Lyman Lemnitzer
Lyman Louis Lemnitzer (
August 29,
1899 –
November 12,
1988) was an
American Army general, who served as
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 1960 to 1962. He then served
Supreme Allied Commander,
NATO from 1963 to 1969.
Lemnitzer was born on
August 29,
1899 in
Honesdale, Pennsylvania. He graduated from
West Point in 1920 and was assigned at his request to a Coast Artillery unit. Lemnitzer served in the
Philippines but soon began receiving the staff assignments that marked his military career.
Lemnitzer was promoted to
Brigadier General in June 1942 and assigned to General
Eisenhower's staff shortly thereafter. He helped form the plans for the invasions of
North Africa and
Sicily and was promoted to
Major General in November 1944. Lemnitzer was one of the senior officers sent to negotiate the
Italian surrender in 1943 and the
German surrender in 1945. He would later be accused of making it possible for some
Nazis to elude investigations for
war crimes.
Following the end of
World War II, Lemnitzer was assigned to the Strategic Survey Committee of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and was later named as Deputy Commandant of the
National War College. In 1950, at the age of 51, he took
parachute training and was subsequently placed in command of the 11th Airborne Division. He was assigned to
Korea in command of the
7th Infantry Division in November 1951 and was promoted to
Lieutenant General in August 1952.
Lemnitzer was promoted to the rank of General and named Commander of U.S. Army Forces in the Far East and of the 8th Army in March 1955. He was named Chief of Staff of the Army in July 1957 and he was appointed as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in September 1960. As Chairman, Lemnitzer weathered the
Bay of Pigs crisis and the early years of American involvement in
Vietnam. He was also required to testify before the
Senate Foreign Affairs Committee about his knowledge of the activities of Major General
Edwin Walker, an extreme
racist who had been dismissed from the Army over alleged attempts to promote his beliefs in the military. Lemnitzer approved the plans known as
Northwoods in 1962; a proposed (and rejected) plan to discredit the
Castro regime and create support for military action against
Cuba by staging
false flag acts of terrorism.
Lemnitzer was named as Commander of U.S. Forces in Europe in November 1962 and was appointed as
Supreme Allied Commander of
NATO in January 1963. Once again, he was called upon to lead in difficult times as this period encompassed the
Cyprus crisis of 1963-1964 and the withdrawal of NATO forces from
France in 1966.
Lemnitzer retired from the military in July 1969. In 1975, President
Ford appointed Lemnitzer to the
Commission on CIA Activities within the United States (aka the Rockefeller Commission) to investigate whether the
Central Intelligence Agency had committed acts that violated American laws.
Lemnitzer died on
November 12,
1988 and is buried in
Arlington National Cemetery. His wife, Katherine Tryon Lemnitzer (
1901-
1994), is buried with him.
Lemnitzer was played by
John Seitz in the 1991 film
JFK.