The New Republic - A Fighting Faith
AN ARGUMENT FOR A NEW LIBERALISM: A Fighting Faith
Issue date 12.13.04
On January 4, 1947, 130 men and women met at
Washington's Willard Hotel to save American liberalism. A few months earlier,
in articles in The New Republic and elsewhere, the columnists Joseph and
Stewart Alsop had warned that "the liberal movement is now engaged in
sowing the seeds of its own destruction." Liberals, they argued,
"consistently avoided the great political reality of the present: the
Soviet challenge to the West." Unless that changed, "In the spasm of
terror which will seize this country ... it is the right--the very extreme
right--which is most likely to gain victory."
During World War II, only one major liberal organization,
the Union for Democratic Action (UDA), had banned communists from its ranks. At
the Willard, members of the UDA met to expand and rename their organization.
The attendees, who included Reinhold Niebuhr, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., John
Kenneth Galbraith, Walter Reuther, and Eleanor Roosevelt, issued a press
release that enumerated the new organization's principles. Announcing the
formation of Americans for Democratic Action (ADA), the statement declared,
"[B]ecause the interests of the United States are the interests of free
men everywhere," America should support "democratic and
freedom-loving peoples the world over." That meant unceasing opposition to
communism, an ideology "hostile to the principles of freedom and democracy
on which the Republic has grown great."
At the time, the ADA's was still a minority view among
American liberals. Two of the most influential journals of liberal opinion, The
New Republic and The Nation, both rejected militant anti-communism. Former Vice
President Henry Wallace, a hero to many liberals, saw communists as allies in
the fight for domestic and international progress. As Steven M. Gillon notes in
Politics and Vision, his excellent history of the ADA, it was virtually the
only liberal organization to back President Harry S Truman's March 1947
decision to aid Greece and Turkey in their battle against Soviet subversion.
But, over the next two years, in bitter political
combat across the institutions of American liberalism, anti-communism gained
strength. With the ADA's help, Truman crushed Wallace's third-party challenge
en route to reelection. The formerly leftist Congress of Industrial
Organizations (CIO) expelled its communist affiliates and The New Republic
broke with Wallace, its former editor. The American Civil Liberties Union
(aclu) denounced communism, as did the naacp. By 1949, three years after
Winston Churchill warned that an "iron curtain" had descended across
Europe, Schlesinger could write in The Vital Center: "Mid-twentieth
century liberalism, I believe, has thus been fundamentally reshaped ... by the
exposure of the Soviet Union, and by the deepening of our knowledge of man. The
consequence of this historical re-education has been an unconditional rejection
of totalitarianism."
Today, three years after September 11 brought the
United States face-to-face with a new totalitarian threat, liberalism has still
not "been fundamentally reshaped" by the experience. On the right, a
"historical re-education" has indeed occurred--replacing the
isolationism of the Gingrich Congress with George W. Bush and Dick Cheney's
near-theological faith in the transformative capacity of U.S. military might.
But American liberalism, as defined by its activist organizations, remains
largely what it was in the 1990s--a collection of domestic interests and
concerns. On health care, gay rights, and the environment, there is a positive
vision, articulated with passion. But there is little liberal passion to win
the struggle against Al Qaeda--even though totalitarian Islam has killed thousands
of Americans and aims to kill millions; and even though, if it gained power,
its efforts to force every aspect of life into conformity with a barbaric
interpretation of Islam would reign terror upon women, religious minorities,
and anyone in the Muslim world with a thirst for modernity or freedom.
When liberals talk about America's new era, the
discussion is largely negative--against the Iraq war, against restrictions on
civil liberties, against America's worsening reputation in the world. In sharp
contrast to the first years of the cold war, post-September 11 liberalism has
produced leaders and institutions--most notably Michael Moore and MoveOn--that
do not put the struggle against America's new totalitarian foe at the center of
their hopes for a better world. As a result, the Democratic Party boasts a
fairly hawkish foreign policy establishment and a cadre of politicians and
strategists eager to look tough. But, below this small elite sits a Wallacite
grassroots that views America's new struggle as a distraction, if not a mirage.
