With regard to your telegram of today I am
glad you have finally accepted my challenge to participate in this debate.
I suggested a fifth debate close to the election as a means of keeping
the record straight - face to face - and correcting any distortions made
in the closing days of the campaign. Your telegram to me tonight clearly
indicates I was right in calling for such a debate - for the distortions
of the record concerning my position on Cuba exceed any others you have
made during this campaign. You have developed the technique of having your
writers rewrite my statements, using those rewritten statements and attacking
me for things I have never said or advocated. This is certainly the record
with regard to the speeches you have been making in the past 45 hours on
Cuba. I have never advocated and I do not now advocate intervention in
Cuba in violation of our treaty obligations and in fact stated in Johnstown,
Pa., that whatever we did with regard to Cuba should be within the confines
of international law. What I have advocated is that we use all available
commuuications - radio, television, and the press - and the moral power
of the American Government - to let the forces of freedom in Cuba know
that we believe that freedom will again rise in their country. I will be
pleased to discuss the whole record of Cuba with you - how this island
only 90 miles from our border fell into Communist hands and the sorry record
of administration inaction with regard to Cuba. I cannot understand, however,
why you wish to place a gag on the press in this final debate. Cuba is
important but so are our relations with the Soviet Union, the problems
of Latin America, Africa, and Asia.
Equally important are the domestic issues
which you and the Republican Party seem to wish to bury during this campaign
- minimum wage, medical care for the aged, aid to education, and the rising
rate of unemployment; only a week ago you stated you were going to talk
about Quemoy and Matsu every day for the final 3 weeks of the campaign.
Now it is Cuba. These latter two are important issues but I think the American
people want and deserve to hear us discuss all the important problems which
face our country and to limit the subject of the fifth to one country would
be to subvert the purpose of such a debate.
I have instructed Mr. Leonard Reinsch of my
staff to meet with your staff and attempt to further work out details for
this important fifth debate.