After
the inauguration of John F. Kennedy as the thirty-fifth president on January
20, 1961, Washington, D.C., appeared to be “suffused with an atmosphere of
youth, of vigor, of hope,” noted John Bartlow Martin, who had worked as a
speechwriter on Kennedy’s presidential campaign. Martin credited the transformation
to the young president.
The
new administration included many people Martin had known during his days with
Adlai Stevenson’s two unsuccessful presidential campaigns, and his time as a
Kennedy speechwriter. Although bitterly disappointed at being passed over for
the Secretary of State position that had gone instead to Dean Rusk, Stevenson
had accepted a job as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Stevenson’s
law partners also joined the administration, with Newton Minow serving as
chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, Bill Wirtz as undersecretary
of labor, and Bill Blair as ambassador to Denmark. Theodore Sorensen, Pierre
Salinger, Richard Goodwin, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., and Kenny O’Donnell were on
the White House staff, while Robert F. Kennedy joined his brother’s Cabinet as
attorney general. “Never before had I known so many important people in an
administration,” said Martin. “It was an aspect of political campaigning to
which I had given no thought.”
After
the turmoil of the campaign season, Martin had relaxed with his wife Fran by
vacationing in Puerto Rico, paid for by a public relations company promoting
the commonwealth. The firm hoped Martin might write about his experiences there
for the Saturday Evening Post. “I
checked with the Post then went,” he
said. Martin found no story there, which did not bother his hosts, as they were
patient; Martin did later write some articles about Puerto Rico. When he and
Fran were about to leave, he suggested that on their way home they should visit
the Dominican Republic—a place Martin had not been to since the winter of 1937–38,
on a trip with his first wife, Barbara. “I had always wanted to go [back],”
Martin noted, “for I had liked the Dominican Republic and its people better
than any other in the Caribbean, but, since I had published my anti-Trujillo
piece [in Ken magazine] I had not
thought it entirely safe.”
Although Rafael Trujillo continued to maintain an iron grip on the country and its people,
Martin thought he might be safe because of his connection to the Kennedy
administration. He took no chances, however, writing letters to Schlesinger and
Sorensen in the White House giving them his detailed itinerary and letting them
know when he and Fran expected to return. Because he entered the country as a
journalist, and expected Trujillo’s secret police to search his hotel room, he
kept carbon copies of his letters to the White House in his briefcase, hoping
to forestall any reprisals for his previous supposed transgressions against the
dictator.
The Martins
spent a week in the Dominican Republic, visiting tourist sites and, more
quietly, talking to people and getting their insights and opinions about
Trujillo’s reign. The entire country, especially its capital, Ciudad Trujillo (Trujillo City), named by
the dictator after himself, appeared to be “unusually tense,” according to
Martin. Upon his safe return to the United States, Martin produced a memorandum
about Trujillo, the country, the effect of economic and diplomatic sanctions
imposed on Trujillo by the Organization of American States after the dictator
had dispatched agents to assassinate Venezuelan president Rómulo Betancourt,
and the possibility of subversion inspired or instigated by Fidel
Castro’s Communist government in Cuba. Once he finished the memo, Martin sent
it off to Schlesinger.
Refreshed
by his trip, Martin returned to producing well-researched stories for such
national magazines as the Post and Look, including a four-part series on
how the Midwest had changed in the years since the end of World War II and an
in-depth examination of an obviously disturbed young New Jersey man who had murdered
someone after receiving little or no help from his school and a state hospital.
They were good stories, Martin noted, but he realized that he had begun to
repeat himself; the Midwest series seemed to mirror what he had done on Muncie,
Indiana, so long ago for Harper’s magazine.
“It was getting too easy, too expectable,” he said. “I have always worked best
when I worked against a resistance, writing something new, something hard.”
Martin
began wondering if it was perhaps time for him to take a risk with his career. This
restlessness might have been fueled in part by an offer broached by Schlesinger,
who asked him if he might be interested in serving as ambassador to
Switzerland. A startled Martin said he knew little about that country, but
believed it was “a rather dull place.” He also demurred about serving as America’s
top diplomat in Morocco, whose ruler, he noted, still cut off the hands of
thieves—“not a pleasant prospect.” Undisturbed at his friend’s rebuffs, Schlesinger
advised him to take time and think more about the job offers, as it was hard to
find capable people to staff the new administration.