Two elections, and two defeats, into the September 11 era, American liberalism
still has not had its meeting at the Willard Hotel. And the hour is getting
late.
The Kerry Compromise
The press loves a surprise. And so, in the days
immediately after November 2, journalists trumpeted the revelation that
"moral values" had cost John Kerry the election. Upon deeper
investigation, however, the reasons for Kerry's loss don't look that surprising
at all. In fact, they are largely the same reasons congressional Democrats lost
in 2002.
Pundits have seized on exit polls showing that the
electorate's single greatest concern was moral values, cited by 22 percent of
voters. But, as my colleague Andrew Sullivan has pointed out ("Uncivil
Union," November 22), a similar share of the electorate cited moral values
in the '90s. The real change this year was on foreign policy. In 2000, only 12
percent of voters cited "world affairs" as their paramount issue;
this year, 34 percent mentioned either Iraq or terrorism. (Combined, the two
foreign policy categories dwarf moral values.) Voters who cited terrorism
backed Bush even more strongly than those who cited moral values. And it was
largely this new cohort--the same one that handed the GOP its Senate majority
in 2002--that accounts for Bush's improvement over 2000. As Paul Freedman
recently calculated in Slate, if you control for Bush's share of the vote four
years ago, "a 10-point increase in the percentage of voters [in a given
state] citing terrorism as the most important problem translates into a 3-point
Bush gain. A 10-point increase in morality voters, on the other hand, has no
effect."
On national security, Kerry's nomination was a
compromise between a party elite desperate to neutralize the terrorism issue
and a liberal base unwilling to redefine itself for the post-September 11
world. In the early days of his candidacy, Kerry seemed destined to run as a
hawk. In June 2002, he attacked Bush from the right for not committing American
ground troops in the mountains of Tora Bora. Like the other leading candidates
in the race, he voted to authorize the use of force in Iraq. This not only
pleased Kerry's consultants, who hoped to inoculate him against charges that he
was soft on terrorism, but it satisfied his foreign policy advisers as well.
The Democratic foreign policy establishment that
counseled the leading presidential candidates during the primaries--and
coalesced behind Kerry after he won the nomination--was the product of a
decade-long evolution. Bill Clinton had come into office with little passion
for foreign policy, except as it affected the U.S. economy. But, over time, his
administration grew more concerned with international affairs and more hawkish.
In August 1995, Clinton finally sent nato warplanes into action in Bosnia. And,
four years later, the United States, again working through nato, launched a
humanitarian war in Kosovo, preventing another ethnic cleansing and setting the
stage for a democratic revolution in Belgrade. It was an air war, to be sure,
and it put few American lives at risk. But it was a war nonetheless, initiated
without U.N. backing by a Democratic president in response to internal events
in a sovereign country.
For top Kerry foreign policy advisers, such as Richard
Holbrooke and Joseph Biden, Bosnia and Kosovo seemed like models for a new
post-Vietnam liberalism that embraced U.S. power. And September 11 validated
the transformation. Democratic foreign policy wonks not only supported the war
in Afghanistan, they generally felt it didn't go far enough--urging a larger
nato force capable of securing the entire country. And, while disturbed by the
Bush administration's handling of Iraq, they agreed that Saddam Hussein was a
threat and, more generally, supported aggressive efforts to democratize the
Muslim world. As National Journal's Paul Starobin noted in a September 2004
profile, "Kerry and his foreign-policy advisers are not doves. They are
liberal war hawks who would be unafraid to use American power to promote their
values." At the Democratic convention, Biden said that the
"overwhelming obligation of the next president is clear"--to exercise
"the full measure of our power" to defeat Islamist totalitarianism.
