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The Wisconsin School



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 10th 03, 08:59 PM
Chris Mark
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Default The Wisconsin School

I was discussing with a friend the Gar Alperovitz episode and remarking on how
regrettable it was that even in a military-oriented newsgroup visited by people
with an interest in Cold War history and whose lives have been directly
affected by his views, he is an unknown. And that led us to the so-called
Wisconsin school of Cold War revisionist historians (of whom GA was--is--a
member) and the probability that a lot of people who should know about it, who
have been affected by it, know little or nothing about it. So we came up with
a list of six crucial books from this school, books that radically changed
America's own view of the Cold War--as well as the view of the US held by the
rest of the West. They still have influence, as even on this newsgroup today
there are posts reflecting the world view of the US and its motives established
by the following six books. (These are not "bad" books in the sense that they
are necessarily misinformed, inaccurate, or poorly written, but their influence
has been most pernicious.)
Note that the timeframe of their publication encompasses the 1960s and the
birth of the "New Left."

1. William A. Williams, Tragedy of American Diplomacy, 1959. Williams, the
founder of the "Wisconsin School" argues here that US diplomacy has long been
dominated by the search for commercial markets for American products and farm
goods, to the exclusion of higher values.

2. Donald Fleming, The Cold War and Its Origins, 1961. Fleming argues that
anticommunists in the Roosevelt and Truman administrations sabotaged FDR's plan
for a postwar order that would have stressed friendly relations with the USSR.

3. Gar Alperovitz, Atomic Diplomacy: Hiroshima and Potsdam, the Use of the
Atomic Bomb and the American Confrontation with Soviet Power, 1965. Alperovitz
argued that the bomb had been dropped on Japan to warn Stalin against
interfering with American plans for the postwar world.

4. David Horowitz, Free World Colossus: A Critique of American Foreign Policy
in the Cold War, 1965. Horowitz took the arguments of the above three and
others who mined the same lode and turned them into a blistering anti-Vietnam
War polemic. The book became standard reading in college history courses almost
as soon as it was published. (Horowitz, a "red diaper baby," also came to be
associated with the Black Panthers. He is one of the rare ones who has
repudiated his earlier views.)

5. Gabriel Kolko, Politics of War: The World and United States Foreign Policy,
1943-1945, 1968. Kolko contended that America's anti-Soviet policies during
WW2 were responsible for the breakdown of the Soviet-American alliance and the
beginning of the Cold War.

6. Lloyd Gardner, Architects of Illusion: Men and Ideas in American Foreign
Policy, 1941-1949, 1970. Gardner asserted that responsibility for the Cold War
belonged squarely with the United States, with the Soviet Union an innocent
victim of American duplicity.

These books caused a seismic shift in the academic and diplomatic view of the
US role in the world, a shift that denied the reality of a Soviet threat in
particular and of communism in general, and questioned the motives behind the
containment doctrine. They influenced the Nixon-Kissenger policy of detente
and profoundly affected the Carter administration's world view.
George Meany, old time union organizer, New Deal Democrat and head of the
AFL-CIO, was baffled by the sudden diffidence of even old time anti-communists
like Nixon and blasted detente, asserting that "the cause of human rights in
this world is dependent on the strength--the economic strength, the military
strength and the moral strength--of the United States of America."
But the Wisconsin School had made him and his views a dinosaur. In 1975 came
Paul Warnke's famous 1975 "Apes on a Treadmill" essay in Foreign Policy, in
which he called for global downsizing of American power and an end to efforts
to match Soviet military strength--if we quit the arms race, the Soviets would,
too.
Succeeding Nixon-Ford came Carter, who, within months of his innauguration,
spoke of "the intellectual and moral poverty" of US post WW2 actions, based on
"flawed principles and tactics." (speech 5-22-77)
Of course, the result of all this was defeat in Vietnam, the expulsion of
Taiwan from the UN, the Breshnev doctrine and all the rest of it, down to this
day.


Chris Mark
  #2  
Old November 11th 03, 05:05 AM
Juvat
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Default

After an exhausting session with Victoria's Secret Police, Chris Mark
blurted out:

I was discussing with a friend the Gar Alperovitz episode and remarking on how
regrettable it was that even in a military-oriented newsgroup visited by people
with an interest in Cold War history and whose lives have been directly
affected by his views, he is an unknown.


I remember reading stuff by him and Kolko in college.

Note that the timeframe of their publication encompasses the 1960s and the
birth of the "New Left."


I don't recall ever hearing of the "New Left."

Alperovitz argued that the bomb had been dropped on Japan to warn
Stalin against interfering with American plans for the postwar world.


We were trying to keep nuke secrets away from the DRPCBs from the
gitgo. Ike foreign policy of massive retaliation and containment were
pretty good indicators that we didn't want the DRPCBs interfering.

In 1975 came Paul Warnke's famous 1975 "Apes on a Treadmill"
essay in Foreign Policy, in which he called for global downsizing
of American power and an end to efforts to match Soviet military
strength--if we quit the arms race, the Soviets would, too.


FWIW, in 1960 just before Ike "shook the stick" for JFK's change of
command, he warned against the efforts of the military-industrial
complex trying to stay ahead of the soviets...for the economic health
of our nation.

Of course, the result of all this was defeat in Vietnam,


Mark Clodfelter's book, "The Limits of Air Power," wouldn't put the
blame on the "New Left."

Juvat


  #3  
Old November 11th 03, 06:55 AM
Chris Mark
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Posts: n/a
Default

From: Juvat

Mark Clodfelter's book, "The Limits of Air Power," wouldn't put the
blame on the "New Left."


Some of his peers have problems with Clodfelter's rundown of the air war. He
teaches at the AF academy and is a graduate of the School for Advanced
Airpower Studies, so he is no tyro. I don't know enough about the air war to
have a useful opinion. It is certainly an interesting book.
What the Wisconsin School did was not direct but insidious-- to sow moral
doubt, sap political will. Loss of the will to win led to defeat, whatever the
tactical military details.
(Incidentally, I don't mind "revisionist" historians; there is no one truth
about history, and it behooves new generations to take a fresh look at things.
What the Wisconsin School did was take the State Department "received" version
of the origins of the Cold War and its development and giving it a good, hard
cross-examination. However, they did not admit their own biases, some of which
were quite extreme. This led them, among other sins, to a quite selective use
of sources and to assume that their beliefs and points of view were equivalent
to facts. Robert J. Maddox's "The New Left and the Origins of the Cold War,"
Princeton, 1972, gives an excellent rundown.)

A good column revealing the lasting influence of the Wisconsin School
(although the author makes no reference to it) on American political will when
it comes to fighting a war to win is in a column published Sunday in the LA
Times by David Gelernter, the Yale computer scientist (and victim of the
Unabomber...lost most of one of his arms in the blast). About the current
controversy over Iraq, it is titled, "Don't Quit as We Did in Vietnam." You can
read it he

http://weeklystandard.com/Content/Pu...3/369kgcua.asp

Gelernter mentions a book review without naming the book. That book is "A
Better War : The Unexamined Victories and the Final Tragedy of America's Last
Years in Vietnam" by Lewis Sorely. An excellent review of the book (with links
to many other reviews of it) is at:

http://www.brothersjudd.com/index.cf...ail/book_id/82
9/Better%20War.htm

BTW this is among the best books on the Vietnam War. Sorely, West Point grad,
tank battalion commander, Johns Hopkins Ph.D, CIA Chief of Policy and Plans
Div., does a very thorough job of sifting through the whole sorry mess,
political and military, US and Vietnamese.


Chris Mark
 




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