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The
Old Right Revisited
Review by Ryan McMaken
by Ryan McMaken
Prophets
on the Right: Profiles of Conservative Critics of American Globalism
By
Ronald Radosh
Second
Edition, Copyright 2001
Cybereditions.com
Ronald Radosh,
most recently the author of Commies:
A Journey Through the Old Left, the New Left and the Leftover Left,
a neoconservative assessment of the history of the American left,
has penned a new introduction for a book that no neoconservative
could have written: Radosh’s own Prophets on the Right: Profiles
of Conservative Critics of American Globalism. Indeed, Radosh,
at the time the first edition of the book was published in 1975,
was a member of the anti-New Deal New Left, and like many of his
fellow neoconservatives today, eventually switched from the big-government
left to the big-government right, and set up shop clamoring for
a war for global democracy. In 1975 though, Radosh was under the
influence of the leftist intellectual William Appleman Williams
who was a proponent of dismantling the American corporate state
that he believed had been created under FDR’s New Deal and had been
complicit in creating the military-industrial complex that the New
Left so reviled. Opposition to centralized "rational"
government was certainly not unique to the American left, and in
his search to find allies on the Right, Radosh ended up making a
great contribution to the literature of the history of the American
right in the 20th century. Prophets on the Right
is a history of five members of what we now call the "Old Right,"
that coalition of old-style liberals and laissez faire theorists
who united in opposition to the New Deal, American involvement in
WWII, and finally, the Cold War. The writings of these men would
serve as some of the core intellectual foundations for a later movement
of conservative anti-interventionists, and at the time of its first
printing, Radosh’s leftist assessment of these conservatives would
win him some friends on the right. Indeed, several years earlier,
Radosh had co-edited with Murray Rothbard a collection of essays
on the "American Corporate State" titled A New History
of Leviathan. Prophets on the Right was much in this
same ecumenical vein, and today, the book is still a basic text
for any serious scholar researching the history of American conservatism.
Regarding his
embrace of neoconservatism, Radosh is quite upfront and clear about
all of this, unlike some of his fellow neocons, and in his new introduction
to Prophets on the Right, Radosh makes no bones about sharing
"what is often called the neoconservative view that the United
States has a positive role to play in the spread of democracy and
the creation of democratic regimes around the globe, and that success
in this endeavor will lead to both a more peaceful and more just
world." Thus Radosh explains that his own politics could not
be more unlike the politics of men he wrote so sympathetically about
almost thirty years earlier. Although his current intellectual adversaries
do not escape such a fate, Radosh is loath to dismiss his old subjects
as mere kooks and fools, and describing them as "serious and
penetrating thinkers," and maintains that these men of the
Old Right, while hopelessly wrong about America’s role in the international
arena, are still worth reading and understanding.
Prophets
on the Right is an examination of the intellectual and political
careers of five men: Charles
Beard, Oswald
Garrison Villard, Robert
A. Taft, John
T. Flynn, and Lawrence
Dennis. While Radosh does spend some time examining the personalities
of these men, his examination of the Old Right focuses not on character
studies or biographical data, but rather looks at American foreign
policy from the end of World War I to the early years of the Cold
War through five different lenses, each one offering a passionate
account of the folly of American foreign adventurism as provided
by these leading figures of the conservative opposition.
How each of
these men ends up being considered "conservative" is itself
interesting given the diverse backgrounds of Radosh’s five subjects.
Beard, Flynn, and Villard, before the New Deal, had all been associated
with "progressive" or leftist movements and intellectual
traditions, yet by the time Franklin Roosevelt had transformed America’s
corporate structure and agitated for yet another Wilsonian project
to liberate all the world, they all found themselves associated
with the American right and with older notions of what the United
States was supposed to be and what its place was in the world. Both
Flynn and Villard, for example, had supported Roosevelt early in
the 30’s, yet for both of them, it soon became abundantly clear
that, far from being an enemy of state-controlled "capitalism"
(which Flynn had become famous by lampooning), Roosevelt was actually
quite comfortable granting favors and subsidies to his corporate
allies if it forwarded his plans to regiment the economy under the
New Deal program. Both Villard and Flynn began to fear what they
called "corporate fascism" and eventually sided against
the New Deal and the Second World War which they saw as nothing
more than an extension of the administration’s grandiose plans to
transform the world. Charles Beard was more forgiving of Roosevelt
on domestic issues, yet offered some of the most withering attacks
on Roosevelt’s policies that led up to American entry into the Second
World War. Beard relentlessly chronicled the Roosevelt administration’s
efforts to agitate for war with the American public through provoking
small-scale military encounters with the Axis powers. This was no
surprise to Flynn and Villard who contended that the drive for war
stemmed from the same reckless motivations as the drive toward corporate
fascism, taking the form of militarism and infecting the minds of
American intellectuals leading them ever further away from
the true democratic and liberal ideals of earlier generations.
Villard and
Flynn would carry into the Cold War era their warnings that the
abandonment of American traditions to militarism would destroy the
United States before the Soviets ever could, and that the true threat,
a militarist ideology, was already a danger from within. Militarism
was the enemy, Flynn contended, and had been the downfall of societies
in the past that had tried it "supposing it would advance some
special objective not necessarily connected with war, only to find
that militarism in the end rides the countries. It sets in motion
forces and pressures too powerful to ever be controlled." Villard
was no more optimistic. He saw what was being called the "American
Century" as the century of American war: "We are to have
permanent conscription and a seven-ocean navy, the largest ever
dreamed of in the world…to be prepared for our next wholesale effort
to save the world for democracy or from other countries, white or
yellow, which we may have to put in their places." Both Flynn
and Villard saw the coming of an imperial age where the needs of
the quest for global enlightenment would forever trump the needs
of the Republic.
