Combating 'Evildoers' in the Developing World: Eisenhower's Vietnam to Bush's Iraq
Seth Jacobs, Boston College
Date: February 23, 2006
Event Recap
Are the comparisons drawn in the media over the past year between the war in Iraq and the Vietnam War tenable? Seth Jacobs of Boston Collegeās history department believes so, but with an important qualification. For Jacobs, it is the Vietnam War of the Eisenhower years, not the Vietnam of the 1960s, which offers a striking parallel to the Bush administrationās Iraqi policy. The Eisenhower administration placed God at the center of American political life in the 1950s just as Bush has in the new millennium. Eisenhower invoked God early and often in his presidency. āGodās Floatā led his 1953 inaugural parade. In the mid-fifties, he supported the insertion of āunder Godā into the pledge of allegiance and oversaw the change of the national motto from āE Pluribus Unumā to āIn God We Trust.ā Bushās public statements about his faith and his many references to God are well known. And his foreign policy, like Eisenhowerās before him, is informed by his understanding of Christianity. During his February presentation at the Boisi Center, Jacobs outlined a substantial record of similarities between the two administrations. Eisenhower and Bush both staffed their administrations with people of faith. John Foster Dulles, Ikeās secretary of state, was a devout Presbyterian, renowned in the press and among foreign dignitaries as a man of God first and Secretary of State second. Bushās staff has consisted of John Ashcroft, an active member of the Assemblies of God, Condoleezza Rice, daughter of a Presbyterian minister, Andrew Card, whose wife is a Methodist minister, and head speechwriter Michael Gerson, a born again evangelical. Eisenhower often opened cabinet meetings with prayer. Bush has followed suit and Bible studies are attended by over half of the White House staff. Both administrations cast their respective conflicts in the loaded religious language of crusade, and too easily divided the geopolitical landscape between āgoodā and ābadā nations.
The staunch religious rhetoric of the current administration worries Jacobs. He points to the āmind-lockā the Eisenhower administration suffered in its understanding of the complexities of Vietnam. The crusading mentality made it difficult for Eisenhower and Dulles to reexamine their policies and consider alternative plans when it came to intervening in Vietnam. It also clouded their analysis of Ho Chi Minh and his communist followers, a movement more about the fight for indigenous independence than a puppet of the Soviet Union. As Jacobs sees it, there are similar patterns at work in Americaās involvement in Iraq. Bushās refusal to admit any mistakes concerning the Iraq war may be a function of Bushās āreligiously-based certitude.ā For Jacobs, Bushās rigidity will bequeath the second most tragic and unnecessary āquagmireā after Vietnam.
The discussion following Jacobsās talk was lively. Some argued that Bushās neo-conservative ideology, rather than his religious belief, seemed the more likely origin of his Iraqi policy. Others debated the sincerity of Bushās faith, viewing it as a mask for political manipulation. Jacobs fielded the questions and concluded that political strategy and genuine faith were not necessarily mutually exclusive.