Had history taken a different course, this new brand
of liberalism might have expanded beyond a narrow foreign policy elite. The war
in Afghanistan, while unlike Kosovo a war of self-defense, once again brought
the Western democracies together against a deeply illiberal foe. Had that war,
rather than the war in Iraq, become the defining event of the post-September 11
era, the "re-education" about U.S. power, and about the new
totalitarian threat from the Muslim world that had transformed Kerry's
advisers, might have trickled down to the party's liberal base, transforming it
as well.
Instead, Bush's war on terrorism became a partisan
affair--defined in the liberal mind not by images of American soldiers walking
Afghan girls to school, but by John Ashcroft's mass detentions and Cheney's
false claims about Iraqi WMD. The left's post-September 11 enthusiasm for an
aggressive campaign against Al Qaeda--epitomized by students at liberal
campuses signing up for jobs with the CIA--was overwhelmed by horror at the
bungled Iraq war. So, when the Democratic presidential candidates began
courting their party's activists in Iowa and New Hampshire in 2003, they found
a liberal grassroots that viewed the war on terrorism in negative terms and
judged the candidates less on their enthusiasm for defeating Al Qaeda than on
their enthusiasm for defeating Bush. The three candidates who made winning the
war on terrorism the centerpiece of their campaigns--Joseph Lieberman, Bob
Graham, and Wesley Clark--each failed to capture the imagination of liberal
activists eager for a positive agenda only in the domestic sphere. Three of the
early front-runners--Kerry, John Edwards, and Dick Gephardt--each sank as
Howard Dean pilloried them for supporting Ashcroft's Patriot Act and the Iraq
war.
Three months before the Iowa caucuses, facing mass
liberal defections to Dean, Kerry voted against Bush's $87 billion supplemental
request for Iraq. With that vote, the Kerry compromise was born. To Kerry's
foreign policy advisers, some of whom supported the supplemental funding, he remained
a vehicle for an aggressive war on terrorism. And that may well have been
Kerry's own intention. But, to the liberal voters who would choose the party's
nominee, he became a more electable Dean. Kerry's opposition to the $87 billion
didn't only change his image on the war in Iraq; it changed his image on the
war on terrorism itself. His justification for opposing the $87 billion was
essentially isolationist: "We shouldn't be opening firehouses in Baghdad
and closing them down in our own communities." And, by exploiting public
antipathy toward foreign aid and nation-building, the natural building blocks
of any liberal anti-totalitarian effort in the Muslim world, Kerry signaled
that liberalism's moral energies should be unleashed primarily at home.
Kerry's vote against the $87 billion helped him lure
back the liberal activists he needed to win Iowa, and Iowa catapulted him
toward the nomination. But the vote came back to haunt him in two ways. Most
obviously, it helped the Bush campaign paint him as unprincipled. But, more
subtly, it made it harder for Kerry to ask Americans to sacrifice in a global
campaign for freedom. Biden could suggest "a new program of national
service" and other measures to "spread the cost and hardship of the
war on terror beyond our soldiers and their families." But, whenever Kerry
flirted with asking Americans to do more to meet America's new threat, he found
himself limited by his prior emphasis on doing less. At times, he said his
primary focus in Iraq would be bringing American troops home. He called for
expanding the military but pledged that none of the new troops would go to
Iraq, the new center of the terror war, where he had said American forces were
undermanned. Kerry's criticisms of Bush's Iraq policy were trenchant, but the
only alternative principle he clearly articulated was multilateralism, which
often sounded like a veiled way of asking Americans to do less. And, because he
never urged a national mobilization for safety and freedom, his discussion of
terrorism lacked Bush's grandeur. That wasn't an accident. Had Kerry
aggressively championed a national mobilization to win the war on terrorism, he
wouldn't have been the Democratic nominee.
