By Caroline B. Glick
During his tenure as President George W. Bush's defense secretary,
Donald Rumsfeld often likened the administration's foreign policy
decisions to those of the Truman administration during the first years
of the Cold War. As President George W. Bush makes his way to Israel,
the Palestinian Authority, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states with
a stated agenda of advancing the goal of Palestinian statehood, it is
worth examining president Truman's achievements and comparing them with
those of President Bush.
President Harry S Truman was in some ways an accidental president.
Elected vice president in Franklin Delano Roosevelt's fourth term in
office, he assumed the presidency when Roosevelt died in April 1945, a
month before the Allied victory in Europe and four months before the
surrender of Imperial Japan.
As the war wound down, Truman was quick to understand the threat that
Soviet imperialism and communist ideology posed to US national
security. A world dominated by communism was a world in which America,
as the beacon of human freedom and liberty, could not be safe.
Consequently, he recognized that the rising Cold War between the Soviet
Union and the US would be the defining contest of the postwar era.
DURING HIS tenure, Truman established the instruments of government and
international affairs which, in the years to come, would counter and
contain the Soviet threat. He also took military action to begin to
combat the Soviets with the intention of rolling back Soviet domination
of East-Central Europe and preventing the Soviet Union from expanding
its influence globally.
Truman established the Defense Department, the National Security
Council, the Air Force and the Central Intelligence Agency. He set
forth the Truman Doctrine, which prevented Soviet domination of Greece
and Turkey and stemmed the political advance of the communists in
France and Italy. He established the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
to provide for the military defense of Western Europe. Through the
Marshall Plan, he enabled the postwar economic recovery of Western
Europe.
Militarily, Truman conducted the Berlin airlift to ensure the economic
development of western Germany as the anchor of postwar Western
European unity against the Soviets. He also waged the Korean War to
contain communist expansion in Asia.
After the Soviets surprised the US with their acquisition of the atom
bomb in 1949, Truman moved speedily to test the hydrogen bomb.
Moreover, quick to realize that with the advent of Soviet nuclear power
the US could no longer rely simply on its nuclear deterrent to fight
the Soviets, Truman revamped and expanded US conventional forces which
had been largely scrapped in the rapid demobilization after World War
II.
ON THE IDEOLOGICAL and political front, Truman worked to educate the
American people about the threat of communism and took steps to root
out Soviet agents from the US government. Truman also set up the
infrastructure to combat the Soviets in a war of ideas inside of the
Soviet bloc. He founded Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty which
brought American ideals, culture and credible news directly into the
Soviet Union and Soviet-controlled East-Central Europe.
Beyond all that, Truman willingly took on his foreign policy
bureaucracy when he felt that its members were wrong. Against the
virulent opposition of his popular secretary of state George Marshall
and what Truman referred to as the "striped pants conspirators" in the
State Department, he recognized the State of Israel.
By the time he left office, then, Truman had ensured that the US had
the institutional wherewithal and the political and ideological will to
fight the Cold War, and had upheld the principle of presidential
control over US foreign policy. LIKE TRUMAN, Bush too was in some
respects an accidental president. His electoral victory in the 2000
presidential race came despite his failure to win the popular vote.
Like Truman also, Bush has been forced to contend with a foreign policy
establishment openly hostile to his stated foreign policy objectives.
Truman left office with the lowest popularity ratings in modern US
history. The war in Korea was overwhelmingly unpopular and his
successor, Dwight D. Eisenhower, based his campaign for office on his
pledge to take US forces out of Korea.
Although Bush was considered a foreign policy lightweight when he
entered office, the September 11, 2001 jihadist attacks on America made
it clear that foreign policy would dominate his presidency. And, like
Truman, Bush's legacy would be determined by his conduct of the war
against the new epochal struggle with Islamic fascism and global jihad.
Bush clearly understands this. In his interviews with the Israeli and
Arab media ahead of his trip to the Middle East this week, Bush claimed
that, like Truman in his day, he hopes that history will remember him
as the leader who clearly identified the threats of the 21st century
and set up the institutional, military and ideological foundations for
the current epochal struggle.
