Jack of No Trade, Masters of War
by
Joseph
R. Stromberg
Independent
Institute
The task
of history, according to historian Ralph Raico, is essentially one
of revisionism and especially the undermining of excuses for war.
It therefore comes as no surprise that Raico masterfully punctures
the inflated reputations of Wilson, Churchill, Roosevelt, Truman,
and the Soviet leadership in his recent book, Great
Wars and Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal.
You will probably
never see Ralph Raico, professor emeritus of history at Buffalo
State College, holding forth on the History Channel surrounded by
wide-eyed naïfs eager to improve their mastery of American
Establishment gospel. His new book, Great
Wars and Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal (Auburn,
Ala.: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2010) shows why. Yet Raico has
a well-earned reputation as a classical-liberal historian who has
made important contributions to the history of German liberalism,
translated Ludwig von Misess Liberalism,
broadened our knowledge of liberal class-conflict theory, and accomplished
much more. There is more to a historians achievement than
superficial public acclaim.
In a typical
Raico essay, the reader finds solid research, detailed knowledge
of relevant sources, deft deployment of quotations, and careful
interpretation, complemented by wit, devastating understatement,
and an occasional outburst that might seem intemperate had he not
just written several pages that render the point both inevitable
and obvious. The materials in his new book have been published previously,
but the first three chapters have been greatly expanded to good
effect. Because they amount to 60 percent of the book, I deal mainly
with them in this review. Each of these three chapters provides
an excellent overview of the main issues of the period under consideration
as well as a good introduction to essential historical sources.
Wars, Wars,
and Rumors of Wars
With superb
moral clarity, Raico states in his introduction that the task of
history is essentially one of revisionism and especially
the undermining of excuses for war (p. vii). He notes
the declension of Europes nineteenth-century liberal parties
into machines for the exploitation of society by the now victorious
predatory middle classes (p. ix, a point also made in the
foreword by Robert Higgs). From then to now, it has fallen to consistent
and critical liberals such as Richard Cobden, John Bright, William
Graham Sumner, Gustave de Molinari, Albert Jay Nock, H. L. Mencken,
Frank Chodorov, Murray Rothbard, Leonard Liggio, and others to expose
the motives of apparently liberal wars.
The First
European Suicide Attempt, 19141918
Raicos
first chapter, World War I: The Turning Point, sees
the war of 191418 as the Great Disaster that set the tone
and course of the dreadful twentieth century. Given the mass slaughter,
ideological extremism, and sheer state building that accompanied
the war, this characterization is no exaggeration. Raico is of course
concerned to sketch the wars impact on American politics and
life none of it good. Here his mastery of the relevant literature
and his immunity to encrusted wartime myths, old and new alike,
serve us well.
Raico does
not shortchange the reader on essential background: the emerging
alliance system that pitted Allied Powers against Central Powers,
Serbian ambitions, Balkan Wars, Pan-Slavism, and the dangers of
mobilization. Neither does he overlook the commitments made to France
(and therefore to Russia) by a minority of the British cabinet a
secret (and undemocratic) undertaking that plays hell with the fashionable
democratic peace theory (p. 6).
Once the European
war began in August 1914, the outwardly neutral United
States found its shipping at the mercy of the warring powers. (Americans
had been here before, a century earlier.) Raico spares no details,
especially regarding the international law of the case. Britain
undertook a hunger blockade (pp. 4445) to starve the Germans.
(Chapter 9, Starving a People into Submission, pursues
this topic further.) Certain consequences followed, chief among
them being German resort to submarine warfare. The U.S. ruling elite
could never manage to connect these two things (p. 28, citing Edwin
M. Borchard and William P. Lage). They knew much and understood
little.
Worse luck
for the Americans, between 1914 and 1917 the United States had two
war parties and no peace party (p. 27), a condition that by now
seems entirely normal. Northeastern Anglophile intellectuals, clergymen,
politicians, and big business took Englands side from the
start and saw their chief problem as maneuvering the rest of the
country into war on the Allied side. Raico accordingly makes acid
comments on the US ambassador to Britain, Walter Hines Page, who
practically served as a member of the British cabinet, and more
particularly on Robert Lansing, William Jennings Bryans successor
as US secretary of state (Bryan had taken the administrations
peace rhetoric entirely too seriously). Raico highlights
passages in Lansings War
Memoirs (1935) that admit that all of his diplomatic notes
complaining about British naval practices were meaningless charades
that ensured the continuance of the controversy and left the
questions unsettled, which was necessary in order to leave this
country free to act and even act illegally when it entered the war
(qtd. on p. 30).
Raico draws
the rather straightforward conclusion that such postwar revelations
[explain] the passion of the anti-war movement before the
Second World War much better than the imaginary Nazi sympathies
or anti-Semitism nowadays invoked by ignorant interventionist
writers (p. 30 n.).
Villains abound
in this chapter, but the Villain in Chief is surely Thomas Woodrow
Wilson, president of the United States from 1913 to 1921
and rightly so, as Raico soon demonstrates. Despite his constant
Jeffersonian rhetoric (in which he was even less sincere than Jefferson),
Professor Wilson was an ambitious Hamiltonian state builder, fascinated
by the power of the Presidency and how it could be augmented by
meddling in foreign affairs and dominating overseas territories
(p. 18). As for Wilsons idealism, Raico concludes
that it masked a well-developed need for power.
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the rest of the article
June
13, 2012
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© 2012 Independent
Institute
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