Mr. Buck, Mr. Vice President, Governor Connally, Senator
Yarborough, Jim Wright, members of the congressional delegation, Mr. Speaker,
Mr. Attorney General, ladies and gentlemen:
Two years ago, I introduced
myself in Paris by saying that I was the man who had accompanied Mrs. Kennedy
to Paris. I am getting somewhat that same sensation as I travel around
Texas. Nobody wonders what Lyndon and I wear.
I am glad to be here in Jim
Wright's city. About 35 years ago, a Congressman from California who had
just been elected received a letter from an irate constituent which said:
"During the campaign you promised to have the Sierra Madre Mountains reforested.
You have been in office one month and you haven't done so." Well, no one
in Fort Worth has been that unreasonable, but in some ways he has had the
Sierra Madre Mountains reforested, and here in Fort Worth he has contributed
to its growth.
He speaks for Fort Worth and
he speaks for the country, and I don't know any city that is better represented
in the Congress of the United States than Fort Worth. And if there are
any Democrats here this morning, I am sure you wouldn't hold that against
him.
Three years ago last September
I came here, with the Vice President, and spoke at Burke Burnett Park,
and I called, in that speech, for a national security policy and a national
security system which was second to none - a position which said not first,
but, if, when and how, but first. That city responded to that call
as it has through its history. And we have been putting that pledge into
practice ever since.
And I want to say a word about
that pledge here in Fort Worth, which understands national defense and
its importance to the security of the United States. During the days of
the Indian War, this city was a fort. During the days of World War I, even
before the United States got into the war, Royal Canadian Air Force pilots
were training here. During the days of World War II, the great Liberator
bombers, in which my brother flew with his co-pilot from this city, were
produced here.
The first nonstop flight around
the world took off and returned here, in a plane built in factories here.
The first truly intercontinental bomber, the B-36, was produced here. The
B-58, which is the finest weapons system in the world today, which has
demonstrated most recently in flying from Tokyo to London, with an average
speed of nearly 1,000 miles per hour, is a Fort Worth product.
The Iroquois helicopter from
Fort Worth is a mainstay in our fight against the guerrillas in South Viet-Nam.
The transportation of crews between our missile sites is done in planes
produced here in Fort Worth. So wherever the confrontation may occur, and
in the last 3 years it has occurred on at least three occasions, in Laos,
Berlin, and Cuba, and it will again - wherever it occurs, the products
of Fort Worth and the men of Fort Worth provide us with a sense of security.
And in the not too distant future
a new Fort Worth product - and I am glad that there was a table separating
Mr. Hicks and myself - a new Fort Worth product, the TFX Tactical Fighter
Experimental - nobody knows what those words mean, but that is what they
mean, Tactical Fighter Experimental - will serve the forces of freedom
and will be the number one airplane in the world today.
There has been a good deal of
discussion of the long and hard fought competition to win the TFX contract,
but very little discussion about what this plane will do. It will be the
first operational aircraft ever produced that can literally spread its
wings through the air. It will thus give us a single plane capable of carrying
out missions of speed as well as distance, able to fly very far in one
form or very fast in another. It can take off from rugged, short airstrips,
enormously increasing the Air Force's ability to participate in limited
wars. The same basic plane will serve the Navy's carriers, saving the taxpayers
at least $1 billion in costs if they built separate planes for the Navy
and the Air Force.
The Government of Australia,
by purchasing $125 million of TFX planes before they are even off the drawing
boards, has already testified to the merit of this plane, and at the same
time it is confident in the ability of Fort Worth to meet its schedule.
In all these ways, the success of our national defense depends upon this
city in the western United States, 10,000 miles from Viet-Nam, 5,000 or
6,000 miles from Berlin, thousands of miles from trouble spots in Latin
America and Africa or the Middle East. And yet Fort Worth and what it does
and what it produces participates in all these great historic events. Texas,
as a whole, and Fort Worth bear particular responsibility for this national
defense effort, for military procurement in this State totals nearly $1¼
billion, fifth highest among all the States of the Union. There are more
military personnel on active duty in this State than any in the Nation,
save one - and it is not Massachusetts - any in the Nation save one, with
a combined military-civilian defense payroll of well over a billion dollars.
I don't recite these for any partisan purpose. They are the result of American
determination to be second to none, and as a result of the effort which
this country has made in the last 3 years we are second to none.
In the past 3 years we have
increased the defense budget of the United States by over 20 percent; increased
the program of acquisition for Polaris submarines from 24 to 41; increased
our Minuteman missile purchase program by more than 75 percent; doubled
the number of strategic bombers and missiles on alert; doubled the number
of nuclear weapons available in the strategic alert forces; increased the
tactical nuclear forces deployed in Western Europe by over 60 percent;
added five combat ready divisions to the Army of the United States, and
five tactical fighter wings to the Air Force of the United States; increased
our strategic airlift capability by 75 percent; and increased our special
counter-insurgency forces which are engaged now in South Viet-Nam by 600
percent. I hope those who want a stronger America and place it on some
signs will also place those figures next to it.
This is not an easy effort.
This requires sacrifice by the people of the United States. But this is
a very dangerous and uncertain world. As I said earlier, on three occasions
in the last 3 years the United States has had a direct confrontation. No
one can say when it will come again. No one expects that our life will
be easy, certainly not in this decade, and perhaps not in this century.
But we should realize what a burden and responsibility the people of the
United States have borne for so many years. Here, a country which lived
in isolation, divided and protected by the Atlantic and the Pacific, uninterested
in the struggles of the world around it, here in the short space of 18
years after the Second World War, we put ourselves, by our own will and
by necessity, into defense of alliances with countries all around the globe.
Without the United States, South Viet-Nam would collapse overnight. Without
the United States, the SEATO alliance would collapse overnight. Without
the United States the CENTO alliance would collapse overnight. Without
the United States there would be no NATO. And gradually Europe would drift
into neutralism and indifference. Without the efforts of the United States
in the Alliance for Progress, the Communist advance onto the mainland of
South America would long ago have taken place.
So this country, which desires
only to be free, which desires to be secure, which desired to live at peace
for 18 years under three different administrations, has borne more than
its share of the burden, has stood watch for more than its number of years.
I don't think we are fatigued or tired. We would like to live as we once
lived. But history will not permit it. The Communist balance of power is
still strong. The balance of power is still on the side of freedom. We
are still the keystone in the arch of freedom, and I think we will continue
to do as we have done in our past, our duty, and the people of Texas will
be in the lead.
So I am glad to come to this
State which has played such a significant role in so many efforts in this
century, and to say that here in Fort Worth you people will be playing
a major role in the maintenance of the security of the United States for
the next 10 years. I am confident, as I look to the future, that our chances
for security, our chances for peace, are better than they have been in
the past. And the reason is because we are stronger. And with that strength
is a determination to not only maintain the peace, but also the vital interests
of the United States. To that great cause, Texas and the United States
are committed.
Thank you.
Editor's Note
After the breakfast at the Texas
Hotel in Fort Worth the President flew to Love Field in Dallas. There he
acknowledged greetings for a brief period and then entered an open car.
The motorcade traveled along a 10-mile route through downtown Dallas on
its way to the Trade Mart, where the President planned to speak at a luncheon.
At approximately 12:30 p.m. (c.s.t.) he was struck by two bullets fired
by an assassin.
The President was pronounced
dead at 1 p.m. at the Parkland Hospital in Dallas.