Below is an interesting article form NYTimes.com on President 
Eisenhower's farewell address to the nation, which warned about a 
permanent war-based industrial complex's potential to abuse its powers.

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In Archive, New Light on Evolution of Eisenhower Speech
By SAM ROBERTS
Published: December 10, 2010

The phrase that would emerge as the most enduring legacy of what became, 
arguably, the most famous farewell address since George Washington’s 
evolved over 20 months and was agreed to only a few days before it was 
delivered.

The words, in a speech by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, were 
transformed from a warning against a “war-based industrial complex” into 
a “vast military-industrial complex” and finally into a more vanilla 
“military-industrial complex,” which seemed controversial enough without 
the qualifier.

Documents released Friday by the National Archives shed new light on the 
genesis of the phrase in the televised address, which Eisenhower 
delivered on Jan. 17, 1961, three days before his successor’s inauguration.

In the final version, the president recalled that until recently the 
nation had no permanent arms industry, that “American makers of 
plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well,” but 
said that the country could no longer risk “emergency improvisation of 
national defense.” An adequate military establishment and arms industry 
were vital, he said, but their conjunction and “its total influence — 
economic, political, even spiritual” also had “grave implications.”

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of 
unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the 
military-industrial complex,” Eisenhower warned. “The potential for the 
disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must 
never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or 
democratic processes.”

In the version he read from that night, those words were underlined. 
Several were typed in capital letters.

The newly released letters, memos and speech drafts — 21 in all — were 
received by the National Archives from Grant Moos, whose father, 
Malcolm, was Eisenhower’s special assistant and chief speechwriter.

“It’s probably the most important farewell address of the modern era,” 
said Karl Weissenbach, director of the Eisenhower Presidential Library 
and Museum in Abilene, Kan. “And now we get to see its evolution, which 
started in May 1959 and didn’t end until it was delivered. We also learn 
the important role of Milton Eisenhower, who was instrumental in making 
sure that his brother’s thoughts would be correctly portrayed.”

The earliest White House memos suggesting a farewell address mentioned 
only an appeal for bipartisanship. But the president wrote his brother 
on May 25, 1959, of “the importance of getting our people to understand 
that local affairs have a definite relationship to foreign affairs.” A 
year later, another White House aide was urging the president’s 
speechwriter to read Washington’s farewell address, especially its 
warning of “overgrown military establishments.”

On Oct. 31, 1960, another speechwriter, Ralph E. Williams, warned of a 
“permanent war-based industry” run by former military officials.

An undated draft titled “commencement” called for “jealous precaution” 
(Milton Eisenhower later deleted “jealous”) by civilian authorities “to 
avoid measures which would enable any segment of this 
military-industrial complex to sharpen the focus of its own power at the 
expense of the sound balance which now prevails.”

The president’s staff later expressed surprise at the phrase’s durability.

“I am sure that had it been uttered by anyone except a president who had 
also been the Army’s five-star chief of staff, it would long since have 
been forgotten,” Williams recalled years later.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/11/us/politics/11eisenhower.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=a24

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Regards,

LelandJ


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