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What Eisenhower Could Teach Obama, Part I

by: Melvin A. Goodman  |  Consortium News | Op-Ed

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(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Patrick Gage Kelley, T4c. Messerlin)

Fifty years ago, President Dwight D. Eisenhower told his senior advisers in the Oval Office of the White House, “God help this country when someone sits in this chair who doesn’t know the military as well as I do.” Several months later, he issued his famous warning about the military-industrial complex.

Now the United States finds itself in a cul-de-sac, with no way out of increased military deployments and expenditures, and no evidence that President Obama has a firm hand on the national security tiller.

A central problem for the nation is the increased power and influence of the Pentagon over the foreign and national security policies of the United States.

No president since Eisenhower has fully understood the Pentagon’s dominant position in military and security policy. Armed with his knowledge and experience as World War II’s Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, Eisenhower made sure that he could not be outmaneuvered by his military advisers, particularly on such key issues as the Vietnam War and tensions with the Soviet Union.

However, his immediate successors thoroughly bungled the decision-making process. President John F. Kennedy never understood that the Pentagon anticipated the failure of the CIA in Cuba in 1961 and expected to use its air power to finish the job.

President Lyndon B. Johnson knew that Vietnam was a fool’s errand but failed to challenge the pleas from the Pentagon for more force and additional troops – or the strategic views of the Rostow and Bundy brothers.

By contrast, Eisenhower ignored the hysteria of the bomber and missile gaps in the 1950s, claimed by Senators Stuart Symington and Kennedy as well as by such key advisors as Paul Nitze.

Nitze had unnecessarily heightened concerns about U.S. security in National Security Council Report 68 (known as NSC-68) in the late 1940s, and he was the chief author of the overwrought Gaither Report, which called for unnecessary increases in the strategic arsenal.

Eisenhower ignored these advocates for increased defense spending and even cut the military budget by 20 percent between 1953 and 1955 on the way to balancing the budget by 1956. Eisenhower started no wars and was willing to settle for a stalemate in ending the Korea War.

Eisenhower clashed with the military mindset from the very beginning of his presidency. He knew that his generals were wrong in proclaiming “political will” as the major factor in military victory.

A five-star general, Eisenhower would have shuddered when four-star General David Petraeus, like so many military commanders of recent decades, proclaimed last week that U.S. political will is the key factor for success in Afghanistan.

How Much is Sufficiency?

Eisenhower knew that military demands for weaponry and resources were always based on inexplicable notions of “sufficiency,” and he made sure that Pentagon briefings on the Hill were countered by testimony from the national security bureaucracy.

Henry A. Kissinger was one of the rare national security advisers and secretaries of state who understood Eisenhower’s point of view.

During the ratification process for the SALT I agreement in 1972, Kissinger countered conservative and military opposition to SALT and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with two questions they could never answer: What is strategic sufficiency? What would we do with strategic sufficiency if we had it?

In his Farewell Address in 1961, Eisenhower warned that the United States should not become a “garrison state,” but nearly 50 years later we have developed a garrison mentality with unprecedented military spending; continuous military deployments; hyped fears about “Islamo-terrorism” and now cyberwars; and exaggerated aspirations with regard to counterinsurgency and nation-building.

Eisenhower understood that it was the military-industrial complex that fostered an inordinate belief in the omnipotence of American military power. Eisenhower made sure that the Pentagon and the Dulles brothers, who were in command at the State Department and the CIA, respectively, did not over-reach with the U.S. role overseas.

Finally, although Eisenhower signed off on some aggressive, even violent, CIA operations, such as in Iran in 1953, Guatemala in 1954, and the Congo in 1960, he did not authorize the more grandiose actions that characterized later presidencies, the likes of Kennedy’s Bay of Pigs; Johnson’s Vietnam; Reagan’s Grenada; Bush II’s Iraq; and now Obama’s Afghanistan.

