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ELLSBERG ARCHIVE
Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965
PENTAGON PAPERS
Pentagon Papers. Once I was ready to risk my clearances and career for actions that had some (not necessarily great) chance of being helpful, new approaches occurred to me. I embarked on several of these simultaneously. As one of these approaches, in October 1969 I began photocopying, with the initial help of my former RAND colleagueAnthony
THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS The 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis – Quemoy. I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica FIRST USE OF B-52S IN VIETNAM (Outtake from Daniel Ellsberg’s Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers; fits in after the section break on p.79) On May 14, 1965, a cable came across my desk from Ambassador Taylor in Saigon, forwarding—with his support—the recommendation from General Westmoreland that B-52s be used to attack a Viet Cong “base area”in South Vietnam.
A MEMORY OF HOWARD ZINN A day later, Howard Zinn was the last speaker at a large rally in Boston Common. I was at the back of a huge crowd, listening to him over loudspeakers. 27 years later, I can remember some things he said. “On Mayday in Washington thousands of us were arrested for disturbing the peace. But there is no peace.ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITEBIOTHE DOOMSDAY MACHINESECRETSCONTACTCV (1958-1970)EXTENDED BIOGRAPHY Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. BIO – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE Bio. Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at King’s College, Cambridge University. From 1954 to 1957, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps as rifle platoon leader, operations officer, and rifle companyELLSBERG ARCHIVE
Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965
PENTAGON PAPERS
Pentagon Papers. Once I was ready to risk my clearances and career for actions that had some (not necessarily great) chance of being helpful, new approaches occurred to me. I embarked on several of these simultaneously. As one of these approaches, in October 1969 I began photocopying, with the initial help of my former RAND colleagueAnthony
THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS The 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis – Quemoy. I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica FIRST USE OF B-52S IN VIETNAM (Outtake from Daniel Ellsberg’s Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers; fits in after the section break on p.79) On May 14, 1965, a cable came across my desk from Ambassador Taylor in Saigon, forwarding—with his support—the recommendation from General Westmoreland that B-52s be used to attack a Viet Cong “base area”in South Vietnam.
A MEMORY OF HOWARD ZINN A day later, Howard Zinn was the last speaker at a large rally in Boston Common. I was at the back of a huge crowd, listening to him over loudspeakers. 27 years later, I can remember some things he said. “On Mayday in Washington thousands of us were arrested for disturbing the peace. But there is no peace.ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
ELLSBERG ARCHIVE
Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. DOCUMENTS – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis: A Documented History. by Morton Halperin, 1966. From Daniel Ellsberg: I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doingDECISION THEORY
Decision Theory. Daniel Ellsberg graduated from Harvard in In 1952 with a B.A. degree summa cum laude in Economics. HIs senior honors thesis, “Theories of Decision-making Under Uncertainty: The Contributions of von Neumann and Morgenstern,” led to articles being published in the Economic Journal and the American Economics Review.EXTENDED BIOGRAPHY
Daniel Ellsberg: Biographical Statement (written for Right Livelihood Award, 2006) I was born in Chicago in 1931. I attended Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan on a full scholarship, graduating first in my class, and won a full four-year scholarship to Harvard.ELLSBERG.NET
The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis: A Documented History. by Morton Halperin, 1966. From Daniel Ellsberg: I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965.
DOOMSDAY MACHINE
Basic National Security Policy (BNSP) Daniel Ellsberg’s Draft of the BNSP, May 9, 1961 (from his archives) Parts of the same draft, obtained by the National Security Archive via FOIA, 1999. Ellsberg’s notes on the BNSP—notes written 1961, typed 1976. November 22, 2017 byEllsberg.Net.
DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE Daniel Ellsberg's WebsiteELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITEBIOTHE DOOMSDAY MACHINESECRETSCONTACTCV (1958-1970)EXTENDED BIOGRAPHY Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. BIO – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE Bio. Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at King’s College, Cambridge University. From 1954 to 1957, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps as rifle platoon leader, operations officer, and rifle companyPENTAGON PAPERS
Pentagon Papers. Once I was ready to risk my clearances and career for actions that had some (not necessarily great) chance of being helpful, new approaches occurred to me. I embarked on several of these simultaneously. As one of these approaches, in October 1969 I began photocopying, with the initial help of my former RAND colleagueAnthony
PENTAGON PAPERS
June 13th, 2011, marks the 40th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times.. Daniel Ellsberg was interviewed for pieces in both the New York Times and CNN on the anniversary, and on the government’s decision to declassify the Papers.. In the New York Times piece, Daniel said:. It’s absurd. . ..
VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965
DANIEL ELLSBERG BIOGRAPHY (SHORT VERSION) Daniel Ellsberg Biography (short version) Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year at King’s College, Cambridge University, on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Between 1954 and 1957, Ellsberg spent three years in the U.S. Marine Corps THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS The 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis – Quemoy. I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica FIRST USE OF B-52S IN VIETNAM (Outtake from Daniel Ellsberg’s Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers; fits in after the section break on p.79) On May 14, 1965, a cable came across my desk from Ambassador Taylor in Saigon, forwarding—with his support—the recommendation from General Westmoreland that B-52s be used to attack a Viet Cong “base area”in South Vietnam.
A MEMORY OF HOWARD ZINN A day later, Howard Zinn was the last speaker at a large rally in Boston Common. I was at the back of a huge crowd, listening to him over loudspeakers. 27 years later, I can remember some things he said. “On Mayday in Washington thousands of us were arrested for disturbing the peace. But there is no peace.ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITEBIOTHE DOOMSDAY MACHINESECRETSCONTACTCV (1958-1970)EXTENDED BIOGRAPHY Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. BIO – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE Bio. Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at King’s College, Cambridge University. From 1954 to 1957, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps as rifle platoon leader, operations officer, and rifle companyPENTAGON PAPERS
Pentagon Papers. Once I was ready to risk my clearances and career for actions that had some (not necessarily great) chance of being helpful, new approaches occurred to me. I embarked on several of these simultaneously. As one of these approaches, in October 1969 I began photocopying, with the initial help of my former RAND colleagueAnthony
PENTAGON PAPERS
June 13th, 2011, marks the 40th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times.. Daniel Ellsberg was interviewed for pieces in both the New York Times and CNN on the anniversary, and on the government’s decision to declassify the Papers.. In the New York Times piece, Daniel said:. It’s absurd. . ..
VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965
DANIEL ELLSBERG BIOGRAPHY (SHORT VERSION) Daniel Ellsberg Biography (short version) Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year at King’s College, Cambridge University, on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Between 1954 and 1957, Ellsberg spent three years in the U.S. Marine Corps THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS The 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis – Quemoy. I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica FIRST USE OF B-52S IN VIETNAM (Outtake from Daniel Ellsberg’s Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers; fits in after the section break on p.79) On May 14, 1965, a cable came across my desk from Ambassador Taylor in Saigon, forwarding—with his support—the recommendation from General Westmoreland that B-52s be used to attack a Viet Cong “base area”in South Vietnam.
A MEMORY OF HOWARD ZINN A day later, Howard Zinn was the last speaker at a large rally in Boston Common. I was at the back of a huge crowd, listening to him over loudspeakers. 27 years later, I can remember some things he said. “On Mayday in Washington thousands of us were arrested for disturbing the peace. But there is no peace.ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
DECISION THEORY
Decision Theory. Daniel Ellsberg graduated from Harvard in In 1952 with a B.A. degree summa cum laude in Economics. HIs senior honors thesis, “Theories of Decision-making Under Uncertainty: The Contributions of von Neumann and Morgenstern,” led to articles being published in the Economic Journal and the American Economics Review. DOCUMENTS – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis: A Documented History. by Morton Halperin, 1966. From Daniel Ellsberg: I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doingPENTAGON PAPERS
June 13th, 2011, marks the 40th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times.. Daniel Ellsberg was interviewed for pieces in both the New York Times and CNN on the anniversary, and on the government’s decision to declassify the Papers.. In the New York Times piece, Daniel said:. It’s absurd. . ..
VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965
DANIEL ELLSBERG BIOGRAPHY (SHORT VERSION) Daniel Ellsberg Biography (short version) Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year at King’s College, Cambridge University, on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Between 1954 and 1957, Ellsberg spent three years in the U.S. Marine Corps U.S. NUCLEAR TERRORISM U.S. Nuclear Terrorism. Long after the ending of the Cold War, the chance that some nuclear weapons will kill masses of innocent humans somewhere, before very long, may well be higher than it was before thefall of
CV (1958-1970)
Daniel Ellsberg. Curriculum Vitae 1958-1970 (pre-Pentagon Papers) Harvard University, B.A., Economics, 1948-52 (summa cum laude; Phi Beta Kappa).. King’s College, Cambridge University, Woodrow Wilson Fellow, 1952-53. Harvard University, Society of Fellows, 1957-59.. Harvard University, Ph.D., Economics, 1962 (undergraduate and Ph.D. theses on decision-making under uncertainty). DANIEL ELLSBERG’S RELATIONS WITH NEIL SHEEHAN, AS TOLD IN Daniel Ellsberg’s Relations with Neil Sheehan, as Told in “Secrets”. On February 28, 1971, I was in Washington on a Sunday night to take part in a panel the next day at the National War College. I had dinner with Dick Barnet, Mark Raskin, and Ralph Stavinsof
ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITEBIOTHE DOOMSDAY MACHINESECRETSCONTACTCV (1958-1970)EXTENDED BIOGRAPHY Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. BIO – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE Bio. Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at King’s College, Cambridge University. From 1954 to 1957, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps as rifle platoon leader, operations officer, and rifle companyDECISION THEORY
Decision Theory. Daniel Ellsberg graduated from Harvard in In 1952 with a B.A. degree summa cum laude in Economics. HIs senior honors thesis, “Theories of Decision-making Under Uncertainty: The Contributions of von Neumann and Morgenstern,” led to articles being published in the Economic Journal and the American Economics Review.PENTAGON PAPERS
Pentagon Papers. Once I was ready to risk my clearances and career for actions that had some (not necessarily great) chance of being helpful, new approaches occurred to me. I embarked on several of these simultaneously. As one of these approaches, in October 1969 I began photocopying, with the initial help of my former RAND colleagueAnthony
PENTAGON PAPERS
June 13th, 2011, marks the 40th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times.. Daniel Ellsberg was interviewed for pieces in both the New York Times and CNN on the anniversary, and on the government’s decision to declassify the Papers.. In the New York Times piece, Daniel said:. It’s absurd. . ..
THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS The 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis – Quemoy. I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica FIRST USE OF B-52S IN VIETNAM (Outtake from Daniel Ellsberg’s Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers; fits in after the section break on p.79) On May 14, 1965, a cable came across my desk from Ambassador Taylor in Saigon, forwarding—with his support—the recommendation from General Westmoreland that B-52s be used to attack a Viet Cong “base area”in South Vietnam.
A MEMORY OF HOWARD ZINN A day later, Howard Zinn was the last speaker at a large rally in Boston Common. I was at the back of a huge crowd, listening to him over loudspeakers. 27 years later, I can remember some things he said. “On Mayday in Washington thousands of us were arrested for disturbing the peace. But there is no peace.ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITEBIOTHE DOOMSDAY MACHINESECRETSCONTACTCV (1958-1970)EXTENDED BIOGRAPHY Daniel Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library.A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of special interest. BIO – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE Bio. Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at King’s College, Cambridge University. From 1954 to 1957, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps as rifle platoon leader, operations officer, and rifle companyDECISION THEORY
Decision Theory. Daniel Ellsberg graduated from Harvard in In 1952 with a B.A. degree summa cum laude in Economics. HIs senior honors thesis, “Theories of Decision-making Under Uncertainty: The Contributions of von Neumann and Morgenstern,” led to articles being published in the Economic Journal and the American Economics Review.PENTAGON PAPERS
Pentagon Papers. Once I was ready to risk my clearances and career for actions that had some (not necessarily great) chance of being helpful, new approaches occurred to me. I embarked on several of these simultaneously. As one of these approaches, in October 1969 I began photocopying, with the initial help of my former RAND colleagueAnthony
PENTAGON PAPERS
June 13th, 2011, marks the 40th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times.. Daniel Ellsberg was interviewed for pieces in both the New York Times and CNN on the anniversary, and on the government’s decision to declassify the Papers.. In the New York Times piece, Daniel said:. It’s absurd. . ..
THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS The 1958 Taiwan Strait Crisis – Quemoy. I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica FIRST USE OF B-52S IN VIETNAM (Outtake from Daniel Ellsberg’s Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers; fits in after the section break on p.79) On May 14, 1965, a cable came across my desk from Ambassador Taylor in Saigon, forwarding—with his support—the recommendation from General Westmoreland that B-52s be used to attack a Viet Cong “base area”in South Vietnam.
A MEMORY OF HOWARD ZINN A day later, Howard Zinn was the last speaker at a large rally in Boston Common. I was at the back of a huge crowd, listening to him over loudspeakers. 27 years later, I can remember some things he said. “On Mayday in Washington thousands of us were arrested for disturbing the peace. But there is no peace.ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
DECISION THEORY
Decision Theory. Daniel Ellsberg graduated from Harvard in In 1952 with a B.A. degree summa cum laude in Economics. HIs senior honors thesis, “Theories of Decision-making Under Uncertainty: The Contributions of von Neumann and Morgenstern,” led to articles being published in the Economic Journal and the American Economics Review. DOCUMENTS – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis: A Documented History. by Morton Halperin, 1966. From Daniel Ellsberg: I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doingPENTAGON PAPERS
June 13th, 2011, marks the 40th anniversary of the initial publication of the Pentagon Papers in the New York Times.. Daniel Ellsberg was interviewed for pieces in both the New York Times and CNN on the anniversary, and on the government’s decision to declassify the Papers.. In the New York Times piece, Daniel said:. It’s absurd. . ..
