After the election, the president-elect offered Schlesinger an ambassadorship and Assistant Secretary of State for Cultural Relations before Robert Kennedy proposed that Schlesinger serve as a "sort of roving reporter and troubleshooter." Schlesinger quickly accepted, and on January 30, 1961, he resigned from Harvard and was appointed Special Assistant to the President. He worked primarily on Latin American affairs and as a speechwriter during his tenure in the
White House. with
President Kennedy,
Vice President Johnson,
Jackie Kennedy, and
Admiral Arleigh Burke in the White House Office of the President's Secretary, May 5, 1961 In February 1961, Schlesinger was first told of the "Cuba operation," which would eventually become the
Bay of Pigs Invasion. He opposed the plan in a memorandum to the president: "at one stroke you would dissipate all the extraordinary good will which has been rising toward the new Administration through the world. It would fix a malevolent image of the new Administration in the minds of millions." He, however, suggested: During the Cabinet deliberations, he "shrank into a chair at the far end of the table and listened in silence" as the
Joint Chiefs and CIA representatives lobbied the president for an invasion. Along with his friend, Senator
William Fulbright, Schlesinger sent several memos to the president opposing the strike; however, during the meetings, he held back his opinion, reluctant to undermine the President's desire for a unanimous decision. Following the overt failure of the invasion, Schlesinger later lamented, "In the months after the Bay of Pigs, I bitterly reproached myself for having kept so silent during those crucial discussions in the cabinet room. ... I can only explain my failure to do more than raise a few timid questions by reporting that one's impulse to blow the whistle on this nonsense was simply undone by the circumstances of the discussion." After the furor died down, Kennedy joked that Schlesinger "wrote me a memorandum that will look pretty good when he gets around to writing his book on my administration. Only he better not publish that memorandum while I'm still alive!" Schlesinger further warned that "by 1970 the USSR may have a radically new production technology, involving total enterprises or complexes of industries, managed by closed-loop, feedback control employing
self-teaching computers". The cause was a pre-vision of an
algorithmic governance of economy by an internet-like computer network authored by Soviet scientists, particularly
Alexander Kharkevich. After President Kennedy was
assassinated on November 22, 1963, Schlesinger resigned his position in January 1964. He wrote a memoir/history of the Kennedy administration,
A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House, which won him his second
Pulitzer Prize in 1966. ==Later career==