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Bush Versus I.F. Stone... and Eisenhower
Something tells me that President Bush did not write the speech he gave today to the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Kansas City. For one thing, it was relatively coherent. For another thing, it was steeped in historical references that, while taken out of context and run through the ideological wringer of the neo-conservative spin machine, displayed a historical breadth not frequently associated with the most intellectually-disengaged president since Andrew Johnson.
But the one section of the speech that made me absolutely certain that Bush had nothing to do with its preparation was its attack on journalist I.F. Stone.
Stretching hard to compare the current quagmire in Iraq with the Korean conflict of more than half a century ago -- as part of a new P.R. campaign designed to build support for maintaining a long-term U.S. military presence in the Middle East, Bush told the veterans, "After the North Koreans crossed the 38th Parallel in 1950, President Harry Truman came to the defense of the South -- and found himself attacked from all sides. From the left, I.F. Stone wrote a book suggesting that the South Koreans were the real aggressors and that we had entered the war on a false pretext. From the right, Republicans vacillated. Initially, the leader of the Republican Party in the Senate endorsed Harry Truman's action, saying, 'I welcome the indication of a more definite policy' -- he went on to say, 'I strongly hope that having adopted it, the President may maintain it intact,' then later said 'it was a mistake originally to go into Korea because it meant a land war.'"
Anyone who seriously believes that George Bush is familiar with the writings of I.F. Stone and the long and complicated history of how the U.S. military found itself encamped on the Korean Peninsula will surely be among that dwindling percentage of Americans that is convinced weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq.
For the record, the book by Stone to which Bush referred today, The Hidden History of the Korean War, 1950-1951: A Nonconformist History of Our Times, was a provocative text written during the course of the Korean conflict. It featured a dramatically broader critique of Truman's approach to the war than the one Bush mentioned Tuesday; in addition to what would eventually be recognized as groundbreaking exposes of military misdeeds, it referenced a wide variety of concerns expressed by prominent figures on the left and right of the American political spectrum at the time. While reasonable people might debate Stone's interpretations of specific details regarding U.S. foreign policy -- and even friendly critics have suggested he was too easily swayed by Soviet criticisms of South Korea's motivations and actions at the war's beginning -- the veteran journalist was hardly staking out radical turf when he asserted that the U.S. dispatched troops to Korea under dubious circumstances.
As Robin Andersen, a professor of Communication and Media Studies at Fordham University who authored an exceptional book, A Century of Media, a Century of War, has noted, "There exists today little collective memory of the Korean War, a conflict in which Gen. Douglas MacArthur extended centralized control over the press, denied access and instituted blanket censorship. Reports that did come out of Korea were awash in jingoism. I.F. Stone was often a lone voice of reason."
Battling General Douglas MacArthur's extreme censorship of war news, Stone exposed the horrors of the Korean conflict, particularly the killing of innocent civilians with napalm with what the journalist -- who would eventually receive a prestigious George Polk Award for his investigative work -- appropriately described as "a complete indifference to noncombatants."
The man who would become something of a journalistic icon for his reporting on U.S. wrongdoing in Vietnam and elsewhere as the editor of I.F. Stone's Weekly was especially concerned about how the his country got into what would come to be referred to as "Truman's War."
It bothered Stone that the Korean war was, like the current conflict in Iraq, entered into without a proper declaration of war by Congress.
As Nebraska Congressman Howard Buffett -- an old-right Republican who was Warren's father -- explained, "Truman entered that war by his own act."
Instead of going to Congress and asking for a formal declaration of war, the president gamed the system by claiming that U.S. participation in the United Nations required him to send American boys to again die in Asia not five years after World War II had finished. As Buffett explained, "On June 25, 1950, the U.N. Security Council demanded a cease-fire and called on members to render every assistance to the United Nations in the execution of this resolution. Nothing was said about entering the conflict.... But at 12 o'clock noon, on June 27, President Truman ordered United States air and sea units to give the Korean Government troops cover and support. That order put our military forces into the Korean civil war on the side of the South Koreans. At 10:45 that evening, 11 hours later, the Security Council requested members of the U. N. to supply the Republic of Korea with sufficient military assistance to repel invasion."
So it was that Buffett determined that, "Truman entered that war by his own act, and not because of a United Nations decision."
Like Stone, Buffett argued, based on the classified Congressional testimony of Admiral Roscoe Henry Hillenkoetter, the third director of the post-WWII U.S. Central Intelligence Group (CIG), and the first director of the Central Intelligence Agency, that South Korea had initiated the shooting war in Korea. History would raise serious questions about this assessment, but it would never challenge the fundamental wisdom of those who argued that Truman was wrong to send U.S. troops to die in an undeclared and unfocused war -- and that Truman misguided approach would negatively influence the presidents who followed him.
