BARACK "DON'T KNOW MUCH ABOUT HISTORY"
Written by Jack Kelly
Thursday, 08 May 2008
In his victory speech after the North Carolina primary, Sen. Barack Hussein
Obama said something that is all the more remarkable for how little it has
been remarked upon. In defending his stated intent to meet with America's
enemies without preconditions, Sen. Obama said:
"I trust the American people to understand that it is not weakness, but
wisdom to talk not just to our friends, but to our enemies, like Roosevelt
did, and Kennedy did, and Truman did."
That he made this statement, and that it passed without comment by the
journalists covering his speech, indicates either breathtaking ignorance of
history on the part of both, or deceit on the part of both.
I assume the Roosevelt to whom Sen. Obama referred is Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Our enemies in World War II were Nazi Germany, headed by Adolf Hitler; fascist
Italy, headed by Benito Mussolini, and militarist Japan, headed by Hideki Tojo.
FDR talked directly with none of them before the outbreak of hostilities, and
his policy once war began was unconditional surrender.
FDR died before victory was achieved, and was succeeded by Harry Truman.
Truman did not modify the policy of unconditional surrender. He ended that war
not with negotiation, but with the atomic bomb.
Harry Truman also was president when North Korea invaded South Korea in June,
1950. President Truman's response was not to call up North Korean dictator Kim
Il Sung for a chat. It was to send troops.
Perhaps Sen. Obama is thinking of the meeting FDR and Churchill had with
Soviet dictator Josef Stalin in Tehran had in December, 1943, and the meetings
Truman and Roosevelt had with Stalin at Yalta and Potsdam in February and
July, 1945. But Stalin was then a U.S. ally, though one of whom we should have
been more wary than FDR and Truman were.
Few historians think the agreements reached at Yalta and Potsdam, which in
effect consigned Eastern Europe to slavery, are diplomatic models we ought to
follow. Even fewer Eastern Europeans think so.
When Stalin's designs became unmistakably clear, President Truman's response
wasn't to seek a summit meeting. He sent military aid to Greece, ordered the
Berlin airlift and the Marshall Plan, and sent troops to South Korea.
Sen. Obama is on both sounder and softer ground with regard to John F.
Kennedy. The new president held a summit meeting with Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev in Vienna in June, 1961. Elie Abel, who wrote a history of the
Cuban missile crisis (The Missiles of October), said the crisis had its
genesis in that summit.
"There is reason to believe that Khrushchev took Kennedy's measure in
June 1961 and decided this was a young man who would shrink from hard
decisions," Mr. Abel wrote. "There is no evidence to support the
belief that Khrushchev ever questioned America's power. He questioned only the
president's readiness to use it. As he once told Robert Frost, he came to
believe that Americans are 'too liberal to fight'."
That view was supported by New York Times columnist James Reston, who traveled
to Vienna with President Kennedy:
"Khrushchev had studied the events of the Bay of Pigs," Mr. Reston
wrote. "He would have understood if Kennedy had left Castro alone or
destroyed him, but when Kennedy was rash enough to strike at Cuba but not bold
enough to finish the job, Khrushchev decided he was dealing with an
inexperienced young leader who could be intimidated and blackmailed."
It's worth noting that Kennedy then was vastly more experienced than Sen.
Obama is now. A combat veteran of World War II, Jack Kennedy served 14 years
in Congress before becoming president. Sen. Obama has no military and little
work experience, and has been in Congress for less than four years.
The closest historical analogue to Sen. Obama's expressed desire to meet
without preconditions with anti-American dictators such as Iranian president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is the trip British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and
French premier Eduoard Daladier took to Munich in September of 1938 to
negotiate "peace in our time" with Adolf Hitler.
That didn't work out so well.
A course in History is an elective few liberals choose to take these days,
noted a poster on the Web log "Hot Air." The lack of historical
knowledge among journalists is merely appalling. But in a presidential
candidate it's dangerous.
In the year Mr. Obama was born, 1961, a R&B singer, Sam Cooke, came out
with a hit song you still hear on Golden Oldies radio stations. The song
started, "Don't know much about history..."
What if voters realized that Don't Know Much About History ought to be Obama's
theme song?