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Special Report

Summer of Appeasement: When Ford Snubbed Solzhenitsyn

It was 35 years ago this summer that conservatives found themselves in a defining, epic moral struggle against…the GOP.

(Page 3 of 3)

As for Carter, in the October 6, 1976 presidential debate, he rightly complained of Ford: "He's also shown a weakness in yielding to pressure. The Soviet Union, for instance, put pressure on Mr. Ford, and he refused to see a symbol of human freedom recognized around the world -- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn."

Yes, when it came to appeasing the Soviets, Gerald Ford, Republican, was to the left of the New York Times and Jimmy Carter.

Is it any wonder that Ronald Reagan challenged the incumbent Republican for the party's presidential nomination the next year?

Not coincidentally, as the Republican convention approached in August 1976, Reagan and his supporters sought to add a plank titled "morality in foreign policy" to the party platform, which included these choice words:

We recognize and commend that great beacon of human courage and morality, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, for his compelling message that we must face the world with no illusions about the nature of tyranny. Ours will be a foreign policy that keeps this ever in mind…. Agreements that are negotiated, such as the one signed in Helsinki, must not take from those who do not have freedom the hope of one day gaining it.

The plank was widely reported (including in the August 17, 1976 New York Times) as a repudiation of Ford-Kissinger foreign policy, which indeed it was.

Such nonsense from Ford was so bad that the editorial board at Bill Buckley's National Review actually considered endorsing Jimmy Carter in 1976 rather than the Republican incumbent. As Lee Edwards notes in his excellent new biography of Buckley, NR's editors (specifically James Burnham) at least considered endorsing Carter, given their grave disappointment with Ford. (In the end, they endorsed Ford.)

Alas, the one saving grace from this sordid episode is that it helped produce the death of détente and the birth of the Reagan presidency, but only after an even more painful period, namely four horrendous years under President Jimmy Carter -- made possible by Gerald Ford. We wouldn't have gotten Reagan without Carter and Ford. With the advent of that sea-change at the head of the Republican Party, accommodation was out and rollback was in. It would be the death knell for an empire that the new Republican president and an esteemed Russian dissident mutually agreed was the embodiment of evil. And it was that tectonic shift at the helm of the Republican Party that sealed the fate of the Soviet empire, ultimately announced worldwide by the collapse of the Berlin Wall in the fall of 1989.

The difference between the fall of 1989 and summer of 1975 was black-and-white and life-and-death, from mere rhetoric about freedom to genuine freedom. Today, most of its players -- Ford, Solzhenitsyn, Reagan -- are gone. Yet, the fight for what's right, for conscience, for rejecting "unprincipled compromises" and "deals with evil," for embracing Solzhenitsyn and what he stood for, remain as timeless as ever.

Page:   1 23

About the Author

Paul Kengor is professor of political science at Grove City College. His books include The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism and the newly released Dupes: How America's Adversaries Have Manipulated Progressives for a Century. His next book will examine Barack Obama's mentor, Frank Marshall Davis.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (31) | Leave a comment

Doctor Right| 8.10.10 @ 8:39AM

Ford was an incurable RINO. He was barely a Conservative.

RINOs are almost as much of a menace as liberals.

We cannot afford them any longer. Let the purge begin.

Finbarr Mora| 8.10.10 @ 8:53AM

Actually, I believe that RINOs are a bigger nuisance than liberal Democrats.

You know what to expect from liberals. You cannot predict when a RINO will sneak off the reservation.

Thank God Carter won. Otherwise it could have meant a RINO ascendency and we might never have had the Reagan years.

Stan Redmond| 8.10.10 @ 9:47AM

Actually you can predict RINOs They are LIBERALS and will always do what liberals do. Lie, cheat, steal, spend, limit your freedom, and grab as much power as possible.

Louis Jenkins| 8.10.10 @ 8:41AM

You left out Kissinger. Kissinger has played several presidents while remaining slightly recluse. I dare say had Kissinger recommended that Ford see Solzhenitsyn it would have happened. But he did not. Kissinger is a bad apple, and the truth is not in him.

Le Cracquere| 8.10.10 @ 9:00AM

A worthwhile reminder that an (R) after one's name guarantees NOTHING. It's also worth remembering that George H.W. Bush was the legitimate successor of men like Ford and his "brain trust," and the reasons that nearly toppled Ford in '76 were the reasons conservatives stayed home in '92.

Ken (Old Texican)| 8.10.10 @ 9:26AM

Mr. Kengor,

Thank you for the reminder.

Every single day, I pray for Sarah Palin to run. Heck even if she looses in the primaries, she will force her fellow Republicans to take some stands...
On Sharia
On Death panels
On Obamacare
Heck, on everything!

