To Make War, Presidents Lie
by
Robert Higgs
When
American presidents prepare for foreign wars, they lie. Surveying
our history, we see a clear pattern. Since the end of the nineteenth
century, if not earlier, presidents have misled the public about
their motives and their intentions in going to war. The enormous
losses of life, property, and liberty that Americans have sustained
in wars have occurred in large part because of the public's unwarranted
trust in what their leaders told them before leading them into war.
In
1898, President William McKinley, having been goaded by muscle-flexing
advisers and jingoistic journalists to make war on Spain, sought
divine guidance as to how he should deal with the Spanish possessions,
especially the Philippines, that US forces had seized in what ambassador
John Hay famously described as a "splendid little war." Evidently,
his prayer was answered, because the president later reported that
he had heard "the voice of God," and "there was nothing left for
us to do but take them all and educate the Filipinos, and uplift
and Christianize them."
In
truth, McKinley's motivations had little if anything to do with
uplifting the people whom William H. Taft, the first Governor-General
of the Philippines, called "our little brown brothers," but much
to do with the political and commercial ambitions of influential
expansionists such as Captain Alfred T. Mahan, Theodore Roosevelt,
Henry Cabot Lodge, and their ilk. In short, the official apology
for the brutal and unnecessary Philippine-American War was a mendacious
gloss.
The
Catholic Filipinos evidently did not yearn to be "Christianized"
in the American style, at the point of a Springfield rifle, and
they resisted the US imperialists as they had previously resisted
the Spanish imperialists. The Philippine-American War, which officially
ended on July 4, 1902, but actually dragged on for many years in
some islands, cost the lives of more than 4,000 US troops, more
than 20,000 Filipino fighters, and more than 220,000 Filipino civilians,
many of whom perished in concentration camps eerily similar to the
relocation camps into which US forces herded Vietnamese peasants
some sixty years later.
When
World War I began in 1914, President Woodrow Wilson's sympathies
clearly lay with the British. Nevertheless, he quickly proclaimed
US neutrality and urged his fellow Americans to be impartial in
both thought and deed. Wilson himself, however, leaned more and
more toward the Allied side as the war proceeded. Still, he recognized
that the great majority of Americans wanted no part of the fighting
in Europe, and in 1916 he sought reelection successfully on the
appealing slogan, "He Kept Us Out of War."
Soon
after his second inauguration, however, he asked Congress for a
declaration of war, which was approved, although six senators and
fifty members of the House of Representatives had the wit or wisdom
to vote against it. Wilson promised this war would be "the war to
end all wars," but wars aplenty have taken place since the guns
fell silent in 1918, leaving their unprecedented carnage nearly
nine million dead and more than twenty million wounded, many of
them hideously disfigured or crippled for life, as well as perhaps
ten million civilians who died of starvation or disease as a result
of the war's destruction of resources and its interruption of commerce.
And what did the United States or the world gain? Only a twenty-year
reprieve before the war's smoldering embers burst into flame again.
After
World War I, Americans felt betrayed, and they resolved never to
make the same mistake again. Yet, just two decades later, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt began the maneuvers by which he hoped to plunge
the nation once again into the European cauldron. Unsuccessful in
his naval provocations of the Germans in the Atlantic, he eventually
pushed the Japanese to the wall by a series of hostile economic-warfare
measures, issued clearly unacceptable ultimatums, and induced them
to mount a desperate military attack, most devastatingly on the
US forces he concentrated at Pearl Harbor.
Campaigning
for reelection in Boston on October 30, 1940, FDR had sworn: "I
have said this before, but I shall say it again and again: Your
boys are not going to be sent into any foreign wars." Well, Peleliu
ain't Peoria. Roosevelt was lying when he made his declaration,
just as he had lied repeatedly before and would lie repeatedly for
the remainder of his life. (Stanford historian David M. Kennedy,
careful not to speak too stridently, refers to FDR's "frequently
cagey misrepresentations to the American public.") Yet many, many
Americans trusted this inveterate liar, sad to say, with their lives,
and during the war more than 400,000 of them paid the ultimate price.
Among
FDR's many political acolytes was a young congressman, Lyndon Baines
Johnson, who eventually and, for the world, unfortunately, clawed
his way to the presidency. As chief executive, he had to deal with
vital questions of war and peace, and like his beloved mentor, he
relied heavily on lying to the public. In October 1964, seeking
to gain election by portraying himself as the peace candidate (in
contrast to the alleged mad bomber Barry Goldwater), LBJ told a
crowd at Akron University: "We are not about to send American boys
9 or 10,000 miles away from home to do what Asian boys ought to
be doing for themselves."
In
1965, however, shortly after the start of his elected term in office,
Johnson exploited the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, itself based on
a fictitious account of an attack on US naval forces off Vietnam,
and initiated a huge buildup of US forces in Southeast Asia that
would eventually commit more than 500,000 American "boys" to fight
an "Asian boy's" war. Some 58,000 US military personnel would lose
their lives in the service of LBJ's vanity and political ambitions,
not to speak of the millions of Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians
killed and wounded in the melee. Chalk up another catastrophe to
a lying American president.
Now
President George W. Bush is telling the American people that we
stand in mortal peril of imminent attack by Iraqis or their agents
armed with weapons of mass destruction. Having presented no credible
evidence or compelling argument for his characterization of the
alleged threat, he simply invites us to trust him, and therefore
to support him as he undertakes what once would have been called
naked aggression. Well, David Hume long ago argued that just because
every swan we've seen was white, we cannot be certain that no black
swan exists. So Bush may be telling the truth. In the light of history,
however, we would be making a long-odds bet to believe him.
October
1, 2002
Robert
Higgs [send him mail]
is senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute, editor of The
Independent Review,
and author of Crisis
and Leviathan
and numerous scholarly and popular articles on Congress.
Copyright
© 2002 LewRockwell.com
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