Groupthink: Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascoes |
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Page 19
They could have obtained and used the crucial information beforehand to correct
their false assumptions if at the group meetings they ... Assumption number 1 : No
one will know that the United States was responsible for the invasion of Cuba .
They could have obtained and used the crucial information beforehand to correct
their false assumptions if at the group meetings they ... Assumption number 1 : No
one will know that the United States was responsible for the invasion of Cuba .
Page 27
... money were only part of the losses sustained because of the policy - makers '
false assumption that the invaders could ... false assumptions have been avoided
if the advisory group had sought fuller information and had taken it into account ...
... money were only part of the losses sustained because of the policy - makers '
false assumption that the invaders could ... false assumptions have been avoided
if the advisory group had sought fuller information and had taken it into account ...
Page 33
But if Kennedy and his advisers had examined the six assumptions carefully
enough to see how faulty they were , wouldn ' t they have realized that permitting
the Bay of Pigs fiasco to materialize would be at least as embarrassing , both at ...
But if Kennedy and his advisers had examined the six assumptions carefully
enough to see how faulty they were , wouldn ' t they have realized that permitting
the Bay of Pigs fiasco to materialize would be at least as embarrassing , both at ...
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Contents
Why So Many Miscalculations? | 2 |
The Bay of Pigs | 14 |
The Wrong | 48 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
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accept 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 feel fiasco forces give groupthink Haldeman initial invasion issues Japanese Johnson judgment Kennedy leader leading major March meetings military missile moral Nixon norms North objections officers operation participants Pearl Harbor policy-making policy-making group political position possible present President pressures probably problem procedures proposed questions responsible result risks role says Secretary seems Senator shared social Soviet staff stress strong suggested thinking threat tion transcripts Truman United Vietnam warning Watergate White House