By Jeffrey Lord on 5.24.06 @ 12:09AM
The modern liberal paradigm of America's role in the world is not new. Anyone remember Henry Wallace? George McGovern?
It didn't start with Iraq. Or with George W. Bush.
The modern liberal paradigm of America's role in the world is
not new. Whispered by Jimmy Carter, bellowed by Al Gore or parroted
by John Edwards, vocalized by a young John Kerry or an old John
Murtha, the notion that America is an imperial war power run amok
alienating the world has a longer lineage. It is a paradigm born
exactly sixty years ago this September in Madison Square
Garden.
On that September 12th of 1946, the world was in turmoil.
Winston Churchill had months earlier delivered a blistering
assessment of the post-World War reality. With Harry Truman at his
side Churchill warned that "an Iron Curtain has descended across
the Continent." Stalin's Soviet Union was on the march. Soon, the
Russians would have the atomic bomb.
Stepping to the podium in the Garden that September night was
Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace, Franklin Roosevelt's Vice
President in FDR's third term. Uneasy about Wallace's left-wing
pronouncements Democratic bosses convinced FDR to replace him with
Truman in the 1944 election. With Roosevelt's death Truman was now
president. The result of the Garden speech was explosive.
Looking back sixty years later, the core ideas now the
ideological heart of the Democratic Party are right there in
Wallace's speeches, the first of which was that night. Moral
relativism? Wallace believed Soviet military control over Eastern
Europe was no different than American influence in Latin America.
The United Nations? Wallace wanted the UN to reign supreme in areas
not under the control of Russia or the United States, giving the UN
control over all nuclear weapons and all major military bases
around the globe. Blame America First? Unless America listened to
him Wallace predicted the United States would "sooner or later"
become "the image of that which we have hated in the Nazis."
Truman fired Wallace. In his diary, an incredulous Truman wrote
that Wallace "is a pacifist 100 percent. He wants us to disband our
armed forces, give Russia our atomic secrets and trust a bunch of
adventurers in the Kremlin.... I do not understand a 'dreamer' like
that." Wallace and his followers, the intellectual ancestors of
today's Angry Left, were "becoming a national danger."
The battle between the Truman and Wallace worldviews began. The
Truman Doctrine of sending military aid to nations fighting
Communism? Wallace opposed. The creation of NATO? In the words of
his biographer, Wallace thought NATO "a harbinger of fascism." The
Marshall Plan? Wallace saw war with the Soviets. The Berlin
Airlift? Wallace saw fascism. And Churchill's Iron Curtain speech?
"Warlike."
Truman's paradigm prevailed. The Wallace paradigm of the world
seemingly disappeared. But a young delegate to the Progressive
Party convention that nominated Wallace in his losing 1948
presidential bid against Truman had other ideas. His name was
George McGovern. Decades later McGovern brought Wallace's paradigm
back to life as the 1972 Democratic presidential nominee. He wrote
of his disdain for Truman. "Harry Truman is being elevated
retroactively as a great President, whereas Henry Wallace is
largely forgotten. But I believed in the late forties and I believe
now that...the peace of the world would have been better served by
the hopeful and compassionate views of Wallace than the 'Get Tough'
policy of the Truman Administration."
Today the results of the Wallace/McGovern paradigm are dramatic
images of repeated failure. Desperate Vietnamese clinging to the
last American helicopter leaving Vietnam. Piles of skulls from
Cambodian genocide. Soviet troops rolling into Kabul. Charred
Marine corpses littering the Iranian desert. In the 1990s (thanks
to the Clinton administration's adherence to the Wallace/McGovern
paradigm it is becoming known as The Lost Decade) the images
captured: the body of an American soldier being dragged through
Mogadishu, terrified civilians fleeing a first attack on the World
Trade Center, bombed U.S. embassies, slaughtered sailors on the USS
Cole. Then, the most devastating images of the
Wallace/McGovern paradigm: 9/11.
No, this liberal paradigm didn't start with Iraq or President
Bush. But I bet this is news to its latest -- if predictable --
champions: the Dixie Chicks.
topics:
Trade, Military, Iraq, Iran, Russia, United Nations, NATO, Communism, Fascism, Nuclear Weapons, Oil