Yet although the historical parallels between Bush and Truman are
clear, unlike Truman, Bush has not yet struck a clear course for
fighting the war and so, with a year left in office, he has not ensured
that those who follow him will have either the administrative and
international tools to fight the war, or the ideological and political
clarity to understand that the war with Islamic fascism is in fact the
central security challenge of the new century.
Since September 11, Bush has made numerous speeches that have indicated
that he does indeed grasp the challenges of our times. In a speech
before the National Endowment for Democracy in October 2005 for
instance the president said, "The murderous ideology of the Islamic
radicals is the great challenge of our new century."
In that address and several others like it, Bush argued that jihadists
must be denied control over any territory; that there can be no
distinction between jihadists and their state sponsors - both have to
be defeated - and that the message of democracy and human liberty has
to be communicated clearly in an ideological war against those
preaching jihad.
Bush eschewed appeasement, claiming, "No act of ours invited the rage
of the killers - and no concession, bribe or act of appeasement would
change or limit their plans for murder.
"On the contrary: They target nations whose behavior they believe they
can change through violence. Against such an enemy, there is only one
effective response: We will never back down, never give in, and never
accept anything less than complete victory."
Yet speeches like this one have been in large part superseded by the
president's actions. With al-Qaida and the Taliban resurgent in
Afghanistan and Pakistan, and with Iraq's borders with Syria, Iran and
Saudi Arabia still unsecured, the president's sometimes assertive
definition of the road to victory has been largely obscured by bumps in
that road.
THEN TOO, although Bush, like Truman, set out to form institutional
tools to fight the long struggle against the forces of jihad, these
institutions have done little to advance the cause. The Department of
Homeland Security has not stymied the strength of Islamic agents of
subversion in the US. And the National Intelligence Directorate has
caused grave harm to Bush's foremost objective of preventing Iran from
acquiring nuclear weapons. In what has been cast as a bureaucratic
assault on presidential power to determine US foreign policy, the
National Intelligence Estimate on Iran stripped Bush of the political
capacity to act forthrightly to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons.
The Defense Department's decision last week to sack Stephen Coughlin,
the only expert on Islamic law in the Pentagon's joint staff, because
his documented report on American Muslim institutional support for
jihad angered pro-Muslim forces in the Pentagon, is another indication
that the foreign policy bureaucracy is successfully scuttling the
president's agenda.
Most important, though, is the fact that the new centerpiece of Bush's
foreign policy agenda is to establish a Palestinian state. Bush's
support for Palestinian statehood, stated first just two months after
9/11, has always been difficult to square with his recognition of the
global jihad and its radical Islamic ideology as the central challenges
of our age.
After all, when America was attacked the Palestinians were entering the
second year of their jihad against Israel. The Palestinians greeted
those attacks with open delight. And now, after the Palestinian people
popularly elected Hamas to lead them and transformed Gaza into an
operating base for global terrorists; while Fatah leaders like Mahmoud
Abbas refuse to accept Israel as a Jewish state and official Fatah
security forces wantonly murder Israeli civilians, Bush's main foreign
policy goal in his last year in office is to establish a Palestinian
state.
WHILE BUSH argues that the Palestinians have to be shown what they can
achieve if they eschew terror and accept Israel, he never mentions what
price they must pay for their continued, open support for Israel's
destruction and support for and involvement in the global jihad. In his
treatment, then, of the Palestinian war against Israel and its central
role in the global jihad, Bush has done more to undermine the coherence
of his recognition of the challenges of the 21st century and his own
legacy in shaping the free world's war against the forces of terror and
jihad than anyone else.
Truman is today considered one of the great American presidents because
his forthright clarity and consistent policies in office set the US on
a steady course for victory against Soviet communism even as specific
actions - like the Korean War - were deeply unpopular.
In his last year in office, Bush's central challenge is to clarify what
he himself has allowed to become muddled about the nature of the
current generational struggle. Unfortunately, though his commitment to
Palestinian statehood, and his refusal to assert his own foreign policy
against the wishes of a hostile bureaucracy, he calls to mind not
Truman, but another American president who led his country at the cusp
of another formative crisis. Like Bush, James Buchanan - the last
president to serve before the Civil War - understood the nature of the
gathering storm; yet rather than confront the dangers, he was
overwhelmed by them
Original
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