Stone, Buffett and others on the left and right believed more in the Constitution's system of checks and balances than in partisan games or ideological positioning. They wanted wars declared. They wanted Congress to share with the president responsibility for directing foreign policy, especially when it involved military endeavors abroad. And they wanted a an honest discourse about where the U.S. committed its troops -- and why. Denouncing the Truman doctrine -- which Bush seemed to be reasserting with his VFW speech -- Buffett said, "Even if it were desirable, America is not strong enough to police the world by military force. If that attempt is made, the blessings of liberty will be replaced by coercion and tyranny at home."
As the Korean conflict degenerated into the disaster that it became, Stone and Buffett found allies -- on the right, on the left, and ultimately in the political middle.
"My conclusion," wrote Ohio Senator Robert Taft as he prepared a campaign for the 1952 Republican presidential nomination, "is that in the case of Korea, where a war was already under way, we had no right to send troops to a nation, with whom we had no treaty, to defend it against attack by another nation, no matter how unprincipled that aggression might be, unless the whole matter was submitted to Congress and a declaration of war or some other direct authority obtained."
Taft did not become the GOP nominee. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the former Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in Europe and a decidely more moderate political figure, was given the task. Eisenhower ran on a promise that he would go to Korea personally with the purpose of ending what had become an extremely unpopular war.
Eisenhower did just that, traveling to Korea before he was even sworn in as president. By the following summer, with his support and encouragement, a rough peace was achieved. Unfortunately, more than half a century later, the U.S. continues to spend billions of dollars annually to maintain a massive military presence in the region.
Bush did not criticize Eisenhower in his speech to the VFW, presumably because he is no more familiar with the 34th president than he is with I.F. Stone. But if he does actually develop an interest in the period of history he referenced today, the current president might be intrigued by two of his predecessor's statements from the era.
"When people speak to you about a preventive war, you tell them to go and fight it. After my experience, I have come to hate war. ... War settles nothing," explained the old military man.
Eisenhower rejected the argument that keeping up the fight in Korea was necessary to protecting America, and he counseled that a permanent commitment to fighting abroad would -- as his fellow Republican Howard Buffett had earlier suggested -- cost America dearly.
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed," Eisenhower declared in the spring of 1953, as he was dialing down the Korea conflict. "This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. [...] This is not a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it is humanity hanging on a cross of iron."
John Nichols' new book is The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism. Rolling Stone's Tim Dickinson hails it as a "nervy, acerbic, passionately argued history-cum-polemic [that] combines a rich examination of the parliamentary roots and past use of the 'heroic medicine' that is impeachment with a call for Democratic leaders to 'reclaim and reuse the most vital tool handed to us by the founders for the defense of our most basic liberties.'"
© 2007 The Nation



14 Comments so far
Show AllGreat examination of the background of Bush's comments.
Do the neocons truly believe that they can continue to marginalize every source of intellectual inquiry in the US?
Their attitude seems to be that they can convince the American people to ignore everyone who illuminates their foolishness.
Unfortunately, they're partly correct.
jj
It is also instructive to note what was the heart and core of Ike's first innaugural delivered 01-20-53 during the Korean war. It shows how much we have lost in the last 50 or so years:
"So are we persuaded by necessity and by belief that the strength of all free peoples lies in unity; their danger, in discord. To produce this unity, to meet the challenge of our time, destiny has laid upon our country the responsibility of the free world's leadership. So it is proper that we assure our friends once again that, in the discharge of this responsibility, we Americans know and we observe the difference between world leadership and imperialism; between firmness and truculence; between a thoughtfully calculated goal and spasmodic reaction to the stimulus of emergencies. We wish our friends the world over to know this above all: we face the threat, not with dread and confusion, but with confidence and conviction.
We feel this moral strength because we know that we are not helpless prisoners of history. We are free men. We shall remain free, never to be proven guilty of the one capital offense against freedom, a lack of staunch faith.
In pleading our just cause before the bar of history and in pressing our -- and in pressing our labor for world peace, we shall be guided by certain fixed principles. These principles are:
Number 1: Abhorring war as a chosen way to balk the purposes of those who threaten us, we hold it to be the first task of statesmanship to develop the strength that will deter the forces of aggression and promote the conditions of peace. For, as it must be the supreme purpose of all free men, so it must be the dedication of their leaders, to save humanity from preying upon itself.
In the light of this principle, we stand ready to engage with any and all others in joint effort to remove the causes of mutual fear and distrust among nations, so as to make possible drastic reduction of armaments. The sole requisites for undertaking such effort are that, in their purpose, they be aimed logically and honestly toward secure peace for all; and that, in their result, they provide methods by which every participating nation will prove good faith in carrying out its pledge.
Number 2: Realizing that common sense and common decency alike dictate the futility of appeasement, we shall never try to placate an aggressor by the false and wicked bargain of trading honor for security. Americans, indeed, all free men, remember that in the final choice a soldier's pack is not so heavy a burden as a prisoner's chains.