AMENBRO| 8.10.10 @ 11:53AM

AGREED sir. She has out-polled Boy Wonder since 2009.
Public Policy Polling, a claque as liberal as they come, could only muster a draw, 46% to 46%. In every strain of each sentence they implored, the polled to pick Obama. Mama Grizzle was chosen 1 fer 1
Dipshits they be, that are too smart to realize the intrinsic value a woman with LARGER BALLS then they. Sadly these idiots do so at the peril of the REPUBLIC for which it stands, One Nation Under God, Indivisible , with Liberty & Justice for all.

In short Get your Heads outta your asses fellers.

goatlocker| 8.12.10 @ 2:03PM

Right now, the only politicians with cajones are female, conservative Republicans. Sarah Palin, Michelle Bachman and Jan Brewer will be the salvation of our country. Why can't we raise our boys to grow up with this much spunk, character and integrity? Thank God that these great ladies are among us and willing to stand up and fight for truth!!!

Petronius| 8.10.10 @ 9:43AM

Outside of common sense, Ford never had a lick of gravitas. He was just another beltway bastard who made sure he wore the correct shade of brown lipstick in front of the camera. As to books and ideas, he was allergic to both. During Reagan's first term he would vet the President's mail, always discarding the complimentary copies of Human Events and dare I say TAS?
A meeting with such a colossal nonentity as Gerry Ford would have frustrated any man with serious intentions all the more when the only concern of a President like Ford is tomorrows headline in the Washington Post announcing to the rest of the world that his choice of belle letters is the society section. Gerry got to be President by knowing his place and taking orders from the beltway establishment which wanted to do to us then what Obama is doing to us now.

Tom| 8.10.10 @ 11:07AM

Ford vetted Reagan's mail? Ford didn't work for Reagan, hell they could barely stand each other.

TURK| 8.10.10 @ 9:55AM

What Kengor writes about, has a separate thrust to it, that being how the gutless country club/rino's put this country in the great jeopardy it finds itself with the communist cadre doing its best to destroy our foundations as a great nation. They leave America at the brink.

Ford was typical of the rot within the republican party. The democrats; the party of the far left have ridden roughshod over republicans like ford for decades. Only recently did they decide they had virtually no opposition for their leftist schemes. In the 40s and 50s I can remember the pipe smoking ford leading the republicans in the house. He was a bumbler with no core of substance. Harry Truman made light of him with the remark about fords football days, observing-he played without his helmet too much. But it wasn't mental deficiency, but (in Sarah's word) the lack of cojones. Like all country clubbers/rinos, ford just hated waves. It was ANYTHING to avoid the contest with nasty democrats (or the russians). Recently, Carl Rove admitted it was a mistake for Bush to spend 8 yrs being genteel in the face of the lying-vituperative democrats. W was for 'compassionate conservatism' whatever in hell that was: his daddy, in his inaugural address spoke of "a kinder gentler nation'. Further daddy joked of 'that vision thing' (one thinks he meant conservatism).

The fate of this nation rests, for now with the Republicans. Aint THAT scary!

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$| 8.10.10 @ 10:32AM

Gerald Ford secured his place in history by becoming the only chief executive to get the job without benefit of a vote of the people. Given a chance to vote, the people punished us with 4 years of the smiley face peanut farmer. This points out the troubling truth that the only real difference between the dumbo-crats and the rino-kons is whose ‘friends’ get the loot.

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was a valiant hero of World War II in which he “served as the commander of a sound-ranging battery in the Red Army, was involved in major action at the front, and twice decorated.”
[ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A.....itsyn#WWII ]. In the kommie mind of Nazi collaborator, Iosif Dzhugashvili (aka joe stalin), this made Solzhenitsyn and most of his co-patriots traitors to the kommie movement. These valiant soldiers were the first to enter Berlin ending the third reich. Their crime against the reds was nothing more than meeting soldiers from the West. These dangers to the purity of stalin’s version of hype and chains were rewarded for their noble sacrifice on behalf of Mother Russia by life-time positions slaving in the Siberian salt mines. In his masterpieces: ‘One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich’, ‘The Gulag Archipelago’ and ‘Cancer Ward’ Solzhenitsyn provides us with a glimpse of the wonderful life found under the boot of a kommie utopia. Surely, all similarities between stalin’s treatment of genuine Russian Patriots and current dumb-ocratic opinion of OURs are merely coincidental.

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$
Don’t Tread on Me.
gill.Oteen07041776@gmail.com
“Our government declared that it is conducting some kind of great reforms. In reality, no real reforms were begun and no one at any point has declared a coherent programme.” - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Only 894 days to go

Doctor Right| 8.10.10 @ 11:23AM

"Gerald Ford secured his place in history by becoming the only chief executive to get the job without benefit of a vote of the people."

Ummmm....

