[sixties-l] Fwd: LBJ Targeted Black Power

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Date: Wed May 31 2000 - 03:43:18 CUT

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    Activist sent to front lines in Vietnam?

    LBJ Targeted Black Power Radicals
    Files Show FBI Secretly Checked Stokely Carmichael's (Kwame Ture) Draft
      Status

       May 15, 2000

       By Hans H. Chen

       WASHINGTON (APBnews.com) -- The 1966 election of Stokely Carmichael to lead
       the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee so alarmed President Lyndon
       Johnson that he ordered the FBI to send him reports on the "black power"
       activist several times a week, and even inquired about Carmichael's draft
       status.

       The FBI's release of a part of its files on Carmichael fuels the
       long-standing suspicions of SNCC members that the government sought to
      silence the civil rights group by sending its leaders to the front lines
    of the
       Vietnam War.

       Carmichael's FBI file numbers over 18,000 pages and would ordinarily take
       years to review and release, the FBI said. But after negotiations the agency
       agreed to expedite the publication of the file's first 282 pages.

       Those pages reveal a pattern of government suspicion, observation and
       infiltration at the highest levels. Three months after Carmichael's election
       to lead the civil rights group SNCC, Marvin Watson, a key Johnson aide,
      called the FBI asking for information on Carmichael and the SNCC.

       "Watson stated that the President would like to be reassured that the
    FBI has
       good coverage on Carmichael," wrote one of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover's
       aides. "I told him we had excellent sources within this group. Watson also
       stated that the President would like to have, at least several times a week,
      a memorandum on the activities of Carmichael and his group."

       The level of FBI interest surprised even Julian Bond, the SNCC's former
       communications director and today the chairman of the National Association
       for the Advancement of Colored People.

       "It seemed obvious to us that the FBI and state and local police had
    movement
       people under surveillance," he said, "but I don't think we imagined it
    was so
       extensive."

       Carmichael died in November 1998 in Africa, where he had lived since 1969.
      For one year he led SNCC, founded 30 years ago last month, before leaving
    to join
      the more radical Black Panthers. To replace Carmichael, the SNCC elected H.
      Rap Brown, who later changed his name to Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin. He became a
      community activist, but he now stands accused in a March 16 killing of a
      sheriff's deputy in Atlanta and faces the death penalty.

       Under the rallying cry of black power, Carmichael rejected the philosophy of
       nonviolence that had first motivated the SNCC's founders in 1960, and he
       called on blacks to win economic and political self-sufficiency. After
       Carmichael's election, SNCC expelled its white members and abandoned the
       political alliances earlier civil rights activists had formed with the
       Democratic administrations of Kennedy and Johnson.

       Activists felt betrayed by Democrats

       Johnson's surveillance of the group also reflected the mutual distrust
       between Carmichael and the mainstream, white-dominated political system.
    Two years before Carmichael's election, Johnson had prevented 60 black
    activists
       at the 1964 Democratic Presidential Convention from replacing the state's
       segregationist, all-white regular delegation. Johnson did, however, dispatch
       30 FBI agents to monitor every move the SNCC made at the convention,
      according to Robert Dallek, a Johnson biographer.

       This sort of political intrigue, along with the lackadaisical protection the
       FBI offered civil rights workers, contributed to SNCC's radicalism.

       Stokely Carmichael's FBI file shows that President Johnson showed an
       unusual interest in the black power activist's draft status, and that the
       bureau kept the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee under constant
       surveillance.

       Read the Documents

       "These kind of events, and the kinds of violence that was put upon workers,
       made it very clear that if we assumed we had a friend in the White House,
      that we were probably mistaken," said Cleveland Sellers Jr., who served
    as SNCC's
       national program director.

       White House's secret request

       Carmichael's FBI file also hints at more sinister government machinations.
    On Sept. 9, 1966, Johnson's secretary called the White House asking about
       Carmichael's draft status.

       "Mrs. Stegall [Johnson's secretary] said the White House was interested in
       determining precisely what the Selective Service status of Carmichael is and
       what the facts were which prompted various changes in classification,"
    an FBI
       official wrote later that day. "She emphasized that under no circumstances
      was it desired that it be known the White House is interested in [sic]
    and this
      should be handled most discretely."

       The FBI satisfied Johnson's curiosity by quoting the psychiatrist who
       performed Carmichael's pre-draft screening in 1965. Carmichael's various
       arrests for civil disobedience "seem not evident of any inherent anti-social
       or criminal traits, and I feel from our standpoint, he would rate a 'waiver
       recommendation.' However, there seems to be homo-sexual tendencies as
    well as
       hetero-sexual relationships. I would like to follow this case more
    closely as
       far as his further conduct is concerned."

       That exam downgraded Carmichael's draft status from I-A, which meant he had
       been available for military service, to IV-F, meaning he was not
    qualified.

       But nothing else in the declassified portion of Carmichael's file indicates
       any further evidence of "homo-sexual tendencies," and a second exam in 1966
       upgraded his draft status to I-Y, which meant he was only eligible for
       military service in time of war or national emergency.

       To Sellers, who spent four months in jail for draft evasion in 1967,
       Johnson's inquiry confirmed the feeling at the time that SNCC members were
       being made available for the draft as retribution for their outspoken
       opposition to the Vietnam War.

       Attacking SNCC with military service

       "All of a sudden, it seemed as if all the young men in SNCC were being
       drafted," Sellers said. "So it didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out
       that, systemically, SNCC was under attack by the administration to draft us
       into the armed services."

       Bond said his draft officer even once admitted to a magazine: "'That
       [expletive] Julian Bond, we let him slip through our fingers.'"

       "We always assumed this was a mixture of just local draft boards acting on
       their own initiative and some kind of orders from on high, saying, 'Get
    those
       guys, get those people, get them off the street,'" Bond said.

       The FBI documents currently available do not show that Johnson expressly
      asked for SNCC activists to be drafted and sent to Vietnam -- only that
    Johnson
      showed an unusual interest in their draft status.

       At home, a 'kind of war going on'

       While many of SNCC's leaders have gone on to become leaders in mainstream
       society, many more conservative Americans of the 1960s looked at the SNCC's
       radicalism, rejection of nonviolence and opposition to the Vietnam War with
       alarm. Carmichael's file includes several letters from Americans who called
      on Hoover to arrest or deport Carmichael, who was born in Trinidad but
    had been
       naturalized as a child.

       Many at the time also feared SNCC's growing black separatism would lead to
       even worse racial conflicts. Riots had already erupted in several cities by
       1964, including Philadelphia and New York. The mostly black Watts
      neighborhood in Los Angeles went up in flames one year later.

       Johnson had embraced the mainstream civil rights movement and pushed through
       the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
    But he, too, feared that the SNCC could foster more violence and believed
    it had
       been infected by communism. To Johnson, these beliefs justified the group's
       surveillance, said Dallek, the author of a two-volume biography of the
    former
       president.

       "In the context of what was going on in the country and in the context
    of the
       suspicions that had been generated in the administration, you had this kind
      of impulse to investigate and probe and look over people's shoulders and keep
      track of those they thought had ties to radicalism," Dallek said. "There was
       kind of war going on, a kind of domestic civil conflict."

       Hans H. Chen is an APBnews.com staff writer

       The African American Perspective
       http://www.CaraLive.com
       CaraLive@usa.net



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