DANIEL ELLSBERG’S EFFORTS TO RELEASE THE PENTAGON PAPERS From Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg, Chapter 25: Congress. In late December 1970 I had what turned out to be my next-to-last talk with Senator Fulbright, in his office, about what to do with the Pentagon Papers. DANIEL ELLSBERG BIOGRAPHY (SHORT VERSION) Daniel Ellsberg Biography (short version) Daniel Ellsberg was born in Chicago in 1931. After graduating from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. summa cum laude in Economics, he studied for a year at King’s College, Cambridge University, on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Between 1954 and 1957, Ellsberg spent three years in the U.S. Marine Corps VIETNAM – DANIEL ELLSBERG'S WEBSITE In 1964-65, by direction of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Ellsberg assisted McNaughton’s work on secret plans to escalate the war in Vietnam, although both of them personally regarded these as wrongheaded and dangerous. Regrettably, by decisions of President Johnson and McNamara, these plans were carried out in the spring of1965.
CV (1958-1970)
Daniel Ellsberg. Curriculum Vitae 1958-1970 (pre-Pentagon Papers) Harvard University, B.A., Economics, 1948-52 (summa cum laude; Phi Beta Kappa).. King’s College, Cambridge University, Woodrow Wilson Fellow, 1952-53. Harvard University, Society of Fellows, 1957-59.. Harvard University, Ph.D., Economics, 1962 (undergraduate and Ph.D. theses on decision-making under uncertainty).WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
Report, on Taiwan—Quemoy Operation . JCS indicated that nuclear weapons would probably not be cap) owed, at least to sa initial 1 v. led to a new cycle of plannin« actions,ELLSBERG
Ellsberg
WWW.ELLSBERG.NET
www.ellsberg.net
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* About Secrets
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* Home
* Areas of Inquiry ►* Decision Theory
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* About Secrets
* Previously Unpublished Papers Discussed in “Secrets” * Going Underground, from “Secrets” * DE & Neil Sheehan, from “Secrets” * DE, Congress, & Pentagon Papers * Additional Endnotes from “Secrets” * Outtakes from “Secrets”* Articles
* Archive @ UMass ►* Archive Launch
* PP-50th Events
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* Extended Biography* Contact
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PP-50TH AT UMASS-AMHERST: CONFERENCE, COURSE & PODCAST Although it is still being processed and is not fully accessible to the public, Ellsberg’s archive at UMass-Amherst is already in active use. The university’s recent acquisition of the Ellsberg papers,
together with the pending Pentagon Papers 50th anniversary, informed the recent Truth and Dissent conference, a yearlonggraduate course , a
new archive web resource , and a5-part podcast
by GroundTruth.
—The University of Massachusetts-Amherst recently hosted Truth, Dissent & the Legacy of Daniel Ellsberg, a two-day online
conference marking the 50th anniversary of the release of the Pentagon Papers. Ellsberg’s keynote addressplus seven
roundtable discussionsexplored the
major issues that have engaged his life: the Vietnam War, nuclear weapons, antiwar resistance, the Pentagon Papers, Watergate, whistleblowing, and the wars of the 21st century. Videos of all of the sessions can be viewed here.
