Authors: David Halberstam
338
WHEN WILLIAM SULLIVAN JOINED:
Sullivan, p. 33.
339
WHEN HOOVER WAS ASKED IN LATER:
Sullivan, p. 37.
339
“ANYTIME I NEED:
Sullivan, p. 38.
339
FROM THAT MOMENT ON, WROTE:
Sullivan, p. 38.
340
“WE GAVE MCCARTHY EVERYTHING:
O’Reilly,
Hoover and the Un-Americans,
p. 337.
340
WHEN A REPORTER FROM THE:
Powers,
Secrecy and Power,
p. 321.
340
THE HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE ON THE:
O’Reilly, p. 325
341
IN THE FALL OF
1952
:
Stern, p. 195.
342
IN THE COPY TO HOOVER:
Blumberg and Owens,
Energy and Conflict,
p. 304.
342
EISENHOWER ORDERED THAT A “BLANK:
Stern, p. 221
343
“JACK, I’M SORRY”:
Michelmore, p. 206.
344
HE SAT THAT FIRST DAY:
Stern, p. 232.
344
“WHAT YOU SHOULD SAY:
interview with Weisskopf.
344
HE DID NOT, HE WROTE:
Stern, p. 233.
345
“THE SUN’S RISING IN:
Moss,
Men Who Play God,
p. 8.
346
“SOME KIND OF WHITE SAND:
Lapp,
The Voyage of the Lucky Dragon,
p. 34.
346
“THE INDIVIDUALS WERE UNEXPECTEDLY:
Lapp, p. 53.
346
“YOU LOOK LIKE A NEGRO:
Lapp, p. 56.
346
“FROM THIS DAY ON, UNHAPPINESS:
Lapp, p. 87.
346
ONE OF THE SEAMEN TOLD:
Moss, p. 90.
347
AT ONE POINT HE CRIED:
Lapp, p. 169.
347
“IF I WERE THE REDS:
Hagerty,
The Diary of James C. Hagerty,
p. 42.
*347
ON APRIL
2, 1954
:
Hagerty, p. 40.
348
LUIS ALVAREZ, ANOTHER OPPENHEIMER:
Alvarez,
Alvarez,
p. 180.
348
“SOMEHOW,” WEISSKOPF WROTE:
Stern, p. 255
349
ASKED WHY HE HAD TOLD:
Stern, p. 280.
349
“THERE HADN’T BEEN A PROCEEDING:
Stern, p. 305.
349
HE WAS SORRY TO HEAR ABOUT:
Stern, p. 335.
349
AFTER BEING RECRUITED BY STRAUSS:
FBI documents on J. Robert Oppenheimer, May 27, 1952, Albuquerque office to director.
350
WHEN ROBB ASKED TELLER:
Blumberg and Owens, p. 361.
350
THIS WAS THE CRITICAL:
Blumberg and Owens, pp. 362–63.
350
FINALLY CAME THE DENOUEMENT:
Coughlin, “Dr. Teller’s Magnificent Obsession,” p. 74.
350
OPPENHEIMER, IN A POLITE VOICE:
Coughlin, p. 74.
351
WHEN OPPENHEIMER HAD BEEN ASKED:
Stern, p. 380.
351
YOU DOUBLE-DEALING, LYING:
interview with Green.
351
HE DID IT, GREEN NOTED:
interview with Green.
351
EISENHOWER BECAME NERVOUS:
Hagerty, p. 43.
351
LATER, AFTER THE REVIEW BOARD:
Hagerty, p. 61.
352
OPPENHEIMER SMILED AND ANSWERED:
Stern, p. 451.
352
“THE LOS ALAMOS LABORATORY:
Davis,
Lawrence and Oppenheimer,
p. 316.
352
WHILE A ROOM FULL OF PROMINENT:
Stern, p. 447.
353
FRIENDS HEARD THEIR YOUNG DAUGHTER:
Stern, p. 378.
355
IT WAS ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE:
Coffey,
Iron Eagle,
p. 165.
355
NOT EVERYONE IN THE AIR FORCE:
Coffey, p. 246.
355
LEMAY ANSWERED, “IT DOESN’T:
Coffey, p. 272.
356
HE BELIEVED, RIGHT UP UNTIL:
Coffey, p. 331.
356
“SOME OF US,” HE WOULD ADD:
Coffey, pp. 331–2.
356
HE THOUGHT ARMY BASE SECURITY:
Coffey, p. 311.