Andrew Johnson: Sworn in on April 15, 1865, the morning after Lincoln's assassination

Chester A. Arthur: Sworn in on September 19, 1881 after the death (by assassination) of President Garfield.

Theodore Roosevelt: Sworn in on September 19th, 1901, after the death (by assassination) of President McKinley.

Lyndon Baines Johnson: Sworn in on November 22nd, 1963, after the death (by assassination) of President Kennedy.

Ford was the FIFTH President to obtain the White House without benefit of an election.

Akaky| 8.10.10 @ 11:57AM

Doc, sorry, but all of the men you bring up ran as the second half of a presidential ticket. The people voted for them. Ford was appointed Vice President by Nixon after Agnew's resignation and became President after Nixon's resignation. Nobody except the people in Ford's congressional district ever voted for him for anything other than Congress until 1976, when he'd already been President for two years. Gill got it right.

Doctor Right| 8.10.10 @ 12:30PM

Actually, you got it right by clarifying the statement.

Gil's original comment was not as clear.

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$| 8.10.10 @ 1:36PM

Akaky, thanks for backing me up!

Doctor Right, just because you lack a basic understanding of the turmoil of the Nixon years does not make my statement in any way unclear. Try checking your facts. A simple glimpse at the first paragraph of Wikipedia’s Gerald Ford would have revealed your error.

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$
Don’t Tread on Me.
gill.Oteen07041776@gmail.com
“As the first person appointed to the vice-presidency under the terms of the 25th Amendment, when he became President upon Richard Nixon's resignation on August 9, 1974, he also became the only President of the United States who was elected neither President nor Vice-President.” - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Ford
Only 894 days to go.

Alert1201| 8.10.10 @ 2:35PM

I understood what Gil meant.

Finbarr Moran| 8.10.10 @ 6:10PM

We're all on the same side, aren't we gents?

Let's not act like RINOs :)

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$| 8.11.10 @ 6:44AM

Are we all on the same side? The fact is what I know about most of those who comment here is limited to whatever they have written. Nor do any of you know that much about me. Which side am I on? Many think I’m a respubly-kon; whereas, I dislike that crowd almost as much as I hate the other guys. Consider the handles we each chose for posting here. How many of them are assuredly the actual name of the poster? And there is nothing preventing anyone else from using my nom de AmSpec and posting comments here. AmSpec doesn’t care. All it asks is for an email address. I’m not even sure whether they check if that e-address is valid.

What I do know is that there are many loonie lemmings who corrupt this and similar sites. One of their techniques is simply to complicate the argument. Nothing in my first comment was in error other than maybe the spelling or grammar. Yet Doctor Right made a rather lame attempt to create a tempest in an empty pot by posting a demonstrably inaccurate reply. Either he really is that clueless, which I have no way of proving, since I do not know him (I don’t even know for certain Doctor Right is a him) or he’s playing mind games. Either way, I’m not on his side.
Gill O’Teen ✝✡$
Don’t Tread on Me.
gill.Oteen07041776@gmail.com
“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of the facts and evidence” - John Adams
Only 893 days to go.

Joe Oliva| 8.10.10 @ 12:59PM

All except Ford were legitimately elected as VP, which implies if the the President dies, resigns, or is impeached, he would become President.

Ford was APPOINTED as VP and became President without the benefit of receiving the votes of his countrymen.

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$| 8.10.10 @ 1:54PM

I should have included you in my 1:36 PM reply to Doctor Right when I thanked Akaky. My only excuse is that I first voted during the Nixon years. Well, maybe I was voting already in Chicago - just not in person.
Gill O’Teen ✝✡$
Don’t Tread on Me.
gill.Oteen07041776@gmail.com
“Good evening. I'm Gerald Ford and you're not.” - Gerald Ford, possibly to Chevy Chase who had made a career of lampooning Ford’s stumbling down the steps of Air Force One in 1975, at the annual Radio and Television Correspondents Association dinner in 1975.
Only 894 days to go.

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$| 8.10.10 @ 3:26PM

Not to put too fine a point on this, but in all there were eight Presidents who died in office:
1) William Henry Harrison succeeded by John Tyler;
2) Zachary Taylor succeeded by Millard Fillmore;
3) Abraham Lincoln succeeded by Andrew Johnson;
4) James A. Garfield succeeded by Chester A. Arthur;
5) William McKinley succeeded by Theodore Roosevelt;
6) Warren G. Harding succeeded by Calvin Coolidge;
7) Franklin Delano Roosevelt succeeded by Harry S. Truman; and
8) John F. Kennedy succeeded by Lyndon B. Johnson.

With the exception of Taylor, the others were all elected in years evenly divisible by 20. A coincidence that gave the loonie left great hope during the Reagan era.