—In a related project, GroundTruth launched The Whistleblower: TheForce of Truth
. This
five-part podcast series explores Ellsberg’s life story through exclusive interviews as well as archival materials.Continue Reading
May 18, 2021 by Michael Ellsberg__
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“GOING UNDERGROUND,” FROM “SECRETS” FROM _SECRETS: A MEMOIR OF VIETNAM AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS_ BY DANIEL
ELLSBERG
CHAPTER 29: GOING UNDERGROUND On Monday evening, June 14, 1971, we went to a dinner party at the house of Peter Edelman and Marian Wright Edelman. It was jammed with people sitting on the floor and sofas with plates in their laps, and there were two topics of conversation: What the Pentagon Papers were revealing, and who had given them to the _New York Times. _ Patricia and I listened without contributing much. Jim Vorenberg was eating, on the floor, in one corner of the room. Our eyes didn’t meet. Tuesday morning the third installment appeared. Attorney General John Mitchell sent a letter to the _New York Times _ asking it to suspend publication and to hand over its copy of the study. The _Times _ declined, and that afternoon the Justice Department filed a demand, the first in our country’s history, for an injunction in federal district court in New York. The judge granted a temporary restraining order while he considered the injunction. For the first time since the Revolution, the presses of an American newspaper were Stopped from printing a scheduled story by federal court order. The First Amendment, saying “Congress shall pass no law … abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press,” had always been held above all to forbid “prior restraint” of newspaper or book publication by federal or state government, including courts and the executive branch. The Nixon Justice Department was making a pioneering experiment, asking federal courts to violate or ignore the Constitution or in effect to abrogate the First Amendment. It was the boldest assertion during the cold war that “national security” overrode the constitutional guarantees of the Bill of Rights.Continue Reading
January 12, 2021 by Michael Ellsberg__
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DANIEL ELLSBERG’S RELATIONS WITH NEIL SHEEHAN, AS TOLD IN“SECRETS”
FROM _SECRETS: A MEMOIR OF VIETNAM AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS, _
CHAPTER 26: TO THE _NEW YORK TIMES_ On February 28, 1971, I was in Washington on a Sunday night to take part in a panel the next day at the National War College. I had dinner with Dick Barnet, Mark Raskin, and Ralph Stavins of the Institute for Policy Studies, a left-wing think tank. They were working on a book analyzing U.S. involvement in Vietnam in relation to war crimes. As background for their research I had actually given them parts of the Pentagon study, including my own draft of the 1961 decisions, and they had followed my efforts to get it out through Congress. When they pressed me now on how I was doing, I told them about striking out with Fulbright and McGovern. They said that they thought it was very important that I get it out. They wanted their book out by June, and they were counting on being able to refer to the documentation in the study. They told me I ought to take it to the _New York Times, _ the same thing Fulbright and McGovern had mentioned. I had always thought of this choice as a backup, though it seemed unlikely that a newspaper would do more than publish some excerpts. But at this point it was looking as though Congress was closed off. Among newspapers, the _Times _ was the obvious choice. It was the only journal of record, the only paper that printed long accounts, such as speeches and press conferences, in their entirety. No other paper would do that. Only the _Times _ might publish the entire study, and it had the prestige to carry it through. They asked me if I knew anybody at the _Times_. I told them I knew Neil Sheehan from Vietnam. I didn’t mention that I had also given him top secret leaks in 1968. For that very reason I had tended to stay away from him in recent years. But now all the signs seemed to be pointing me in his direction.Continue Reading
January 12, 2021 by Michael Ellsberg__
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DANIEL ELLSBERG’S EFFORTS TO RELEASE THE PENTAGON PAPERS TO CONGRESS, AS TOLD IN “SECRETS” FROM _SECRETS: A MEMOIR OF VIETNAM AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS_ BY DANIEL
ELLSBERG, CHAPTER 25: CONGRESS In late December 1970 I had what turned out to be my next-to-last talk with Senator Fulbright, in his office, about what to do with the Pentagon Papers. He now had nearly everything I had, including NSSM-r and my notes on the Ponturo study of Tonkin Gulf. Norvil Jones had made it clear that there would be no public hearings on the war of the sort he’d envisioned back in May, during the Cambodian invasion. The public concern just wasn’t there anymore, nor was there support for such hearings on the Foreign Relations Committee itself. The war had scarcely been an issue in the November congressional elections. Fulbright himself didn’t disagree with my own urgent concern, after the failed Son Tay raid to rescue American prisoners of war, and the renewed bombing of North Vietnam, that the war would soon be getting larger, but he didn’t see much possibility of mobilizing opposition in Congress until that happened. As for the Pentagon Papers, Fulbright seemed sympathetic to my desire to find some way, apart from immediate hearings, to bring them to bear on the continuing war. He mentioned a number of ways in which it would still be possible to get the papers out with relatively little damage to me, though that wasn’t my major concern. He raised the possibility of issuing a subpoena to Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird for the papers. He didn’t have to limit himself, he said, to requesting them from Laird, as he had done several times so far. Hecould demand them.
At this point Norvil revealed what I take it had been his real worry from the beginning. He thought that the committee, even if it got the papers from Laird by request or subpoena, couldn’t put them out to the public on its own, without administration approval. Even more, the chairman couldn’t do it on his own because he and the committee were supposed to safeguard for the Senate as a whole classified material, which they got all the time and for which they had storage facilities. If Fulbright leaked the papers or went ahead and distributed or published them, he could be charged with having jeopardized the ability to get classified material from the executive, not only for the committee or himself but for the entire Senate. Jones also mentioned that the committee members, and in particular its staff members, were often accused of leaking. It was easy for me to guess that Jones himself didn’t want to be accused of this. He had often shown great concern that I not reveal to anyone that I had given the papers to Fulbright. Fulbright told me that he had asked Laird several times now for the study, but it seemed unlikely that he was going to get it. It was becoming clear to me that Jones was not going to encourage Fulbright to stick his neck out by releasing or using what I’d given him. Fulbright himself said to me, “Isn’t it after all only history?” I said, well, yes, but it seemed to me quite important history. It was also a history that wasn’t over yet. He said, “But does it really matter? Is there much in there that we don’t know?” He asked if I would give him an example of a revelation that would make a bigsplash.