A
dramatic event changed the course of Martin’s career. On May 30 on a road
outside of Ciudad Trujillo, then the
capital of the Dominican Republic, seven assassins ambushed and killed the
dictator. Those directly involved in the dictator’s killing, and the other
conspirators, had all previously been associated with Trujillo’s rule and were
inspired in their action by everything from patriotism to revenge. The murder sparked
retaliation from Trujillo’s relatives and remaining supporters, who tracked down
and killed all but two of the assassins. The country slowly plunged into chaos
as rival groups, including Trujillo’s son, Ramfis, and the dictator’s puppet president,
Joaquín Balaguer, jockeyed for control. Democratic elements in the Republic took
to the streets to seek the removal of the dictator’s family from the country
once and for all.
The news of Trujillo’s fall from power prompted
Martin to ask Fran, while they sat on their home’s back porch having a drink,
“How would you like to be the wife of the ambassador to the Dominican
Republic?” Although he had not spent a lot of time thinking about what
Schlesinger had earlier said about being an ambassador, the chance to establish
true democracy in the Dominican Republic after thirty-one years of Trujillo’s despotism had inspired
Martin to start thinking about seeking a diplomatic post. It also marked a
chance to be a part of the Kennedy administration’s Alianza para el Progreso (Alliance for Progress)—a program
for economic aid and political reform instituted shortly after Kennedy had
taken office to do for countries in Latin America what the Marshall Plan had
done for Europe following World War II. Kennedy said the Alliance represented a
“vast cooperative effort, unparalleled in magnitude and nobility of purpose,”
to satisfy such basic needs in Latin America as homes, work, land, health, and
schools.
At the back of the president’s mind was the fear that the region,
ripe for revolution, might embrace communism as Cuba had done when Fidel Castro
overthrew pro-American dictator Fulgencio Batista. Kennedy told his aide
Richard Goodwin, who worked to fashion many of the Alliance’s details, that the
“whole place could blow up on us,” and considered the region to be, for his
administration, the “most dangerous place in the world.” In the aftermath of
Trujillo’s killing, Kennedy saw three possibilities for the Republic—the
development of a democratic regime, a continuation of the government
established by Trujillo, or the growth of a Castro-style leadership. “We ought
to aim for the first,” the president told his aides, “but we can’t really
renounce the second until we are sure that we can avoid the third.”
Martin
called Schlesinger to express his interest in becoming the American ambassador
to the Republic, and Schlesinger appeared enthusiastic about the suggestion,
but cautioned patience. The Kennedy administration had yet to decide whether to
send a new ambassador; the United States had cut diplomatic ties with Trujillo on August 26, 1960, and OAS
sanctions against the Republic were still in force following the dictator’s
assassination.
As he later wrote Schlesinger, Martin believed he was
particularly equipped for the job because he possessed a longstanding interest
in the country, had written about it, studied it, and visited there. “I love it
and its people and would like to help it realize its potentialities,” wrote
Martin. “What is more, it seems to me that if somebody with my experience can
serve this country abroad, it is primarily because he can do legwork, can find
out what is going on; and the Dominican Republic seems to me to be a place
where it could be a good idea to have someone who can do legwork.”
In June 1961 Martin met with Robert Kennedy, who
had become increasingly involved in foreign affairs on his brother’s behalf
since the Bay of Pigs disaster, at a fund-raising dinner. Before the dinner and
after, Martin met with Kennedy in his room to talk about the Dominican post.
“In brief,” Martin wrote Fran about the meeting, “he was for my appointment and
was sure the President would favor it and he would get busy on ‘working something
out’ and we would keep in touch.”
Kennedy did tell Martin that there existed
strong opposition within the government, especially within the State
Department, on recognizing the new regime and nothing would happen anytime
soon. Even if the administration decided to send an ambassador, the State
Department was certain to have its own candidate in mind for the job. “This is
all a long way from happening,” Martin wrote. “But I would think that tonight’s
conversations moved the affair out of the realm of day dreaming and into the
possible. I couldn’t be more pleased.”
