Was Ronald Reagan an Even Worse
President Than George W. Bush?
by Robert Parry
www.consortiumnews.com/, June
3, 2009
There's been talk that George W. Bush
was so inept that he should trademark the phrase "Worst President
Ever," though some historians would bestow that title on
pre-Civil War President James Buchanan. Still, a case could be
made for putting Ronald Reagan in the competition.
Granted, the very idea of rating Reagan
as one of the worst presidents ever will infuriate his many right-wing
acolytes and offend Washington insiders who have made a cottage
industry out of buying some protection from Republicans by lauding
the 40th President.
But there's a growing realization that
the starting point for many of the catastrophes confronting the
United States today can be traced to Reagan's presidency. There's
also a grudging reassessment that the "failed" presidents
of the 1970s - Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter - may
deserve more credit for trying to grapple with the problems that
now beset the country.
Nixon, Ford and Carter won scant praise
for addressing the systemic challenges of America's oil dependence,
environmental degradation, the arms race, and nuclear proliferation
- all issues that Reagan essentially ignored and that now threaten
America's future.
Nixon helped create the Environmental
Protection Agency; he imposed energy-conservation measures; he
opened the diplomatic door to communist China. Nixon's administration
also detected the growing weakness in the Soviet Union and advocated
a policy of détente (a plan for bringing the Cold War to
an end or at least curbing its most dangerous excesses).
After Nixon's resignation in the Watergate
scandal, Ford continued many of Nixon's policies, particularly
trying to wind down the Cold War with Moscow. However, confronting
a rebellion from Reagan's Republican Right in 1976, Ford abandoned
"détente."
Ford also let hard-line Cold Warriors
(and a first wave of young intellectuals who became known as neoconservatives)
pressure the CIA's analytical division, and he brought in a new
generation of hard-liners, including Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld.
After defeating Ford in 1976, Carter injected
more respect for human rights into U.S. foreign policy, a move
some scholars believe put an important nail in the coffin of the
Soviet Union, leaving it hard-pressed to justify the repressive
internal practices of the East Bloc. Carter also emphasized the
need to contain the spread of nuclear weapons, especially in unstable
countries like Pakistan.
Domestically, Carter pushed a comprehensive
energy policy and warned Americans that their growing dependence
on foreign oil represented a national security threat, what he
famously called "the moral equivalent of war."__However,
powerful vested interests - both domestic and foreign - managed
to exploit the shortcomings of these three presidents to sabotage
any sustained progress. By 1980, Reagan had become a pied piper
luring the American people away from the tough choices that Nixon,
Ford and Carter had defined.
Cruelty with a Smile
With his superficially sunny disposition
- and a ruthless political strategy of exploiting white-male resentments
- Reagan convinced millions of Americans that the threats they
faced were: African-American welfare queens, Central American
leftists, a rapidly expanding Evil Empire based in Moscow, and
the do-good federal government.
In his First Inaugural Address in 1981,
Reagan declared that "government is not the solution to our
problem; government is the problem."
When it came to cutting back on America's
energy use, Reagan's message could be boiled down to the old reggae
lyric, "Don't worry, be happy." Rather than pressing
Detroit to build smaller, fuel-efficient cars, Reagan made clear
that the auto industry could manufacture gas-guzzlers without
much nagging from Washington.
The same with the environment. Reagan
intentionally staffed the Environmental Protection Agency and
the Interior Department with officials who were hostile toward
regulation aimed at protecting the environment. George W. Bush
didn't invent Republican hostility toward scientific warnings
of environmental calamities; he was just picking up where Reagan
left off.
Reagan pushed for deregulation of industries,
including banking; he slashed income taxes for the wealthiest
Americans in an experiment known as "supply side" economics,
which held falsely that cutting rates for the rich would increase
revenues and eliminate the federal deficit.
Over the years, "supply side"
would evolve into a secular religion for many on the Right, but
Reagan's budget director David Stockman once blurted out the truth,
that it would lead to red ink "as far as the eye could see."
While conceding that some of Reagan's
economic plans did not work out as intended, his defenders - including
many mainstream journalists - still argue that Reagan should be
hailed as a great President because he "won the Cold War,"
a short-hand phrase that they like to attach to his historical
biography.