Continue Reading
January 12, 2021 by Michael Ellsberg__
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ELLSBERG’S ARCHIVE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS – AMHERSTDaniel
Ellsberg’s papers have been acquired by the University of Massachusetts – Amherst and will be managed by its Special Collections and University Archives at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library . A week of activities at UMass in October 2019 marked the official launch of the archive and brought opportunities to engage the community on subjects of specialinterest.
In addition to the arrangements for his archive, Ellsberg joins the University of Massachusetts – Amherst community as a Distinguished Researcher at the W.E.B. Du Bois Library and a Distinguished Research Fellow at the university’s Political Economy Research Institute(PERI) . Two
videos from Ellsberg’s PERI presentations in October 2019: —A lecture applying economic insights to the psychology of war planning: “The Dollar Auction, Unendable Wars, and Gambling withCatastrophe.”
(10/23/19)
—A panel discussionwith Ellsberg, Gar
Alperovitz and Janaki Tschanner following a showing of “The Most Dangerous Man in America ,” a documentary film about Ellsberg. (10/28/19)Continue Reading
April 12, 2020 by Michael Ellsberg__
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DANIEL ELLSBERG INTERVIEWED BY NEW YORK MAGAZINE Andrew Rice interviewed Daniel Ellsberg for a profile in New YorkMagazine
.
Here are some passages: “Keeping secrets was my career,” Daniel Ellsberg says. “I didn’t lose the aptitude for that when I put out the Pentagon Papers.” This might come as a shock, considering that the former Defense Department analyst is best known for leaking classified information nearly half a century ago, thus bringing about a landmark legal precedent in favor of press freedom and, indirectly, hastening the end of both the Vietnam War and the Nixon administration. But for many years, even as Ellsberg beat prosecution, became a peace activist, and wrote an autobiography titled Secrets, he still had something remarkable left to disclose…. The Doomsday Machine is being published at an alarmingly relevant moment, as North Korea is seeking the capability to target the United States with nuclear missiles, and an unpredictable president, Donald Trump, has countered with threats of “fire and fury.” Experts on North Korea say that the risk of a nuclear exchange is higher than it has been in recent memory. Ellsberg, as one of the few living members of the generation of theorists who devised our nuclear strike doctrines, has been grappling with such possibilities for much of his life. “It is kind of astonishing,” he says, “that people will put up with a non-zero chance of this happening.”….“It’s like living on Vesuvius — that’s what humans do,” Ellsberg said. “That’s why I think we’re likely to go.”…. Continue Reading November 29, 2017 by Michael Ellsberg__
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SECRECY AND NATIONAL SECURITY WHISTLEBLOWING By Daniel Ellsberg (originally published in _Social Research_) I) REFLECTIONS ON SECRET-KEEPING AND IDENTITY In the “national security” area of the government–the White House, the departments of state and defense, the armed services and the “intelligence community,” along with their contractors–there is less whistleblowing than in other departments of the executive branch or in private corporations. This despite the frequency of misguided practices and policies within these particular agencies that are both more well-concealed and more catastrophic than elsewhere, and thus even more needful of unauthorized exposure. The mystique of secrecy in the universe of national security, even beyond the formal apparatus of classification and clearances, is a compelling deterrent to whistleblowing and thus to effective resistance to gravely wrongful or dangerous policies. In this realm, telling secrets appears unpatriotic, even traitorous. That reflects the general presumption–even though it is very commonly false–that the secrecy is aimed not at domestic, bureaucratic or political rivals or the American public but at foreign, powerful enemies, and that breaching it exposes the country, its people and its troops to danger. Even those insiders who have come to understand that the presumption is frequently false and that particular facts are being wrongly and dangerously kept secret not so much from foreigners but from Congress, courts or the public are strongly inhibited from speaking out by an internalized commitment to keep official secrets from outsiders, which they have promised to do as a condition of employment or access.Continue Reading
January 8, 2013 by Michael Ellsberg__
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ENDING NUCLEAR TERRORISM: BY AMERICA AND OTHERSLong
after the ending of the Cold War, the chance that some nuclear weapons will kill masses of innocent humans somewhere, before very long, may well be higher than it was before the fall of the Berlin Wall. One phase of the Nuclear Age, the period of superpower arms race and confrontation, has indeed come to a close (though the possibility of all-out, omnicidal exchange of alert forces triggered by a false alarm remains, inexcusably, well above zero). But another dangerous phase now looms, the era of nuclear proliferation and with it, an increased likelihood of regional nuclear wars, accidents, and nuclear terrorism.Continue Reading
August 6, 2009 by Michael Ellsberg__
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WHEN THE LEADERS ARE THE PROBLEMDr.
