Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
With the approaching announcement of the new President's Cabinet
members, we are reminded of the singular importance they can play
in the advancement of public policy. Former Secretary of
Defense Melvin Laird was just such an appointee. In 1968, at
the peak of the Vietnam War, the Republican Congressman from
Wisconsin agreed to serve in Richard Nixon's Cabinet. Laird
knew that serving as Secretary of Defense was a move not likely to
endear him to the American public. But for the next four
years, he deftly navigated the morass of the war he had
inherited.
In the first book to focus on Laird's legacy, Dale Van Atta
reveals the central and often unrecognized role Laird played in
managing the crisis of national identity sparked by the Vietnam War
- and the challenges, ethical and political, that confronted him
along the way. Van Atta offers a portrait of a man striving
for open government in an atmosphere fraught with secrecy. He
illuminates the inner workings of high politics: Laird's
behind-the-scenes sparring with Kissinger over policy, his
decisions to ignore Nixon's wilder directives, his formative impact
on arms control and health care, his key role in the selection of
Ford for Vice President, and his frustration with the country's
abandonment of Vietnamization.
Watching Laird operate, I sometimes wondered if Nixon
realized what he had gotten when he picked Laird.
- Bob Schieffer,
commentator on CBS's Face the Nation
More About the Speakers
Dale Van Atta
Author
Hosted By
Edwin Feulner, Ph.D.
President
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