Chapter Nine: You Say You Want a Revolution?

  1.     Danny Miller, “Eartha Kitt, CIA Target,” HuffPost, December 27, 2008 (quoting New York Times), accessed January 27, 2018, www.huffingtonpost.com/danny-miller/eartha-kitt-cia-target_b_153684.html; Editors of Life, Life 1968: The Year That Changed the World (New York: Life Books, 2018), 54.

  2.     Davis, Long Road Home, 161.

  3.     Amanda Foreman, “Remembering the Pueblo: Hostages as Propaganda Tools,” Wall Street Journal, January 23, 2018.

  4.     Davis, Long Road Home, 160.

  5.     Edwin H. Brandt, “The Moving Finger Rites,” Esquire, December 1969, 253.

  6.     Sybil Stockdale diary, n.d., 98, box 11, folder 22, SBSP.

  7.     Patrick J. Buchanan, “With Nixon in ’68: The Year America Came Apart,” Wall Street Journal, April 7–8, 2018.

  8.     Karnow, Vietnam: A History, 510.

  9.     Mark K. Updegrove, Indomitable Will: LBJ in the Presidency (New York: Skyhorse, 2012), 248.

  10.   Stockdale and Stockdale, In Love and War, 299.

  11.   Andrea Rander, in conversation with the author, June 29, 2018.

  12.   Andrea Rander, in conversation with the author, May 7 and June 29, 2018; Sybil Stockdale to Louise Mulligan (“Dear Wives and Families of the MIA and POW, En Route to California”), October 11, 1969, collection of Louise Mulligan.

  13.   Sybil Stockdale, “1968: What Was Changing,” 5, box 3, SBSP.

  14.   Bob Boroughs to Sybil Stockdale, April 12, 1968, box 3, SBSP.

  15.   Niall Ferguson, Kissinger, 1923–1968: The Idealist (New York: Penguin Press, 2015), 813–815.

  16.   Sylvia Poggioli, “Marking the French Social Revolution of ’68,” Morning Edition, NPR, May 13, 2008.

  17.   Ferguson, Kissinger, 814.

  18.   Ibid.; Abramson, Spanning the Century, 644, 661.

  19.   Abramson, Spanning the Century, 660.

  20.   Ibid., 660–61.

  21.   Jonathan Coleman, “Harold Wilson, Lyndon Johnson and the Vietnam War, 1964–68,” American Studies Today Online, December 7, 2004, accessed December 11, 2017, www.americansc.org.uk/Online/Wilsonjohnson.htm.

  22.   Stockdale and Stockdale, In Love and War, 295.

  23.   Sybil Stockdale diary, n.d., 5, box 11, folder 22, SBSP.

  24.   Allen, Until the Last Man, 28.

  25.   Sybil Stockdale diary, n.d., 5, box 11, folder 22, SBSP.

  26.   Debby Burns Henry and Jenny Connell Robertson, in conversation with the author, January 16, 2016.

  27.   Andrea Rander, in conversation with the author, May 7, 2018.

  28.   Stockdale and Stockdale, In Love and War, 297.

  29.   Davis, Long Road Home, 5–11.

  30.   Senate Report 2832, “Communist Interrogation, Indoctrination and Exploitation of American Military and Civilian Prisoners,” 84th Cong., December 31, 1956, in collection of Max Friedman, 3.

  31.   Ibid., 2.

  32.   Ibid., 21.

  33.   Sybil Stockdale diary, n.d., 5, box 11, folder 22, SBSP.

  34.   Louise Mulligan, email message to author, November 2017; McDaniel, After the Hero’s Welcome, 52.

  35.   Stockdale and Stockdale, In Love and War, 299–300.

  36.   Sybil Stockdale, “1968: What Was Changing,” 5, box 3, SBSP.

  37.   Sybil Stockdale diary, n.d., 101–102, box 11, folder 22, SBSP.

  38.   “Navy Wife Keeps Vigil for Captive Pilot,” San Diego Union-Tribune, October 27, 1968, box 5, folder 10, SBSP.

  39.   Sybil Stockdale, “1968: What Was Changing,” 5, box 3, SBSP.

  40.   Stockdale and Stockdale, In Love and War, 303, 305; Sybil Stockdale diary, n.d., 103, box 11, folder 22, SBSP.

  41.   “An Appeal to the World: POW Wives Break Silence,” San Diego Union-Tribune, June 4, 1969, collection of Debby Burns Henry.

  42.   McDaniel, After The Hero’s Welcome, 53.

  43.   Denis Collins, “The Deprogramming of a POW,” Washington Post, August 31, 1981.

  44.   Louise Mulligan, oral history interview with Heath Hardage Lee, December 10, 2016, REDASC.