Gerstein’s final chapter has given guidelines for leaders on how they might avert the kinds of catastrophes described in this book. It would be good for society (and all organizations) if more leaders exhibited this kind of concern and followed the suggestions he gives. However, in my own experience in government, and in my study of national security policy catastrophes in the decades since, I have come to believe that the most dangerous practices in the national security realm reflect priorities, in general, that are set by top officials: getting reelected, avoiding condemnation for past actions, or other political or bureaucratic objectives. Those priorities generally take great precedence over safety or preventing public harm.Continue Reading
July 14, 2009 by Michael Ellsberg__
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LEARNING FROM PAST DISASTERS, PREVENTING FUTURE ONESI
have participated in several major organizational catastrophes. The most well known of them is the Vietnam War. I was aware on my first visit to Vietnam in 1961 that the situation there – a failing neocolonial regime we had installed as a successor to French rule – was a sure loser in which we should not become further involved. Yet a few years later, I found myself participating as a high-level staffer in a policy process that lied both the public and Congress into a war that, unbeknownst to me at the time, experts inside the government accurately predicted would lead to catastrophe. Continue Reading July 13, 2009 by Michael Ellsberg__
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DANIEL ELLSBERG AT GOOGLE Daniel spoke to employees of Google on August 22nd, 2008 for their Authors@Google series. September 9, 2008 by Michael Ellsberg__
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OUTTAKES: “SECRETS: A MEMOIR OF VIETNAM AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS” In order to keep_ Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers_ to a reasonable length, some worthy pieces did not make the final cut. Here are some sections, scenes, and snippets that would have made it into the book if space had not been a consideration. First Use of B-52s in Vietnam Ellsberg’s account of “the first time in the war. . . had the sharp, sudden sense the people was working with were mad.”Mary, 1969
Ellsberg’s description of involving his daughter Mary in copying the Pentagon Papers. (This outtake is included in the paperback edition.) Boston Federal Building, May 1971 A vignette of Ellsberg’s participation in civil disobedience with Howard Zinn, outside of the Boston Federal Building, May 1971Speer
Ellsberg reflects on comments he made after his arrest, concerning the responsibility of officials in a criminal war.Additional Notes
Additional notes and commentary on _Secrets_, including anecdotes, explanation, analysis, and historical details not included in thebook.
November 24, 2002 by Michael Ellsberg__
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PREVIOUSLY UNPUBLISHED PAPERS AND MEMOS DISCUSSED IN “SECRETS: A MEMOIR OF VIETNAM AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS” (These previously unpublished papers and documents written by Daniel Ellsberg were discussed in Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and thePentagon Papers
.
The numbers in parentheses refer to the pages of _Secrets_ in which the paper or memo is discussed.)(pp.
88-97)
Draft Speech for Secretary McNamaraJuly 22, 1965
(pp. 106-108)
Memo to General Lansdale: Mission Council MeetingJuly
25, 1966
(p. 169)
Memo to General Lansdale: The Challenge of Corruption in South Vietnam,
November 23, 1965
(pp. 176-177)
Memo for the Record: Ky’s Candidacy and the Upcoming Elections, May 4, 1967
(pp. 236-243, 275, 367-368, 384, 416-417, 432-437, 451) Draft of NSSM-1 Questions, January 1969
(p. 246)
Infeasible Aims and the Politics of Stalemate, August
1969
(pp. 281-282, 310-322) Letter to the New York Times, October 8,
1969
(pp. 282-283)
Letter to Charles Bolté, September 23,
1969
(p. 334)
Revolutionary Judo
,
January 1970
Other Vietnam Memos and Documents: Some Prospects and Problems in Vietnam, February
1968
Critical Postures on U.S. Decision-Making in Vietnam, June 1960
Vu Van Thai on U.S. Aims and Interventions in Vietnam, July
1969
Some Lessons from Failure in Vietnam, July 1969
On Pacification
,
July 1969
U.S. Policy and the Politics of Others, July 1969
Notes on Vietnam Policy: A Strategy for Dissent, January
1970
Escalating in a Quagmire, February
1970
“Coercive Diplomacy” in Light of Vietnam,
November 1970
Reflections on Vietnam Policy November 24, 2002 by Ellsberg.Net__
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THE SECRET HISTORY OF THE BOMB: DANIEL ELLSBERG INTERVIEWED IN ESQUIRE Rick Perlstein interviewed Daniel Ellsberg in Esquire.
