McGeorge Bundy
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McGeorge "Mac" Bundy (March 30, 1919 - September 16, 1996) was Special Assistant for National Security Affairs to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson from 1961-1966, and then headed the Ford Foundation from 1966-1979.
He was one of Kennedy's "wise men," a noted political scientist and academic at Harvard University. He moved into public life in 1960 becoming national security advisor. He played a crucial role in all of the major foreign policy and defence decisions of the Kennedy and part of the Johnson administration. These included the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and, most controversially, the Vietnam War.
He was a strong proponent for participating in Vietnam early in his tenure. He supported escalating the American involvement and the bombing of North Vietnam. He later came to strongly regret the decision, one of the first administration members to do so. He spent much of the rest of his career trying to understand how he and so many others had made such a terrible mistake.
Along with other government leaders during Vietnam, he has been accused of war crimes.
He left government in 1966 to take over direction of the Ford Foundation. Some critics such as Kai Bird have suggested that the Ford Foundation may not have been independent of US government foreign policy during that period (see The Color of Truth).
He was the brother of William Bundy also a foreign policy figure during the Vietnam War.
See also
External links
- McGeorge Bundy at Harvard (http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2001/02.01/13-bundy.html)
- biography of brothers William and McGeorge Bundy (http://www.historians.org/new/truth/)
- McGeorge Bundy headed the Ford Foundation from 1966-1979 (http://www.philanthropyroundtable.org/magazines/1999/january/wooster.html)
- point of view of Nuremberg trial prosecutor Telford Taylor on McGeorge Bundy (http://bostonreview.mit.edu/BR24.1/jones.html)
Preceded by: Gordon Gray | National Security Advisor | Succeeded by: Walt Rostow |