Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer. 1860 - 1985. Motion Picture Films from the Army Library Copy Collection. 1964 - 1980. HIGHLIGHTS OF SPEECH BY GEN. BRADLEY, PENTAGON, WASHINGTON, D.C

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Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer. 1860 - 1985. Motion Picture Films from the Army Library Copy Collection. 1964 - 1980. HIGHLIGHTS OF SPEECH BY GEN. BRADLEY, PENTAGON, WASHINGTON, D.C

1952

MSs, CUs, Int, General Omar N. Bradley drivers the highlights of a proposed speech to the Pasadena California Junior Chamber of Commerce. He says that his work leads him to believe that war is not inevitable. He feels the, 'cold' war may get 'colder', and adds that to this 'cold' war Russia has added the new technique of "war by satellites". He speaks of the US treaty with 13 other nations in a defense pact. He warns against the unsound defensive air-sea, "Gibraltar Concept" of isolating America. He feels that the atomic bomb is not enough, that we cannot afford to let Europe face aggression alone, that we would thus be without allies and alone. He says that by placing her soldiers 100 yards apart, the enemy could overrun Europe in the face of atomic attack, unless other men were there to stop them. "Our shame and chagrin", would be unbounded, he says, if we saw them making slave camps of Paris and Brussels. The Korean conflict, he says, had priority from the beginning. He feels that bombing Manchuria would be unwise because it would enlarge the war. He speaks of the UN rejection of Russia as a neutral in the cease-fire talks for he considers that without Russia that war would not be possible. Bradley defends the (Administration?) policies as "morally right", "politically and economically...feasible".

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SNAC Resource ID: 6429727

National Archives at College Park

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Bradley, Omar Nelson, 1893-1981

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65822fj (person)

Omar Nelson Bradley (February 12, 1893 – April 8, 1981) was a senior officer of the United States Army during and after World War II, holding the rank of General of the Army. Bradley was the first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and oversaw the U.S. military's policy-making in the Korean War. Born in Randolph County, Missouri, Bradley worked as a boilermaker before entering the United States Military Academy at West Point. He graduated from the academy in 1915 alongside Dwight D. Eisenh...