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The President and the Press
Address before the
American Newspaper Publishers
Association
President John F.
Kennedy
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel
New York City, April
27, 1961
Mr. Chairman, ladies
and gentlemen:
I appreciate very
much your generous invitation to be here
tonight.
You bear heavy
responsibilities these days and an
article I read some time ago reminded me
of how particularly heavily the burdens
of present day events bear upon your
profession.
You may remember that
in 1851 the New York Herald Tribune
under the sponsorship and publishing of
Horace Greeley, employed as its London
correspondent an obscure journalist by
the name of Karl Marx.
We are told that
foreign correspondent Marx, stone broke,
and with a family ill and
undernourished, constantly appealed to
Greeley and managing editor Charles Dana
for an increase in his munificent salary
of $5 per installment, a salary which he
and Engels ungratefully labeled as the
"lousiest petty bourgeois cheating."
But when all his
financial appeals were refused, Marx
looked around for other means of
livelihood and fame, eventually
terminating his relationship with the
Tribune and devoting his talents full
time to the cause that would bequeath
the world the seeds of Leninism,
Stalinism, revolution and the cold war.
If only this
capitalistic New York newspaper had
treated him more kindly; if only Marx
had remained a foreign correspondent,
history might have been different. And I
hope all publishers will bear this
lesson in mind the next time they
receive a poverty-stricken appeal for a
small increase in the expense account
from an obscure newspaper man.
I have selected as
the title of my remarks tonight "The
President and the Press." Some may
suggest that this would be more
naturally worded "The President Versus
the Press." But those are not my
sentiments tonight.
It is true, however,
that when a well-known diplomat from
another country demanded recently that
our State Department repudiate certain
newspaper attacks on his colleague it
was unnecessary for us to reply that
this Administration was not responsible
for the press, for the press had already
made it clear that it was not
responsible for this Administration.
Nevertheless, my
purpose here tonight is not to deliver
the usual assault on the so-called one
party press. On the contrary, in recent
months I have rarely heard any
complaints about political bias in the
press except from a few Republicans. Nor
is it my purpose tonight to discuss or
defend the televising of Presidential
press conferences. I think it is highly
beneficial to have some 20,000,000
Americans regularly sit in on these
conferences to observe, if I may say so,
the incisive, the intelligent and the
courteous qualities displayed by your
Washington correspondents.
Nor, finally, are
these remarks intended to examine the
proper degree of privacy which the press
should allow to any President and his
family.
If in the last few
months your White House reporters and
photographers have been attending church
services with regularity, that has
surely done them no harm.
On the other hand, I
realize that your staff and wire service
photographers may be complaining that
they do not enjoy the same green
privileges at the local golf courses
that they once did.
It is true that my
predecessor did not object as I do to
pictures of one's golfing skill in
action. But neither on the other hand
did he ever bean a Secret Service man.
My topic tonight is a
more sober one of concern to publishers
as well as editors.
I want to talk about
our common responsibilities in the face
of a common danger. The events of recent
weeks may have helped to illuminate that
challenge for some; but the dimensions
of its threat have loomed large on the
horizon for many years. Whatever our
hopes may be for the future--for
reducing this threat or living with
it--there is no escaping either the
gravity or the totality of its challenge
to our survival and to our security--a
challenge that confronts us in
unaccustomed ways in every sphere of
human activity.
This deadly challenge
imposes upon our society two
requirements of direct concern both to
the press and to the President--two
requirements that may seem almost
contradictory in tone, but which must be
reconciled and fulfilled if we are to
meet this national peril. I refer,
first, to the need for a far greater
public information; and, second, to the
need for far greater official secrecy.
