Joseph’s review of Kennedy's Coup: A White House Plot, a Saigon Murder, and America's Descent into Vietnam > Likes and Comments

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Jack Cheevers “Nothing new”? You’re very much mistaken, Mr. Case.

I believe “Kennedy’s Coup” is the most complete, most detailed account of the anti-Diem coup of 1963 ever published. I filed scores of freedom of information requests and extracted about 1,100 pages of formerly secret documents from the CIA, National Security Agency, and State Department. (These documents were all declassified in 2016 or later; none were “declassified documents from the 1990s.”)

In addition, one of my interview subjects, James D. Rosenthal, who served in the Saigon embassy in the early 1960s, gave me hundreds of State Department cables he painstakingly acquired under the Freedom of Information Act. These documents formed a pile of paper two feet high. Rosenthal hoped to write his own account of the coup, and the role of the Buddhist militant Tri Quang in it, but wasn’t able to, and generously turned his materials over to me.

Thus my book significantly expands what’s publicly known about the coup. Here are some of its revelations:

=Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge’s betrayal of Diem’s youngest brother, Ngo Dinh Can, the unofficial governor of Hue and surrounding provinces. After Diem was killed, the State Department ordered that Can be granted asylum at the U.S. consulate in Hue. The White House separately instructed Lodge to make sure he and his nonagenarian mother got safely out of South Vietnam. (Can wanted to go to Tokyo.) After the U.S. consul in Hue bravely refused a South Vietnamese general’s demand to turn over Can, he was flown to Saigon aboard a CIA aircraft. There Lodge turned him over to the South Vietnamese military. Can was put on trial and executed six months later, with Lodge denying to the press that he gave up Can to the military.

This story, Mr. Case, has never been told before. In other words, it’s new.

=Since the South Vietnamese generals plotting the coup mistrusted their American allies and revealed few details of their plans, the U.S. began secretly eavesdropping on them. Young Vietnamese language experts assigned to the Army Security Agency sat in electronics-jammed trailers outside Saigon listening to phone calls among the plotters. I interviewed three of these linguists about what they heard.

The National Security Agency, meanwhile, was secretly intercepting cables from the Saigon government to its embassies in Washington, Paris, Bangkok, and elsewhere, trying to find out what Diem was up to. I obtained NSA documents detailing these actions. (One of the intercepts shows the mother of Madame Nhu, Diem’s sister-in-law, begging her to get herself and her four children out of South Vietnam before they’re all killed. The cable from the mother, then living in Washington, is signed “Love, mamma.”)

This information, Mr. Case, has never been published before. In other words, it’s new.

=State Department officials tried to use Madame Nhu’s three youngest children as bait to lure her out of the United States, where she’d become a high-profile critic of the Kennedy administration during a speaking tour just prior to the coup. The three kids, who’d disappeared during the coup, were found in the Central Highlands afterwards. Madame Nhu wanted them flown to Los Angeles to be with her, but the State Department instead sent them to Rome to be with her brother-in-law, Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc. When JFK found out about the scheme, he put an end to it, ordering subordinates to give the children U.S. visas if requested. But Madame Nhu later rejoined her kids in Italy anyway.

This episode, which I pieced together from various sources, has never been published before. In other words, Mr. Case, it’s new.

=The story of how and why Lodge fired John Richardson, the CIA station chief in Saigon has never been told before with the level of detail presented in “Kennedy’s Coup.” That’s because I obtained several CIA documents related to Richardson’s dismissal, including McGeorge Bundy’s heated discussion of it with Frank Wisner, a retired CIA executive, at a dinner party at Wisner’s home. Richardson’s abrupt ouster, less than a month before the coup, limited the CIA’s ability to gather intelligence on what the Diem regime as well as the coup plotters were up to just before Diem was assassinated.

Through my declassification requests, I obtained some very revealing individual government documents. They included CIA agent Lucien Conein’s after-action report on the coup, and a lecture on the coup that CIA deputy station chief David R. Smith gave to the Foreign Service Institute (revealing, among other things, that Diem’s brother Nhu had been viciously bayoneted more than 30 times by coup troops).

I also got hold of an 84-page chronology of the CIA’s actions in South Vietnam in 1963-64. This extraordinary document, written by CIA Inspector General J. S. Earman, contains many previously secret details of the spy agency’s operations during that time period.

I can provide more examples. But I believe the ones I’ve listed here will lead any fair and objective reader of my book to conclude that it contains a great deal that’s new. –Jack Cheevers


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