Groupthink: Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and FiascoesGroupthink - the psychological drive for consensus at any cost that suppresses disagreement and prevents the appraisal of alternatives in cohesive decision-making groups. In the first edition (Victims of groupthink), Iriving L. Janis showed how this phenomenon contributed to some of the major U.S. foreign policy fiascos of recent decades: the Korean War stalemate, the escalation of the Vietnam War, the failure to be prepared for the attack on Pearl Harbor, and the Bay of Pigs blunder. He also examined cases, such as the handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the formulation of the Marshall Plan, where groupthink was avoided. Here, in this revised and expanded edition, Janis applies his hypothesis to the Watergate cover-up, portraying in detail how groupthink helped to put the participants on a disastrous couurse and keep them there. In addition, he presents some fresh ideas on how and why groupthink occurs and offers suggestions for avoiding it. |
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Page 15
On April 17 , 1961 , the brigade of about fourteen hundred Cuban exiles , aided
by the United States Navy , Air Force , and the CIA , invaded the swampy coast of
Cuba at the Bay of Pigs . Nothing went as planned . On the first day , not one of ...
On April 17 , 1961 , the brigade of about fourteen hundred Cuban exiles , aided
by the United States Navy , Air Force , and the CIA , invaded the swampy coast of
Cuba at the Bay of Pigs . Nothing went as planned . On the first day , not one of ...
Page 20
They said that highly effective precautions would mask completely the fact that
the United States was engineering the invasion . The brigade of Cuban exiles
would be quietly and unspectacularly landed in their homeland . The only noisy
part ...
They said that highly effective precautions would mask completely the fact that
the United States was engineering the invasion . The brigade of Cuban exiles
would be quietly and unspectacularly landed in their homeland . The only noisy
part ...
Page 21
President Kennedy was so confident that he publicly promised at a press
conference on April 12 , 1961 ( five days before the invasion ) , that “ there will not
be , under any conditions , any intervention in Cuba by United States armed
forces ...
President Kennedy was so confident that he publicly promised at a press
conference on April 12 , 1961 ( five days before the invasion ) , that “ there will not
be , under any conditions , any intervention in Cuba by United States armed
forces ...
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Contents
Why So Many Miscalculations? | 2 |
The Wrong | 48 |
Or Why the Fortress Slept | 72 |
Copyright | |
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accepted according action administration Admiral advisers alternative American appears asked assumptions attack avoid Bay of Pigs become called Chiefs cohesive Committee concerning consensus consequences continued course cover-up crisis critical Cuba Cuban danger Dean decision decision-making Defense deliberations Department direct discussion effect errors evidence example Executive expected fact factors feel fiasco forces give going groupthink Haldeman invasion involved issues Japanese Johnson judgment Kennedy leader leading major March meetings military missile moral Nixon norms North objections officers operation participants Pearl Harbor policy-making political position possible present President pressures probably problem procedures proposed questions responsible result risks role says Secretary seems Senator shared social sources Soviet staff stress strong suggested thinking threat tion transcripts Truman United Vietnam warning Watergate White House