However, a strong case can be made that
the Cold War was won well before Reagan arrived in the White House.
Indeed, in the 1970s, it was a common perception in the U.S. intelligence
community that the Cold War between the United States and the
Soviet Union was winding down, in large part because the Soviet
economic model had failed in the technological race with the West.
That was the view of many Kremlinologists
in the CIA's analytical division. Also, I was told by a senior
CIA's operations official that some of the CIA's best spies inside
the Soviet hierarchy supported the view that the Soviet Union
was headed toward collapse, not surging toward world supremacy,
as Reagan and his foreign policy team insisted in the early 1980s.
The CIA analysis was the basis for the
détente that was launched by Nixon and Ford, essentially
seeking a negotiated solution to the most dangerous remaining
aspects of the Cold War.
The Afghan Debacle
In that view, Soviet military operations,
including sending troops into Afghanistan in 1979, were mostly
defensive in nature. In Afghanistan, the Soviets hoped to prop
up a pro-communist government that was seeking to modernize the
country but was beset by opposition from Islamic fundamentalists
who were getting covert support from the U.S. government.
Though the Afghan covert operation originated
with Cold Warriors in the Carter administration, especially national
security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, the war was dramatically
ramped up under Reagan, who traded U.S. acquiescence toward Pakistan's
nuclear bomb for its help in shipping sophisticated weapons to
the Afghan jihadists (including a young Saudi named Osama bin
Laden).
While Reagan's acolytes cite the Soviet
defeat in Afghanistan as decisive in "winning the Cold War,"
the counter-argument is that Moscow was already in disarray -
and while failure in Afghanistan may have sped the Soviet Union's
final collapse - it also created twin dangers for the future of
the world: the rise of al-Qaeda terrorism and the nuclear bomb
in the hands of Pakistan's unstable Islamic Republic.
Trade-offs elsewhere in the world also
damaged long-term U.S. interests. In Latin America, for instance,
Reagan's brutal strategy of arming right-wing militaries to crush
peasant, student and labor uprisings left the region with a legacy
of anti-Americanism that is now resurfacing in the emergence of
populist leftist governments.
In Nicaragua, for instance, Sandinista
leader Daniel Ortega (whom Reagan once denounced as a "dictator
in designer glasses") is now back in power. In El Salvador,
the leftist FMLN won the latest elections. Indeed, across the
region, hostility to Washington is now the rule, creating openings
for China, Iran, Cuba and other American rivals.
In the early 1980s, Reagan also credentialed
a young generation of neocon intellectuals, who pioneered a concept
called "perception management," the shaping of how Americans
saw, understood and were frightened by threats from abroad.
Many honest reporters saw their careers
damaged when they resisted the lies and distortions of the Reagan
administration. Likewise, U.S. intelligence analysts were purged
when they refused to bend to the propaganda demands from above.
To marginalize dissent, Reagan and his
subordinates stoked anger toward anyone who challenged the era's
feel-good optimism. Skeptics were not just honorable critics,
they were un-American defeatists or - in Jeane Kirkpatrick's memorable
attack line - they would "blame America first."
Under Reagan, a right-wing infrastructure
also took shape, linking media outlets (magazines, newspapers,
books, etc.) with well-financed think tanks that churned out endless
op-eds and research papers. Plus, there were attack groups that
went after mainstream journalists who dared disclose information
that poked holes in Reagan's propaganda themes.
In effect, Reagan's team created a faux
reality for the American public. Civil wars in Central America
between impoverished peasants and wealthy oligarchs became East-West
showdowns. U.S.-backed insurgents in Nicaragua, Angola and Afghanistan
were transformed from corrupt, brutal (often drug-tainted) thugs
into noble "freedom-fighters."
With the Iran-Contra scandal, Reagan also
revived Richard Nixon's theory of an imperial presidency that
could ignore the nation's laws and evade accountability through
criminal cover-ups. That behavior also would rear its head again
in the war crimes of George W. Bush. [For details on Reagan's
abuses, see Robert Parry's Lost History and Secrecy & Privilege.]
Wall Street Greed
The American Dream also dimmed during
Reagan's tenure.
