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Ash Heap of History: President Reagans Westminster
Address 20 Years Later - Remarks by Lee Edwards (June
3, 2002)

When Ronald Reagan
was elected president in November 1980, the United States and its allies
had been laboring for 35 years to contain communism around the world with
a wide range of diplomatic, military and economic initiatives that had
cost tens of thousands of lives and hundreds of billions of dollars. They
had employed economic programs like the Marshall Plan, military alliances
like NATO and SEATO, direct conflicts like the Korean War and the Vietnam
War, surrogate operations like the Bay of Pigs, weapons treaties like
SALT I, economic treaties like MFN, and covert operations around the world.
And yet, communism
was not only alive and seemingly well in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe,
mainland China, Cuba, and North Korea, but had spread to sub-Saharan Africa,
Afghanistan, and Central America. In Southeast Asia, communist regimes
were in place in South Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. In southern Africa,
Angola and Mozambique had fallen to communism with the help of several
hundred thousand Cuban troops. A New York Times commentator went so far
as to speak of "America in retreat."1
Seeking to take advantage
of U.S. uncertainty in the wake of the Vietnam War, the Soviets accelerated
their decades-long buildup of strategic weapons with a significant increase
of theater nuclear forces in Europe. This followed "an unprecedented
expansion of conventional forces" in the 1970s, including tanks,
artillery, and tactical aircraft.2 Concurrently, the Soviet Union expanded
its armed forces by 400,000 while the United States was cutting its military
manpower by 1.4 million. By the beginning of the 1980s, Soviet leaders
were stating with growing confidence that "the correlation of forces
had shifted in their favor."3
Containment was not
working, or at least it was not working fast enough to satisfy the new
president. The time had come, Ronald Reagan decided, not merely to contain
communism but to defeat it. He borrowed from fellow conservative Barry
Goldwater, who had asked in his 1962 book, "Why not victory?"
Richard V. Allen, President Reagan's first national security adviser,
remembers visiting Reagan in California in January 1977 and engaging in
a four-hour discussion of the Cold War. Reagan began the dialogue by saying,
"My idea of American policy toward the Soviet Union is simple, and
some would say simplistic. It is this: we win and they lose.'"4
How would we go about achieving that? he asked Allen.
At his very first
news conference as president in January 1981, Reagan bluntly denounced
the Soviet leadership as still dedicated to "world revolution and
a one-world Socialist-Communist state." Speaking at Notre Dame University
a few months later, the president predicted that "the years ahead
are great ones for this country, for the cause of freedom.... The West
won't contain communism. It will transcend communism. It will dismiss
it as some bizarre chapter in human history whose last pages are even
now being written."5 Reagan was not shooting from the lip. As he
put it in his autobiography, "I decided we had to send as powerful
a message as we could to the Russians that we weren't going to stand by
anymore while they armed and financed terrorists and subverted democratic
governments."6
In May of the following
year, one month before the Westminster address, President Reagan again
talked about communism's imminent demise at a commencement address at
his alma mater, Eureka College. "The Soviet empire is faltering,"
he said, "because rigid centralized control has destroyed incentives
for innovation, efficiency and individual achievement." At the same
time, the president pointed out, "the Soviet dictatorship has forged
the largest armed force in the world." This military buildup combined
with the preemption of the human needs of the Soviet people, Reagan predicted,
"will undermine the foundations of the Soviet system."7
To liberal Democrats
and Republican realists, such talk was deeply disturbing: any suggestion
of victory over communism seemed quixotic and dangerous. Every knowledgeable
person knew that the Soviet Union was economically strong and militarily
powerful. The West's only responsible option was negotiation and accommodation
-- in a word, détente. The liberal historian Arthur Schlesinger,
Jr., declared after a 1982 visit to Moscow: "Those in the U.S. who
think the Soviet Union is on the verge of economic and social collapse,
ready with one small push to go over the brink, are...only kidding themselves."
The liberal establishment's favorite economist, John Kenneth Galbraith,
published a glowing appraisal of Soviet economics, explaining that "the
Russian system succeeds because, in contrast to the Western industrial
economies, it makes full use of its manpower."8 One wonders whether
Professor Galbraith included the Gulag in his calculations of the Soviets'
"full use" of manpower.
