This is a must for the WEB site... cite this as an epilogue
to my interview...is this the smoking gun that produced a secret Executive
Order authorizing this Mk 15 to fly fully armed!
This Mark 15 was a "war reserve" weapon in Feb 1958... when the
below story happened...
Do You think with the mentality of "Sputnik Fear" expressed by
this story on President Eisenhower's readiness Planning (remember this is
General 4 star Ike) that this B-47 would be toting a weapon reserved for
war (the real meaning of war reserve) if it was NOT mission capable????
This is the point I have been trying to hammer on since day 1. It is all
there.
Derek
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=544&e=8&u=/ap/secret_government
the link above is to the web page for the stoy below...
Eisenhower Planned Emergency Government
Sat Mar 20, 7:24 PM ET Add White House - AP to My Yahoo!
By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - CBS President Frank Stanton was one of six private citizens
secretly recruited and granted authority by President Eisenhower to run
major components of the government if a Soviet attack wiped out many American
leaders.
No public announcement of the appointments was made. Their existence
was confirmed by recently publicized Eisenhower administration letters.
A few weeks after the Soviets launched the first manmade satellite in
1957, shattering America's sense of security, Stanton was summoned to
the White House to see Eisenhower.
Stanton knew his friend was agonizing over how to respond to Sputnik and
the terrorizing thought that permeated America: Had the Soviets gained
a huge first-strike advantage in the nuclear arms race?
But Stanton learned Eisenhower also was wrestling with how best to ensure
the U.S. government could function in an emergency.
Stanton, who had no experience or ambitions in government, was taken aback
when the president asked if he would be willing to oversee a federal communications
agency after such an attack.
"I was surprised and startled by the breadth of the assignment,"
said the 96-year-old Stanton, who lives in Boston.
Nervous about the awesome task of keeping the nation's telephone, radio
and television systems operating after an attack, Stanton said he nevertheless
"agreed to do my chore."
"The president was planning for the unthinkable," said retired
Army Gen. Andrew J. Goodpaster, Eisenhower's staff secretary. "He
wanted to bring in the wisdom and competence to reinforce whatever elements
of the government survived and provide some assurance that our government
could not be decapitated."
Presidents are granted vast powers under the Constitution to lead the
nation in times of war or enemy attack.
Shortly after the 2001 terrorist attacks, President Bush (news - web sites)
created a shadow government of 75 to 150 officials who worked in mountainside
bunkers outside Washington to ensure the government would function if
the capital came under attack.
All those officials already were in government when they were given the
assignment. Eisenhower is believed to be the first president to go outside
government to look for leaders in a crisis.
"Eisenhower went beyond the normal lines of succession, which I think
was a reflection of the widespread paralyzing fear that swept the country
in the 1950s," said Peter Kuznick, a history professor and director
of the Nuclear Studies Institute at American University.
Besides Stanton, the appointees included George Baker, a Harvard Business
School professor who was tapped to oversee transportation; Harold Boeschenstein,
president of Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., in charge of manufacturing
and production; Aksel Nielsen, president of the Title Guaranty Co., housing;
J. Ed Warren, senior vice president of the First National City Bank of
New York, energy; and Theodore Koop, vice president of CBS, to oversee
an emergency censorship agency. Koop would have had 40 civilian staff
members to monitor and control wartime information about the devastation.
Eisenhower also appointed two Cabinet secretaries and Federal Reserve
(news - web sites) Chairman William McChesney Martin to emergency posts
for currency stabilization, food and labor.
"The people Eisenhower chose, while they were his friends, they were
also the captains of industry of his day. People like Bill Gates (news
- web sites) today," said Bill Geerhart, editor of a Web site called
Conelrad, or Control of Electromagnetic Radiation. That was the name of
nation's first emergency broadcasting system, established by President
Truman.
The site posted the Eisenhower documents after obtaining them from the
Eisenhower Presidential Library in Abilene, Kan.
The selections were based as much on the appointees' geographic location
and personal relationships with Eisenhower as their expertise. Nielsen,
for example, was Eisenhower's regular fishing buddy.
The presidential form letters dated March 6, 1958, provide for the appointees
to immediately take office in the event of a national emergency. Until
then, they were asked to keep their status secret. They were promised
an undisclosed salary but there were few specifics about their jobs.
The documents show the secret group met in July 1960 with the now-defunct
Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization to discuss staffing for their
agencies. But work barely got started before the group was relieved of
its duties by President Kennedy, who took office in 1961.
Still, subsequent administrations have made contingency plans for government
continuity — often involving citizens outside government — in the event
of a devastating attack. For example, Kennedy's director of emergency
planning, Frank Ellis, said in 1961 that the president had emergency appointees
for transportation, agriculture and communications.
During the Reagan administration, then-Rep. Dick Cheney (news - web sites)
and Donald Rumsfeld, who was chief executive of the pharmaceutical company
G.D. Searle & Co., were key players in a secret program to set aside
the legal lines of succession and install a new president in a catastrophe,
The Atlantic Monthly reported this month.
___
On the Net:
Conelrad: http://conelrad.com/atomicsecrets/secrets.php?secrets05
Dwight D. Eisenhower Library & Museum: http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/
|