April 25, 2005
Call Me Unaccountable: Woodrow Wilson and George
Bush
By Paul Craig Roberts
The passage of time permits
historians to be truthful in their assessments of
presidents.
Abe Lincoln, a Republican Party
icon since 1865, was
exposed in the 21st century as America’s
first tyrant by
Thomas DiLorenzo. Woodrow Wilson, a Democratic icon
since the early 20th century, has now been
knocked off his pedestal by
Jim Powell in
Wilson’s War: How Woodrow Wilson’s Great Blunder Led
to Hitler, Lenin, Stalin, and World War II (Crown
Forum, 2005).
Declaring Wilson to be "the
worst president in American history," Powell makes a
strong case that the rise of the Soviet Union and Nazi
Germany were unintended consequences of Wilson’s
arrogance.
Powell argues that the war, which
began in 1914, was stalemated by 1917 and would have
ended in a compromise peace. Wilson’s entry into the war
won the war for Britain and France and allowed the
disastrously vindictive
Versailles Treaty to be
imposed on Germany. The British economist,
John Maynard Keynes, knew the
treaty was unrealistic, as did Count von
Brockdorff-Rantzau, the leader of the German Peace
Delegation.
The Germans were aghast at
"the victorious violence of our enemies." The Count
told French President Georges Clemenceau that "the
exactions of this treaty are more than the German people
can bear."
The treaty required massive
losses of German territory: Part of East Prussia ("amputated
from the body of the State, condemned to a lingering
death, and robbed of its northern portion, including
Memel") most of West Prussia, Danzig, Pomerania,
Upper Silesia, the Saar, the overseas German colonies,
plus occupation of Rhenish territory for 15 years.[
German Delegates' Protest Against Proposed Peace Terms
at the Paris Peace Conference, May 1919]
On top of the dissolution of the
German state was added confiscation of all German assets
abroad, the German merchant fleet, and reparation
payments that would condemn the German people "to
perpetual slave labor."
Powell shows how this insane
treaty brought Hitler to power and how Wilson’s bribe to
the Russian government to continue in the war produced
the Bolshevik Revolution, Stalin, and the Cold War.
One hundred million deaths
resulted from Wilson’s decision to turn the stalemated
European conflict into
World War I.
Like the current president,
George W. Bush, Wilson became a warmonger once he gained
power. In his
first inaugural address, Wilson declared that the US
government "has too often been made use of for
private and selfish purposes, and those who used it had
forgotten the people." Government was afflicted with
"many deep secret things" and was "too often
debauched and made an instrument of evil."
In his August 1914 address to
Congress, Wilson
warned against taking sides in the war. "The
United States must be neutral in fact, as well as in
name . . . impartial in thought, as well as action."
By the following March, Wilson was disregarding his
declared neutrality. Wilson "went along with
Britain’s naval blockade—a blatant disregard for
international law." Wilson invited war by insisting
"Americans had the right to travel anywhere including a
war zone."
By June 9, 1915, it was clear to
Secretary of State
William Jennings Bryan that Wilson was
heading America to war. "Under increasing
pressure to march to war with Wilson, Bryan
resigned as secretary of state."
If only Colin Powell had done the
same. Bryan’s resignation could not stop Wilson from
entering an ongoing war, but Colin Powell could have
thrown a monkey wrench into Bush’s naked aggression
against Iraq by refusing to deliver that packet of lies
to the UN.
Colin Powell would have saved his
own reputation and that of his country along with
thousands of lives. Instead, he allowed the White House
morons to commit a fantastic strategic blunder, the
consequences of which will allow future historians to
much excoriate the hapless George W. Bush.
Jim Powell presents the
disastrous 20th century as the unintended
consequences of Wilson’s blunders. In contrast, Claes
Ryn
sees Wilson as America’s first
Jacobin neoconservative. Powell could be speaking of
Bush when he asks what gave Wilson the idea "that he
could impose his will on millions of people who lived
thousands of miles away?"
Historian
Margaret MacMillan’s observation
that Wilson’s "ability, self-deception perhaps,
to frame his decisions so that they became not merely
necessary, but morally right" applies equally to
George W. Bush—as does
Alexander and Juliette George’s observation that
"to justify his aggressive treatment of opponents,
[Wilson] needed to regard himself as the best
interpreter of the people’s true aspirations."
America’s claim to virtuous
hegemony is contradicted by the disasters inflicted on
the world by America’s arrogant and blundering leaders.
Paul
Craig Roberts, a former Reagan Administration official,
is the author of
The Supply-Side Revolution and, with Lawrence M.
Stratton, of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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