The distinguished
Sovietologist Seweryn Bialer of Columbia University wrote in Foreign Affairs
in 1982 that "the Soviet Union is not now, nor will it be during
the next decade, in the throes of a true economic crisis, for it boasts
enormous unused reserves of political and social stability that suffice
to endure the deeper difficulties."9 Even as Bialer wrote, Leonid
Brehznev was dying and Yuri Andropov was making plans to assume the reins
of power, but concealing his own ill health.
Nobel laureate Paul
Samuelson put the case for communist continuity even more strongly in
his textbook Economics, published in 1981: "It is a vulgar mistake
to think that most people in Eastern Europe are miserable."10 Obviously,
Professor Samuelson did not accord much weight to the aroused people of
Poland who organized Solidarity that same year in protest against the
prolonged economic mismanagement of their country by the communists.
At the same time,
the liberal establishment expressed open angst about Reagan's announced
intention to build up the U.S. military, including our nuclear arsenal.
The New Yorker devoted its entire February 1982 issue to Jonathan Schell's
Fate of the Earth. Journalist Strobe Talbott charged that Reagan had increased
the risk of nuclear war through his anti-communist obsessions and "deeply
pessimistic" reckoning of the Soviet-American military balance.11
In truth, the more
serious obsession was that of the analysts and academics who kept insisting
that the Soviets were ten feet tall and must not be challenged or antagonized.
What these experts could not accept was that the Soviet communists had
failed, literally, to deliver the goods to the people. They had promised
bread but produced food shortages and rationing for the people, except
for the nomenklatura. They had promised peace but embroiled the nation
and its long-suffering people in a series of conflicts from Berlin to
Afghanistan.
By 1981, the Soviet
Union was no longer a formidable fortress but a Potemkin village. And
President Reagan determined to take full advantage of the inherent flaws
and widening fissures in the Soviet system that were reported to him by
CIA Director William Casey, national security adviser Richard Allen, NSC
aides Richard Pipes and Roger Robinson, and others. "We adopted a
comprehensive strategy," Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger later
recalled, calculated to shift "the focus of the superpower struggle"
to the Soviet bloc and the Soviet Union itself.12
Casey depended for
many of his analyses on his special assistant Herbert Meyer, a Soviet
affairs specialist and author of a series of articles in Fortune magazine
during the late 1970s that had described the Soviet Union's economic and
social decline. According to author Joseph Shattan, Casey instructed Meyer
to challenge the conventional wisdom at the CIA and "bring alternative
views" to his attention. Meyer produced a "stream of assessments"
that underscored the Soviets' economic distress and predicted its imminent
collapse.13 Casey brought these reports to the attention of the president,
who was especially interested in the anecdotal intelligence -- such as
factories shutting down for a lack of spare parts, hard currency shortages
-- they confirmed "his belief that the Soviet economy was in monumental
trouble."14 As indeed it was.
Starting in 1981,
the Reagan administration pursued a multi-faceted foreign policy offensive
that included covert and other support to the Solidarity movement in Poland,
a global campaign to reduce Soviet access to Western high technology,
and a drive to hurt the Soviet economy by driving down the price of oil
and limited natural gas exports to the West.
It implemented the
strategy through a series of top-secret national security decision directives
(NSDDs). NSDD-32, for example, which was approved in March 1982, declared
that the United States would seek to "neutralize" Soviet control
over Eastern Europe and authorized the use of covert action and other
means to support anti-Soviet groups in the region. Conservatives had in
fact been urging such a policy since 1959, when an annual National Captive
Nations Week had been authorized by Congress and signed into law by President
Dwight D. Eisenhower. Even earlier, anti-communist writers like journalist
Eugene Lyons and Georgetown University economist Lev E. Dobriansky had
referred to the people behind the iron curtain as "our secret allies."15
NSDD-66, drafted by
National Security Council aide Roger Robinson, stated that it would be
U.S. policy to disrupt the Soviet economy by attacking a "strategic
triad" of critical resources -- financial credits, high technology,
and natural gas -- deemed essential to Soviet economic survival. NSDD-66
was tantamount, Robinson later explained, "to a secret declaration
of economic war on the Soviet Union."16 NSDD-75, written by the distinguished
Harvard historian Richard Pipes, called for the United States to no longer
coexist with the Soviet system but rather to seek to change it fundamentally.
The directive "was a clear break from the past," said Pipes.
