A review by justmevictoria
Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis by Robert F. Kennedy

informative medium-paced

4.5

A first-hand look at the thirteen days when the world stood on the brink of total armageddon.

On Thursday 16 October 1962, President Kennedy was presented with aerial images of Cuba showing the installation of surface-to-surface missiles at the hands of the Soviet Union. What followed was an intense thirteen days as Kennedy and his advisory committee ExComm tried to figure out the best way to get the missiles removed without starting an all-out nuclear war with the Soviet Union. Those thirteen days became the one point during the Cold War when the world stood on the brink of armageddon and total nuclear annihilation. Bobby Kennedy, President Kennedy’s brother and the United States Attorney General, recounts the events of those thirteen days with the unique perspective as the person closest to the President.

From his own diaries and recollections, RFK offers up a unique insight into the Cuban Missile Crisis as only someone so closely connected with those involved could. His day-by-day and almost hour-by-hour breakdown of events provides a really insightful and interesting account of those intense thirteen days, and at times you can definitely feel that tension rise off the page. There’s a reason this book is so heavily recommended to anyone studying or interested in Cold War politics.

Although packed with details, Bobby’s writing flows easily, ensuring we as the reader aren’t getting bogged down in the information, negotiations and personalities. Obviously, it is helpful to have some knowledge of Cold War politics, Kennedy’s term as President, or the Cuban Missile Crisis. This definitely isn’t a book to dive into completely blind to the general history of the era.

While others have pointed out that Bobby may not have been so open, truthful or correct about what went on behind closed doors, such a view is to be expected from someone in his position. As Ted Sorensen notes, RFK wrote the book on the basis of his personal diaries and recollections in the US summer and autumn of 1967, and never had the opportunity to rewrite or complete the book as he was assassinated twelve months later. No doubt the book would be written and compiled differently had he been given the chance the complete it on his own terms. Having not yet read any other major works about the Missile Crisis, I cannot comment on how Bobby’s account compares to others. But given that he was JFK’s brother and part of ExComm, his account is a unique one, regardless of what details are lacking, altered or different.

Arthur Schlesinger Jr.’S foreword, written 37 years after the Crisis, provides a really insightful introduction to Bobby’s work. Meanwhile Richard E. Neustadt and Graham T. Allison’s afterword delves into the ethical question that Bobby had wanted to, but never had the chance to discuss: ‘what, if any, circumstance or justification fives the government or any government the moral right to bring its people and possibly all people under the shadow of nuclear destruction?’. It’s an extremely interesting discussion and made for an insightful read. Also included is a collection of documents, such as addresses, statements and letters sent and publicised during the Crisis and in the weeks following. These additions add a lot of context, insight and added information to Bobby’s memoir, which would probably feel a little short or incomplete if it still sat on its own. 

This is definitely one to read if you’ve got an interest in Cold War Politics or Kennedy’s presidency.