The other morning I wandered down to Grosvenor Square to see the
July 4 unveiling of a statue of President Ronald Reagan, despite
reports that only a handful of people would be there. That
invaluable piece of intelligence was handed down by the Hon. Louis
B. Susman, our ambassador, who was busy as a director of the St.
Louis Cardinals baseball team during the 1980s when President
Reagan was staring down the Soviets with his befuddling mixture of
amiability and steely resolve that astoundingly “ended the Cold War
without firing a shot.” That is how Lady Thatcher memorably put it.
She was not astounded, nor was President Richard Nixon or other
hawkish Cold Warriors.
Our Liberal friends had a different way of seeing it. They
thought Reagan was a dunce, and many still do. They feared he would
bring us to nuclear holocaust, and Senator Ted Kennedy
surreptitiously entered into league with the Soviets to oppose the
president in 1984. They did not know what to make of his meetings
with Mikhail Gorbachev, and I remember one, the journalist Michael
Kinsley, saying no one Left or Right predicted the peaceful end of
the Cold War. Later, as the historically minded dug out Reagan’s
assurances that the Cold War could be won, the Liberals had moved
on to a different subject. No one is better than the Liberals at
avoiding epochal events that they have played little part in.
I liked the Hon. Susman’s crowd estimate. It shows how attuned
to the times he and all his Liberal friends are. They are now
predicting an Obama victory in 2012, and when it fails to take
place they will change the subject. How about the conservatives are
scary or leading America to its doom? Actually, the crowd Monday
morning numbered in the thousands and many had to be turned away.
There were hundreds more who turned out in the evening at an
elaborate black-tie tribute to the 40th president at Guildhall that
was more than a tribute to Reagan. It also seemed to me to be an
acknowledgement of the vast achievements of America and Great
Britain’s “special relationship,” and of what great things those
two resolute powers have achieved since the dawn of the 20th
century. July 4, 2011, was a great day of American and British
friendship.
There in Grosvenor Square, with statues of Dwight David
Eisenhower and Franklin Roosevelt looking on, a handsome 10-foot
statue was unveiled of the Old Cowboy, looking out on the festive
crowd with a vaguely amused look on his face but his chest thrust
out, his shoulders broad. He once corrected me when I told him I
had heard that in recuperating from an assassin’s bullet he did
bench presses and put an inch of muscle on his upper body. “Two and
a half inches,” he serenely but firmly said.
There were speeches by Congressman Kevin McCarthy, former
secretary of state Condoleezza Rice, and the invaluable erstwhile
Reagan aide, Frederick Ryan, the chairman of the board of trustees
of the Ronald Reagan Foundation. A note by the ailing Lady Thatcher
was read. The Hon. Susman gave a speech that was admirable in its
recognition of Reagan and also of FDR and Ike too. His predecessor
Robert Tuttle spoke engagingly and, of course, First Secretary of
State and Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs of Great Britain
the Rt. Hon. William Hague, who said “it is a fitting tribute to
the honor of the truest friend that Britain has ever had,” Ronald
Reagan.
We all walked off glad to be breathing the sweet air of a Free
World.