Eisenhower opposed and reversed the British-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt in 1956, and withstood criticism for not assisting the Hungarian uprising weeks later. Thirty years after the fact, President Ronald Reagan joined in criticizing Eisenhower’s restraint regarding Hungary.

With the possible exception of President Richard Nixon, no recent president has understood the military mindset and was willing to limit the military’s influence. Democrats, such as Kennedy, Johnson and Bill Clinton as well as Republicans such as Reagan, George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush deferred too readily to the military; devoted too many resources to the military; and often resorted to the use of power instead of diplomacy and statecraft.

Now President Obama has found himself in a position where the military wields far too much influence on Capitol Hill; controls too much of the depleted U.S. Treasury; and has the leading policy voice on both security and diplomatic issues.

Obama proclaims Reinhold Niebuhr as his favorite philosopher. But he would do well to take heed of the philosophy and advice of Eisenhower, who had a far better understanding of America’s infatuation with military power.

Melvin A. Goodman, a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy and adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University, spent 42 years with the CIA, the National War College, and the U.S. Army. His latest book is Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA.

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I think Obama understands

I think Obama understands the power of the military and its political handmaidens just fine.

The problem is, he loves it.

"Change you can believe in" translates into "Business as usual with maybe a few not-too-radical adjustments around the edges." That's the limit of Obama's power of belief, and hence of his willingness to act. Anything beyond that is just incredible--literally, beyond belief.

However, Obama is better than the Republicans who are at this very moment planning overtly, shamelessly, and single-mindedly to inflict on this country a militarized dictatorship that will abolish all elections after their long-deferred seizure of total state power in 2012.

Expect the elimination of ALL social spending, the violent suppression of ALL dissent, and the mass murder of minority groups beginning, Uganda-style, with queers, but soon engulfing all of society in a wave of Republican terror.

Working people should vote for Democrats down the line, BUT expect nothing good from them. Instead, the One Big Union idea of the IWW should be use to strike powerful blows against the ruling class and build a base from which both Republicans and Democrats will run screaming in fear for their ill-gotten billions.

Eisenhower was a complex and

Eisenhower was a complex and intelligent man, but note that he waited to warn of the "military-industrial complex" until he was leaving the public arena. The barely mentioned "aggressive" shenanigans he signed off on in Iran played no small role in the genesis of our current security dilemmas. No doubt there is much to be learned from Eisenhower, as both good and bad example, but this essay seems to romanticize him.

EVERYTHING

EVERYTHING

Eisenhower's iconic

Eisenhower's iconic military-industrial speech was significant and even miraculous simply because it was made, but it was esily more than ten year too late as a warning - it locked the proverbial door after the horse was stolen. Shortly after ours and our allies' victory in World War II, our understandable triumphalism very likely marked our accelerating slide down the Slippery Slope of nearly unbridled militarism with concomitant expenditures that would eventually exceed those of the rest of the world combined. And for some iconic symbolism, very soon after that war we changed the name of the War Department to the Department of Defense, nicely demonstrating that George Orwell was alive and kicking.

"President Lyndon B. Johnson

"President Lyndon B. Johnson knew that Vietnam was a fool’s errand"

If Johnson knew Vietnam was a fools errand it was one he heartily endorsed. It is believed that he engineered the Gulf of Tonkin incident to get Congress to go along with the escalation of the war, and that it is well known that he was a "General" wannabe directing specific missions in Vietnam from his oval office. Often deciding the target, the direction of attack and even the ordnance load the Air Force would carry on missions. He infamously said "they can't even bomb a outhouse without my say so" Good riddance. It was a great day when he refused to run for re-election.

Wasn't Ike a war criminal?

Wasn't Ike a war criminal? Why is he, continously, used by the Liberal press as some kind of an example? His vice President was Nixon, nearly as hysterical as McCarthy himself! Eisenhower told us that the economy will rotate around the Pentagon, that's about it. We launched brutal terror attacks of our own in WWII, in both theaters.
Lemay was incinerating Japanese, and Ike was overseeing the same, in Dresden.

crime pales beside war,only

crime pales beside war,only slavery is worse,and the only reason to fight one,its an unavoidable reality in its season

Wow does this get JFK wrong.