Number 3: Knowing that only a United States that is strong and immensely productive can help defend freedom in our world, we view our nation's strength and security as a trust upon which rests the hope of free men everywhere. It is the firm duty of each of our free citizens and of every free citizen everywhere to place the cause of his country before the comfort, the convenience of himself.
And number 4: Honoring the identity and the special heritage of each nation in the world, we shall never use our strength to try to impress upon another people our own cherished political and economic institutions.
Number 5: Assessing realistically the needs and capacities of proven friends of freedom, we shall strive to help them to achieve their own security and well-being. Likewise, we shall count upon them to assume, within the limits of their resources, their full and just burdens in the common defense of freedom.
Number 6: Recognizing economic health as an indispensable basis of military strength and the free world's peace, we shall strive to foster everywhere, and to practice ourselves, policies that encourage productivity and profitable trade. For the impoverishment of any single people in the world means danger to the well-being of all other peoples.
Number 7: Appreciating that economic need, military security, and political wisdom combine to suggest regional groupings of free peoples, we hope, within the framework of the United Nations, to help strengthen such special bonds the world over. The nature of these ties must vary with the different problems of different areas. In the Western Hemisphere, we enthusiastically join with all our neighbors in the work of perfecting a community of fraternal trust and common purpose. In Europe, we ask that enlightened and inspired leaders of the Western nations strive with renewed vigor to make the unity of their peoples a reality. Only as free Europe unitedly marshals its strength can it effectively safeguard, even with our help, its spiritual and cultural heritage.
Number 8: Conceiving the defense of freedom, like freedom itself, to be one and indivisible, we hold all continents and peoples in equal regard and honor. We reject any insinuation that one race or another, one people or another, is in any sense inferior or expendable.
Number 9: Respecting the United Nations as the living sign of all people's hope for peace, we shall strive to make it not merely an eloquent symbol but an effective force. And in our quest for an honorable peace, we shall neither compromise, nor tire, nor ever cease.
By these rules of conduct, we hope to be known to all peoples.
By their observance, an earth of peace may become not a vision but a fact.
This hope, this supreme aspiration, must rule the way we live.
**************
I know that Ike's administration (and in particular John Foster Dulles and his deceitful little brother Alan at State and CIA respectfully) didn't follow his noble sentiments but at least it was out there on the record and available for all the world to see.
And who the hell would have called Ike a squishy soft pinko appeaser and been regarded as anything more than a deranged idiot?
Ah history.....Was anyone taught anything important? Anyone have a history prof that mentioned I.F. Stone let alone use his writings? Truman already had much experience in initiating, funding and covering-up lots of anti-people actions in Greece, Italy, France, Russia, and Germany prior to his unilateral invasion of Korea. Ike soon became a war criminal, if he wasn't one already, with Guatamala and Iran--odd how his high-falutin words were lost so quickly.
Since President Eisenhower warned America that it needed to be "alert and knowledgeable" in order to "compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals," it is troubling indeed that the United States has gotten into the habit of conduct multi-year campaigns causing hundreds of thousands of violent deaths without declaring war: Korea, Vietnam, and now Iraq. These have all been wars in reality, but not in law, lasting years and causing hundreds of thousands, even millions of deaths. This late 20th century development of an extra-Constitutional route to waging "undeclared war," has not served our nation well, and well deserves a Constitutional Amendment to clearly define and prohibit warfare that does not follow the political process required by the Constitution for declaring war.
Our failure to insist on the deliberative political process through which congress declares war under the Constitution is a failure, in Eisenhower's words, to "guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex." After four years of a bloody, incompetent, and barbaric military offensive, instead of Eisenhower's vigilance, we have, an opposition congress, that relies on parliamentary procedure to cover up it's decision to continue to fund this offensive without restriction and without public debate. I write more about this in "Animal Farm, Undeclared War, and the Social Congract" located on my blog.
From "Animal Farm, Undeclared War, and the Social Contract": "Since President Eisenhower warned America that it needed to be "alert and knowledgeable" in order to "compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals," it is troubling indeed that the United States has gotten into the habit of conduct multi-year campaigns causing hundreds of thousands of violent deaths without declaring war: Korea, Vietnam, and now Iraq. These have all been wars in reality, but not in law, lasting years and causing hundreds of thousands, even millions of deaths. This late 20th century development of an extra-Constitutional route to waging "undeclared war," has not served our nation well, and well deserves a Constitutional Amendment to clearly define and prohibit warfare that does not follow the political process required by the Constitution for declaring war.
