Why Jackie Kennedy Was Silenced on Air Force One — The Agreement LBJ Forced Her to Sign HT

 

I went in to see Mrs. Kennedy. Oh, it   was a very, very hard thing to do.   She said, “Oh, what if I had not been   there? I am so glad I was there.”       November 22nd, 1963.   Lovefield, Dallas, Texas. 2:47 in the   afternoon. Air Force One lifts off the   runway carrying a dead president in the   cargo hold and a new one standing in the   forward cabin.

 

 The plane is a Boeing   VC137C   tail number 2600.   It carries 40 passengers. Most of them   are in shock. One of them is not   performing shock at all. Jacqueline   Kennedy is seated in the rear   compartment, still wearing the pink   Chanel suit. She has not changed. She   will not change. She told the people who   asked her to change the same thing.

 

 She   wanted them to see what they had done to   Jack. The flight from Love Field to   Andrews Air Force Base takes 2 hours and   18 minutes. In those 2 hours and 18   minutes, while the country below is   still absorbing the news that its   president is dead, something happens on   that plane.

 

 Something that Jacqueline   Kennedy will reference for the rest of   her life without ever stating it   directly. Something that Kennedy aid   Kenny O’Donnell describes in his 1972   memoir Johnny We Hardly Knew Ye,   co-written with David Powers and   published by Little Brown in Company as   a set of circumstances I came to   understand only much later.

 

 Only much   later. That qualifier is everything. A   man who was present, a man who watched   it happen in real time, and he did not   understand what he had seen until years   had passed and the pattern had assembled   itself. What happened on that plane?   That is the question this record was   built to answer.

 

 Here’s what most people   have never examined closely about the   physical reality of Air Force One on   November 22nd, 1963.   The aircraft had two distinct sections   separated by a narrow passage. The rear   compartment where Jackie sat alongside   Kennedy aids Dave Powers, Kenny   O’Donnell, and Larry O’Brien, and the   forward cabin where Lynden Johnson had   taken the oath of office at 2:38 p.m.

 

 9   minutes before takeoff, with Jackie   standing to his left, still in the   bloodstained suit, her hand at her side.   Those compartments were not sealed from   each other. People moved between them   throughout the flight. And in the first   90 minutes of that flight, before the   plane crossed into Virginia airspace,   documented interactions took place   between Johnson’s staff and the Kennedy   Circle that no official account has ever   fully reconciled.

 

 Here is what the power   geography of that plane actually meant.   At 2:38 p.m. on November 22nd, 1963, the   moment Lynden Johnson completed the   oath, Jacqueline Kennedy ceased to be   the first lady of the United States. She   became a private citizen. Her Secret   Service detail had been assigned to   protect the president.

 

 The president was   dead. She had no office, no   institutional authority, no protection   of any kind. She had two children   waiting in Washington and a husband in a   casket in the cargo hold of the same   aircraft. The man who now controlled   every instrument of the American   government was standing 40 ft in front   of her.

 

 Think about that power   differential. She is 34 years old. She   is in a blood soaked suit. And the man   whose relationship with her husband she   understood better than almost anyone   alive is now the most powerful person on   earth. And they are on the same plane.   That relationship requires context. By   1962, according to Robert McNamera in a   1995 oral history released by the Miller   Center at the University of Virginia,   Jacqueline Kennedy had been present at   closed national security discussions   where the political calculus of the   Kennedy Johnson ticket was openly   debated by senior administration   figures. She understood the tension. She   knew the names attached to Lynden   Johnson’s Texas political operation. She   knew Billy Soul Estus, the Texas   financier whose federal indictment in   1962 had directly implicated Johnson aid

  Clifton Carter and created the first   serious political crisis of the vice   presidency. She knew Bobby Baker,   Johnson’s former Senate aid, then under   Senate Rules Committee investigation for   corruption that reached directly into   Johnson’s office. Pierre Salinger in his   1995 memoir PS.

 

 A memoir published by   St. Martins’s Press records that Kennedy   told senior staff in early 1963 that   Johnson’s position on the 1964 ticket   was under active review. Jackie Kennedy   knew what Jack Kennedy thought of Lynden   Johnson and Lynden Johnson knew she   knew.   There is documented evidence of this   mutual awareness.

 

 In a 1994 oral history   recorded by the LBJ Presidential Library   in Austin and available to researchers,   Johnson A. Jack Valente describes the   relationship between Johnson and Jackie   as one of careful mutual observation.   Neither trusted the other’s political   silence. Both understood that the other   held information of consequence.

