The Past Marches On
by George Morgenstern
First published
in
Human Events, Vol. 10, No. 16, 22 April 1953.
If history
is to be considered the process of consolidating the blunders of
the past, the Eisenhower administration need disappoint no one.
It is busy validating, one by one, the promises and myths that it
inherited from Roosevelt and Truman. The campaign talk about "the
mess in Washington" assumed that the mess had developed within
the last year or two, and was confined to a little routine corruption
here and there. But the mess has been in the making for more than
half a century.
At the end
of the 19th Century the United States began to stir with
those promptings of imperialism and altruism which have worked to
the mischief of so many puissant states. The sinister Spaniard provided
a suitable punching bag. Two days before McKinley went to Congress
with a highly misleading message which was an open invitation to
war, the Spanish government had agreed to the demands for an armistice
in Cuba and American mediation. There was no good reason for war,
but there was war anyway. We wound up the war with a couple of costly
dependencies, but this was enough to intoxicate the precursors of
those who now swoon on the very sight of the phrase "world
leadership."
McKinley testified
that in lonely sessions on his knees at night he had been guided
to the realization that we must "uplift and civilize and Christianize"
the Filipinos. He asserted that the war had brought new duties and
responsibilities "which we must meet and discharge as becomes
a great nation on whose growth and career from the beginning the
Ruler of Nations has plainly written the high command and pledge
of civilization." This sort of exalted nonsense is familiar
to anyone who later attended the evangelical rationalizations of
Wilson for intervening in the European war, of Roosevelt promising
the millennium, with the four freedoms thrown in for the dog, of
Eisenhower treasuring the "crusade in Europe" that somehow
went sour, or of Truman, Stevenson, Paul Douglas, or the New
York Times preaching the holy war in Korea.
It has been
considered clever in recent times to deride certain Republicans
for wishing to retreat to the days of McKinley. But the plain fact
is that the country has never left the road onto which he wobbled.
War, which in 1898 had been a summer’s holiday, became a recurrent
affliction, until today the country is in the state of a patient
who, after three severe coronaries, looks forward with hope to the
one which will do him in.
Wilson had
some moments of lucidity which persuaded him "that the objects
which the statesmen on both sides have in mind in this war (No.
1) are virtually the same." Later, he accommodated his Calvinistic
morals to a more congenial view: on April 2, 1917, he sensed "the
pride of those who know the day has come when America is privileged
to spend her blood and might…" Since then this privilege has
become chronic.
Of course,
this war was to proceed according to a magic formula whereby it
could become the last war in history. This has become the ignis
fatuus that has beckoned American internationalists into every
war since. The idea was expounded by Wilson in these terms:
"I am
proposing that all nations henceforth avoid entangling alliances
which would draw them into competitions of power, catch them in
a net of intrigue and selfish rivalry, and disturb their own affairs
with influences intruded from without. There is no entangling
alliance in a concert of power. When all unite to act in the same
sense and with the same purpose all act in the common interest
and are free to live their lives under a common protection."
In short, international
organization for collective security was the answer. Wilson tried
it out on the Senate in 1919 with results which have been variously
portrayed. Sen. Lodge, who had been willing enough for war, observed,
"We
may set aside all this empty talk about isolation. Nobody expects
to isolate the United States or make it a hermit nation. But there
is a wide difference between taking a suitable part and bearing
a due responsibility in world affairs and plunging the United
States into every controversy and conflict on the face of the
globe."
Despite the
Senate’s rebuff to this automatic device for insuring American participation
in every war, the dream of a security that should be "collective"
was treasured in numerous breasts. Henry L. Stimson, always a firebrand,
tried to persuade President Hoover in 1931 that Japan’s behavior
in Manchuria warranted a resort to economic sanctions and close
collaboration, if possible, with other nations, involving a willingness
to accept the predictable consequence of war if sanctions failed.
But Mr. Hoover would not agree; so Mr. Stimson hurried off to solicit
the incoming President of an opposition party, F.D. Roosevelt.
Roosevelt and
Hull were ahead of the League of Nations in imposing economic sanctions
on Italy in 1935, and, after the conquest of Ethiopia, they stubbornly
clung to the Stimson prescription of non-recognition. In 1937 Roosevelt
expressed his desire to "quarantine" aggressors, but,
as Sumner Welles sadly recounts, it proved "wholly impossible
for him for a period of exactly four years to carry out the policy
that he himself believed to be vitally important to our security."
