Lyndon Johnson/Presidency
![]() LBJ insists upon being sworn in just hours after the JFK assassination. | |
Date | November 22, 1963 - January 20, 1969 |
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Participants | Hubert Humphrey, Dean Rusk, C. Douglas Dillon, Henry H. Fowler, Joseph W. Barr, Robert McNamara, Clark Clifford, Robert F. Kennedy, Nicholas Katzenbach, Ramsey Clark, John A. Gronouski, Larry O'Brien, W. Marvin Watson, Stewart Udall, Orville Freeman, Luther H. Hodges, John T. Connor, Alexander Trowbridge, C. R. Smith, W. Willard Wirtz, Anthony J. Celebrezze, John W. Gardner, Wilbur J. Cohen, Robert C. Weaver, Robert Coldwell Wood, Alan S. Boyd, Adlai Stevenson II, Arthur Goldberg, George Ball, James Russell Wiggins |
Description | The administration of president Lyndon B. Johnson |
Lyndon B. Johnson's tenure as the 36th president of the United States began on November 22, 1963, upon the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and ended on January 20, 1969.
Contents
The person Lyndon B. Johnson
For the person Lyndon B. Johnson and his activities and career before and after the presidency, see:
- Full article: Lyndon B. Johnson
- Full article: Lyndon B. Johnson
JFK Assassination
- Full article: John F. Kennedy/Assassination
- Full article: John F. Kennedy/Assassination
The 36th President of the United States (1963–1969), Lyndon Johnson is generally reckoned to have been the deeply involved with the JFK Assassination, and was named as such by the deathbed confession of CIA agent E. Howard Hunt.
Vietnam War
- Full article: Vietnam War
- Full article: Vietnam War
LBJ stoked war fever by characterizing North Vietnam’s attacks on the Maddox – and the later attack on the Maddox and the Turner Joy – as "unprovoked aggression." A very different picture is revealed by a phone conversation he had on August 3 with his Treasury Secretary Robert Anderson, which the latter secretly recorded:
"OK. Here’s what we did. We [were] within their 12-mile limit, and that’s a matter that hasn’t been settled. But there have been some covert operations in that area that we have been carrying on – blowing up some bridges and things of that kind, roads, and so forth. So I imagine they wanted to put a stop to it. So they come out there and fire and we respond immediately with five-inch guns from the destroyer and with planes overhead. And we cripple them up – knock one of them out and cripple the other two. And then we go right back where we were with that destroyer [the Maddox], and with another one [the Turner Joy], plus plenty of planes standing by. And that’s where we are now."
LBJ - 1964-08-03[1]
William Pepper quotes Colonel John Downey, LBJ's briefing officer during the Vietnam War as stating that LBJ stated that he couldn't stop the war in Vietnam because "my friends are making too much money".[2]
Known Participants
15 of the 30 of the participants already have pages here:
Participant | Description |
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George Ball | US deep politician who attended all 40 Bilderberg meetings up to his death, he helped make key decisions about post-WW2 Europe. |
Ramsey Clark | US Attorney General turned activist |
Clark Clifford | United States Secretary of Defense who was a key figure in the Bank of Credit and Commerce International |
Douglas Dillon | Bilderberg, Brookings, Committee on the Present Danger, CFR, US/Secretary of the Treasury... |
Orville Freeman | Governor of Minnesota 1955-1961, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture from 1961-1969. |
Arthur Goldberg | US Ambassador to the United Nations in the 1960s |
Hubert Humphrey | |
Nicholas Katzenbach | United States Deputy Attorney General at the time of the JFK assassination who assisted in the cover up |
Robert McNamara | US Deep state actor, War criminal, Defense secretary, World Bank president, Brookings, CFR... |
Larry O'Brien | |
RFK | Brother of murdered US president John F. Kennedy, Robert had been his Attorney General and wanted to become US President himself so he could uncover his brothers killers. Assassinated. |
Dean Rusk | Very long serving US Secretary of State, 5 visits to the Bilderberg |
Adlai Stevenson | |
James Russell Wiggins | |
W. Willard Wirtz | US Secretary of Labor between 1962 and 1969 |