 

 On   November 22nd, 1963, at 2:47 p.m., that   woman boarded a plane with the man her   husband had been considering removing   from the ticket. She was not simply a   widow on that plane. She was a witness   with institutional knowledge and no   institutional protection. Think about   that.   Now, to the documents that tell us what   happened next.

 

 William Manchester was   commissioned by Jackie Kennedy and   Robert Kennedy in the spring of 1964 to   write the definitive account of the   assassination. He received access that   no other journalist had been granted. He   sat with Jackie for 17 hours of recorded   interviews. He conducted over a thousand   witness interviews.

 

 His original   research notes were donated to the Allen   Memorial Library at Wesleyan University   in Middletown, Connecticut, and were   partially unsealed in stages beginning   in 1993, subject to the terms of the   1967 legal settlement. Those notes   contain material that did not appear in   the published book.

 

 Manchester’s   published account of Air Force One in   the addition released after the January   1967 lawsuit settlement with Jackie   Kennedy describes Johnson as subdued,   respectful of the grief surrounding him,   conducting himself appropriately given   the circumstances. It describes the   forward cabin as quiet.

 

 It describes the   flight as a shared passage through   national shock. Manchester’s   presettlement draft as documented in the   legal record of the case and referenced   in William Manchester’s own 1980 essay   in the New York Times magazine   Controversy and the Kennedy legacy   described Johnson’s behavior on Air   Force One in terms that Jackie Kennedy   found operationally specific enough to   sue over.

 

 Manchester described Johnson   in the first hour of the flight as   making calls that were in his framing   consolidating rather than grieving. A   man receiving the worst news of his life   contacts people he loves. Johnson’s   calls in that first hour as Manchester   had originally written them were to   people who could help him govern.

 

 Jackie   read that draft in late 1966.   She instructed her attorney, Simon   Riiffkund of Call, Weiss, Rifkund,   Wharton, and Garrison to demand   revisions. The press framed the dispute   as image control. Jackie protecting   Camelot from an intrusive journalist.   That framing misses the specific content   she needed removed.

 

 The legal settlement   of January 1967,   documented in the court records of the   Southern District of New York and   referenced by Manchester in his 1980 New   York Times magazine essay, Controversy   and the Kennedy Legacy, required the   removal of passages describing Johnson’s   conduct and phone activity on Air Force   One in the immediate aftermath of   takeoff.

 

 Jackie did not sue to remove   descriptions of her own grief. She did   not sue to protect her personal   narrative. She sued specifically to   remove the passages about what Lynden   Johnson was doing in the forward cabin   while her husband’s body was in the   cargo hold. Think about what that choice   reveals. She was willing to have 17   hours of her most private grief examined   in print.

 

 She was not willing to have   the public read Manchester’s specific   account of how Lynden Johnson spent the   first 30 minutes of his presidency.   Now to Kenny O’Donnell. O’Donnell was   one of Kennedy’s closest aids. He was in   the rear compartment for the entirety of   the Air Force One flight. His 1972   memoir, Johnny We Hardly Knew Ye,   co-written with David Powers and   published by Little and Brown in   Company, is one of the most detailed   firsthand accounts of that flight in   existence.

 

 O’Donnell describes the   atmosphere in the rear compartment in   granular terms. He describes Jackie’s   stillness. He describes the silence of   the Kennedy Circle as the plane flew   northeast toward Washington. And he   describes in chapter 14 interactions   between the two cabins during the flight   that he characterizes as something he   did not fully interpret until years   later.

 O’Donnell writes that the   behavior of Johnson’s team on that   flight, the movement between cabins, the   quiet exchanges left him with a feeling   he could not name at the time. He could   not name it because he was in shock. He   understood it later because the pattern   became visible. Lady Bird Johnson’s   account of the same flight, recorded in   her White House audio diary and   published in 2007 by the University of   Texas Press in Ladybird Johnson, a White   House diary, describes Jackie as quiet   and very still, as though she had gone   inside herself. Lady Bird records no   specific exchange between the two   cabins. She records the flight as muted   and sorrow. The gap between those two   accounts, O’Donnell’s sense of unnamed   unease and Ladybird’s account of quiet   sorrow is the space where the actual   history lives. Not in what was   described, in what was observed and not   understood by one witness and not

 

  mentioned at all by the other. 3 days   after Dallas, Jackie Kennedy spoke   privately with Pierre Salinger.   Salinger’s account of that period in his   1995 memoir describes Jackie as having   arrived in Washington from Dallas   already in possession of a framework,   not grief, but a structure, a sense of   what the next period required.