So Ford was the Ninth Vice President to assume the highest office in OUR land due to His President’s leaving office before completion of his current term.

Gill O’Teen ✝✡$
Don’t Tread on Me.
gill.Oteen07041776@gmail.com
kommie: "Excuse me, what time is it right now?"
Tea Partier: "It's 11:25PM."
kommie: (confused look on face) "You know, it's the weirdest thing, I've asked that question thirty times today, and every time someone gives me a different answer." modified from http://www.ahajokes.com/blo020.html
Only 894 days to go.

Al Adab| 8.10.10 @ 3:36PM

Gill, et al:
Nixon considered Goldwater for the VP appointment. Had he been picked instead of Ford, what a future. Nixon misjudged and thought that Ford, being a nonentity would secure his, Nixon's, Presidency. Goldwater would have. They would have dropped "Watergate" like a hot potato with Goldwater in the Vice Presidency.

mike ames| 8.10.10 @ 10:46AM

Ford stood in a long line of testosterone deprived RINOs. Men who lived not by honor or principal but by public funding u0on which rests thier livlihood making them no beter than the Marxist they claim to stand against.

Al Adab| 8.10.10 @ 11:19AM

The so called Moderate or accomodationist wing of the Republican party was, and continues to be, the biggest problem for GOP success. They are more interested in their own position and their own "nest padding" than the principles to which they should adhere. The battle against the luke warm Republicans continues. They fear the loss of their perrogatives and another 1964. Yet it was from 64 that the American renewal began.

Don't forget that Bush opposed Reagan in 80 and that Cheny and Rumsfeld backed Ford over Reagan in 76. Romney opposed Goldwater in 64. Yet, what these events demonstrate is that it is only when the Conservative Movement preponderates in the GOP that the party enjoys success. Those who fail to stand for something, stand for nothing.

Petronius| 8.10.10 @ 3:58PM

Good pt. Al
If we look at presidential election results starting in 1960 with Nixon's loss, it was because the hard case conservatives stayed home even after Goldwater had at them to contribute to the team they claimed to be on. When Goldwater lost in '64, the RINO's returned the favor and so it has remained. The Demoncrats win because they play for keeps united to the end. The Republicans only care about who controls their party; not their country. Every time conservatives in my state tried to challenge the power of the plutocrats of the Republican state committee the chair would recess the meetings and they would all get in their Caddys and drive off. The reason is simple enough, as it is their one commonality with the Demoncrats. They too are snobs first: and will do anything to prevent ordinary Americans from accumulating enough wealth where they might have to treat with just one of us who earns his position the hard way. The RINO loves socialism because it is such a convenient means of keeping the proles in their places.

David Shoup| 8.10.10 @ 5:25PM

When foxes ( Democrats) kill our chickens, we are saddened by the loss, but foxes are wild animal that are expected to cause damage. When rogue guard dogs (liberal Republicans) cause damage, we are righteously indignant, because guard dogs are supposed be protectors. The rogue guard dogs (we could name many names, past and present) deserve special contempt.

Bill| 8.11.10 @ 4:37PM

Solzhenitsyn was indeed "kind of a horse's ass." He was also the clearest, most compelling, and loudest voice trumpeting the vicious brutality of Soviet communism, and President Ford should have done everything he could to have Solzhenitsyn address a joint session of Congress.

Ford was a good man, but unlike Reagan, he was too much of a politician and not enough of a diplomat.

bernardo| 8.11.10 @ 6:30PM

Some people have said that RINOs such as Ford are almost as bad as the leftists. Actually, except in unusual circumstances such as 1964-1966 and the last two years when the left is in nearly full control, the RINOs are often worse than the leftists in their effect if not in their intentions, at least in domestic policy.
When Democrats are in power, we can count on the Republicans to oppose their worst ideas and often to block them. When RINOs are in power, we can count on most Republicans to be good team players and go along with wage and price controls, creating the EPA, the ADA, higher taxes, TARP, creating the TSA, or whatever other bad schemes the RINO in the White House comes up with.
Generally in foreign policy even RINOs do better than the anti-American Dems of the last forty years. However that is not saying much. Ford was less of a disaster than Carter, but he was still a failure

Dan| 8.11.10 @ 9:34PM

Yet President Bush actually decided to name a carrier, a United States Naval CARRIER after that real horse's ass, Gerald Ford.

I was livid then about that decision, and I'm still livid about it.

But then again, it would be a Bush who would do it. It's just the kind of thing a Bush would do.

kingsmill| 8.12.10 @ 12:14PM

Ford was a petty place server.

Ford's small minded attacks on Reagan (after his Presidency) show his true colors.

Ford is laughable as a literary critic.

Ford was putty in Kissinger's hands.

Reagan's presidency would have been crippled if Ford had been chosen as his VP.

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