FDR: Tarnished Icon
Published May 21, 2005
The AP reporter Terence Hunt suggests that President Bush's recent speech in Latvia "second guessed" liberal icon FDR on the carving up of Europe toward the end of World War II in Yalta:
"Second-guessing Franklin D. Roosevelt, President Bush said Saturday the United States played a role in Europe's painful division after World War II — a decision that helped cause "one of the greatest wrongs of history" when the Soviet Union imposed its harsh rule across Central and Eastern Europe.
"Bush said the lessons of the past will not be forgotten as the United States tries to spread freedom in the Middle East.
"'We will not repeat the mistakes of other generations, appeasing or excusing tyranny, and sacrificing freedom in the vain pursuit of stability,' the president said. 'We have learned our lesson; no one's liberty is expendable. In the long run, our security and true stability depend on the freedom of others.'
"One can almost hear the hysteria as Mr. Hunt quotes historian Alan Brinkley for reassurance that Bush's speech is the fault of the 'far right':
"'Certainly it goes further than any president has gone,' historian Alan Brinkley said from the U.S. 'This has been a very common view of the far right for many years — that Yalta was a betrayal of freedom, that Roosevelt betrayed the hopes of generations.'"
It's almost as if he wants reassurance that "it's O.K." that millions were enslaved and oppressed by the Soviet Union after the war. Or, perhaps, that "it's O.K." that the U.S.S.R. was permitted — by the stroke of a pen — to establish vassal states in Eastern Europe.
Of course, it is possible that Eastern Europe would have fallen into the Soviet orbit anyway given its proximity to Russia. But did we really have to hand over Eastern Europe to Stalin on a silver platter?
- FDR: Tarnished Icon
- Published: May 21, 2005
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Politics
- Writer: Dean
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- Dean's personal site
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Comments
Actually, I think he did mean his dad and by extension, Rumsfeld, as well as FDR, Ike, JFK, Johnson, Nixon, Carter, Reagan and Clinton. Bush is a radical president when it comes to foreign policy, and I mean that as a compliment.
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Well, it's easy to second-guess people over 50 years after the events. But if we put ourselves in FDR's position, it did seem like the best choice. The US and the USSR were divided long before the end of the war, and it seemed inevitable that there would be tensions long after the war's end. But at the very least, I think (and I'm not supporting or denouncing Bush for his comments/actions or the reporter for his thoughts) that keeping history in our minds while we continue through these rough (or turbulent) times is a very good thing. Not repeating mistakes and learning from them is always a good thing.
I've heard many people say over the years that the U.S. gave up too much at Yalta -- President Carter among them. Sounds obvious enough in perspective, so Bush's comments don't strike me as all that radical.






"We will not repeat the mistakes of other generations, appeasing or excusing tyranny, and sacrificing freedom in the vain pursuit of stability"
Other generations being Rumsfeld and his dad, presumably.
And that means that they will depose Musharraf now?
Coming to Yalta, I guess Stalin's armies efforts in pushing Hitler back and being a major threat from the rear, causing him to divide his attentions from Europe, didn't matter, did they?