While he played the role of the nation's
kindly grandfather, his operatives divided the American people,
using "wedge issues" to deepen grievances especially
of white men who were encouraged to see themselves as victims
of "reverse discrimination" and "political correctness."
Yet even as working-class white men were
rallying to the Republican banner (as so-called "Reagan Democrats"),
their economic interests were being savaged. Unions were broken
and marginalized; "free trade" policies shipped manufacturing
jobs abroad; old neighborhoods were decaying; drug use among the
young was soaring.
Meanwhile, unprecedented greed was unleashed
on Wall Street, fraying old-fashioned bonds between company owners
and employees.
Before Reagan, corporate CEOs earned less
than 50 times the salary of an average worker. By the end of the
Reagan-Bush-I administrations in 1993, the average CEO salary
was more than 100 times that of a typical worker. (At the end
of the Bush-II administration, that CEO-salary figure was more
than 250 times that of an average worker.)
Many other trends set during the Reagan
era continued to corrode the U.S. political process in the years
after Reagan left office. After 9/11, for instance, the neocons
reemerged as a dominant force, reprising their "perception
management" tactics, depicting the "war on terror"
- like the last days of the Cold War - as a terrifying conflict
between good and evil.
The hyping of the Islamic threat mirrored
the neocons' exaggerated depiction of the Soviet menace in the
1980s - and again the propaganda strategy worked. Many Americans
let their emotions run wild, from the hunger for revenge after
9/11 to the war fever over invading Iraq.
Arguably, the descent into this dark fantasyland
- that Ronald Reagan began in the early 1980s - reached its nadir
in the flag-waving early days of the Iraq War. Only gradually
did reality begin to reassert itself as the death toll mounted
in Iraq and the Katrina disaster reminded Americans why they needed
an effective government.
Still, the disasters - set in motion by
Ronald Reagan - continued to roll in. Bush's Reagan-esque tax
cuts for the rich blew another huge hole in the federal budget
and the Reagan-esque anti-regulatory fervor led to a massive financial
meltdown that threw the nation into economic chaos.
Love Reagan; Hate Bush
Ironically, George W. Bush has come in
for savage criticism, but the Republican leader who inspired Bush's
presidency - Ronald Reagan - remained an honored figure, his name
attached to scores of national landmarks including Washington's
National Airport.
Even leading Democrats genuflect to Reagan.
Early in Campaign 2008, when Barack Obama was positioning himself
as a bipartisan political figure who could appeal to Republicans,
he bowed to the Reagan mystique, hailing the GOP icon as a leader
who "changed the trajectory of America."
Though Obama's chief point was that Reagan
in 1980 "put us on a fundamentally different path" -
a point which may be historically undeniable - Obama went further,
justifying Reagan's course correction because of "all the
excesses of the 1960s and 1970s, and government had grown and
grown, but there wasn't much sense of accountability."
While Obama later clarified his point
to say he didn't mean to endorse Reagan's conservative policies,
Obama seemed to suggest that Reagan's 1980 election administered
a needed dose of accountability to the United States when Reagan
actually did the opposite. Reagan's presidency represented a dangerous
escape from accountability - and reality.
Still, Obama and congressional Democrats
continue to pander to the Reagan myth. On Tuesday, as the nation
approached the fifth anniversary of Reagan's death, Obama welcomed
Nancy Reagan to the White House and signed a law creating a panel
to plan and carry out events to honor Reagan's 100th birthday
in 2011.
Obama hailed the right-wing icon. "President
Reagan helped as much as any President to restore a sense of optimism
in our country, a spirit that transcended politics -- that transcended
even the most heated arguments of the day," Obama said. [For
more on Obama's earlier pandering about Reagan, see Consortiumnews.com's
"Obama's Dubious Praise for Reagan."]
It's a sure thing that the Reagan Centennial
Committee won't do much more than add to the hagiography surrounding
the 40th President.
Despite the grievous harm that Reagan's
presidency inflicted on the American Republic and the American
people, it may take many more years before a historian has the
guts to put this deformed era into a truthful perspective and
rate Reagan where he belongs -- near the bottom of the presidential
list.
Robert Parry's new book is Secrecy &
Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq."
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