Patrick J. Buchanan
June 16 2004
With the passing of President Reagan,
historians, scholars and journalists have again taken to rating our
presidents.
Invariably, greatness is ascribed to only three: Washington, Lincoln and
FDR. Which reveals as much about American historians, scholars and
journalists as it does about American presidents.
Certainly, Washington is our greatest president, the father of our
country and the captain who set our course. But Lincoln is great only if
one believes that preventing South Carolina, Georgia and the Gulf states
from peacefully seceding justified the suspension of the Constitution, a
dictatorship, 600,000 dead and a resort to a total war that ravaged the
South for generations.
As for FDR, he was the greatest politician of the 20th century. But why
call a president great whose government was honeycombed with spies and
traitors, and whose war diplomacy lead to the loss of 10 Christian
countries of Eastern Europe to a Muscovite despot whose terrorist regime
was the greatest enemy of human freedom in modern history?
FDR restored the nation's confidence in his first term and won a
46-state landslide to a second. But by 1937, the Depression was back and
we were rescued only by the vast expenditures of World War II into
which, even admirers now admit, FDR lied his country. The man talked
peace as he plotted war.
None of the historians, scholars or journalists rate Reagan a great
president. Yet his leadership led to the peaceful liberation of a
hundred million children and grandchildren of the people FDR sold down
the river at Teheran and Yalta, as well as of the 300 million people of
the Soviet Union.
And why are Wilson and Truman always listed among the "near great"
presidents?
While our entry into World War I ensured Allied victory, Wilson brought
home from Versailles a vindictive peace that betrayed his principles,
his 14 Points and his solemn word to the German government when it
agreed to an armistice. That treaty tore Germany apart and led directly
to Hitler and a horrific war of revenge 20 years later. Moreover,
Wilson's stubborn refusal to accept any compromise language to protect
U.S. sovereignty led to Senate rejection of both his treaty and the
League of Nations. Why, then, is this obdurate man "near great"?
As for Truman, he dropped two atom bombs on defenseless cities, sent
back 2 million Russian dissidents and POWs to his "Uncle Joe," death and
the Gulag, offered to send the USS Missouri to Russia to bring Stalin
over to give him equal time to answer Churchill's "Iron Curtain" speech,
lost China to communism, fired Gen. MacArthur for demanding victory in
Korea, presided over a corrupt administration, left us mired down in a
"no-win war" and left office with 23 percent approval.
What is near great about that? Why is Eisenhower, who ended the Korean
War in six months, restored America's military might and presided over
eight years of secure peace not the greater man?
Now consider one of the men whom all the raters judge a "failure" and
among our worst presidents, Warren G. Harding.
Harding served five months less than JFK, before dying in office in
1923. Yet his diplomatic and economic triumphs were of the first order.
He negotiated the greatest disarmament treaty of the century, the
Washington Naval Agreement, which gave the United States superiority in
battleships and left us and Great Britain with capital-ship strength
more than three times as great as Japan's. Even Tokyo conceded a U.S.
diplomatic victory.
With Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon, Harding cut Wilson's wartime
income tax rates, which had gone as high as 63 percent, to 25 percent,
ended the stagflation of the Wilson presidency and set off the greatest
boom of the century, the Roaring Twenties. When Harding took his oath,
unemployment was at 12 percent. When he died, 29 months later, it was at
3 percent. This is a failure?
If it is because of Harding's White House dalliance with Nan Britton,
why does not JFK's White House dalliance with Judith Exner make him a
failure? And if Teapot Dome, which broke after Harding's death – and in
which he was not involved – makes him a failure, why does not the Monica
Lewinsky scandal that led to his impeachment make Clinton a failure? Of
the seven Democratic presidents in the 20th century, only Truman and
Carter did not have lady friends in the White House.
Harding's vice president, Calvin Coolidge, succeeded him, won one of the
great landslides in U.S. history and was, as Jude Wanniski writes, an
inspiration for Ronald Reagan, who considered Silent Cal a role model
and put his portrait up in the Cabinet Room as a mark of respect.
Harding, Coolidge, Eisenhower and Reagan were men who kept us out of war
and presided over times of peace, security and often of soaring
prosperity. Yet, the 20th century presidents who took us into war and
who lost the fruits of war – Wilson, FDR, Truman – are "great" or "near
great." These ratings tell us less about presidents than they do about
historians, scholars and journalists.
© 2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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