Have Peace Activists Ever Stopped a War?
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
Thanks
to Kevin B. Zeese for
pointing this out.
The
role of peace activism in ending U.S. wars has received very little
attention from scholars. Despite the fact that historians and social
scientists have studied U.S. peace movements extensively in recent
decades, we know much more about peace movements' organizational
history than we do about their impact upon public policy. Thus,
what I have to say today is a preliminary report.
Let me begin
by examining the provocative comment by some observers that, rather
than peace movements putting an end to wars, wars put an end to
peace movements. This is sometimes the case, for given the
strength of nationalism many people tend to rally 'round
the flag of their nation once war is declared. Thus, not surprisingly,
substantial U.S. peace movements largely collapsed with the entry
of the United States into the Civil War, World War I, and World
War II. In more recent years, polls indicate that U.S. peace sentiment
declined significantly (albeit temporarily) after the entry of the
United States into the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and the Iraq War.
Furthermore, direct government repression in wartime for
example, during World War I has sometimes dramatically undermined
or destroyed peace movements.
Moreover, even
when powerful peace movements have persisted in wartime, they have
not always been very effective. The War of 1812 might well have
been (as Samuel Eliot Morison claimed) the most unpopular war in
U.S. history. Certainly it drew a tidal wave of criticism, especially
in the Northeast. But the frequent denunciations of the war did
not halt its progress. The same phenomenon can be glimpsed in the
case of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century "pacification"
of the Philippines. Although a powerful Anti-Imperialist League
consistently challenged this war (which resulted in the deaths of
hundreds of thousands of Filipinos and 7,000 U.S. troops), it continued
to rage right up to a U.S. military victory.
On the other
hand, there are instances in which the peace movement brought an
end to U.S. wars. The Mexican War of the 1840s provides us with
one example. Condemned from the start as a war of aggression and
as a war for slavery, the Mexican War stirred up remarkably strong
opposition. Thus, although the war went very well for the United
States on a military level and President Polk pressed for the annexation
of all of Mexico to the United States, when Nicholas Trist, Polk's
diplomatic negotiator, disobeyed his instructions and signed a treaty
providing for the annexation of only about a third of Mexico, Polk
felt trapped. In the face of fierce public opposition to the conflict,
he did not believe it possible to prolong the war to secure his
goal of taking all of Mexico. And so Polk reluctantly backed Trist's
peace treaty, and the war came to an end.
Another example
of peace movement effectiveness can be seen in its impact upon the
Vietnam War. By late 1967, as Lyndon Johnson recalled, "the
pressure got so great" that Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara
"couldn't sleep at night. I was afraid he might have a nervous
breakdown." Johnson himself seemed obsessed with the opposition
his war policies had generated. Conversations with Cabinet members
began: "Why aren't you out there fighting against my enemies?"
After McNamara resigned and Johnson was driven from office by a
revolt within his own party, it was the Nixon administration's turn
to be caught, as Henry Kissinger complained, "between the hammer
of antiwar pressure and the anvil of Hanoi." Kissinger noted:
"The very fabric of government was falling apart. The Executive
Branch was shell-shocked." The war and the peace protests,
Kissinger concluded, "shattered the self-confidence without
which Establishments flounder." In a careful and well-researched
study, Johnson,
Nixon, and the Doves, the historian Melvin Small concluded
that "the antiwar movement and antiwar criticism in the media
and Congress had a significant impact on the Vietnam policies of
both Johnson and Nixon," pushing them toward de-escalation
and, ultimately, withdrawal from the war.
Yet another
example of the peace movement's efficacy occurred in the context
of the Reagan administration's determined attempts to overthrow
the Sandinista-led government of Nicaragua. As in Vietnam, despite
the immense military advantage the U.S. government enjoyed against
a small, peasant nation, it was unable to employ it effectively.
Popular pressure against U.S. military intervention in Nicaragua
not only blocked the dispatch of U.S. combat troops, but led to
congressional action (i.e., the Boland amendment) cutting off U.S.
government funding for the U.S. surrogates, the contras. Although
the Reagan administration sought to circumvent the Boland amendment
by selling U.S. missiles to Iran and sending the proceeds to the
contras, this scheme backfired, and did more to undermine the Reaganites
than it did the Sandinistas.
There is also
considerable evidence that it was the peace movement that brought
an end to the Cold War. The peace movement's struggle against the
nuclear arms race and its clearest manifestation, nuclear testing,
led directly to Kennedy's 1963 American University address and to
the Partial Test Ban Treaty of that year, which began Soviet-American
détente. The speech was partially written by Norman Cousins,
founder and co-chair of the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear
Policy, America's largest peace group. Cousins also brokered the
treaty.
