Beinart, advocates the Democratic Party Embrace a New Truman Doctrine to Fight Global "Islamic Totalitarianism", Create New McCarthyist Institutions at Home. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A49824-2004Dec8.htmlCan the Democrats Fight?
Cold War Lessons for Reclaiming Trust on National Security
By Peter Beinart
Thursday, December 9, 2004; Page A33
At the beginning of the Cold War, liberals had a national security problem. As the columnists Joseph and Stewart Alsop wrote in 1946, liberals "consistently avoided the great political reality of the present: The Soviet challenge to the West." Unless that changed, the Alsops warned, "it is the right -- the very extreme right -- which is most likely to gain victory."
Over the following three years, it did change. Anti-communism, a minority view among liberals in 1946, was by 1949 a cornerstone of liberal belief. Much of the credit goes to Harry Truman, who rallied liberals and other Americans behind containment and the Marshall Plan. But Truman didn't do it alone. At the Democratic grass roots, organizations such as Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) put the struggle against communism at the heart of a new liberal worldview. When former vice president Henry Wallace tried to ally liberals and communists in 1948, the ADA helped defeat his third-party candidacy. And after Republicans took back the White House in 1952, the ADA helped ensure that anti-communism never became an exclusively conservative faith.
Today liberals have a national security problem again. The current "great political reality" is the threat from al Qaeda and totalitarian Islam. And in the shadow of that threat, the right -- including the extreme right -- has won two straight elections, partly because Americans don't trust Democrats to keep them safe.
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Consider MoveOn.org, which the online journal Salon has called "the most important political advocacy group in Democratic circles." MoveOn was founded in the late 1990s to oppose Bill Clinton's impeachment. But it responded to Sept. 11 by opposing the war against the Taliban. In 2002 it incorporated 9-11peace.org, which also opposed the Afghan war, and questioned the need for greater CIA funding. In the years since, MoveOn has depicted the war on terrorism in overwhelmingly negative terms -- as a menace to civil liberties and a distraction from domestic concerns. Like Michael Moore, it has minimized the al Qaeda threat.
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The obvious answer to Peter Beinart's leading question, "Can The Democrats Fight?" (WP Op-ed, 12/09/04) is: yes, among themselves. That is exactly what would happen if the Party followed his advise and turned further to the Right.
His proposed "cure" for the Dem's inability to recapture the White House and Congress is the Democrats become a war party. Beinart urges Democrats to embrace a sort of new Truman Doctrine, a global crusade against what he calls "totalitarian Islam", which is currently the Republican policy.
Doesn't that war also entail the Patriot Act, the War In Iraq, and the abuses that go along with them? Mr. Beinart seems to forget that McCarthyism and the Korean War started under the Truman Administration.
Cold War domestic politics demonstrated something he seems to forget: war parties turn into machines for domestic political purges. Does he want the Democratic Party and America torn apart again along ideological lines? Who would that really benefit?
Mark G. Levey