356
“THIS AFTERNOON,” HE TOLD THEM:
Shepley and Blair,
The Hydrogen Bomb,
p. 192.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
359
A WORD FROM ONE [BROTHER]:
Schlesinger and Kinzer,
Bitter Fruit: The Untold Story of the American Coup in Guatemala,
p. 108.
360
THE GENERAL MANAGER OF THE WAR:
Candee,
Current Biography: Who’s News and Why—1953,
p. 580.
360
GODDAMNIT, LET’S HAVE IT OUT:
Lyon,
Eisenhower: Portrait of the Hero,
p. 328.
360
I LOVE THAT MAN:
Lyon, p. 367.
360
COLD FISHY EYE:
Mosley,
Dulles: A Biography of Eleanor, Allen, and John Foster Dulles and their Family Network,
p. 283.
360
HE WAS A SMALL MAN:
Roosevelt,
Countercoup: The Struggle for Control of Iran,
p. 4.
360
ROOSEVELT, IF YOU CAN’T KEEP:
Roosevelt, p. 4.
361
SO THIS IS HOW WE GET:
Roosevelt, p. 8.
361
AS I LISTENED TO HIM:
Rubin:
Paved with Good Intentions: The American Experience and Iran,
p. 74.
361
INARTICULATE AS USUAL BUT ENTHUSIASTIC:
Roosevelt, p. 18.
361
WE SHOULD PROCEED:
Roosevelt, p. 17.
361
THAT’S THAT THEN:
Roosevelt, p. 18.
362
THE LAST PERSON YOU’D EXPECT:
Mosley, p. 326.
362
ONE PERCENT OF THE POPULATION:
Rubin, p. 22.
362
BY CONTRAST, THE AMERICAN EMBASSY:
Rubin, p. 54.
362
IN
1950,
THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT:
Lyon, p. 488.
363
YOU DO NOT KNOW HOW CRAFTY:
Rubin, p. 66.
363
DON’T YOU REALIZE THAT RETURNING:
Rubin, p. 68.
363
TO EMBODY IRAN PERSONALLY, ITS:
Rubin, p. 59.
364
BUT BEING CALLED ON SO OBVIOUS A PLOY:
Acheson,
Present at the Creation: My Years at the State Department,
p. 504.
364
ESSENTIALLY A RICH REACTIONARY:
Acheson, p. 504.
364
PULL UP YOUR SOCKS:
Roosevelt, p. 115.
365
IT WAS A GREAT ADVENTURE:
Roosevelt, p. 138.
365
HE WAS BARELY LITERATE:
Roosevelt, pp. 138–40.
366
THE OLD BUGGER:
Roosevelt, p. 163.
366
ROOSEVELT ALSO BROUGHT WITH HIM:
Rubin, p. 82.
366
I WISH YOUR IMPERIAL MAJESTY:
Roosevelt, p. 168.
367
HAPPY TO REPORT:
Roosevelt, pp. 190–91.
367
AS A SOUVENIR OF OUR RECENT ADVENTURE:
Roosevelt, p. 201.
367
THE SHAH IS A NEW MAN:
Lyon, p. 552.
367
WELL I CAN SAY THAT THE STATEMENT:
Wise and Ross,
The Invisible Government,
p. 113.
367
YOUNG MAN, IF I HAD BEEN:
Roosevelt, p. 207.
367
OUR AGENT THERE, A MEMBER:
Lyon, p. 552.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
369
HIS EYES ... GLEAMING:
Roosevelt,
Countercoup: The Struggle for the Control of Iran,
p. 4.
370
BUT ROOSEVELT FIGURED THAT:
Author interview with Kermit Roosevelt.
372
IF THAT COLONEL OF YOURS:
Beschloss,
Mayday: Eisenhower, Khruschev, and the U-2 Affair,
p. 126.
372
YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU’RE:
Schlesinger and Kinser,
Bitter Fruit: The Untold Story of the American Coup in Guatemala,
p. 146.
372
I’LL TELL THE TRUTH TO DICK RUSSELL:
Beschloss, p. 129.
372
FOR UNFRIENDLY COUNTRIES:
Beschloss, p. 126.
372
ALLEN, CAN’T I EVER MENTION A NAME:
Beschloss, p. 128.
372
ALAS, NO, BUT I WISH:
Mosley,
Dulles: A Biography of Eleanor, Allen, and John Foster Dulles and Their Family Network,
p. 125.
373
HE REFUELED HIMSELF ON PARTIES:
Mosley, p. 282.
373
HIS AFFAIRS WERE SO NOTORIOUS:
Mosley, p. 125.
373
DELICIOUS SENSE OF SIN:
Dulles,
John Foster Dulles,
p. 2.
