On May 25, 1961, President John Kennedy declared: "I believe that this
nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is
out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth."
Over his remaining time in the White House, JFK actively involved
himself in space decisions and several times reviewed his decision to go
to the Moon, each time concluding that the benefits of being the leader
in space outweighed the massive costs of the lunar landing enterprise.
Logsdon traces the evolution of JFK's thinking and policy up until his
assassination, which brought to an end his reexamination of the
program's goal and schedule and his hope to collaborate, rather than
compete, with the Soviet Union in going to the Moon. This study, based
on extensive research in primary documents and archival interviews with
key members of the Kennedy administration, is the definitive examination
of John Kennedy's role in sending Americans to the Moon.