Friday, April 23, 2004
Assassin's History
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Tuesday 4 November 2003
"Robert Kennedy died last night. Martin Luther King was shot a month
ago. And every day my Government gives me a count of corpses created
by military science in Vietnam. So it goes."
- Kurt Vonnegut
Benjamin Disraeli, in a speech before the British Parliament, once
said, "Assassination has never changed the history of the world."
Some terrible decades later, the sentiment was repeated by Robert
Kennedy, who commented upon the death of his brother with the
Disraelian observation, "Assassins have never changed history."
Benjamin and Robert were both wise men. Both were completely wrong in
ways difficult to measure. Robert, specifically, was not just wrong,
but dead wrong.
Very soon now, newspapers and magazines and television screens will
become filled with images of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy. The
40th anniversary of that deadly day in Dallas approaches, and so we
will see the Zapruder film again and again, see his head blasted
open, see Connolly bellow from the front seat, see Jackie crawl
desperately across the trunk of the car to retrieve pieces of her
husband's skull.
We will hear, of course, all of the theories that have surrounded
his death. It was Oswald, acting alone. It was the Cubans. It was the
Mob. It was the CIA. It was all of them together. At the end of it,
however, there is a truth that sets the theories aside. The shooting
of President Kennedy was Act Two in a five-scene opera of death and
ruin that has forever changed the face and nature of this nation and
the world. Benjamin Disraeli was wrong. Assassination changed
history, and we are the poorer for it.
The first act came in a driveway in Mississippi, on the night of
June 12, 1963. Medgar Evers was an African American activist fighting
for equal rights for his people in the South. He opened a chapter of
the NAACP in the heart of Mississippi, investigated acts of violence
against African American citizens, organized boycotts of local
merchants who practiced segregation, and brought national attention
to the civil rights struggle while fighting to get African American
James Meredith admitted to the segregated University of Mississippi.
Medgar Evers was shot in the back and died in front of his wife and
children on that night in June. He was 37 years old.
The second act took place in Dallas on November 22, 1963. John
Kennedy, the youngest President in American history, was shot down in
a public execution that remains veiled in mystery to this day. What
is no mystery is the aftermath of his death. Kennedy had been
committed to extracting the United States from the nascent conflict
in Vietnam he had inherited from Eisenhower, and to ending the Cold
War by creating a level of cooperation between the superpowers that
would have terminated the nature of that struggle. Upon his murder,
Lyndon Johnson dramatically stepped up American involvement in
Vietnam, unleashing a hurricane that blew away his Presidency, shook
this country to its foundations, and added dramatically to the 58,000
names now listed on a black monument in Washington DC. John Kennedy
was 46 years old.
The third act unfolded in a Manhattan ballroom on February 21,
1965. Malcolm X, the firebrand Muslim and former member of the
controversial Nation of Islam, was never one to go gentle into that
good night. As a leader within the civil rights struggle, his theme
song was not "We Shall Overcome" but "We Shall Kick Your Ass." After
a transformative pilgrimage to Mecca, Malcolm began moving towards a
more racially inclusive breed of activism, eschewing his former
separatist rhetoric and preaching his message to all races. One week
after his home was firebombed, Malcolm X was shot fifteen times while
giving a speech. As with Medgar Evers, Malcolm's family was present
to witness the slaughter. He was 39 years old.
Act four took place on a balcony in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4,
1968. Martin Luther King, Jr. was by far and away the most prominent,
and important, leader in the struggle for African American civil
rights. As an organizer, King was gifted. As a public speaker, he was
and remains without peer. Arrested over 20 times, assaulted at least
four times, his courage in the face of violent racism knew no bounds.
King's organizing principle for the movement centered around the non-
violent confrontations practiced by Gandhi in India. His work earned
him the Nobel Peace Prize; at the time, he was the youngest man ever
to receive the honor. Running through his work for civil rights was a
larger struggle for social justice across the entire racial spectrum;
King was far more of a radical than our children are taught about in
school today. He was shot down while preparing to participate in an
action with striking garbage workers in Memphis. He was 39 years old.
The final act came on the evening of June 4, 1968, in the kitchen
of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. Robert Kennedy, brother and
Attorney General to the slain 35th President, had just won the
California primary in his own drive for the White House. Kennedy had
become a beloved leader for those fighting for civil rights, and
against the war in Vietnam. On the night of Martin Luther King Jr.'s
assassination, Kennedy was speaking to a large crowd in Indianapolis.
All across the nation that night, furious riots broke out, killing 43
people and injuring thousands more. Kennedy gave an impromptu speech
calling for the reconciliation of the races in the aftermath of
King's death, and Indianapolis was quiet that night. On June 4,
Robert Kennedy was shot in the back of the head. He died on June 6.