These former
leftists were joined in their vitriol by Lawrence Dennis, a long-time
member of the American right, and a convert to anti-interventionism
after witnessing the American mission in Nicaragua to establish
"supervision of elections, the maintenance of order and economic
rehabilitation" following the revolution of 1926. Noting that
3,000 "Nicaraguan patriots" had died fighting the American
occupation (135 Marines were killed in the conflict) Dennis was
convinced that foreign interventions were at best counterproductive.
Like Flynn and Villard, Dennis believed that if it were not careful,
the United States would "go fascist fighting fascism."
What made Dennis different, however, was that he was accepting of
an American version of fascism as a necessary defense against the
racist and totalitarian breeds of fascism overseas. Dennis’ great
sin, it turned out, was that he identified fascism as a type of
socialism and insisted that others make the connection as well.
His mixing together of communists, Nazis, and fascists as all socialists
eventually earned him accusations of "seditious" behavior
and he was put on trial for conspiracy with 29 other right-wing
Roosevelt critics.
By the time
the Cold War was in full swing, though, Dennis had reverted to his
laissez-faire beliefs of earlier days. Disenchanted with the possibility
of government using political power responsibly, Dennis developed
a critique of American global power that laid blame on the previous
generations for courting imperialist fantasies. Dennis concluded
that the American internationalism of the Cold War era was more
of the same in the "imperial tradition" that his generation
had inherited from the likes of Theodore Roosevelt, John Hay, Rudyard
Kipling, and Cecil Rhodes. According to Radosh, Dennis believed
that the Republicans had fully accepted the globalism of Woodrow
Wilson and that they had bought what Dennis saw as the central fallacy
of U.S. policy: "that controlling the world is purely a matter
of power. But the more power is used compulsively…the more uncontrollable
are the consequences." Dennis lamented that a restrained foreign
policy had lost all currency in American politics and that conservatives
had been particularly pathetic in their opposition to the policies
of Truman and Roosevelt bitterly noting that there was "nothing
you can’t put over on conservatives if you spice it with war and
anti-red talk." For Dennis, the vast spending and global crusading
was nothing more than a complete surrender to the militaristic crusading
of the Roosevelt years, except that it was now considered a "conservative"
agenda.
The one politician
in Radosh’s study is Robert Taft. Unlike the other men featured
here, Taft was neither a newspaperman nor an academic, and thus
we see less intellectual consistency in Taft’s opposition to foreign
intervention. Nevertheless, from the 30’s until his death in 1953,
Taft was one of the few voices in the mainstream political arena
challenging the liberal and mainstream orthodoxy of American globalism.
He supported true neutrality in Atlantic shipping in the early days
of the war in Europe, believing that a disregard for neutrality
had brought the United States into the First World War, and he attacked
the president heartily for "stirring up prejudices against
one or another nation." He was one of FDR’s few critics in
Washington during the Greer affair where Roosevelt claimed
that the Germans had fired unprovoked on an American sub, failing
to mention to the American public that the destroyer had been tracking
the sub on behalf of the British Navy.
Most characteristic
of Taft was his rejection of the proposition that the war
even if a legitimate case for national defense could be made – was
some kind crusade against evil. Calling the "pro-democracy"
argument nothing more than a specious belief that the United States
had a "divine appointment to reform the world," Taft would
fight against framing the war in such terms and would later lead
the conservative opposition against permanent membership in NATO,
and against involvement in the United Nations. Taft failed to see
the inherent goodness in the United States adopting for itself the
role of global caretaker and noted, "however benevolent we
might be, other people simply do not like to be dominated."
As the Cold
War progressed and Truman claimed "that as Commander in Chief
of the Armed Forces he had the authority to send troops anywhere
in the world," Taft found himself increasingly isolated among
Republicans who were adopting the liberal interventionist view of
American foreign policy. Men like Barry Goldwater would vote against
him at the 1952 convention, and by the time of his death, Taft’s
opposition to a perpetual military presence in places like Korea
and endless commitments to international organizations like NATO
became lost in the anti-Communist din.
Today, in looking
at these anti-interventionist critiques from World War II and the
early Cold War, it is noteworthy how little the modern rhetoric
has changed about spreading democracy, and that its inevitable result,
as John T. Flynn pointed out, has been massive growth of government
power both at home and abroad. All five of these men would die forgotten
and ignored, their memories kept alive by only a tiny group of right-wing
opponents to the triumphant messianic foreign policy that would
dominate the American mind for the next fifty years.
Since the end
of the Cold War, however, the Old Right has enjoyed renewed attention
from the new opponents to the continuation of a war against an enemy
that no longer existed. Just as Flynn and Villard would have predicted,
the needs of the militaristic state dictated that new enemies be
found, and indeed they were. In reading Prophets, it quickly
becomes clear that the arguments of the Old Right discussed by Radosh
are in no way irrelevant to today’s political climate and ideological
battles. One could change out names and dates, a find himself with
an accurate account of recent policy debates.
Unfortunately,
Radosh has these days taken to the sort of ad hominem attacks
(like being sure to note in the new introduction that he believes
Pat Buchanan to be "clearly an anti-Semite") that he so
properly condemns in this book. Yet, in spite of Radosh’s current
leanings and some of the left-socialist overtones contained in the
original text such as a rather flippant condemnation of Joseph McCarthy,
Radosh gives us an excellent introduction to the Old Right, and
provides us with profiles of principled men with whom every critic
of modern America’s endless foreign adventures should be familiar.
July
24, 2003
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
writes from Colorado. His personal web site can be found here.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Ryan
McMaken Archives
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