373
I CAN MAKE AN EDUCATED GUESS:
Mosley, p. 282.
373
SMITH APPARENTLY THOUGHT DULLES TOO:
Mosley, p. 294.
375
AS IN THE PAST, HE RESERVED:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 108.
375
THAT GOOD INDIAN LOOK ABOUT HIM:
Hunt,
Give Us This Day,
p. 117.
375
I WANT YOU ALL TO BE DAMN:
Lyon,
Eisenhower: Portrait of the Hero,
p. 611.
376
IT ALSO CONTROLLED EITHER DIRECTLY:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 12.
376
BY
1950,
THE COMPANY REPORTED:
Immerman,
The CIA in Guatemala: The Foreign Policy of Intervention,
p. 73.
376
WILD AND DANGEROUS BEAST:
Immerman, p. 32.
376
SO! YOU TOO ARE A COMMUNIST:
Ydigoras,
My War with Communism,
p. 26.
377
THEN IT’S TRUE:
Ydigoras, p. 36.
377
POLITICAL REVOLUTION WAS NO PROBLEM:
Bernays,
Biography of an Idea: Memoirs of
a
Public Relations Council,
pp. 757–58.
377
HIS IDEALISM COINCIDED WITH THE:
Immerman, p. 46.
377
THE BANANA MAGNATES, CO-NATIONALS:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 47.
378
JUST GIVE ME THE ARMS:
Mathews,
A World in Revolution,
262.
379
A STAR-SPANGLED-BANNER GUY:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 55.
379
THE GOVERNMENT WILL FALL IN:
Sulzberger,
The Last of the Giants,
p. 826.
379
SEEMED MUCH MORE CIA. THAN STATE:
Sulzberger, p. 826.
379
AGRARIAN REFORM HAD BEEN INSTITUTED:
Immerman, p. 138.
380
WE ARE MAKING OUR FOURTH OF JULY:
Immerman, p. 141.
380
IF ARBENZ IS NOT A COMMUNIST:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 139.
380
ALLEN DULLES HAD ANOTHER AGENT:
Immerman, p. 155.
380
WELL BOYS, TOMORROW AT THIS:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 13.
380
IN FACT, THE NEWS WAS SO PUBLIC:
Immerman, p. 3.
381
MEXICO CITY WAS NOT AN ONEROUS:
Author interview with Sidney Gruson.
381
YOU’RE CRAZY, YOU KNOW YOU:
Author interview with Sidney Gruson.
382
TURNER, WE CAN DO THIS:
Author interview with Sidney Gruson.
382
SYDNEY, WE WANT YOU TO STAY:
Author interview with Sidney Gruson.
383
A MAJOR GENERAL, A NO-NONSENSE:
Salisbury,
Without Fear or Favor:
The New York Times
and Its Times,
p. 477.
383
HE BEGAN TO PRESS THE HEAD:
Salisbury, pp. 479–82.
384
MR. PRESIDENT, WHEN I SAW HENRY:
Eisenhower,
Mandate for Change,
pp. 424–26.
384
THINKING OF THE TERRIBLE LOSSES:
Phillips,
The Night Watch,
p. 50.
385
PEOPLE WERE COMPLAINING THAT:
Immerman, p. 141.
385
AND THAT IF HE HAD BROUGHT:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, p. 195.
385
COLONEL, YOU’RE JUST NOT CONVENIENT:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, pp. 206–7.
385
IT WOULD BE BETTER IN:
Schlesinger and Kinzer, pp. 207–208.
386
HE WOULD, HE SAID, MAKE EVERYTHING:
Immerman, p. 181.
386
THERE WAS NOTHING CONCLUSIVE:
Immerman, p. 186.
386
BECAUSE OF MY RESPECT FOR:
Salisbury, p. 481.
386
A MAN HAVING HIS [GRUSON’S]:
Salisbury, p. 482.
386
MY JUDGMENT, FORMED ON THE BASIS:
Salisbury, p. 482.
386
CYRUS SULZBERGER, WHO BELIEVED GRUSON:
Author interview with Cyrus Sulzberger.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
388
AS REINHOLD NEIBHUR:
Hoopes,
The Devil and John Foster Dulles,
p. 37.
389
YES, SAID DULLES, AND HE:
Hoopes, p. 74.
389
THERE WERE REPORTS THAT AT THE LAST:
Hoopes, p. 137–38.
389
HE COMPLAINED TO CLOSE AIDES:
Hoopes, p. 129.
389
STILL HE HONORED EISENHOWER:
Adams,
First-Hand Report,
p. 89.