His body was carried from California to Massachusetts by rail, and
all 3,000 miles of the journey found Americans standing in silent
respect by the tracks as his train passed. He was 42 years old.
From June of 1963 to June of 1968, a string of bright lights became
forever extinguished. The hopes and prayers and optimism of millions
and millions of Americans were poured out in the life blood of these
men on the streets of Mississippi, Texas, New York, Tennessee and
California. There is no calculating the damage that came because of
their absence.
None of these men were even 50 years old when they were killed. All
of them would have entered the 1970s, 1980s and even the 1990s as
activists, elder statesmen, and spokesmen for the most righteous
progressive causes imaginable. Imagine the good Medgar Evers could
have done in the civil rights struggles in the South. Imagine the
understanding a newly tolerant Malcolm X could have given Americans
about the true nature of the Muslim faith. Tremble at the
magnificence of what Martin Luther King Jr. could have done with
forty or fifty more years to work. Tremble again at the thought of
Robert Kennedy given the same opportunity.
What kind of world would this have been had these men lived? Would
Ronald Reagan have even bothered to leave Hollywood? Would Richard
Nixon and Watergate have happened? Would the rampant ignorance and
selfishness that is the standard issue attitude for most Americans
today been allowed to flourish as it has? Would George W. Bush be
anything more than a thrice-failed oilman in Texas?
No. No and no and no.
The murder of John Fitzgerald Kennedy forty years ago has, beyond
question, done more damage to this nation and the world than we can
possibly imagine. Though Kennedy was a Cold Warrior for the ages, his
commitment to radically changing the nature of that conflict would
have saved us vast amounts of grief. His committment to reverse
America's course in Vietnam and remove all troops by December 31,
1965 would likewise have avoided the spilling of rivers of blood and
tears. Imagine a world where those 58,000 Americans had also been
allowed to live out the fullness of their days. Imagine what they,
too, could have accomplished.
An end to the Cold War would have allowed us to avoid spending
trillions of dollars on a suicidal nuclear proliferation that has
left the planet littered with the deadliest of weapons. What other
good could that money and ingenuity have been put to?
An end to the Cold War would have meant that the United States
would not have armed, funded and trained Osama bin Laden and his
cadre of extremist warriors in our proxy war against the Soviets in
Afghanistan. The two soaring Towers in New York City, not even
conceived when Kennedy was cut down, would still be standing today.
An end to the Cold War would have meant that the United States
would not have armed, funded, given aid and intelligence to Saddam
Hussein in Iraq, as we would have had no need to fashion that
dictator into a counterweight against Soviet actions in Iran. There
would have been no second, nor even a first, Gulf War.
The trajectory of the bullets that tore through John Kennedy did
not stop, but arced through time and space to cut down Paul
Velasquez, Algernon Adams, Michael Barrera, Isaac Campoy, Aubrey
Bell, Jonathan Falaniko, Steven Acosta, Rachel Bosveld, Charles
Buehring, Joseph Guerrera, Jamie Huggins, Artimus Brassfield, Michael
Hancock, Jose Mora, John Teal, John Johnson, Jason Ward, Paul Bueche,
Paul Johnson, David Bernstein, John Hart, Michael Williams, Joseph
Bellavia, Sean Grilley, Kim Orlando, Jose Casanova, Benjamin Freeman,
Douglas Weismantle, Donald Wheeler, Stephen Wyatt, James Powell,
Joseph Norquist, Sean Silva, Christopher Swisher, Spencer Karol,
Kerry Scott, Richard Torres, James Pirtle, Charles Sims, James
Blankenbecler, Analaura Gutierrez, and Simeon Hunte.
These are the names of the American men and women who died in the
month of October in Iraq. Added to this list are nearly 400 more
names, now including nearly 20 more who died on Sunday when their
helicopter was blasted out of the sky. Like Medgar, like John, like
Malcolm, like Martin, and like Robert, none of these men and women
were above the age of 50. Most were hardly into their 20s.
What great or simple good could they have done in this world? What
great or simple good could have been done by the Iraqi civilians and
Iraqi soldiers killed in this conflict, and the last conflict? What
great or simple good could the millions of Vietnamese, Cambodian and
Laotian civilians killed in that conflict have done? What great or
simple good could have been done by the thousands of Afghan civilians
killed in our Cold War proxy fight, and in our more recent conflict
there? What great or simple good could have been done by the
thousands of American civilians and soldiers slaughtered on September
11?
We are forty years gone from answers we will never know. The
assassins stole from us all, and God help us because of it.
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