The Softs
Kerry was a flawed candidate, but he was not the
fundamental problem. The fundamental problem was the party's liberal base,
which would have refused to nominate anyone who proposed redefining the
Democratic Party in the way the ADA did in 1947. The challenge for Democrats
today is not to find a different kind of presidential candidate. It is to
transform the party at its grassroots so that a different kind of presidential
candidate can emerge. That means abandoning the unity-at-all-costs ethos that
governed American liberalism in 2004. And it requires a sustained battle to wrest
the Democratic Party from the heirs of Henry Wallace. In the party today, two
such heirs loom largest: Michael Moore and MoveOn.
In 1950, the journal The New Leader divided American
liberals into "hards" and "softs." The hards, epitomized by
the ADA, believed anti-communism was the fundamental litmus test for a decent
left. Non-communism was not enough; opposition to the totalitarian threat was
the prerequisite for membership in American liberalism because communism was
the defining moral challenge of the age.
The softs, by contrast, were not necessarily
communists themselves. But they refused to make anti-communism their guiding
principle. For them, the threat to liberal values came entirely from the
right--from militarists, from red-baiters, and from the forces of economic
reaction. To attack the communists, reliable allies in the fight for civil
rights and economic justice, was a distraction from the struggle for progress.
Moore is the most prominent soft in the United States
today. Most Democrats agree with him about the Iraq war, about Ashcroft, and
about Bush. What they do not recognize, or do not acknowledge, is that Moore
does not oppose Bush's policies because he thinks they fail to effectively
address the terrorist threat; he does not believe there is a terrorist threat.
For Moore, terrorism is an opiate whipped up by corporate bosses. In Dude,
Where's My Country?, he says it plainly: "There is no terrorist
threat." And he wonders, "Why has our government gone to such absurd
lengths to convince us our lives are in danger?"
Moore views totalitarian Islam the way Wallace viewed
communism: As a phantom, a ruse employed by the only enemies that matter, those
on the right. Saudi extremists may have brought down the Twin Towers, but the
real menace is the Carlyle Group. Today, most liberals naïvely consider Moore a
useful ally, a bomb-thrower against a right-wing that deserves to be torched.
What they do not understand is that his real casualties are on the decent left.
When Moore opposes the war against the Taliban, he casts doubt upon the
sincerity of liberals who say they opposed the Iraq war because they wanted to
win in Afghanistan first. When Moore says terrorism should be no greater a
national concern than car accidents or pneumonia, he makes it harder for
liberals to claim that their belief in civil liberties does not imply a
diminished vigilance against Al Qaeda.
Moore is a non-totalitarian, but, like Wallace, he is
not an anti-totalitarian. And, when Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry
McAuliffe and Tom Daschle flocked to the Washington premiere of Fahrenheit
9/11, and when Moore sat in Jimmy Carter's box at the Democratic convention,
many Americans wondered whether the Democratic Party was anti-totalitarian
either.
Next: If Moore is America's leading individual soft,
liberalism's premier soft organization is MoveOn. ... Like the softs of the
early cold war, MoveOn sees threats to liberalism only on the right. And thus,
it makes common cause with the most deeply illiberal elements on the
international left.
If Moore is America's leading individual soft,
liberalism's premier soft organization is MoveOn. MoveOn was formed to oppose
Clinton's impeachment, but, after September 11, it turned to opposing the war
in Afghanistan. A MoveOn-sponsored petition warned, "If we retaliate by
bombing Kabul and kill people oppressed by the Taliban, we become like the
terrorists we oppose."
By January 2002, MoveOn was collaborating with
9-11peace.org, a website founded by Eli Pariser, who would later become
MoveOn's most visible spokesman. One early 9-11peace.org bulletin urged
supporters to "[c]all world leaders and ask them to call off the
bombing," and to "[f]ly the UN Flag as a symbol of global unity and
support for international law." Others questioned the wisdom of increased
funding for the CIA and the deployment of American troops to assist in
anti-terrorist efforts in the Philippines. In October 2002, after 9-11peace.org
was incorporated into MoveOn, an organization bulletin suggested that the
United States should have "utilize[d] international law and judicial
procedures, including due process" against bin Laden and that "it's
possible that a tribunal could even have garnered cooperation from the
Taliban."
