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Johnson made a commitment to the Civil Rights Act, he would do everything needed to get it passed, even if it tied up the Government for months (it did, the Senate did NOTHING but the Civil Rights act for the three months it was being filibustered). Kennedy and his family and friends hated Johnson, the big City bosses had pushed for Johnson on the ticket, Johnson had never been Kennedy's first (or even last) choice. An example of this is a cable to the Swedish Government during LBJ's visit to Sweden while he was Vice President. The Cable basically said Johnson did NOT represent the Administration (Completely cutting Johnson out of any power).
Johnson had been given the Job, as VP, to head a council on Civil Rights. JFK hated the way LBJ was running that council, permitting all the bad parts of segregation in an concentrated arena for the press to pick up.
I go into the above to show how much JFK and LBJ did NOT work together (another gem was JFK's approval of the removal of Diem as leader of South Vietnam, the only man to oppose that removal was LBJ, on the grounds you never stab a friend in the back).
Getting the Civil Rights Act though the house of Representatives would be easy, JFK could have done that on his own, the problem was getting it through the Senate. Would JFK been willing to shut down the government for the three months needed? Remember nothing else was being done during that three months, no one could be confirmed in an executive position or a Judgeship till the Filibuster was ended, could JFK wait three months for his appointments to make it through the Senate AND also wait three months for the budget and other bills to make it through the Senate, all were stopped by the Filibuster rules of that time period? Would the Military tolerate promotions being delayed three months while the Senate is under a Filibuster? Under LBJ the military had to wait, as did every one else, but would JFK run that risk? I do NOT think so, the best example of this is during various Civil Rights Marches in the South, JFK did call the National Guard into Service for those Marches, but more to prevent the State from using them against the Marchers NOT to protect the Marchers (The National Guardsmen, were called into Federal Service and then ordered to stay in their barracks). JFK took that attitude for it prevented the State Governors from using the Troops against the Marchers, but by NOT sending them to protect the Marchers, the State Police and Klan and a free hand as to those same Marchers.
Thus, in my opinion, once the South Agreed to Filibuster I do NOT see JFK waiting three months and making all types of deals to get 67 Senates to vote to end the Filibuster. LBJ could have done it for JFK, but JFK was NOT about to give LBJ any credit and that is want LBJ would have wanted.
As to the Withdraw of US advisers, that had been done for years, and then returned after the Tet Holiday every year. The key was the removal of Diem. Diem had been the leader of South Vietnam for almost eight years in 1963. Ho Chi Minh viewed him as the most dangerous enemy he had in South Vietnam (And Ho Chi Minh could NOT believe that the US would have Diem Killed, but that was the result of the Coup that over three Diem). More recent released documents indicate that JFK NEVER thought Diem would be killed, but JFK also did not make it clear to the Coup leaders that the US would NOT tolerate Diem's death.
Now South Vietnam under Diem was in a constant decline compared to the Viet Cong. Diem concentration on his fellow Catholics over the Buddhists was both Diem's strength and weakness (The Catholics were the most anti-communists in South Vietnam, but the Buddhist made up 70-80% of the Country). Technically Diem's overthrow was tied in with Buddhist protests of 1963 against Diem's pro-Catholic policies, but he tended to be overthrown by a group of generals who tended to be Catholic more then Buddhist. Thieu, who ended up on top after a few years was involved the coup AND was Catholic, As Ho Chi Minh observed, none of the Generals that killed Diem had the following among the people to oppose the Viet Cong on a Political level (Diem could and thus Ho viewed Diem as his greatest rival).
Anyway, with the assassination of Diem, the situation in South Vietnam deteriorated throughout 1963 and 1964. Vietnam was a big issue in the 1964 election. The Majority of Americans supported the sending advisers and American Troops to South Vietnam till the middle of 1968. Would JFK run the risk of doing something the vast majority of American opposed (With draw from Vietnam before 1968)? No, and for the same reason LBJ had to send in troops. US troops were needed by 1965 to stabilize the situation in South Vietnam. The South Vietnamese Government would have fallen in 1965 or 1966 if US troops had NOT been introduced to tip the balance in favor of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN, the South Vietnamese Army). LBJ had to send in troops, and JFK would have had to send in troops. Both had been in Government during the 1940s, when Truman had refused to send in US Troops to bail out the Nationalist Chinese and all you heard in the late 1940s and till the 1960s was "Who Lost China?" and the answer was the Democrats (That was untrue, but even today the GOP careless about facts and reality).
In 1954, the French asked the US for air Support to protect and supply their garrison in Dien Bien Phu. but that was refused by President Eisenhower. The US army did a study in 1954 that recommended that the US stay out of Vietnam (tied up to many US troops and not worth the effort). Eisenhower accepted that recommendation as to US Troops, but did everything short to support South Vietnam staying non-communist (Thus the US Support for Dien starting in 1955). In this action JFK, as a Senator, supported Eisenhower and continued that policy as President. JFK, in many ways wanted to end the war in Vietnam quickly, and saw Diem as someone who was NOT doing want was needed to end the war and as such had to go. The problem was any guerrilla war is always Political, Diem new this but JFK seems NOT to have known this. Thus JFK saw the removal of Diem as a way end the war, while LBJ and the US Army saw it as it was, a death ride to defeat (But no one listened to the experts, when the experts said what they did not want to hear).
I point out the above to show that JFK, like LBJ, hands would have been forced to continue the war in Vietnam. As long as the American People supported the war, no matter who was President, with the assassination of Diem, the Political Situation in South Vietnam had turned pro-communist. The only way to end that political Situation was to stabilize the South Vietnamese Government with US troops. JFK would have had to face that same situation, the fall of Vietnam to the Communist in 1965/1966 era, There is no way JFK would have permitted that, for that would set up a GOP victory in 1968. Thus JFK would have been in the same boat LBJ found himself in, until the American People turned against the War (and that was NOT till the Summer of 1968) there was no way for any President to end the war in Vietnam until the majority of Americans no longer supported the war.
Thus by 1968, had JFK lived, Vietnam would still be going on, US be waist deep in Vietnam (JFK was more of a hard liner then LBJ, may even have risked fighting Red China and moved into North Vietnam, expanding the war). No Civil Rights act would have passed and the Great Society would never even have been attempted (Medicare would still be needed, for LBJ would not have been in place to push it through). Nixon probably would have won, for LBJ would have been denied the Democratic Nomination do to the power of a Sitting President in most conventions prior to the reforms of the 1970s. Without LBJ Great Society Program, the problems of the 1970s would have been worse, but that is another story.
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