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Rereading American Betrayal: How FDR's Soviet Recognition Changed the USA Beyond Recognition
dianawest.net ^ | February 26, 2015 | Diana West

Posted on 02/27/2015 11:10:40 AM PST by No One Special

FDR's decision to "normalize" diplomatic relations with Stalin's dictatorship of blood on November 16, 1933 is the seminal event in modern American history, I argue in American Betrayal -- one reason I was very happy to participate in the 80th commemoration of the event presented by CSP, hosted by Frank Gaffney, and also featuring M. Stanton Evans, Chris Farrell, and Stephen Coughlin. The moral, intellectual and strategic repercussions plague us to this minute.

From American Betrayal, starting p. 193:

When Franklin Roosevelt finally extended “normal diplomatic relations” in exchange for a page of Soviet concessions signed by Foreign Minister Maxim Litvinov (who, Prohibition beer on his breath, then returned to the Soviet Embassy “all smiles . . . and said, ‘Well, it’s all in the bag; we have it’), the U.S. government found itself derailed onto a strange, new track through an unfamiliar, soon monotonous, land of endless apologetics.

The crux of the U.S.-USSR agreement rested on a series of promises, accepted and signed by Litvinov, that listed very specifically what the Soviet Union would not do “in the United States, its territories or possessions”: namely, it would not attempt to subvert or overthrow the U.S. system. The declaration “scrupulously” stated the USSR would refrain and restrain all persons and all organizations, under its direct or indirect control, from taking any act, overt or covert, aimed at the overthrow or preparation for the overthrow of the United States. It further specifically stipulated that the Soviet government would not form or support groups inside the United States—such as the Soviet-supported CPUSA, myriad “front groups,” the Soviet-directed underground espionage networks Bentley and Chambers later broke with, or the CPUSA-Comintern group on the West Coast that Harry Hopkins found out J. Edgar Hoover was bugging (and knowingly told the Soviets). The agreement, in other words, was a bunch of lies, the first bunch of lies of many. To make it all stick, however, to keep this sorriest of bad bargains, to perpetuate the myth of U.S.-Soviet accord, the United States had to pretend otherwise. The United States had to retire to a new fantasy world of its own creation in which the Soviet Union was keeping its word, in which Soviet-directed and -financed espionage did not exist . . . in which Communists were not under every bed, in which even the act of looking was “Red-baiting” and anti-Communists were paranoid about “bugaboos.” As our most respected and beloved leaders increasingly sought refuge in this world of pretend, they led the nation on a disastrous retreat from reality from which we have never, ever returned. In our retreat, we left morality behind, undefended.

Now, as far as we know, Harry Hopkins had nothing to do with this beginning. Then again, I have found that we don’t know much about who did. “Four presidents and their six Secretaries of State for over a decade and a half held to this resolve” not to recognize the Soviet government, as Herbert Hoover, one of those four presidents, wrote in Freedom Betrayed, his posthumously published (2011) history of World War II and the early Cold War. These American leaders understood that the Bolsheviks’ seizure of the government by force, their reign of blood, their pledge to conspire against other governments, made the “mutual confidence” required for diplomatic relations impossible. However, Hoover doesn’t explain the shift in thinking. Indeed, who or what specifically inspired FDR to undertake this momentous decision is largely glossed over in the historical narrative in general, although we do know Soviet recognition was applauded by businessmen eager to sell their rope to Lenin. The interchanges that followed, the relations that evolved, were marked and warped by paradoxes we would later understand and explain as “Orwellian.” Some of them Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn would bring to our attention some forty years later.

In his very first speech on his very first trip to the USA in 1975, the fifty-six-year-old Solzhenitsyn asked the question he had wanted to ask America most of his adult life. He set it up by comparing America’s historic aversion to alliance with czarist Russia to Roosevelt’s rush to recognize a far more repressive and infinitely more violent Bolshevik Russia in 1933. Pre-Revolutionary executions by the czarist government came to about seventeen per year, Solzhenitsyn said, while, as a point of comparison, the Spanish Inquisition at its height destroyed ten persons per month. In the revolutionary years of 1918 and 1919, he continued, the Cheka executed without trial more than a thousand per month. At the height of Stalin’s terror in 1937–38, tens of thousands of people were shot per month. The author of The Gulag Archipelago put it all together like so:

Here are the figures: seventeen a year, ten a month, more than one thousand a month, more than forty thousand a month! Thus, that which had made it difficult for the democratic West to form an alliance with pre-revolutionary Russia had, by 1941, grown to such an extent, yet still did not prevent the entire united democracies of the world—England, France, the United States, Canada, and other small countries—from entering into a military alliance with the Soviet Union. How is this to be explained? How can we understand it?