In the past several years, MoveOn has emerged, in the
words of Salon's Michelle Goldberg, as "the most important political
advocacy group in Democratic circles." It boasts more than 1.5 million
members and raised a remarkable $40 million for the 2004 election. Many MoveOn
supporters probably disagree with the organization's opposition to the Afghan
war, if they are even aware of it, and simply see the group as an effective
means to combat Bush. But one of the lessons of the early cold war is
scrupulousness about whom liberals let speak in their name. And, while MoveOn's
frequent bulletins are far more thoughtful than Moore's rants, they convey the
same basic hostility to U.S. power.
In the early days after September 11, MoveOn suggested
that foreign aid might prove a better way to defeat terrorism than military
action. But, in recent years, it seems to have largely lost interest in any
agenda for fighting terrorism at all. Instead, MoveOn's discussion of the
subject seems dominated by two, entirely negative, ideas. First, the war on
terrorism crushes civil liberties. On July 18, 2002, in a bulletin titled
"Can Democracy Survive an Endless 'War'?," MoveOn charged that the
Patriot Act had "nullified large portions of the Bill of Rights."
Having grossly inflated the Act's effect, the bulletin then contrasted it with
the--implicitly far smaller--danger from Al Qaeda, asking: "Is the threat
to the United States' existence great enough to justify the evisceration of our
most treasured principles?"
Secondly, the war on terrorism diverts attention from
liberalism's positive agenda, which is overwhelmingly domestic. The MoveOn
bulletin consists largely of links to articles in other publications, and,
while the organization says it "does not necessarily endorse the views
espoused on the pages that we link to," the articles generally fit the
party line. On October 2, 2002, MoveOn linked to what it called an
"excellent article," whose author complained that "it seems all
anyone in Washington can think or talk about is terrorism, rebuilding
Afghanistan and un-building Iraq." Another article in the same bulletin
notes that "a large proportion of [federal] money is earmarked for
security concerns related to the 'war on terrorism,' leaving less money
available for basic public services."
Like the softs of the early cold war, MoveOn sees
threats to liberalism only on the right. And thus, it makes common cause with
the most deeply illiberal elements on the international left. In its campaign
against the Iraq war, MoveOn urged its supporters to participate in protests
co-sponsored by International answer, a front for the World Workers Party,
which has defended Saddam, Slobodan Milosevic, and Kim Jong Il. When George
Packer, in The New York Times Magazine, asked Pariser about sharing the stage
with apologists for dictators, he replied, "I'm personally against
defending Slobodan Milosevic and calling North Korea a socialist heaven, but
it's just not relevant right now."
Pariser's words could serve as the slogan for today's
softs, who do not see the fight against dictatorship and jihad as relevant to
their brand of liberalism. When The New York Times asked delegates to this
summer's Democratic and Republican conventions which issues were most
important, only 2 percent of Democrats mentioned terrorism, compared with 15
percent of Republicans. One percent of Democrats mentioned defense, compared
with 15 percent of Republicans. And 1 percent of Democrats mentioned homeland
security, compared with 8 percent of Republicans. The irony is that
Kerry--influenced by his relatively hawkish advisers--actually supported
boosting homeland security funding and increasing the size of the military. But
he got little public credit for those proposals, perhaps because most Americans
still see the GOP as the party more concerned with security, at home and
abroad. And, judging from the delegates at the two conventions, that perception
is exactly right.
The Vital Center
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. would not have shared MoveOn's
fear of an "endless war" on terrorism. In The Vital Center, he wrote,
"Free society and totalitarianism today struggle for the minds and hearts
of men.... If we believe in free society hard enough to keep on fighting for
it, we are pledged to a permanent crisis which will test the moral, political
and very possibly the military strength of each side. A 'permanent' crisis?