Other members of the administration offered their
support for Martin, including Chester Bowles, undersecretary of state, who
wrote Schlesinger that Martin, whom he knew from Stevenson’s 1952 and 1956
presidential campaigns, would make “an excellent ambassador to the Dominican
Republic when and if we restore normal relations.” Robert Kennedy spoke
directly to Rusk about Martin’s wishes for a diplomatic assignment, and Kennedy
told Martin that the Secretary of State appeared to be “enthusiastic about it.”
Schlesinger informed Martin that support had been coming in “from even the
remote precincts,” and jokingly said that “we confidently expect your
nomination on the fourth ballot.”
Although Stevenson had initially questioned whether
Martin might be a good choice when asked by Schlesinger, saying he would have
to first think about it for a time, he eventually wrote a letter of support on
Martin’s behalf to Rusk. In the letter, Stevenson, sounding particularly
Stevensonian, wrote: “I hear that John Bartlow Martin is under consideration
for Ambassador to the Dominican Republic. I am not sure why anybody would want
to be Ambassador to the Dominican Republic, and John has not approached me personally.
But if he wants to be, I can underline, endorse, recommend, sponsor, and get
madly enthusiastic about his appointment. I don’t know whether you know him,
but he’s a gifted writer and thoughtful student and perceptive reporter—and a
damn good liberal Democrat!”
With
no decision forthcoming from Washington, in early August Martin, accompanied by
Fran and their two sons, traveled to Three Lakes in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
for a vacation. On Friday, September 1, after a day spent exploring the dense
woods in the family’s Jeep, Martin’s friends in Michigamme, Earl Numinen and
Maurice Ball, greeted him with the news that President Kennedy had been calling
all over town trying to reach him and wanted him to return the call as soon as
possible. By the time Martin reached the White House, Kennedy had left for the
Labor Day weekend and instead he talked to the president’s brother-in-law,
Stephen E. Smith, who said Kennedy wanted Martin to travel to Washington as
soon as he could for discussions on the Dominican Republic.
Upon
his arrival in the nation’s capital, Martin met with Smith and Robert Kennedy,
who told him that the president wanted additional facts in order to deal with
the OAS sanctions against the Dominican Republic. “The main question was:
Should we urge the OAS to lift its sanctions against the Republic?” noted
Martin. “This, in effect, would mean that we regarded the sanctions as directed
against the Generalissimo personally and that, with him gone, we now accepted
his heirs as rulers of the Republic.” Kennedy wanted Martin to travel to the
Republic, learn what he could, and report back to him. Smith gave Martin a
sheaf of classified information to study and, when Martin pointed out he had no
security clearance, Smith, knowing of the urgency of the situation, told him,
“You’ve got Smith clearance—take them.”
Martin
spent a week going over the material and gaining his bearings in the State
Department before traveling to the Republic, arriving there for his
presidential fact-finding mission on September 10 and staying in the country
for three weeks. Martin, accompanied by an interpreter, Joseph G. Fandino, a
State Department career officer, did most of his work in the Republic’s two
major cities, the capital and Santiago (Martin spoke “adequate” Spanish, but
always depended upon an interpreter when conducting official business). Martin
did what he had always done in his magazine legwork, talking to all sorts of
people—businessmen, workingmen, doctors, lawyers, militant university students,
widows whose husbands had been murdered by the secret police, army officers,
government officials, leaders of the underground political parties, and
Trujillo’s son, Ramfis.
Everywhere
he went, Martin was besieged by Dominicans pleading with him for visas so they
could leave their country for the United States. The wife of a young member of
the oligarch, then in prison, spoke for many of her fellow countrymen when she
told Martin that Ramfis’s had been making a great show of democratizing the
country, but that nothing had really changed. “There’s been thirty-one years of
murder,” she said. “People now don’t want any more Trujillo. There’s a feeling
that if you don’t help us, we’ll let anyone else do it. But we don’t want to.”
She urged that the OAS sanctions remain in place. Ramfis insisted that only he
could control the military, and expressed surprise at the opposition’s
impatience with his attempts at democratization. He promised Martin that if a
clash came, the opposition, and not his supporters, “would get the worst of it.
I see the future as very, very dark.”
