Press kit for With Honor


With Honor press kit | Press release | Blurbs | Reviews | Author's bio | Author's photo | Cover image | Excerpt

 

With Honor
Melvin Laird in War, Peace, and Politics
Dale Van Atta
Foreword by President Gerald R. Ford
Publication date April 2008
LC: 2007040159 E
648 pp.    6 x 9    40 b/w illus.
ISBN-13: 978-0-299-22680-0 
Cloth $35.00 t

Press Release


Blurbs:

“[Laird] exemplifies a blend of principle and pragmatism that is sorely needed in our country today.”—President Gerald R. Ford

“Historians, journalists, and other observers have become so entangled in debates about Kennedy and Johnson in the 1960s, and Nixon and Kissinger in the 1970s, that they have neglected the formidable role of Melvin Laird. This clearly written biography will rectify that oversight.”—Jeremi Suri, author of Henry Kissinger and the American Century

“Watching Laird operate, I sometimes wondered if Nixon realized what he had gotten when he picked Laird.”—Bob Schieffer, commentator on CBS’s Face the Nation

Reviews:

[Will be posted as they become available]

Excerpt

“The last job Melvin Laird wanted in the fall of 1968 was that of secretary of defense. The Vietnam War was at its bloody apex, and public support for the war was at its nadir. Richard Nixon had just been elected president of the United States based on a rumored “secret plan” to end the war. But Laird knew his old friend Nixon had no such plan. The only plan was to scour the ranks of the unwilling and find someone to be secretary of defense, someone who would then figure out how to pull the
United States from the Vietnam quagmire.

Laird had just been elected to his ninth term in Congress representing his beloved state of Wisconsin, and there was no place he would rather be than in the House of Representatives. Since the election, Nixon had leaned heavily on Laird to help him find a defense secretary, preferably a Democrat for the sake of interparty relations. Laird proposed Senator Henry “Scoop” Jackson of Washington. He was a hawkish advocate of strong military power as well as conservative about national security. Jackson was willing to consider the job, but when he went to a Democratic retreat in Hawaii and told
some of his friends about it, Senator Edward Kennedy tore into him.  . . . Jackson phoned Nixon from Hawaii with his regrets. It was December, and the press was clamoring for Nixon’s cabinet slate. He turned his wrath on Laird over the Jackson debacle and ordered Laird to come to the annual meeting of the Republican Governors Association at Palm Springs, California, where the two of them would work on the problem. “You got me into this mess. You’re going to damn well fix it!” Nixon told Laird.

Laird was in the greatest quandary of his life as he boarded Nixon’s jet for the return trip to D.C. Ford was on the plane, as was veteran political operative Bryce Harlow, whom Nixon had named as his legislative affairs liaison. Harlow had joined Laird in lobbying for Jackson for defense secretary, and Nixon’s opening blast was directed at both advisors. “You sons of bitches!” Nixon sputtered. “You talked me into this thing with Scoop and now he’s backed out.” Then he turned on Laird. “There’s only one way to fix this—I’m going to announce YOU for defense secretary!”

“The hell you are!” Laird countered. “I’m not going to leave Congress.” During an extended debate on the cross-country flight, Laird outlined reasons why it would be better for the new administration if he remained in Congress. Nixon’s response is summed up in a letter he later wrote to Laird: “I made the hard sell—even though a friend was involved. I know this was a terribly difficult decision for you to make, but you were the indispensable man—the right man for the right place, at the right time.”—from the prologue, With Honor


Author's Bio:

Dale Van Atta is the author of Trust Betrayed: Inside the AARP and, with Jack Anderson, Stormin’ Norman: An American Hero. He lives in Washington, D.C.

For more information, in addition to this press kit, contact Chris Caldwell, our publicity manager, phone: (608) 263-0734, email: publicity@uwpress.wisc.edu

[Return to the book page for With Honor]

Cover image:

The cover of the UW Press title With Honor is illustrated with a photo of Melvin Laird

This cover image can be downloaded and used in any web-based publicity for this book.
For a 300 dpi version, click here.

Author Photo:


A black and white 72 dpi web-ready image of the author, DAle Van Atta

This image can be downloaded and used in any web-based publicity for this book. For a 300 dpi version, click here. It is provided courtesy of United Feature Syndicate.

Other photos:

this photo of Laird in front of a chart on Vietnamization. .
Melvin Laird illustrating the rate of troop withdrawals. From the personal collection of Melvin Laird. © 2007, private collection of Melvin Laird. For use in publicity for this book only.

This photo of Melvin Laird with South Vietnamese General Ngo Quang Truong is in the book, and is used with permission, from Melvin Laird's personal collection. © 2007, private collection of Melvin Laird.

This photo of Melvin Laird with South Vietnamese General Ngo Quang Truong is in the book, and is used with permission, from Melvin Laird's personal collection. © 2007, private collection of Melvin Laird. For use in publicity for this book only.

This photo of Melvin Laird in conversation with Henry Kissinger is used with permission, from Melvin Laird's personal collection. © 2007, private collection of Melvin Laird.
This photo of Melvin Laird in conversation with Henry Kissinger is used with permission, from Melvin Laird's personal collection. © 2007, private collection of Melvin Laird. For use in publicity for this book only.

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Updated January 7, 2008

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