Well, a generation or two anyway, permanent in one's own lifetime."
Schlesinger, in other words, saw the struggle against
the totalitarianism of his time not as a distraction from liberalism's real
concerns, or as alien to liberalism's core values, but as the arena in which
those values found their deepest expression. That meant several things. First,
if liberalism was to credibly oppose totalitarianism, it could not be
reflexively hostile to military force. Schlesinger denounced what he called
"doughfaces," liberals with "a weakness for impotence ... a
fear, that is, of making concrete decisions and being held to account for
concrete consequences." Nothing better captures Moore, who denounced the
Taliban for its hideous violations of human rights but opposed military action
against it--preferring pie-in-the-sky suggestions about nonviolent regime
change.
For Schlesinger (who, ironically, has moved toward a
softer liberalism later in life), in fact, it was conservatives, with their
obsessive hostility to higher taxes, who could not be trusted to fund America's
cold war struggle. "An important segment of business opinion," he
wrote, "still hesitates to undertake a foreign policy of the magnitude
necessary to prop up a free world against totalitarianism lest it add a few
dollars to the tax rate." After Dwight Eisenhower became president, the
ADA took up this line, arguing in October 1953 that the "overriding issue
before the American people today is whether the national defense is to be
determined by the demands of the world situation or sacrificed to the worship
of tax reductions and a balanced budget." Such critiques laid the
groundwork for John F. Kennedy's 1960 campaign--a campaign, as Richard Walton
notes in Cold War and Counterrevolution, "dominated by a hard-line,
get-tough attack on communism." Once in office, Kennedy dramatically
increased military spending.
Such a critique might seem unavailable to liberals
today, given that Bush, having abandoned the Republican Party's traditional
concern with balanced budgets, seems content to cut taxes and strengthen the
U.S. military at the same time. But subtly, the Republican Party's dual
imperatives have already begun to collide--with a stronger defense consistently
losing out. Bush has not increased the size of the U.S. military since
September 11--despite repeated calls from hawks in his own party--in part
because, given his massive tax cuts, he simply cannot afford to. An
anti-totalitarian liberalism would attack those tax cuts not merely as unfair
and fiscally reckless, but, above all, as long-term threats to America's
ability to wage war against fanatical Islam. Today, however, there is no
liberal constituency for such an argument in a Democratic Party in which only 2
percent of delegates called "terrorism" their paramount issue and
another 1 percent mentioned "defense."
But Schlesinger and the ADA didn't only attack the
right as weak on national defense; they charged that conservatives were not
committed to defeating communism in the battle for hearts and minds. It was the
ADA's ally, Truman, who had developed the Marshall Plan to safeguard European
democracies through massive U.S. foreign aid. And, when Truman proposed
extending the principle to the Third World, calling in his 1949 inaugural
address for "a bold new program for making the benefits of our scientific
advances and industrial progress available for the improvement and growth of
underdeveloped areas," it was congressional Republicans who resisted the
effort.
Support for a U.S.-led campaign to defeat Third World
communism through economic development and social justice remained central to
anti-totalitarian liberalism throughout the 1950s. Addressing an ADA meeting in
1952, Democratic Senator Brien McMahon of Connecticut called for an
"army" of young Americans to travel to the Third World as
"missionaries of democracy." In 1955, the ADA called for doubling
U.S. aid to the Third World, to blunt "the main thrust of communist
expansion" and to "help those countries provide the reality of
freedom and make an actual start toward economic betterment." When Kennedy
took office, he proposed the Alliance for Progress, a $20 billion Marshall Plan
for Latin America. And, answering McMahon's call, he launched the Peace Corps,
an opportunity for young Americans to participate "in the great common
task of bringing to man that decent way of life which is the foundation of
freedom and a condition of peace."