I
The very word
"secrecy" is repugnant in a free and
open society; and we are as a people
inherently and historically opposed to
secret societies, to secret oaths and to
secret proceedings. We decided long ago
that the dangers of excessive and
unwarranted concealment of pertinent
facts far outweighed the dangers which
are cited to justify it. Even today,
there is little value in opposing the
threat of a closed society by imitating
its arbitrary restrictions. Even today,
there is little value in insuring the
survival of our nation if our traditions
do not survive with it. And there is
very grave danger that an announced need
for increased security will be seized
upon by those anxious to expand its
meaning to the very limits of official
censorship and concealment. That I do
not intend to permit to the extent that
it is in my control. And no official of
my Administration, whether his rank is
high or low, civilian or military,
should interpret my words here tonight
as an excuse to censor the news, to
stifle dissent, to cover up our mistakes
or to withhold from the press and the
public the facts they deserve to know.
But I do ask every
publisher, every editor, and every
newsman in the nation to reexamine his
own standards, and to recognize the
nature of our country's peril. In time
of war, the government and the press
have customarily joined in an effort
based largely on self-discipline, to
prevent unauthorized disclosures to the
enemy. In time of "clear and present
danger," the courts have held that even
the privileged rights of the First
Amendment must yield to the public's
need for national security.
Today no war has been
declared--and however fierce the
struggle may be, it may never be
declared in the traditional fashion. Our
way of life is under attack. Those who
make themselves our enemy are advancing
around the globe. The survival of our
friends is in danger. And yet no war has
been declared, no borders have been
crossed by marching troops, no missiles
have been fired.
If the press is
awaiting a declaration of war before it
imposes the self-discipline of combat
conditions, then I can only say that no
war ever posed a greater threat to our
security. If you are awaiting a finding
of "clear and present danger," then I
can only say that the danger has never
been more clear and its presence has
never been more imminent.
It requires a change
in outlook, a change in tactics, a
change in missions--by the government,
by the people, by every businessman or
labor leader, and by every newspaper.
For we are opposed around the world by a
monolithic and ruthless conspiracy that
relies primarily on covert means for
expanding its sphere of influence--on
infiltration instead of invasion, on
subversion instead of elections, on
intimidation instead of free choice, on
guerrillas by night instead of armies by
day. It is a system which has
conscripted vast human and material
resources into the building of a tightly
knit, highly efficient machine that
combines military, diplomatic,
intelligence, economic, scientific and
political operations.
Its preparations are
concealed, not published. Its mistakes
are buried, not headlined. Its
dissenters are silenced, not praised. No
expenditure is questioned, no rumor is
printed, no secret is revealed. It
conducts the Cold War, in short, with a
war-time discipline no democracy would
ever hope or wish to match.
Nevertheless, every
democracy recognizes the necessary
restraints of national security--and the
question remains whether those
restraints need to be more strictly
observed if we are to oppose this kind
of attack as well as outright invasion.
For the facts of the
matter are that this nation's foes have
openly boasted of acquiring through our
newspapers information they would
otherwise hire agents to acquire through
theft, bribery or espionage; that
details of this nation's covert
preparations to counter the enemy's
covert operations have been available to
every newspaper reader, friend and foe
alike; that the size, the strength, the
location and the nature of our forces
and weapons, and our plans and strategy
for their use, have all been pinpointed
in the press and other news media to a
degree sufficient to satisfy any foreign
power; and that, in at least in one
case, the publication of details
concerning a secret mechanism whereby
satellites were followed required its
alteration at the expense of
considerable time and money.
The newspapers which
printed these stories were loyal,
patriotic, responsible and well-meaning.
Had we been engaged in open warfare,
they undoubtedly would not have
published such items. But in the absence
of open warfare, they recognized only
the tests of journalism and not the
tests of national security. And my
question tonight is whether additional
tests should not now be adopted.
The question is for
you alone to answer. No public official
should answer it for you. No
governmental plan should impose its
restraints against your will. But I
would be failing in my duty to the
nation, in considering all of the
responsibilities that we now bear and
all of the means at hand to meet those
responsibilities, if I did not commend
this problem to your attention, and urge
its thoughtful consideration.