Today, although every American refers at least on a weekly basis to "the war in Iraq," the reality is that we have never declared war against Iraq, and this fact certainly has something to do with the crisis we have created. Our failure to insist on the deliberative political process through which congress declares war under the Constitution is a failure, in Eisenhower's words, to "guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex." After four years of a bloody, incompetent, and barbaric military offensive, instead of Eisenhower's vigilance, we have, an opposition congress, that relies on parliamentary procedure to cover up it's decision to continue to fund this offensive without restriction and without public debate."
I think it was I.F.Stone who once wrote something to the effect that "The only sensible position is to assume from the beginning that the Government is lying until you have overwhelming evidence that they are telling the truth."
Sounds like good advice to me.
I know all about I. F. Stone. I saw his wife shooting beavers in Basic Instinct.
Let the shareholders of the corporations that make cluster bombs and landmines examine the results of their painless profits.
"This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. […] This is not a way of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it is humanity hanging on a cross of iron."
In my time, Eisenhower was the only President worthy of respect. He understood that the corporate-controlled government, through propagating fear, planned on replacing our Constititution with the National Security State.....and he had the "courage" to tell us about these secret plans to destroy our Constitutional government.
And guess what folks? Here we are some 40 years later with a Corporate-loving Republican President who told us that the Constitution is just a "goddamned piece of paper". We also have a Republican and Democratic Congress apparently sharing this same ruthless philosophy of a corporate- controlled government where Congressman and Senators can make a lifetime career in government as long as they are willing to undermine the Bill of Rights and Constitution.
Yes, my friends, "impeachment is off the table" because the "rule of law" has been replaced by "rule of money".
"Anyone who seriously believes that George Bush is familiar with the writings of I.F. Stone and the long and complicated history of how the U.S. military found itself encamped on the Korean Peninsula will surely be among that dwindling percentage of Americans that is convinced weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq."
This speech was certainly penned by one of the older drivellers from the Weekly Standard; no one else would think to mention I.F. Stone or Graham Greene.
We should thank Eisenhower for appointing Earl Warren chief justice of the Supreme Court, giving us the only Court expanding rights of the oppressed rather than the rights of the owners.
Still, despite the palliative words in Eisenhower's inaugural, the imperialist imperative sounds in every word.
To quote a more honorable political figure:
"If the present war arouses among the reactionary Christian socialists, among the whimpering petty bourgeoisie, ONLY horror and fright, ONLY aversion to all use of arms, to bloodshed, death, etc., then we must say: Capitalist society is and has always been horror without end." (Lenin, October 1916)
I.F. Stone's eye-opening book on the Korean War drew primarily, as I recall, on stories published in the national press that he read between the lines. The picture he presented of that war was radically at odds with the prevailing view. According to Stone, US diplomacy all but invited North Korea to invade South Korea; once the war was started, Washington did not exploit opportunities for a diplomatic solution; American bombing at the Chinese border and I think of Chinese territory provoked the entry of China into the war; Chinese forces did NOT subsequently overwhelm MacArthur who, rather, withdrew his forces precipitously with the Chinese not pursuing them; and far from being insubordinate --until the end, when he crossed Truman in the context of domestic politics-- MacArthur played tough cop to Truman's moderate cop, with both collaborating to recklessly make war and lure the chinese into it.
As I recall, Stone wrote or implied that Truman's motive was to frighten the country into a Cold War, following on the policy enunciated in the document NSC-68.
If this strikes you as implausible, I suggest you read Stone's provocative and thoroughly footnoted book.
Poet:
"And who the hell would have called Ike a squishy soft pinko appeaser and been regarded as anything more than a deranged idiot?"
Answer: Dean Clarence Manion, on his radio program The Manion Forum of Opinion. Manion was Dean of the Notre Dame Law School and served on the editorial advisory board of the Birch Society's magazine.
During an interview with an ultra right-wing retired admiral, Manion claimed he had proof that Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren (former Republican Governor of California) was "a card-carrying communist." He went on to say that while he didn't believe Ike actually belonged to the Communist Party, he was sympathetic to and working for the Communist Party.
Yeah, I actually heard that on the radio one evening in the fifties. The right-wingers of then and now are indeed deranged, but they aren't idiots: they are adequately clever enough to have led a majority of US citizens to accept, or at least allow, the the present state of fascist empire. At a local appearance last year, Michael Moore called Americans "The stupidest people on the planet." The word stupid means "in a stupor," not necessarily idiotic. I couldn't agree more.
GWBush has never written a sentence, let alone a speech; and he doesn't read them well either.
Eisenhower and J. F. Kennedy both tried to warn us about the future we are now "in." Eisenhower just faded away; Kennedy was killed because he tried to warn us.
Dichterfreund -- Think what you will of Eisenhower (who, whatever else he may or may not have done, refused French entreaties to drop US nuclear weapons on the Vietminh at Dien Bien Phu and to send US troops into Vietnam), to compare V.I. Lenin favorably to just about ANYONE, let alone to Dwight Eisenhower, pretty much rules you out of reasoned discussion.