home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
election
/
52elect
/
52elect.011
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1995-02-21
|
8KB
|
171 lines
<text id=93HT1018>
<title>
52 Election: The Rediscovery
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1952 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
September 1, 1952
REPUBLICANS
The Rediscovery
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A great American soldier disclosed political greatness this
week and rediscovered courage as a policy for the nation. Out of
his own wide experience with the fateful issues of the 20th
century, Dwight D. Eisenhower phrased a definition of the peril
besetting the U.S. and proposed a moral basis for meeting that
peril. It was a definition so compelling that it set old
political issues in a new frame. And it displayed, as nothing Ike
has said before, his credentials as a candidate for President of
the U.S.
</p>
<p> He delivered his speech to the American Legion national
convention in Manhattan's Madison Square Garden. The speech was
supposed to be nonpolitical. No speech under such circumstances
could be nonpolitical. But it was the speech his friends and
well-wishers had been waiting for, hoping he would make--a good
speech, in both the moral and political sense of the word.
</p>
<p> The Change. "Seven years ago this very month I left the Army
with no possible thought that I should ever enter politics," said
Eisenhower. "But seven years ago today no one in our whole
country would have dreamed that today we would be prey to fear.
Who would have thought, as we disbanded that great Army, a great
Navy and a great Air Force, that only seven years later America
would have to be studying and analyzing the world in terms of
fear and concern.
</p>
<p> "We are threatened by a great tyranny, a tyranny that is
brutal in its primitiveness. It is a tyranny that has brought
thousands--millions of people--into slave camps and is
attempting to make all human kind its chattel."
</p>
<p> The Losses. Ike calculated with grim arithmetic the free
world's recent territory losses to Russia. In Europe: Latvia,
Estonia, Poland, East Germany, East Austria, Czechoslovakia,
Albania, Hungary, Bulgaria and Rumania, with a total of 94
million people. "All these people are blood kin to us...The
American conscience can never know peace until these people are
restored again to be masters of their own fate...
</p>
<p> "On its Asiatic periphery the Kremlin has made captive China
and Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Northern Korea...the northern half
of Indo-China...It has added 500 million people to its
arsenal of manpower. Most of these peoples of the Far East have
been our friends...Through a dismal decade of false starts,
fractional measures, loud policies and faint deeds, we have lost
them. Again I can hear you say the conscience of America shall
never be free until these peoples have opportunity to choose
their own path."
</p>
<p> The Purpose. He turned to the kind of shrewd analysis of
Communist forces which the U.S. seldom hears from its officials.
The Russians, he said, have not yet attained a position from
which they can accomplish the most important of their objectives,
"economic containment and gradual strangulation of America...They know that our productive power, our economic strength is
acutely dependent upon vast quantities of critical materials that
we import from other sections of the globe. Their method,
therefore, is to infiltrate those areas, to seize them, control
them and so deny us those materials that we so badly need...
</p>
<p> "Their efforts...are accompanied by virulent subversion
and propaganda inside the free world. And though we say it in
shame, as we say it in anger, they have penetrated into many
critical spots of our own country, even into our Government."
</p>
<p> The Perspective. Ike saluted the Legion for its long fight
against subversion and offered to enlist in such a fight "for the
duration." Having stressed the imperative of routing subversion,
he put the political issue of Joe McCarthy in its proper
perspective. "You have done your work," said Ike warmly, "without
recklessly injuring the reputations of innocent people."
</p>
<p> Then Ike returned to Communism's other face--the external
threat. "Now in order to obtain their objectives, Stalin has said
there may have to be another international war, unless the free
nations become so convinced of the hopelessness of the struggle
that they will surrender...
</p>
<p> "Moscow is not going to make the mistake that Nazi Germany
and Imperial Japan made. They were supported...only by
fractional economies. Stalin will never attack...unless war
comes about by an accident of the powder keg variety...until
he is certain there has been gathered under the iron fists of the
Kremlin that amount of material, human organized military
strength, that he believes will bring ultimate victory...All
this means that we have some time, because they do not feel ready
yet to challenge us in this final fashion. But it means also that...we must at once find the right answer."
</p>
<p> The Course. "We have no time for complacency but I assure
you there is also no cause for fear. One hundred and fifty-five
million united Americans are still the greatest temporal force in
the world. We...must not abate our efforts until we have
banished from the free world the last probability of communist
aggression."
</p>
<p> Ike ticked off three markers on "the course to peace":
</p>
<p>-- "America must be militarily and productively strong
(equipped with) security forces whose destructive and retaliatory
power is so great that it causes nightmares in the Kremlin
whenever they think of attacking us...
</p>
<p>-- "We must tell the Kremlin that never shall we desist in
our aid to every man and woman of those shackled lands who seek
refuge with us, any man who keeps burning among his own people
the flame of freedom or who is dedicated to the liberation of his
fellows...
</p>
<p> "These three elements are necessary and immediate, nor may
we suffer delay in other crucial areas if we are to achieve
prosperity in the free world."
</p>
<p> The Domestic Issues. And what of those catchword issues of
the current political campaign? In Ike's frame of reference they
fell easily into their proper place:
</p>
<p>-- Discrimination: "In a time when America needs all the
skills, all the spiritual strength and dedicated services of its
155 million people, discrimination is criminally stupid."
</p>
<p>-- Social Welfare: "Despite propaganda that all the social
ills have been legislated out of existence, we know that the
realities of life are still tough, harsh and disheartening for
many Americans. These ills cannot be abolished by the mere
passage of a law, but they will disappear in an America whose men
& women understand that not one of us--whatever his position--can stand alone, and that all of us, bound in spiritual unity,
are injured by any injury to any of us."
</p>
<p>-- Corruption: "Let us end corruption in public office, at
every level of government. In world opinion and in world
effectiveness, the U.S. is measured by the moral firmness of its
public officials.
</p>
<p> "For you veterans," said Ike in summary, "these resolves
require no effort approaching the demands made on you in war. Yet
the reward for America and for the free world will be as great as
any victory in battle or in any campaign. The world--all the
world--will again recognize the United States of America as the
spiritual and material realization of the dreams that men have
dreamt since the dawn of history.
</p>
<p> "Then the story of America will be repeated on tom-toms of
the African jungle, in the gossip of Arab bazaars, under the
shady trees of the Champs Elysees, in the temples and along the
holy rivers of the East. The ring of truth around the world will
drown the strident lies of Moscow's propaganda. One hundred years
ago America was the wonder of humanity and the symbol of man's
hopes and goals everywhere.
</p>
<p> "We can make it that again."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>