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Remarks at Annapolis to the Graduating Class of the United States Naval Academy
June 7th 1961
Admiral, Mr.
Secretary, members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, members
of the faculty, members of the Graduating Class and
their families:
I am proud as a citizen of the United
States to come to this institution and this room where
there is concentrated so many men who have committed
themselves to the defense of the United States. I am
honored to be here.
In the past I have had some slight
contact with this Service, though I never did reach the
state of professional and physical perfection where I
could hope that anyone would ever mistake me for an
Annapolis graduate.
I know that you are constantly warned
during your days here not to mix, in your Naval career,
in politics. I should point out, however, on the other
side, that my rather rapid rise from a Reserve
Lieutenant, of uncertain standing, to
Commander-in-Chief, has been because I did not follow
that very good advice.
I trust, however, that those of you
who are Regulars will, for a moment, grant a retired
civilian officer some measure of fellowship.
Nearly a half century ago, President
Woodrow Wilson came here to Annapolis on a similar
mission, and addressed the Class of 1914. On that day,
the graduating class numbered 154 men. There has been,
since that time, a revolution in the size of our
military establishment, and that revolution has been
reflected in the revolution in the world around us.
When Wilson addressed the class in
1914, the Victorian structure of power was still intact,
the world was dominated by Europe, and Europe itself was
the scene of an uneasy balance of power between dominant
figures and America was a spectator on a remote
sideline.
The autumn after Wilson came to
Annapolis, the Victorian world began to fall to pieces,
and our world one-half a century later is vastly
different. Today we are witnesses to the most
extraordinary revolution, nearly, in the history of the
world, as the emergent nations of Latin America, Africa,
and Asia awaken from long centuries of torpor and
impatience.
Today the Victorian certitude's which
were taken to be so much a part of man's natural
existence are under siege by a faith committed to the
destruction of liberal civilization, and today the
United States is no longer the spectator, but the
leader.
This half century, therefore, has not
only revolutionized the size of our military
establishment, it has brought about also a more striking
revolution in the things that the Nation expects from
the men in our Service.
Fifty years ago the graduates of the
Naval Academy were expected to be seamen and leaders of
men. They were reminded of the saying of John Paul
Jones, "Give me a fair ship so that I might go into
harm's way."
When Captain Mahan began to write in
the nineties on the general issues of war and peace and
naval strategy, the Navy quickly shipped him to sea
duty. Today we expect all of you--in fact, you must, of
necessity-be prepared not only to handle a ship in a
storm or a landing party on a beach, but to make great
determinations which affect the survival of this
country.
The revolution in the technology of
war makes it necessary in order that you, when you hold
positions of command, may make an educated judgment
between various techniques, that you also be a scientist
and an engineer and a physicist, and your
responsibilities go far beyond the classic problems of
tactics and strategy.
In the years to come, some of you
will serve as your Commandant did last year, as an
adviser to foreign governments; some will negotiate as
Admiral Burke did, in Korea, with other governments on
behalf of the United States; some will go to the far
reaches of space and some will go to the bottom of the
ocean. Many of you from one time or another, in the
positions of command, or as members of staff, will
participate in great decisions which go far beyond the
narrow reaches of professional competence.
You gentlemen, therefore, have a most
important responsibility, to recognize that your
education is just beginning, and to be prepared, in the
most difficult period in the life of our country, to
play the role that the country hopes and needs and
expects from you. You must understand not only this
country but other countries. You must know something
about strategy and tactics and logic--logistics, but
also economics and politics and diplomacy and history.
You must know everything you can know about military
power, and you must also understand the limits of
military power. You must understand that few of the
important problems of our time have, in the final
analysis, been finally solved by military power alone.
When I say that officers today must go far beyond the
official curriculum, I say it not because I do not
believe in the traditional relationship between the
civilian and the military, but you must be more than the
servants of national policy. You must be prepared to
play a constructive role in the development of national
policy, a policy which protects our interests and our
security and the peace of the world. Woodrow Wilson
reminded your predecessors that you were not serving a
government or an administration, but a people. In
serving the American people, you represent the American
people and the best of the ideals of this free society.
Your posture and your performance will provide many
people far beyond our shores, who know very little of
our country, the only evidence they will ever see as to
whether America is truly dedicated to the cause of
justice and freedom.
In my inaugural address, I said that
each citizen should be concerned not with what his
country can do for him, but what he can do for his
country. What you have chosen to do for your country, by
devoting your life to the service of our country, is the
greatest contribution that any man could make. It is
easy for you, in a moment of exhilaration today, to say
that you freely and gladly dedicate your life to the
United States. But the life of service is a constant
test of your will.
It will be hard at times to face the
personal sacrifice and the family inconvenience, to
maintain this high resolve, to place the needs of your
country above all else. When there is a visible enemy to
fight, the tide of patriotism in this country runs
strong. But when there is a long, slow struggle, with no
immediate visible foe, when you watch your
contemporaries indulging the urge for material gain and
comfort and personal advancement, your choice will seem
hard, and you will recall, I am sure, the lines found in
an old sentry box at Gibraltar, "God and the soldier all
men adore in time of trouble and no more, for when war
is over, and all things righted, God is neglected and
the old soldier slighted."
Never forget, however, that the
battle for freedom takes many forms. Those who through
vigilance and firmness and devotion are the great
servants of this country--and let us have no doubt that
the United States needs your devoted assistance today.
The answer to those who challenge us
so severely in so many parts of the globe lies in our
willingness to freely commit ourselves to the
maintenance of our country and the things for which it
stands.
This
ceremony today represents the kind of commitment which
you are willing to make. For that reason, I am proud to
be here. This nation salutes you as you commence your
service to our country in the hazardous days ahead. And
on behalf of all of them, I congratulate you and thank
you.
Note: The President spoke at 11:04 a.m. at the USNA
Field House. His opening words "Admiral, Mr. Secretary"
referred to Rear Adm. John F. Davidson, Superintendent
of the Naval Academy, and John B. Connally, Jr.,
Secretary of the Navy.
Citation: John
T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters,The American Presidency
Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of
California (hosted), Gerhard Peters (database).
Available from World Wide Web:
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=8181.
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