When the hawkish
Reagan administration revived the Cold War and escalated the nuclear
arms race, these actions triggered the greatest outburst of peace
movement activism in world history. In the United States, the Nuclear
Freeze campaign secured the backing of leading religious denominations,
unions, professional groups, and the Democratic Party, organized
the largest political demonstration up to that time in U.S. history,
and drew the support of more than 70 percent of the public. In Europe,
much the same thing occurred, and in the fall of 1983 some five
million people turned out for demonstrations against the planned
deployment of intermediate range nuclear missiles. Reagan was stunned.
In October 1983, he told Secretary of State George Shultz: "If
things get hotter and hotter and arms control remains an issue,
maybe I should go see [Soviet Premier Yuri] Andropov and propose
eliminating all nuclear weapons." Shultz was horrified by the
idea, but agreed that "we could not leave matters as they stood."
Consequently,
in January 1984, Reagan delivered a remarkable public address calling
for peace with the Soviet Union and for a nuclear-free world. His
advisors agree that this speech was designed to signal to the Russians
his willingness to end the Cold War and reduce nuclear arsenals.
But the Soviet leadership was not interested in following up on
Reagan's proposals until the advent of Mikhail Gorbachev in March
1985. Gorbachev, unlike his predecessors, was ready to take action,
for he was a movement convert. His "New Thinking"
by which he meant the necessity for peace and disarmament in the
nuclear age was almost a carbon copy of the peace movement's
program. As Gorbachev himself declared: "The new thinking took
into account and absorbed the conclusions and demands of . . . the
movements of physicians, scientists, and ecologists, and of various
antiwar organizations." Not surprisingly, then, Reagan and
Gorbachev, spurred on by the peace movement, moved rapidly toward
nuclear disarmament treaties and an end to the Cold War.
We might also
give some thought to the wars that, thanks to peace movement activism,
did not occur. Historians have maintained that the anti-imperialist
crusade against the Philippines war blocked the occurrence of later
U.S. wars of this kind and on this scale. They have also suggested
that peace movement pressures helped to block war with Mexico in
1916 and helped to soften the U.S.-Mexican confrontation of the
late 1920s. And how many wars, we might ask ourselves, were prevented
through the implementation of many ideas and proposals that originated
with the peace movement: international arbitration; international
law; decolonization; a league of nations; disarmament treaties;
a United Nations; and nonviolent resistance. We shall probably never
know.
We do know,
however, that the peace movement played a major role in preventing
one kind of war since 1945: nuclear war. Given time constraints,
no more than a tiny portion of the evidence for this point can be
presented today. But it is laid out in great detail in my trilogy,
The Struggle Against the Bomb.
In 1956, Henry
Cabot Lodge Jr., U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, complained
that the atomic bomb had acquired " 'a bad name,' and to such
an extent that it seriously inhibits us from using it." Later
that year, when the Joint Chiefs of Staff and other administration
officials called for greater flexibility in the employment of nuclear
weapons, President Eisenhower responded: "The use of nuclear
weapons would raise serious political problems in view of the current
state of world opinion." In mid-1957, brushing aside ambitious
proposals for nuclear war-fighting, Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles told a National Security Council meeting that "world
opinion was not yet ready to accept the general use of nuclear weapons."
This belief
continued to haunt U.S. officials during the struggle in Vietnam
when, in Dean Rusk's words, the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations
deliberately "lost the war rather than 'win' it with nuclear
weapons." McGeorge Bundy, who served as the National Security
Advisor to two of these presidents and a consultant to the third,
maintained that the U.S. government's decision not to use nuclear
weapons in the war did not result from fear of nuclear retaliation
by the Russians and Chinese, but from the terrible public reaction
that a U.S. nuclear attack would provoke in other nations and, especially,
in the United States.
The proof of
the pudding came during the Reagan administration, whose top national
security officials from the President on down entered
office talking glibly of fighting and winning a nuclear war. But
this position quickly changed thanks to a massive popular outcry
against it. Starting in April 1982, Reagan began declaring publicly
that "a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought."
He added: "To those who protest against nuclear war, I can
only say: `I'm with you!'"
Thus,
although there is considerable room for additional research on peace
movement efficacy, I think it is fair to say that, on numerous occasions,
peace activism has exercised a restraining influence on U.S. foreign
and military policy.
January
17, 2006
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2006 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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