On many earlier
occasions, I have said--and your
newspapers have constantly said--that
these are times that appeal to every
citizen's sense of sacrifice and
self-discipline. They call out to every
citizen to weigh his rights and comforts
against his obligations to the common
good. I cannot now believe that those
citizens who serve in the newspaper
business consider themselves exempt from
that appeal.
I have no intention
of establishing a new Office of War
Information to govern the flow of news.
I am not suggesting any new forms of
censorship or any new types of security
classifications. I have no easy answer
to the dilemma that I have posed, and
would not seek to impose it if I had
one. But I am asking the members of the
newspaper profession and the industry in
this country to reexamine their own
responsibilities, to consider the degree
and the nature of the present danger,
and to heed the duty of self-restraint
which that danger imposes upon us all.
Every newspaper now
asks itself, with respect to every
story: "Is it news?" All I suggest is
that you add the question: "Is it in the
interest of the national security?" And
I hope that every group in
America--unions and businessmen and
public officials at every level-- will
ask the same question of their
endeavors, and subject their actions to
the same exacting tests.
And should the press
of America consider and recommend the
voluntary assumption of specific new
steps or machinery, I can assure you
that we will cooperate whole-heartedly
with those recommendations.
Perhaps there will be
no recommendations. Perhaps there is no
answer to the dilemma faced by a free
and open society in a cold and secret
war. In times of peace, any discussion
of this subject, and any action that
results, are both painful and without
precedent. But this is a time of peace
and peril which knows no precedent in
history.
II
It is the
unprecedented nature of this challenge
that also gives rise to your second
obligation--an obligation which I share.
And that is our obligation to inform and
alert the American people--to make
certain that they possess all the facts
that they need, and understand them as
well--the perils, the prospects, the
purposes of our program and the choices
that we face.
No President should
fear public scrutiny of his program. For
from that scrutiny comes understanding;
and from that understanding comes
support or opposition. And both are
necessary. I am not asking your
newspapers to support the
Administration, but I am asking your
help in the tremendous task of informing
and alerting the American people. For I
have complete confidence in the response
and dedication of our citizens whenever
they are fully informed.
I not only could not
stifle controversy among your readers--I
welcome it. This Administration intends
to be candid about its errors; for as a
wise man once said: "An error does not
become a mistake until you refuse to
correct it." We intend to accept full
responsibility for our errors; and we
expect you to point them out when we
miss them.
Without debate,
without criticism, no Administration and
no country can succeed--and no republic
can survive. That is why the Athenian
lawmaker Solon decreed it a crime for
any citizen to shrink from controversy.
And that is why our press was protected
by the First Amendment-- the only
business in America specifically
protected by the Constitution- -not
primarily to amuse and entertain, not to
emphasize the trivial and the
sentimental, not to simply "give the
public what it wants"--but to inform, to
arouse, to reflect, to state our dangers
and our opportunities, to indicate our
crises and our choices, to lead, mold,
educate and sometimes even anger public
opinion.
This means greater
coverage and analysis of international
news--for it is no longer far away and
foreign but close at hand and local. It
means greater attention to improved
understanding of the news as well as
improved transmission. And it means,
finally, that government at all levels,
must meet its obligation to provide you
with the fullest possible information
outside the narrowest limits of national
security--and we intend to do it.
III
It was early in the
Seventeenth Century that Francis Bacon
remarked on three recent inventions
already transforming the world: the
compass, gunpowder and the printing
press. Now the links between the nations
first forged by the compass have made us
all citizens of the world, the hopes and
threats of one becoming the hopes and
threats of us all. In that one world's
efforts to live together, the evolution
of gunpowder to its ultimate limit has
warned mankind of the terrible
consequences of failure.
And so it is to the
printing press--to the recorder of man's
deeds, the keeper of his conscience, the
courier of his news--that we look for
strength and assistance, confident that
with your help man will be what he was
born to be: free and independent.
President John F.
Kennedy
April 27, 1961
Source :
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and
Museum
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