Here are some highlights pertaining to Kim Jong Un and nuclearweapons:
Ellsberg: The war games we run against North Korea, which have been leaked, are always described as involving “decapitation.” And there have been news stories about the South Koreans developing a special “decapitation team.” Now, what can we expect? First, we can be virtually certain that Kim Jong Un has made provisions so that it would not paralyze his system just to kill him. That’s true of every nuclear state. But now let me add something that’s much less obvious. I’m pretty convinced—this is speculation, but it’s based on history and experience—that Kim has, in fact, also made provisions for massive retaliation if he is killed. A “dead hand”system….
The American people are being led to believe that they have to fear a surprise attack from Kim, which is crazy. It would be an act of self- annihilation if he did that. What he wants is a deterrent. Trump is threatening to do something crazy. Now, unfortunately, that doesn’t mean that it’s totally incredible. Both sides are cultivating an image of impulsivity and backing it up with a readiness to use massive force. It really does have a chance of blowing up, and that’s the theme of my book. We should not be talking about or threatening or preparing to go to war against Kim Jong Un any more than he should be preparing to go to war against us. What does that leave? Negotiation. November 23, 2017 by Michael Ellsberg__
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THE 1958 TAIWAN STRAIT CRISIS – QUEMOY The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis (Quemoy Study) by Morton Halperin, 1966 (unredacted version) Draft Notes on the Taiwan Straits / Offshore Islands Crisis (QuemoyStudy)
by Daniel Ellsberg (Feb. 1963) PACAF Report on Taiwan Quemoy Operation by Daniel Ellsberg (1963) _From Daniel Ellsberg:_
I consulted with my friend Morton Halperin when he began the research for this study, I believe, in 1963. Having participated myself in the Cuban Missile Crisis a few months earlier, I spent most of 1963 and the first half of 1964 doing research on nuclear crises at the RAND corporation in Santa Monica, California, for which Halperin was a consultant. When I joined the Defense Department as a full time employee in August 1964, as special assistant to the assistant secretary of defence for international security affairs (ISA), my purpose was really to pursue my investigation of this subject, in the hopes of reducing the chance of nuclear war in the future. When Halperin completed his study at the end of 1966, my Draft Notes on the Offshore Islands Crisis of 1963 were a product of my consultation with Halperin in February 1963. In the mid ’60s, the crisis over Quemoy and Matsu, Offshore Islands in the Taiwan Strait—which is variously described as the Offshore Islands (OSI) Crisis, the Quemoy Crisis, or in the title of Halperin’s study “The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisis”—was not generally perceived as having been a nuclear crisis, despite the fears expressed publicly by politicians and commentators that it could possibly have erupted into nuclear war. What Halperin discovered in his classified (Top Secret) study was that the nuclear dimensions of this confrontation were taken very seriously by the Eisenhower administration, and in particular the military advisers and commanders involved. Indeed, Christian Herter, who succeeded John Foster Dulles as Secretary of State, was reported to have said later, “The Cuban Missile Crisis is often described as the first serious nuclear crisis; those of us who lived through the Quemoy crisis definitely regarded that as the first serious nuclear crisis.” The reasons for this will be obvious every few pages of this study. November 23, 2017 by Ellsberg.Net__
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BASIC NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY (BNSP) Daniel Ellsberg’s Draft of the BNSP, May 9, 1961 (unredacted, from Ellsberg’s files) Daniel Ellsberg’s Draft of the BNSP, May 9, 1961 (redacted; declassified by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 5/9/83) Parts of the same draft, obtained by the National Security Archive viaFOIA, 1999
Ellsberg’s notes on the BNSP—notes written 1961, typed 1976 November 22, 2017 by Ellsberg.Net__
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DOCUMENTS REFERENCED IN “THE DOOMSDAY MACHINE”_Referenced in: _
INTRODUCTION
* Strategic Objectives and Command and Control Problems by Daniel Ellsberg (1960) * “A Year of Disobedience and a Criticality of Consciousness”– Preface,
Testimony, and Afterword by Daniel Ellsberg (1973)CHAPTER 2
* The 1958 Taiwan Straits Crisisby Morton
Halperin (1966)
CHAPTER 8
* Basic National Security Plan (BNSP)CHAPTER 20
P. 310: Lecture Series on “The Art of Coercion: A Study of Threats in Economic Conflict and War,” 1959 * The Theory and Practice of Blackmail November 20, 2017 by Michael Ellsberg__
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