A British company plans to auction of what it says is a vial of Ronald Reagan’s blood taken at the hospital where he was treated after a 1981 assassination attempt, Reuters reports.
The Yankee Comandante
David Grann has a must-read piece on William Alexander Morgan, a Midwesterner who helped Fidel Castro rise to power in Cuba.
“In 1957, when Castro was still widely seen as fighting for democracy, Morgan had traveled from Florida to Cuba and headed into the jungle, joining a guerrilla force. In the words of one observer, Morgan was ‘like Holden Caulfield with a machine gun.’ He was the only American in the rebel army and the sole foreigner, other than Guevara, an Argentine, to rise to the army’s highest rank, comandante.”
“After the revolution, Morgan’s role in Cuba aroused even greater fascination, as the island became enmeshed in the larger battle of the Cold War. An American who knew Morgan said that he had served as Castro’s ‘chief cloak-and-dagger man,’ and Time called him Castro’s ‘crafty, U.S.-born double agent.'”
Later, Morgan “was charged with conspiring to overthrow Castro. The Cuban government claimed that Morgan had actually been working for U.S. intelligence — that he was, in effect, a triple agent. Morgan denied the allegations, but even some of his friends wondered who he really was, and why he had come to Cuba.”
Understanding LBJ
The New York Times reviews Passage to Power and notes it showcases Robert Caro’s “masterly gifts as a writer: his propulsive sense of narrative, his talent for enabling readers to see and feel history in the making and his ability to situate his subjects’ actions within the context of their times.”
“Caro’s descriptions of Johnson — and those of John and Robert Kennedy — have a novelistic depth and amplitude. He gives us a rich sense here of how past experiences shaped their interactions, how one encounter or misunderstanding often snowballed into another, and how Johnson and Robert Kennedy evinced a capacity to grow and change. Even more impressive in these pages is Mr. Caro’s ability to convey, on a visceral level, how daunting the challenges were facing Johnson upon his assumption of the presidency and the magnitude of his accomplishments in the months after Kennedy’s assassination.”
Did Woodward Embellish Deep Throat?
New York magazine excerpts a forthcoming biography of Ben Bradlee, Yours in Truth by Jeff Himmelman, which suggests the legendary Washington Post editor was skeptical about certain aspects of Bob Woodward’s claims about Watergate informant “Deep Throat.”
According to material from Bradlee’s own archive, he expressed “fear in my soul” that Woodward had embellished key details of his reporting.
However, Woodward tells Politico that Himmelman “failed to include” a much more recent interview he did with Bradlee that was more supportive of Woodward.”
Thankfully, There’s Another One Coming
George Will raves about Robert Caro’s Passage to Power, the fourth book in his epic series on Lyndon Johnson, which is finally out this week.
“Samuel Johnson said of Milton’s Paradise Lost that no one ever wished it longer. Not so Caro’s great work, which already fills 3,388 pages. When his fifth volume, treating the Great Society and Vietnam, arrives, readers’ gratitude will be exceeded only by their regret that there will not be a sixth.”
Re-Evaluating Ike
The New York Times reviews Eisenhower in War and Peace noting author Jean Edward Smith makes the “startling claim” that apart from Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower was “the most successful president of the 20th century.”
Smith carefully traces Eisenhower’s “preparation for the presidency, and that’s what this biography is really about. (Only a quarter of the book is devoted to the White House years and beyond.) From it, Eisenhower’s own views on success in leadership emerge reasonably clearly. To reduce them to the length of a tweet — an exercise my students recommend, and which Ike might well have approved — they amount to achieving one’s ends without corrupting them.”
“Ends, Eisenhower knew, are potentially infinite. Means can never be. Therefore the task of leaders — whether in the presidency or anywhere else — is to reconcile that contradiction: to deploy means in such a way as to avoid doing too little, which risks defeat, but also too much, which risks exhaustion. Failure can come either way.”
Charles Colson Dies
Charles Colson, “who served time in prison for his role in the
Watergate scandal and later became an influential evangelical Christian,”
has died at age 80, NPR reports.
“Colson went from being one of the
nation’s most despised men to a hero of conservative Christians.”
Reagan and Thatcher
Just published: Reagan and Thatcher: The Difficult Relationship by Richard Aldous.
New York Times: “Together they dominated the 1980s. It is a remarkable story, which deserves the fresh account that Richard Aldous, a professor of history at Bard College, gives it in Reagan and Thatcher. His book casts new light on the heroic version in which two great leaders continued the struggle for freedom waged for generations past by ‘the English-speaking peoples.'”
More Robert Caro
In anticipation of Robert Caro’s Passage to Power — which is out in just five weeks! — the New Yorker makes available seven of Caro’s previous pieces for the magazine.