Wow does this get JFK wrong. The Bay of Pigs was much more a trap set by the CIA than by the Pentagon. And he completely ignores the massive conflict that JFK had with Nitze during the BOP conflict. THis article vastly oversimplified JFK who disagreed with the CIA JCS on Vietnam, Laos. Congo, Cuba policy, Cuban Missile Crisis policy and relations with the USSR. See the best book on Cold War history in forty years JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It matters by James W. Douglass.

I Like Ike.

I Like Ike.

I think Obama just wants to

I think Obama just wants to get out of this alive. He'll give them whatever they want.

Nixon, 1960 !

Nixon, 1960 !

Ike was the last respectable

Ike was the last respectable Republican president. He may have had an affair with his secretary, and he certainly let 200,000 german prisoners of war starve to death, but the same amount of people would have starved in Europe if he had fed the pow's. At least he told it like it is. Obama doesn't love the war, he just doesn't have the balls to stand up to the generals.

There are distinct

There are distinct differences between Presidents with civilian political backgrounds and those with military training and service. Obama is in a place where his head is so far up his, well, dark place, he will never fathom the snow job he is being handed by Military and Intelligence Agencies.  He can not begin to get good counsel with the people he has surrounded himself with, due to the preponderence of special interest corruption.  Everyone is lying and that's just the way it is.  Figuring out the cost overruns on the F-22, etc., and other systems are just not possible for him, on his own.  And the dolts on his cabinet are ringers for the extortion that is leveraged against them by the CIA and NSA.  24/7 surveillance for everyone. Especially for pols.  Love it when the dolts passed the Surveillance free-for-alls for the Agencies.  It gave the Agencies the impetus to leverage even more and get their agendas promulgated even more....just more behind the scenes comments for effect. The Ban on the History Channel Mini-Series, The Men Who Killed Kennedy (a three parter), now on YouTube, by the BBC [kudos to the BBC], that made clear the connection of many of the characters in this short essay.  Dulles's, Kissinger, Hoover, Bushes, Murchesons, Nixon, LBJ...all were there the night before the JFK coup-de-tat at the "Party." Operation Zepata = Zepata Oil, repainted ships "Barbara" and "Houston" all for the Bay of Pigs?   Ernie Canning keep writing! Make no mistake, this country has been rewarding bad behavior for a long time. Eisenhower was more than right.
 

Does the president really

Does the president really make any decisions? Or is he possibly a puppet, a spokesperson for those driving policies, economic decisions, war plans etc. This is a serious question - no sarcasm here - always wondered about this...

Anonymous 7/7 23:57-- I

Anonymous 7/7 23:57--

I don't see how Eisenhower can be held even indirectly responsible for the bombing of Dresden. The fire bombing attacks on Germany were primarily the responsibility of British Air Marshal Arthur "Bomber" Harris, who had been pursuing a policy of incinerating German cities with massive night fire bombing raids by the RAF for years before Eisenhower became Commander of the Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force.

The RAF unit attached to SHAEF comprised the 2nd Tactical Air Force only. The 2nd TAF was a combined fighter and bomber group designed for close fire support of ground troops.

The remainder of RAF Bomber Command was led by Bomber Harris, and it was those units- the heavy Avro Lancaster bombers- who levelled German cities with high-altitude night bombing raids.

USAAF bombers also bombed Dresden, but they were units of the 8th AirForce, and not attached to the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force commanded by General Eisenhower. The 8th AAF was also a high altitude heavy bomber force.

The US Army Air Force unit attached to the SHAEF was the 9th Air Force, a tactical unit.

If anyone is still perusing

If anyone is still perusing this, y'all should read Andrew Bacevich's "Limits of Power".