Presidents Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover all rejected relations with the Bolshevik regime. This would seem to mark these men as belonging to the earlier era of Albert Dreyfus, when, as Robert Conquest notes, “the conscience of the civilized world could be aroused by the false condemnation to imprisonment of a single French captain for a crime which had actually been committed, though not by him.” A generation or two later, the conscience of the civilized world couldn’t be aroused, period, not by the false condemnation of one nor the false condemnation of thousands, tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands, as Conquest explains. “The Soviet equivalent of the Dreyfus Case involved the execution of thousands of officers, from Marshals and Admirals down, on charges which were totally imaginary.” What happened to the “conscience of the civilized world”?

The West’s decision to recognize the USSR—and its determination to keep recognizing it, no matter how much lying and acquiescence to betrayal that entailed—did more to transform us than any single act before or since. The profound diplomatic shift—part Faustian bargain, part moral lobotomy—didn’t just invite the Soviet Union into the community of nations. To make room for the monster-regime, the United States had to surrender the terra firma of objective morality and reality-based judgment. No wonder, then, that tens of thousands of Dreyfus Cases in Russia meant nothing to the “conscience of the civilized world.” Implications had already been officially sundered from facts.

To be sure, there was something new in the way recognition ever after reordered the priorities and actions of our republic, something that marked the beginning of a different kind of era. The fact is, the implications of normalizing relations with the thoroughly abnormal USSR didn’t just reward and legitimize a regime of rampantly metasticizing criminality. Because the Communist regime was so openly and ideologically dedicated to our destruction, the act of recognition defied reason and the demands of self-preservation. Recognition and all that came with it, including alliance, would soon become the enemy of reason and self-preservation. In this way, as Dennis J. Dunn points out, we see a double standard in American foreign policy evolve, and, I would add, in American thinking more generally. It was here that we abandoned the lodestars of good and evil, the clarity of black and white. Closing our eyes, we dove head first into a weltering morass of exquisitely enervating and agonizing grays.

This is the journey that forced open our psyches to increasingly expansive experiments in moral relativism. Only a very few refused to go; only a very few saw the sin. There is something poignantly allegorical in Solzhenitsyn’s recollection of being a young Red Army soldier flummoxed by what he and his comrades heard as Roosevelt’s disastrous misreading of Stalin at around the time of the Tehran Conference. As they marched on the Elbe, he said, they hoped to “meet the Americans and tell them.” He added, “Just before that happened I was taken off to prison and my meeting didn’t take place.” Just before that happened, just before he was going to tell his American compatriots the truth about Stalin, about the Soviet Union, the twenty-six-year-old was arrested by the NKVD for the most mildly derogatory statements about Stalin written in a letter. He was sentenced to a labor camp for eight years.

Solzhenitsyn would have been too late anyway. Having abandoned the Western moral tradition and Enlightenment logic as a precondition of the U.S.- USSR relationship, we already inhabited a brave new—and dangerous—realm. Wishful thinking was in. Evidence was out. Ideology was in. Facts were out. With an exchange of rustling paper at the White House, the revolution was here, the epicenter of American betrayal. ...



TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: frankgaffney; gaffney
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Excerpt from Diana West's book, "American Betrayal: The Secret Assault on Our Nation’s Character".
1 posted on 02/27/2015 11:10:40 AM PST by No One Special
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To: No One Special

FDR — one of the great villains in American history.

Possibly the worst.


2 posted on 02/27/2015 11:12:54 AM PST by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
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To: BenLurkin

Woodrow and lbj tie for 3rd behind obama....


3 posted on 02/27/2015 11:15:33 AM PST by GraceG (Protect the Border from Illegal Aliens, Don't Protect Illegal Alien Boarders...)
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To: BenLurkin

He was every bit as radical and tyrannical as the current white hut occupant.


4 posted on 02/27/2015 11:15:51 AM PST by jospehm20
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To: No One Special

Excellent analysis. And in the end, we defeated them anyway — only to see a Communist occupation of our own White House.


5 posted on 02/27/2015 11:17:37 AM PST by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: BenLurkin

Obama is even worst


6 posted on 02/27/2015 11:18:28 AM PST by Dqban22 (Hpo<p> http://i.imgur.com/26RbAPxjpg)
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To: No One Special

Appears to be strikingly similar to what Obama is trying to do with Iran.


