Wesley Clark: In the Tradition of Generals Who Make Peace
By David Greenberg History News Service
Gen. Wesley K. Clark's entry into the Democratic
presidential contest has delighted voters opposed to the
administration's war policies and hungry for a candidate
with national security bona fides. A four-star general who
led the war in Kosovo, Clark has also been an outspoken
critic of President Bush's foreign policies.
Clark's detractors, however, offer this warning to his
Democratic fans: most Americans have supported Bush's
post-9/11 adventurism. Clark's epaulets, these skeptics
insist, won't make his dovishness any more palatable to the
public.
Yet to dismiss Clark's prospects for electoral success as
a liberal delusion is to misread the historic allure of
military officers as presidential contenders. Generals who
have become president (there were ten, six of them notable
as commanders) have usually succeeded by presenting
themselves as bearers not of war but of peace. They do so
because of the public's long-standing ambivalence about
military heroes in politics.
Americans, to be sure, expect their leaders to be tough.
During both the Cold War and the post-9/11 period,
politicians often won followings with bellicose and
chauvinistic rhetoric.
But the American appetite for militarism has limits. The
colonial struggle against British occupation forces in the
Revolutionary era instilled an enduring skepticism about
permanent armies, and the Founders pointedly placed the
armed forces under civilian authority. Remote from Europe,
the United States sought, in its idealized self-portrait, to
be a peace-loving country. (The wars against Native
Americans were left out of the story.)
Accommodating such ambivalence, generals have taken to
emulating Cincinnatus of ancient Rome, who famously heeded
the call to leave his farm and defend the city, only to
return voluntarily to his plow after victory had been
secured. In his own day, George Washington was explicitly
likened to that Roman general: Having led the Revolutionary
army, Washington retired to Mount Vernon, then answered the
call once more when the new nation needed a president.
Largely because of Washington's example, other
office-seeking generals cast themselves as nonpolitical
public servants. They disavowed all personal ambition and
entered politics as if bowing to public demand.
In 1840, William Henry Harrison, a hero of the Indian
wars, professed selfless public service as the rationale for
his candidacy, as did the Mexican War veteran Zachary Taylor
in 1848. So a century later did Dwight D. Eisenhower, the
victorious commander of the Allies in Europe during World
War II, who cultivated an aura of non-partisanship so
skillfully that even the Democrats tried in vain to get him
to bear their standard.
In this respect, Clark has played the Cincinnatus role
beautifully. For a long time (maybe longer than was
plausible), he refused to identify with either party, outing
himself as a Democrat just this month. And he has appeared
to revel in the "Draft-Clark" outfits that have emerged at
the grassroots, as if he were capitulating to public demand.
Beyond a reluctance for politics, the Cincinnatus
archetype also entails a disavowal of warmongering. Here,
too, Clark is following the tradition of generals entering
high office. Although Ulysses S. Grant won fame during the
Civil War for his ferocity, his battlefront glory lent him
credibility as a peacemaker. After the Confederacy's
surrender at Appomattox, he squelched his soldiers'
gloating, telling them that "the rebels are our countrymen
again." In accepting the Republican Party's presidential
nomination in 1868, he concluded, "Let us have peace."
Similarly, Eisenhower pledged just before the 1952
election to go to Korea, to make peace in a frustrating and
demoralizing war. No one dared call the hero of World War II
soft on communism. In contrast, his rival, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur, could never subordinate his martial persona to a
softer peacetime profile, and he never advanced in the
political arena.
Like Ike and Grant, Clark has the authority to denounce a
misbegotten military adventure. His experience can assure
voters that restraint in his case will not mean an
abdication of America's global leadership role.
Whether Clark sinks or soars on the campaign trail will
hinge on many variables. But he has historical precedents on
his side. He doesn't seem to hunger for the presidency, and
-- just as important -- neither does he hunger for war.
David Greenberg is the author of "Nixon's Shadow: The
History of an Image" (2003). He teaches history and
political science at Yale University and is a writer for the
History News Service.
[David Greenberg, 461 Central Park W., 6E, New York, NY
10025. Telephone: (212) 663-5027; e-mail: david.greenberg@yale.edu.]
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This article was posted on September 17, 2003.
Pictured at top (left to right): Constantine, The
Battle of Agincourt, Isaac Newton, Harriet Tubman, The
bombing of Hiroshima, Mikhail Gorbachev.
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