The Parallels Between Clinton and Obama
The Washington Post runs a must-read piece from David Maraniss, author of First in His Class: A Biography of Bill Clinton and the forthcoming Barack Obama: The Story, on the similarities between the two presidents.
“They were born on August days 15 years apart, at opposite ends of the baby-boom generation, Bill Clinton in 1946 and Barack Obama in 1961. Both came into the world under circumstances that made it surpassingly unlikely either boy would grow up to be president of the United States. It is hard to imagine two places further from the centers of power than southwestern Arkansas or Hawaii. Neither state had produced a president before. But there was so much more working against them than geography.”
“William Jefferson Blythe III and Barack Hussein Obama II were the namesakes of fathers they did not know. Billy’s dad, a traveling salesman from Texas, was killed in a car crash before his son was born. Barry’s old man, a traveling student from western Kenya, also died in a car crash. His son was 21 then but had never lived with his father. Both boys’ mothers created myths about their fathers to ease the pain; in truth, the sons were almost certainly better off without them.”
Return to the War Room
A new release of The War Room, the 1993 classic documentary on Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign, is out today with added bonus features.
Dave Weigel: “We get a new, full movie, Return to the War Room, which re-interviews the first movie’s subjects (not Bill Clinton). It’s interesting to see the spoils of victory — these people have put together comfortable Washington/New York axis-of-power lives — but apart from some good new anecdotes, it’s not overly involving. The better stuff comes when Hegedus and Pennebaker talk at length about the film and reveal how they made it. The two big takeaways: They got lucky, and probably no one will ever get this lucky again.”
What Gingrich is Reading
The New York Times notes Newt Gingrich is quoting from Ballots and Bandwagons by Ralph Martin, a 1964 book that focuses on five historic brokered conventions.
Ike’s Granddaughter Opposes Memorial Design
Susan Eisenhower, the 34th president’s granddaughter, is expected to testify before a House subcommittee on national parks to object to designs for a Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial in Washington, the AP reports.
She says the design focuses too much on Eisenhower’s humble roots, instead of his accomplishments.
How Mormons Became Republicans
The Salt Lake Tribune
takes a look at the early days of the Republican Party, when the
founders of the fledgling anti-slavery party “saw Mormons as their
enemies,” and how that evolved into the modern trend of Mormons
overwhelmingly supporting Republicans.
“The GOP’s first party platform
in 1856 took direct aim at polygamy, placing it in the same sinister
frame as slavery in the hope of cultivating the votes of Christians wary
of the spread of these dual threats to the republic… Later on,
Republicans used their congressional power to wipe away any secular
power Mormon leaders had in the Utah Territory and were the main backers
of a law that disincorporated The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints… Republicans over the next several decades targeted the LDS
Church over polygamy and suspicions that Mormons were attempting to form
their own sovereign country in the Mountain West.”
“The GOP’s
take on social issues, such as abortion, the Equal Rights Amendment and
gay marriage, drew Mormons into the conservative fold beginning in the
1970s. Church apostle Ezra Taft Benson, who supported the right-wing
John Birch Society and served as Agriculture secretary under President
Dwight Eisenhower, helped further push his fellow Mormons into the
conservative camp. A report by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life
in January showed that about 74 percent of Mormons lean toward the
Republican Party.”
Bretton Woods Uncovered
Daily Telegraph: “Students of economic history are in for a treat. An official studying deep in the bowels of the US Treasury library has recently uncovered a prize of truly startling proportions — an 800 page plus transcript of the Bretton Woods conference in July 1944, the meeting of nations which established the foundations of today’s international monetary system.”
“All previous accounts of Bretton Woods have been second hand, with historians apparently completely unaware that a full, and one must presume faithful, transcript of proceedings, had been taken.”
Nixon’s Darkest Secrets
Out this week: Nixon’s Darkest Secrets by Don Fulsom.
“Richard Nixon left the White House in 1974 as our most disgraced president, but the American people never knew the full extent of his demons, deceptions, paranoia, prejudices, hatreds, and chicanery.”
Word of the Day
From the political dictionary: “brokered convention”
Romney Can’t Quote Bean Bag
Dan Amira notes Mitt Romney has spent much of the presidential campaign butchering one of the great political phrases of all time: “Politics ain’t bean bag.”
“As far as we can tell, Romney has not accurately recited the aphorism a single time during this entire campaign. Nitpicking? Sure. Romney is usually only off by one letter. Still, ‘politics ain’t bean bag’ has been repeated for over 115 years now. It’s four words long. It shouldn’t be too difficult to master.”