7 posted on 02/27/2015 11:21:40 AM PST by tanknetter
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To: BenLurkin

I detest him and his ilk. His administration was riddled with Soviet agents, not to mention the State Department, and he knew it, in my opinion.


8 posted on 02/27/2015 11:22:11 AM PST by rlmorel ("National success by the Democratic Party equals irretrievable ruin." Ulysses S. Grant)
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To: No One Special

We would ultimately have had to align with Stalin anyway, or else World War II would ended in victory for Hitler.


9 posted on 02/27/2015 11:22:36 AM PST by Lurking Libertarian (Non sub homine, sed sub Deo et lege)
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To: No One Special

We could “unrecognize” Russia, I guess ... :-) ...

AND, while we are at that ... we should also “unrecognize” Red China, too! Nixon did a really bad thing here!


10 posted on 02/27/2015 11:22:50 AM PST by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: No One Special; GraceG; MadMax, the Grinning Reaper; LucyT; null and void
F.D.R.

America's Dictator in the Age of Dictators.


11 posted on 02/27/2015 11:24:56 AM PST by KC_Lion (The Issue is Not The Issue, The Issue is The Revolution.)
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To: GraceG

Don’t forget LBJ, the Clintons and the Kennedys.

Make Bonnie and Clyde look like angels.


12 posted on 02/27/2015 11:25:45 AM PST by Trapped Behind Enemy Lines
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To: BenLurkin
FDR — one of the great villains in American history.

Possibly the worst.

 

Nope. Not by a long shot. FDR's alliance with Russiaa was all about WWII. A fact that Diana ignored here. LBJ did far great damage to the US than FDR. And B. Hussein is a close second and gaining fast.

13 posted on 02/27/2015 11:33:28 AM PST by Responsibility2nd (With Great Freedom comes Great Responsibility.)
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To: rlmorel

I detest him and his ilk. His administration was riddled with Soviet agents, not to mention the State Department, and he knew it, in my opinion.

_____________________________________

If so, they were covert and not boasting about it.

Compare that to the current White House infested with muzzies and their anti-American dogma.

FDR is an Altar Boy compared to B. Hussein.


14 posted on 02/27/2015 11:36:59 AM PST by Responsibility2nd (With Great Freedom comes Great Responsibility.)
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To: Lurking Libertarian

Sort of a “Pick Your Poison” situation. This article helps me to see some parallels in American History. Obama crawling on the floors hoping to extend an olive branch to Iran is not without precedent. This article is as full-bodied and opaque as a dark Mexican beer, so I will come back and finish it later, having sampled the froth.


15 posted on 02/27/2015 11:37:29 AM PST by lee martell (The sa)
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To: Responsibility2nd

What you say is certainly true.

Back in 1930-1945, it was beyond the comprehension of most Americans that our President would have had any common ground with someone like Stalin.

Now, they don’t even bother to hide it.


16 posted on 02/27/2015 11:45:20 AM PST by rlmorel ("National success by the Democratic Party equals irretrievable ruin." Ulysses S. Grant)
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To: Lurking Libertarian

History is not your strong suit.


17 posted on 02/27/2015 11:45:35 AM PST by Misterioso (Islam: It's them or us.)
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To: Lurking Libertarian
We would ultimately have had to align with Stalin anyway, or else World War II would ended in victory for Hitler.

That really is the bottom line. A wolf at your door is much more dangerous than a wolf that is some distance away.

18 posted on 02/27/2015 11:50:18 AM PST by Leaning Right (Why am I holding this lantern? I am looking for the next Reagan.)
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To: Lurking Libertarian

Not necessarily, there’s a good chance that if Hitler took Moscow, Stalin and the Bolsheviks would have been removed from power, and a new government could have led Russia to victory, and both the Nazis and Bolsheviks could have been out of the picture.


19 posted on 02/27/2015 11:50:45 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
there’s a good chance that if Hitler took Moscow, Stalin and the Bolsheviks would have been removed from power, and a new government could have led Russia to victory...

Interesting thought. But I'd guess that had the Bolsheviks fallen, they most likely would have been replaced by a collaborationist government, something along the lines of Vichy France.

20 posted on 02/27/2015 11:59:30 AM PST by Leaning Right (Why am I holding this lantern? I am looking for the next Reagan.)
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