 Just imagine what bothers me. You see, in the clear war, these people are trying to say, now you said so and so in the Korean War. I said my friends, no two military situations are the same and no two political situations. Here is a war that is the most nasty and unpredictable thing we've ever been in. There's just as much political as military. Therefore, when I said in Korea, I didn't say I'd use atomic bombs. I said that I would no more be inhibited or limited by the gentlemen's agreements that have been prevailing up to the time I got there. That if we had to bomb the Yeouido bridges or going over to the bases in China where this stuff was coming from, I'd do it. And I'd use whatever weapons were necessary to win. Now, I listened to that through three different avenues and I said, unless this is going to be done, unless the arms are fine. Well now, the conditions, with that time we had a practical monopoly of all bombs. And there was no conditions and not the same. The war is different and now they're trying to say, they want me to say, wouldn't I raise atomic bombs? I said, nobody can make such a decision except the United States and nobody's going to attend it. That's right. I just want to point out that I never varied from my stance that this is your responsibility. If I have any ideas as to what we should do or could do, I communicate them to you through this. I know that. And whenever I have to say about that may sound critical, that's merely that I want to win the damn war before I could go to the moon or anything else. General, you said what I think. You told me this. You may have forgotten it. The first visit you made to my office when I talked to you did. And I'm over in the old executive office building. You told me that you sent word through a dollar store in Nehru that you were not going to be bound by inter-sanctuaries or any weapons that you were going to do what was best for your country. And you wanted to bring it to an end. And you didn't get specific or anything. You just said, let that word get around. Bob Anderson told me that he heard the same thing. And I think it was a proper thing. And they're trying to get you to say that you won't drop an atomic bomb on somebody. We know that you don't do anything that's not well thought out. They wanted me to say that I wanted to publicly honor this war. And I didn't think I would want to do it. Well, I sure if you... I need all the help I can get. The person knows I'm always available. I know that. And I'm just not going to be in a position of dividing the United States at a time when it needs you. I know that. You've always shown that. And I told Evan Dirkson this morning. He said he made a little statement this morning. He said we got one blood out there and one flag and one uniform. And I said, well, I've been paid a thousand percent. And I said, Evan, do you remember when I used to have stand-up and Bill Nolan go on the back row and attack President? I'd stand up and do it. He said, yes, you're dead. I said, well, I've been paid a hundred percent dividends for three years now.