That is, Roosevelt was not liberated from the restraints of public
opinion until he had succeeded, by what Mr. Justice Frankfurter
has chosen to call a "series of complicated moves," in
maneuvering us into Pearl Harbor.
These complicated
moves were, indeed, so devious that it took a Congressional committee
many months to listen to 10 million words of testimony that hardly
outlined what had occurred. In all the welter of words two statements
possess especial significance. One was Roosevelt’s confidence to
Prime Minister Churchill not quite four months before Pearl Harbor:
"I may never declare war; I may make war. If I were to ask
Congress to declare war, they might argue about it for three months."
The other was the statement of Stimson, situated opportunely in
1941 as Secretary of War: "The question was how we should maneuver
them (the Japanese) into firing the first shot without too much
danger to ourselves."
If the American
people fail to comprehend this sequence of events, the explanation
may lie in Woodrow Wilson’s account of how the German people were
taken into war in 1914. "Such designs," said he, "can
be successfully worked out only under cover where nobody has a right
to ask such questions."
Mr. Wilson
maintained that such cabals are happily impossible where public
opinion commands full information concerning all the nation’s affairs.
But where is the illumination when a restricted group of military
men and civilian officials so concert their plans and actions that
one may see, as did Lincoln, the "framed timbers" without
knowing precisely what goes on beyond the walls? And what of the
vast apathy of an uninformed multitude content to substitute a 21-inch
screen for the intellect?
Add to these
the operations of an organized propaganda capable, apparently, of
doping Americans into belief in any myth, and there is formidable
reason why public opinion should be so stupefied and stultified
that the nation can be led from war to war in pursuit of ever retreating
goals. Yet, despite the general numbness, Americans, surveying the
results of half a century of intermeddling, dimly perceive that
all is not well.
It is certain
that even Republicans in office can see certain effects of recent
policy. They can discern that Roosevelt’s representations of the
mechanics of power were spurious, in that he lit on the wrong adversary.
They can see that his prospectus of the fruits to be gathered from
war was wholly fraudulent. They can smell something fishy about
the means employed to put the United States into war at Pearl Harbor.
They can sense the corroded morals of Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam.
They can see
that such latter day saints as Gen. Marshall, Bedell Smith, and
Eisenhower himself are but plaster effigies. They have a hunch that
the UN is a papier-mâché front. They can hardly escape
the knowledge that Truman promoted the Korean horror in contravention
of the Constitution and the public law. They can savor the irony
of having fought a world war to destroy the partners in the anti-Comintern
pact only that the United States might assume leadership in a new
anti-Comintern pact.
This sense
of frustration was notably keen as a Republican administration moved
in the last few months to verify and confirm the New Deal legacy
of idiocy. There was a smothered protest when Gen. Smith was appointed
Undersecretary of State, for he was a key man in the calculated
triple fumble in the War Department backfield on the eve of Pearl
Harbor which made possible the success of the Japanese "surprise."
There was an instinctive revulsion even among Republican Senators,
who seemingly can absorb any amount of punishment, when the new
President forwarded for approval the draft of a resolution which,
in effect, proclaimed the wisdom and nobility of the secret diplomacy
of Roosevelt and Truman.
The outcry
was shrill in the wrangle over confirmation of Charles E. Bohlen,
counselor of the Acheson State Department, as Eisenhower’s Ambassador
to Russia. This man was a symbol of the diplomacy that produced
the world mess. A participant in every conference from Tehran through
Potsdam, he contemptuously informed Republican senators that it
was idle to expect him to direct a word of criticism toward Roosevelt.
Whether the
United States is, in fact, a captive of the errors and betrayals
of the past may be doubted. But it is hardly in dispute that an
all-pervasive propaganda has established a myth of inevitability
in American action: All wars are necessary, all wars were good.
The burden of proof rests with those who contend that America is
better off, that American security has been enhanced, and that prospects
of world peace have been improved by American intervention in four
wars in half a century. Intervention began with deceit by McKinley;
it ends with deceit by Roosevelt and Truman.
Perhaps we
would have a rational foreign policy, serviceable to the United
States, if Americans could be brought to realize that the first
necessity is the renunciation of the lie as an instrument of national
policy. Those who say that it is an idle exercise to sift the ashes
of past events are all too frequently fearful of the truths that
would be screened out in the sifting. The most disheartening fact
about the new administration is its disinclination to poke among
the clinkers.
April
7, 2006
George
Morgenstern, author of Pearl
Harbor: The Story of the Secret War, was the chief editorial
writer for the Chicago Tribune.
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