1. “In Event of Moon Disaster”
As the universe nervously waited for Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to shore on the moon , Nixon speechwriter William Safire penned a language in compositor’s case the astronauts were stranded in blank . The memo was addressed to H.R. Haldeman , Nixon ’s Chief of Staff , and include chilling steering for the chairwoman , NASA , and clergy in lawsuit something go awry .
Here ’s the text :
2. Eisenhower’s “In Case of Failure” Message
General Dwight D. Eisenhower sounded positive before the Normandy Invasion . “ This performance is planned as a victory , and that ’s the path it ’s go to be . We ’re going down there , and we ’re throwing everything we have into it , and we ’re go to make it a success , ” he said .
Operation Overlord was a monumental movement — an invasion of 4000 ship , 11,000 planes , and nearly three million men . Despite a year of strategizing and a boatload of self-confidence , Eisenhower had a quiet plan in type his missionary station fail . If the armada could n’t cross the English Channel , he ’d order a full hideaway . One day before the invasion , he prepared a brief oral communication just in casing :
Although the friend suffered about 12,000 casualties — with an judge 4900 U.S. troop killed—155,000 successfully made it ashore , with thousands more on the agency . Within a twelvemonth , Germany would surrender .

3. “I Don’t Feel Like Resigning”
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With swath of damning evidence around him and no backup behind him , Richard Nixon stared into a television camera August 8 , 1974 , and announced his surrender . It was n’t presuppose to be that way . That was Plan B.
A few twenty-four hours earlier , Nixon ’s speechwriter , Raymond Price , cook two draft for that address . In one — titled “ Option B”—Nixon announced his resignation . In the other address , he vow to crusade for his job . Here ’s an excerpt :

Shortly after the speech was write , the “ smoke gas ” was released — a tape - recording of Nixon ’s architectural plan to halt the FBI ’s Watergate investigation . His political support evaporate overnight . Impeachment became a certainty : “ pick B ” was the only option left .
4. JFK’sOtherCuban Missile Crisis Speech
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America soiled its collective trouser October 22 , 1962 . The nation ’s middle were glue to the television as President Kennedy read what everyone fear : Cuba had missiles , and they were “ capable of hitting any metropolis in the westerly hemisphere . ” The United States was a jumbo bullseye .
Kennedy announced a Cuban “ quarantine , ” a military blockade that restricted arm and other materials to the island . Other options , however , were on the table — a 2d , more aggressive , address announced design for an airstrike . Kennedy ’s speechwriter , Ted Sorensen , did n’t spell the 2nd speech , but he did register it , and he was disturbed by its opening :

The alternative voice communication said that America would use atomic weapon if necessary — a bold command that never appeared in Kennedy ’s televised address . It ’s strange who wrote the speech and if Kennedy ever learn it . “ There is still a minor mystery as to who , if anyone , was asked to muster in an alternate spoken language announcing and justifying an air work stoppage on the projectile , ” Sorensen after wrote .
5. JFK’s Dallas Trade Mart Speech
It was late November 1963 , and President Kennedy had commence a two - day , five - metropolis go of Texas . After a speedy 13 - hour flight from Fort Worth , a motorcade picked up JFK at the Dallas drome and took him on a ten - Swedish mile tour of duty through business district . The president was bound for the Trade Mart , where he was scheduled to speak at a dejeuner . He never made it .
Here ’s a brusque excerpt of Kennedy ’s undelivered Trade Mart speech .
That day , Americans sorely needed to hear Kennedy ’s unread culmination :

A second undelivered Dallas speech , for the Texas Democratic Committee in Austin , can be foundhere .