Trujillo’s
decades of rule had left the Republic in shambles both economically and
politically. In Martin’s estimation the worst thing the dictator had done was to
damage almost beyond repair the Dominican character, destroying the nation’s
approximately three million population’s confidence in themselves and in each
other. “Nobody trusts anybody down there,” Martin noted. “They’re afraid to
talk out loud . . . in restaurants. They whisper. To relatives, a man to his
wife.”
In his years in power Trujillo had unraveled the mutual trust that “creates
civilization,” Martin said, “the glue that holds society together.” The
dictator left behind a harmful legacy that affected the Dominican people as
they moved toward self-government, and made things extremely difficult for the
Kennedy administration as it attempted to aid the Republic through the Alliance
for Progress. “They have no confidence in themselves because for thirty-one
years they looked to the palace for everything, to Daddy [Trujillo],” lamented
Martin. “They don’t think they can do a thing.” The Republic’s history provided
little hope for future stability—between 1844 and 1930 the country had been
presided over by fifty presidents and suffered through thirty revolutions.
Upon
his return to the United States Martin produced a 115-page report for the
president and State Department outlining what he had discovered and setting out
the choices for the administration moving forward, “all bad,” he noted. Martin described
the Republic as “a sick, destroyed nation, to be viewed as one ravaged by a
thirty-years war, even one to be occupied and reconstituted.” Ramfis had begun
to enjoy the feeling of power, Martin continued, describing him as “pretty cold
and tough,” while Balaguer’s moves toward democratization were merely window
dressing; the rightist military, not the Communist left, posed the greatest
danger to establishing democracy in the country.
The
alternatives Martin proposed to Kennedy were, in a rising order of involvement
for the United States: do nothing (an impossible choice given America’s
interest in establishing a pro-western, reasonably stable, and free government
in an important region); support the regime as it then existed, which would
cost the United States “the support of the Dominican people for years to come,”
Martin noted; or help establish a broad-based provisional government until,
with OAS assistance, free elections could be held, and negotiate Ramfis out of
his economic power and out of the country.
If
the last option, the one Martin supported, was selected, the Kennedy
administration would also have to be prepared to loan the Republic funds to get
its economy on track and send in numerous civil and military missions to
establish order. “It amounted,” Martin said of this final choice, “to
negotiating the Trujillos out if possible and, if not, throwing them out. I
recommended sending a high-level negotiator immediately and sending the fleet
to the horizon to back him up.” The political risks in this option were extreme
for Kennedy because, if the administration tried, but failed, to establish
democracy in the Republic, it faced the danger of “another Castro in the
Caribbean,” noted Martin.
On
October 5 Martin and a host of administration officials, including Rusk,
Goodwin, Schlesinger, as well as representatives from the Central Intelligence
Agency and Alliance for Progress, met with President Kennedy in the Cabinet
Room at the White House. As Kennedy came into the room and gestured for those
waiting for him to be seated at the long, gleaming, six-sided cabinet table, he
saw Martin and said to him, “I’ve been reading your novel, John.” A speed
reader, Kennedy had perused Martin’s report, according to Schlesinger, “with
relish” while he also listened to a World Series game between the New York
Yankees and Cincinnati Reds.
Kennedy
told those gathered that none of the alternatives looked attractive, and asked
questions as they discussed the issue. State Department officials George Ball
and George McGhee had worked out a plan whereby the Trujillos would deed their
vast land holdings to the Republic, and in return the United States would help
the Dominican government raise the needed funds to pay off the dictator’s
family.
In
the end, Kennedy adopted the proposal Martin had recommended, and sent McGhee
directly from the White House to the airport to put the policy into action. As
Martin left the meeting to return home to Highland Park, Kennedy thanked him for
his work. “Seeing President Kennedy made you feel good all the rest of the day
and for several days thereafter,” noted Martin. “There was hope. If ever a man was a leader, John F. Kennedy was.” Of
course, the policy chosen by the president meant that the United States would
not be sending an ambassador, Martin or anyone else for that matter, to the
Republic for quite some time—a fact he explained to Fran in talking about his
trip.
Although
negotiations in the Republic started well, and agreement appeared to have been
reached with the Trujillos to leave the country, the Dominican armed forces
balked and threatened a coup against the Balaguer government. Sporadic rioting
broke out and troops began shooting students in the streets, the secret police
continued a campaign of terror against those viewed as enemies of the state,
and two of Ramfis’s uncle returned from “vacations” abroad to take matters into
their own hands.