"At its root was the belief that we had it in our power to alter
the Soviet system through the use of external pressure."17
A critical part of
the Reagan strategy, political scientist Andrew Busch has pointed out,
was public diplomacy. With the help of a small Reagan "cell"
in the State Department, including world politics analyst John Lenczowski,
the United States Information Agency (USIA), the Voice of America and
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty were all strengthened. New media outlets
such as Radio Marti and TV Marti, aimed at Cuba, and WorldNet, a USIA
satellite TV network, were created. As Reagan asserted in his 1982 State
of the Union address, "We've promised the world a season of truth
-- the truth of our great civilized ideas: individual liberty, representative
government, the rule of law under God."18 "When I had entered
office," Reagan later wrote, "I'd been struck by something that
didn't seem right: The democracies were up against an expansionist powerhouse
that was trying all over the world to peddle its system, yet we who had
the system of government that worked were doing nothing to sell our vision
of freedom."19
A direct result of
Reagan's Westminster Address with its reference to a "campaign for
democracy" was the creation, in 1983, of the National Endowment for
Democracy (NED), which subsequently assisted free trade union movements
(including Solidarity when it was still banned in Poland) and trained
third-world political figures in the techniques of democracy.20 Among
the vocal public advocates of a NED dimension in U.S. foreign policy was
Latin American specialist Constantine Menges, who at a January 1981 conference
in Washington, D.C., had proposed "a National Foundation for Democracy"
to help genuinely democratic groups within foreign countries.21 Brought
into the Reagan administration by CIA director William Casey, Menges subsequently
served as a special assistant to President Reagan for national security
affairs.
Reagan's commitment
to democracy was not just rhetorical. Dictators like Ferdinand Marcos
of the Philippines and "Baby Doc" Duvalier of Haiti departed
with direct U.S. political help. In 1981, there were 54 democracies in
the world; in 1992, there were 99, with 35 more countries in democratic
transition. Looking back at the triumph of freedom and democracy during
the Reagan years, the New York Times editorialized, "The cause of
human rights came triumphantly of age in the liberating 1980s."22
Long-time Reagan adviser
Ed Meese later outlined the core beliefs of Reagan's strategy: Communism
"was torn by fatal contradictions" -- its overweening imperialist
designs on the one hand and its crushing domestic problems on the other.
Moscow could no longer afford guns and butter. It would have to choose
one or the other. It was therefore incumbent on the United States and
the rest of the West to take the initiative by refurbishing their defenses,
assisting anti-communist forces around the world, and emphasizing the
West's scientific-technological superiority. That meant, Meese later explained,
that the West should "stop bailing the communists out of their technical
and economic difficulties" through one-sided arms agreements, technology
transfers, strategic trade, and economic credits.23
Reagan had already
outlined many of these points when he challenged Gerald Ford for the Republican
presidential nomination in 1976 and in the years leading up to his 1980
presidential victory. In fact, he had discussed some of the measures that
might be taken as early as 1964 in his national TV address for presidential
candidate Barry Goldwater. He then suggested that we "should open
our mouths about the millions of people enslaved in Soviet colonies in
the satellite nations." He said that the liberal policy of accommodation
(or containment) was "appeasement" and called instead for a
policy of peace through strength.24
In his radio commentaries
from 1975-1979, which he drafted in longhand on yellow legal pads, Reagan
frequently discussed communism from a philosophical as well as a public
policy point of view. In May 1975, for example, he said that communism
was "a temporary aberration which will one day disappear from the
earth because it is contrary to human nature."25
The language anticipates
Reagan's words at Westminster: "The march of freedom and democracy...will
leave Marxism-Leninism on the ash-heap of history as it has left other
tyrannies which stifle the freedom and muzzle the self-expression of the
people."26
Ronald Reagan sought,
as author Joseph Shattan puts it, not to contain the Soviets but to "overwhelm
them" with such demonstrations of American power and resolve they
had no alternative but to undertake systemic reforms, including the abandonment
of Lenin's goal of socializing the world. Reagan's strength, Richard Pipes
said, "lay in understanding the crisis and vulnerability of the [Soviet]
system, which all the academics were telling him was stable and solid
and popular. And he would buy none of this. And that took a lot of courage."27
The basic principles
that guided President Reagan's foreign policy -- peace through strength,
"trust but verify," tyranny is evil, and evil must not be allowed
to triumph -- proved more effective, concludes political scientist Andrew
Busch, than the rationalizations and moral equivocation offered by many
academics and liberal policymakers during the 1980s.28 Margaret Thatcher
has recounted a private conversation with President Reagan in 1983 in
which he expressed his conviction that if the United States built up its
armed forces as far as necessary, the Soviets would have to change their
attitude because "they knew they could not keep up the pace."29
There were many important
actors -- and actions -- in the 1980s that led to the collapse of communism
first in Eastern and Central Europe and then in the Soviet Union, including
the leadership of Margaret Thatcher and Pope John Paul II, the rise of
Solidarity and the impact of the Velvet Revolution, valiant dissidents
in the Soviet Union and elsewhere behind the Iron Curtain, but the United
States led by President Ronald Reagan was the central player. And a turning
point in the decade was President Reagan's eloquent and prescient address
to the British Parliament in June 1982, a carefully designed rhetorical
volley in a strategy calculated to take full advantage of fundamental
Soviet weaknesses and bring an end to the Cold War on terms favorable
to the forces of freedom.