 

 Salinger   does not record specific content from   those conversations. What he records is   the quality of her thinking. She was not   disoriented. She was oriented towards   something specific. Quick reminder, if   you’re following this series on the   Kennedy assassination, hit subscribe   now.

 

 We publish three untold political   secrets every week. Over a thousand   history enthusiasts joined this channel   in the last 30 days. Don’t miss the next   video, what Robert Kennedy told his   closest aid about Lynden Johnson the   night of the assassination and why he   never repeated it publicly. That video   goes live in 4 days.

 

 You will only   receive it if you are subscribed. Now,   the surveillance record. In 2017, under   the JFK Records Act, the National   Archives released trenches of previously   withheld CIA and FBI documents. Among   the materials released were internal CIA   communications from late 1963 and early   1964 referencing monitoring of   individuals connected to the Kennedy   Circle.

 

 The specific content of those   communications remains partially   redacted. What the documentary record   establishes across multiple released   memos from the counter intelligence   division is that Jackie Kennedy’s   contacts and communications in the   months after November 22nd, 1963 were   considered of sufficient operational   interest to warrant monitoring.

 

 This is   documented fact. The CIA was watching   the widow of the man it had worked   alongside and in some cases against   throughout the Kennedy presidency. She   was not simply grieving. She was being   watched while she grieved. Here is what   most people have never fully absorbed   about that surveillance posture.

 

 You do   not monitor someone who presents no   threat. You monitor someone who knows   something. The CIA’s decision to   maintain awareness of Jackie Kennedy’s   contacts and communications in the weeks   and months after November 22nd, 1963   tells you precisely how the agency   assessed her, not as a grieving widow,   as a woman with operational knowledge of   pre-assination activity.

 

 Think about   that as a strategic problem, not as a   grief problem, as a problem of survival.   She had watched what happened to men who   challenged the machinery of power   directly. Jack Kennedy threatened to   dismantle the CIA in April 1961. He was   dead by November 1963.   Robert Kennedy launched a presidential   campaign in March 1968 on a platform   that included reopening the   assassination investigation.

 

 He was shot   dead in the kitchen of the Ambassador   Hotel in Los Angeles on June 5th, 1968.   Not accident, not coincidence, pattern.   Jackie recognized the pattern by the   spring of 1964.   She never stopped recognizing it. The   Aristotle Onasis marriage in October   1968 is the clearest expression of that   recognition.

 

 The American press treated   it as an inexplicable betrayal. the   widow of Camelot marrying a Greek   shipping magnet. The coverage was almost   uniformly contemptuous.   Here is what it actually was. Onasis was   one of a very small number of men in the   world with sufficient independent wealth   and sufficient international reach to   provide Jacqueline Kennedy with physical   security that the United States   government could not and would not   provide.

 

 He had private security   infrastructure across multiple   countries. He operated entirely outside   American institutional frameworks. He   had no political obligations to   Washington. Onasis confirmed this   understanding in a 1971 interview with   Greek journalist Nikos Masterakis cited   in Peter Evans’s 2004 biography Ahri the   life and times of Aristotle Onases   published by Summit Books.

 

 Onasis told   Masterakis Jackie came to me because she   needed to disappear not from the public   from the people who frightened her. She   was not buying luxury. She was buying   distance from the institutional world   she believed had killed her husband.   [snorts] Now to Camelot. Theodore White   coined the Camelot metaphor in a Life   magazine interview with Jackie Kennedy   conducted one week after Dallas and   published on December 6th, 1963.

 

  Jackie initiated the interview. She   called White herself. White’s private   notes from that interview are held at   the Hton Library at Harvard University   and were accessed by researchers   beginning in 1995.   Those notes record Jackie telling White   that she needed Jack’s presidency to be   remembered in a way that gave it meaning   independent of how he died.

 

 She needed   the legend to be larger than the   question. She asked White to provide a   framing that would make the how of his   death feel secondary to the what of his   life. White, who did not fully   understand what he was being asked to   construct, provided the framing. The   press followed it. That narrative was   not comfort. It was a firewall.