The critique the ADA leveled in the '50s could be
leveled by liberals again today. For all the Bush administration's talk about
promoting freedom in the Muslim world, its efforts have been crippled by the
Republican Party's deep-seated opposition to foreign aid and nation-building,
illustrated most disastrously in Iraq. The resources that the United States has
committed to democratization and development in the Middle East are trivial,
prompting Naiem Sherbiny of Egypt's reformist Ibn Khaldun Center to tell The Washington
Post late last year that the Bush administration was "pussyfooting at the
margin with small stuff."
Many Democratic foreign policy thinkers favor a far
more ambitious U.S. effort. Biden, for instance, has called for the United
States to "dramatically expand our investment in global education."
But, while an updated Marshall Plan and an expanded Peace Corps for the Muslim
world are more naturally liberal than conservative ideas, they have not
resonated among post-September 11 liberal activists. A new Peace Corps requires
faith in America's ability to improve the world, something that Moore--who has
said the United States "is known for bringing sadness and misery to places
around the globe"--clearly lacks. And a new Marshall Plan clearly contradicts
the zero-sum view of foreign aid that undergirded Kerry's vote against the $87
billion. In their alienation over Iraq, many liberal activists seem to see the
very idea of democracy-promotion as alien. When the Times asked Democratic
delegates whether the "United States should try to change a dictatorship
to a democracy where it can, or should the United States stay out of other
countries' affairs," more than three times as many Democrats answered
"stay out," even though the question said nothing about military
force.
What the ADA understood, and today's softs do not, is
that, while in a narrow sense the struggle against totalitarianism may divert
resources from domestic causes, it also provides a powerful rationale for a
more just society at home. During the early cold war, liberals repeatedly
argued that the denial of African American civil rights undermined America's
anti-communist efforts in the Third World. This linkage between freedom at home
and freedom abroad was particularly important in the debate over civil
liberties. One of the hallmarks of ADA liberals was their refusal to imply--as
groups like MoveOn sometimes do today--that civil liberties violations
represent a greater threat to liberal values than America's totalitarian foes.
And, whenever possible, they argued that violations of individual freedom were
wrong, at least in part, because they hindered the anti-communist effort.
Sadly, few liberal indictments of, for instance, the Ashcroft detentions are
couched in similar terms today.
Toward an Anti-Totalitarian Liberalism
For liberals to make such arguments effectively, they
must first take back their movement from the softs. We will know such an effort
has begun when dissension breaks out within America's key liberal institutions.
In the late '40s, the conflict played out in Minnesota's left-leaning
Democratic Farmer-Labor Party, which Hubert Humphrey and Eugene McCarthy
wrested away from Wallace supporters. It created friction within the naacp. And
it divided the aclu, which split apart in 1951, with anti-communists
controlling the organization and non-communists leaving to form the Emergency
Civil Liberties Committee.
But, most important, the conflict played out in the
labor movement. In 1946, the CIO, which had long included communist-dominated
affiliates, began to move against them. Over fierce communist opposition, the
CIO endorsed the Marshall Plan, Truman's reelection bid, and the formation of
nato. And, in 1949, the Organization's executive board expelled eleven unions.
As Mary Sperling McAuliffe notes in her book Crisis on the Left: Cold War
Politics and American Liberals, 1947-1954, while some of the expelled
affiliates were openly communist, others were expelled merely for refusing to
declare themselves anti-communist, a sharp contrast from the Popular Front
mentality that governed MoveOn's opposition to the Iraq war.
Softs attacked the CIO's action as McCarthyite, but it
eliminated any doubt about the American labor movement's commitment to the
anti-communist cause. And that commitment became a key part of cold war foreign
policy. Already in 1944, the CIO's more conservative rival, the American
Federation of Labor (AFL) had created the Free Trade Union Committee (ftuc),
which worked to build an anti-totalitarian labor movement around the world.