Note: The preceding
remarks were part of a panel discussion held in The Heritage Foundation.
[1]. Ben J. Wattenberg,
"It's Time to Stop America's Retreat," New York Times Magazine,
July 22, 1979: 14-16. Also see K. Lynn Stoner, "Cuba," Microsoft
Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2002.
[2]. Andrew E. Busch,
Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Freedom. Lanham, Maryland, 2001:186.
[3]. Paul H. Nitze,
"Strategy in the Decade of the 1980s," Foreign Affairs (Fall
1980): 86.
[4]. Cited by Joseph
Shattan, Architects of Victory: Six Heroes of the Cold War. Washington,
D.C., 1999: 245.
[5]. "The President's
News Conference, January 28, 1961, Public Papers of the Presidents: Ronald
Reagan 1981. Washington, D.C., 1982: 57; "Address at Commencement
Exercises at the University of Notre Dame, May 17, 1981," Public
Papers of the Presidents: Ronald Reagan 1981, Washington, D.C., 1982:
434.
[6]. "Start of
the Reagan Era," U.S. News & World Report, January 26, 1981:
18-20; Ronald Reagan, An American Life, New York, 1990: 267.
[7]. Dinish D'Souza,
Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader, New
York, 1997: 140.
[8]. Peter Schweizer,
Victory: The Reagan Administration's Secret Strategy That Hastened the
Collapse of the Soviet Union, New York, 1994: xiv.
[9]. Peter Schweizer,
Victory: xiv.
[10]. Ibid: xiv-xv.
[11]. Strobe Talbott,
The Master of the Game: Paul Nitze and the Nuclear Peace, New York, 1988:
3-4.
[12]. Schweizer: xv.
[13]. Shattan, Architects
of Victory: 247.
[14]. Ibid: 247-248.
[15]. See Eugene Lyons,
Our Secret Allies: The Peoples of Russia. New York, 1953.
[16]. Schweizer, Victory:
126.
[17]. Ibid: 131.
[18]. "Address
before a Joint Session of Congress Reporting on the State of the Union,
January 26, 1982," Public Papers of the Presidents: Ronald Reagan
1982, Washington, D.C., 1983: 78.
[19]. Ronald Reagan,
An American Life: 555.
[20]. Andrew E. Busch,
Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Freedom, Lanham, Maryland, 2001: 208.
[21]. Constantine
C. Menges, Inside the National Security Council: The True Story of the
Making and Unmaking of Reagan's Foreign Policy, New York, 1988: 46.
[22]. "Human
Rights: Now the Hard Part," editorial, New York Times, December 30,
1989.
[23]. Edwin Meese
III, With Reagan. Washington, D.C., 1992: 169-170.
[24]. Ronald Reagan,
"A Time for Choosing," a televised national address on behalf
of Senator Barry Goldwater, October 27, 1964, as reprinted in Ronald Reagan,
Speaking My Mind, New York, 1989: 22-36.
[25]. "Communism,
the Disease," Ronald Reagan, May 1975 radio commentary, as reproduced
in Reagan in His Own Hand, edited by Kiron K. Skinner, Annelise Anderson,
and Martin Anderson. New York, 2001: 12.
[26]. Ronald Reagan,
"Address to the Members of the British Parliament," [The Westminster
Address], June 8, 1982, as reprinted in Speaking My Mind, New York, 1989:
107-120.
[27]. Joseph Shattan,
Architects of Victory: 294; Carl Bernstein and Marco Politi, His Holiness:
John Paul II and the Hidden History of Our Time, New York, 1996: 359.
[28]. Andrew E. Busch,
Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Freedom: 213.
[29]. Schweizer, Victory:
123.
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