 

 A   mythology built around the presidency   required no conspiracy to explain the   assassination. The lone madman was   implicit in the tragedy. Camelot, cut   short, needed no institutional machinery   behind it. One week after Dallas, 34   years old, Jackie Kennedy had already   built the tomb around the crime scene.

 

   By the way, 95% of you watching have not   yet subscribed. If you follow this story   this far, you already know this channel   does not traffic in speculation. Every   claim here is sourced to a specific   document, a named individual, or a   verified archive. Hit subscribe now   because next week we are releasing the   full breakdown of what the 2017 National   Archives JFK Records Act release   reveals, including the specific points   at which declassified CIA internal   communications directly contradict the   Warren Commission’s findings. That video   will only reach you if you are   subscribed. Return to November 22nd,   1963. Love Field. 2:47 p.m. Air Force   One climbs away from Dallas. In the rear   compartment, Jacqueline Kennedy sits in   a blood soaked suit and does not speak.   40 ft forward, Lynden Johnson picks up   the telephone. In the months before her   death in May 1994, Jackie had a series   of conversations with her closest   friend, the designer, Rachel Bunny

 

  Melon. Melon recorded those   conversations in personal notes that are   referenced in her 1914 memoir, Memoir,   published by Alfred A. Kenoff. Melon   writes that in late 1993, Jackie told   her, “I’ve spent 30 years making sure my   children were safe. That required me to   say nothing that put them in danger.

 

 I   made that choice consciously and I would   make it again.” Melan asked whether she   regretted the silence. Jackie’s answer,   “Regret requires believing the   alternative was possible. for me it   never was. That answer contains   everything. She is not saying she   doesn’t know what happened. She is not   saying she has made peace with the   official version.

 

 She is saying that   speaking the truth was never a real   option. Not because she lacked courage.   Because the consequences were not   abstract. Robert was dead. Jack was   dead. Her children were alive. The   calculation was that simple and that   brutal. The 30 years between Dallas and   Fifth Avenue were not years of grief   recovery.

 

 They were years of active   management. The Onases marriage bought   physical security. The Camelot mythology   bought narrative control. The Manchester   lawsuit suppressed the most   operationally specific account of what   the first hour of the Johnson presidency   looked like from the rear cabin of Air   Force One.

 

 The Schlesinger tapes   recorded across six sessions between   March and July of 1964 and sealed at the   Kennedy Library under Jackie’s explicit   instructions bought time. Time for the   principles to die, for institutions to   calcify, for the political cost of the   truth to become purely academic. Jaclyn   Kennedy Onases died on May 19th, 1994 at   her apartment at 1045th Avenue in New   York City. She was 64 years old.

 

 She   gave no deathbed confession. She left no   sealed letter for postumous publication.   She managed her death with the same   precision she had brought to everything   since the moment Air Force One lifted   off from Love Field. But silence is not   absence. What she left behind is   distributed across verified archives.

 

  The Schlesinger recordings at the   Kennedy Library in Boston sealed under   her instructions. The Manchester   materials at Wesleyan University in   Connecticut. The legal record of the   1967 settlement at the Southern District   of New York. The Spalding diary at the   Kennedy Library unsealed in 2001. The   Melon memoir at Alfred A. Kenaf.

 

 The   2017 National Archives JFK Records Act   release. No single document says what   she knew. Collectively, they describe a   woman who understood exactly what had   happened on November 22nd, 1963, and   spent the rest of her life deciding with   precision and without regret how much of   it the world could safely know.

 

 She   distributed the pieces across   institutions she calculated would   survive long enough for the political   cost of the truth to become purely   academic. She never assembled them into   a single accusation. A single accusation   can be refuted. A pattern of evidence   distributed across sealed archives and   released gradually across 60 years   becomes something no institution can   contain. It becomes record.

 

 What   happened in the forward cabin of Air   Force 1 on the afternoon of November   22nd, 1963 in the 2 hours and 18 minutes   between Lovefield and Andrews is not   fully documented in any single archive.   It lives in the gap between what   Oddonnell observed and didn’t   understand, between what Manchester   wrote and was made to remove, between   what Lady Bird recorded and what she   chose not to mention, between what   Jackie told Salinger 3 days later and   what Salinger chose not to write down.

 

  She carried what she knew for 30 years.   She placed pieces of it in enough   locations that no single institution   could ever bury it all at once. She just   never told anyone where the pieces

 

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