Between 1947 and 1948, the ftuc helped create an alternative to the
communist-dominated General Confederation of Labor in France. It helped
socialist trade unionists distribute anti-communist literature in Germany's
Soviet-controlled zone. And it helped anti-communists take control of the
Confederation of Labor in Greece. By the early '60s, the newly merged afl-cio
was assisting anti-communists in the Third World as well, with the American
Institute for Free Labor Development training 30,000 Latin American trade
unionists in courses "with a particular emphasis on the theme of democracy
versus totalitarianism." And the afl-cio was spending a remarkable 20
percent of its budget on foreign programs. In 1969, Ronald Radosh could remark
in his book, American Labor and United States Foreign Policy, on the
"total absorption of American labor leaders in the ideology of Cold War
liberalism."
That absorption mattered. It created a constituency,
deep in the grassroots of the Democratic Party, for the marriage between social
justice at home and aggressive anti-communism abroad. Today, however, the U.S.
labor movement is largely disconnected from the war against totalitarian Islam,
even though independent, liberal-minded unions are an important part of the
battle against dictatorship and fanaticism in the Muslim world.
The fight against the Soviet Union was an easier fit,
of course, since the unions had seen communism up close. And today's afl-cio is
not about to purge member unions that ignore national security. But, if
elements within American labor threw themselves into the movement for reform in
the Muslim world, they would create a base of support for Democrats who put
winning the war on terrorism at the center of their campaigns. The same is true
for feminist groups, for whom the rights of Muslim women are a natural concern.
If these organizations judged candidates on their commitment to promoting
liberalism in the Muslim world, and not merely on their commitment to
international family planning, they too would subtly shift the Democratic
Party's national security image. Challenging the "doughface"
feminists who opposed the Afghan war and those labor unionists with a knee-jerk
suspicion of U.S. power might produce bitter internal conflict. And doing so is
harder today because liberals don't have a sympathetic White House to enact
liberal anti-totalitarianism policies. But, unless liberals stop glossing over
fundamental differences in the name of unity, they never will.
Obviously, Al Qaeda and the Soviet Union are not the
same. The USSR was a totalitarian superpower; Al Qaeda merely espouses a
totalitarian ideology, which has had mercifully little access to the
instruments of state power. Communism was more culturally familiar, which
provided greater opportunities for domestic subversion but also meant that the
United States could more easily mount an ideological response. The peoples of
the contemporary Muslim world are far more cynical than the peoples of cold war
Eastern Europe about U.S. intentions, though they still yearn for the freedoms
the United States embodies.
But, despite these differences, Islamist
totalitarianism--like Soviet totalitarianism before it--threatens the United
States and the aspirations of millions across the world. And, as long as that
threat remains, defeating it must be liberalism's north star. Methods for
defeating totalitarian Islam are a legitimate topic of internal liberal debate.
But the centrality of the effort is not. The recognition that liberals face an
external enemy more grave, and more illiberal, than George W. Bush should be
the litmus test of a decent left.
Today, the war on terrorism is partially obscured by
the war in Iraq, which has made liberals cynical about the purposes of U.S.
power. But, even if Iraq is Vietnam, it no more obviates the war on terrorism
than Vietnam obviated the battle against communism. Global jihad will be with
us long after American troops stop dying in Falluja and Mosul. And thus,
liberalism will rise or fall on whether it can become, again, what Schlesinger
called "a fighting faith."
Of all the things contemporary liberals can learn from
their forbearers half a century ago, perhaps the most important is that
national security can be a calling. If the struggles for gay marriage and
universal health care lay rightful claim to liberal idealism, so does the
struggle to protect the United States by spreading freedom in the Muslim world.
It, too, can provide the moral purpose for which a new generation of liberals
yearn. As it did for the men and women who convened at the Willard Hotel.
Peter Beinart is the editor of TNR.