. The time has come for an invasion under the
President's statement of February 13th. Fulbright repeated that an
act on Russian ships is an act of war against Russia and on the other
hand, an attack or an invasion of Cuba was an act against Cuba, not
Russia. Fulbright also expressed reservations concerning the
possible OAS action.
The President took issue with Fulbright, stating that he felt
that an attack on these bases, which we knew were manned by Soviet
personnel, would involve large numbers of Soviet casualities and
this would be more provocative than a confrontation with a Soviet ship.
-4-
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