Moving
swiftly, Kennedy dispatched a fleet of American warships to the Republic; the
fleet sailed just offshore of the capital, ready to support Balaguer if he
needed help in stopping a military coup. “The day we sent the fleet,” said
Martin, “is the only time in our recent history, so far as I can recall, when
we threw our weight, including the threat of force, solidly against a rightist
dictatorship.” After further unrest and military uprisings, including strikes
and looting in the capital, Ramfis flew to Paris, followed by the body of his
father; Bonnelly succeeded Balaguer as president; the United States and a
number of Latin American nations recognized the new Council of State, which
took power on January 1, 1962, and was charged with leading the country until
democratic elections could be held; and the OAS lifted its sanctions.
As
matters reached a climax in the Republic, Martin poured over reports about the
negotiations he had received from his friends in the State Department and White
House. The Council’s establishment finally gave the American government a
chance to do something positive in the Caribbean after the crushing failure of
the CIA-sponosred Bay of Pigs operation. Because of Trujillo’s damaging
influence, the country had no experience with democracy or politics, noted
Martin. “They realize this,” he said of the Dominicans. “They seek guidance. If
we do not provide it, the communists will. Now we have what may be a last
chance to teach the moderate Dominicans how to lead.”
Martin
remembered a conversation he had during his fact-finding mission with a young
Dominican lawyer, ignorant of politics, who wanted to form a new political
party and had asked him for copies of the U.S. Constitution and political party
platforms. When Martin suggested that the lawyer obtain the documents at the
library, the Dominican had looked at him “as though I’d lost my mind—didn’t I
know Trujillo hadn’t allowed such subversive material into the Republic?” Appointing
an ambassador to the Republic, Martin added, would show America’s moral support
for the Council, and “symbolize our intention to offer it political as well as
economic aid. It would give us a fresh start to match the regime’s fresh start.
. . . Only an ambassador can make America’s purpose clear.” Martin wanted to be
that ambassador.
With
the way now seemingly clear for the Kennedy administration to send a new
diplomat to the Republic, however, Martin received some disappointing news from
Ball—the State Department had a candidate of its own, a career Foreign Service
officer. Instead of the position in the Caribbean, Ball offered Martin a post
as ambassador to the newly independent African nation of Tanganyika (today the
United Republic of Tanzania). A frustrated Martin traveled to Washington to
personally lobby for the Dominican post with administration officials, talking
with Ball and Minow, who advised him to seek help directly from Robert Kennedy.
According
to Martin, Minow had earlier told Kennedy that Martin badly wanted the
Dominican position, and Kennedy had responded, “But John knows he can have any
job in this administration he wants.” Martin went to Kennedy’s office in the
Justice Department and arranged to meet with the attorney general. “I’ve never
asked you for anything in my life, Bobby,” Martin said in the meeting, “but I
want the ambassadorship to the Dominican Republic, and they’re about to give it
to the [State] Department’s candidate.” Kennedy looked at him “for a long
time,” then told Martin he would speak to the president on his behalf.
Martin
waited in the apartment of his friend, Congressman Sidney Yates of Chicago, to learn
about his fate. After six days, he received a call from a deputy undersecretary
of state for administration telling him he was being appointed as the U.S.
ambassador to the Dominican Republic and he should come to his office to start filling
out the necessary paperwork. It marked quite a change for the forty-six year
old, self-employed, freelance writer. “I’m going to have a job and a
boss—something I haven’t had for 25 years,” Martin noted.
After
being confirmed by the U.S. Senate and sworn into office by McGhee, Martin paid
a courtesy call at the White House on President Kennedy, who, from the first,
acknowledged that the new ambassador’s job would not be an easy one. The two
men discussed the problems facing the Republic and Kennedy noted his intent to
send Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson to the Republic for a visit in mid-April
(later postponed), warning Martin that he did not want any riots to occur
during Johnson’s stay. On more than one occasion the president said Martin
should let him know directly if he needed anything. As Kennedy showed Martin
out the door, he displayed his well-known mordant wit, saying to Martin, “If
you blow this, you’d better not come home.”
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