BOOKS, ART, MUSIC, SPORTS, FASHIONS &Ij~etrfi M14d! a t g THE SUNDAY MAGAZ INIIE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1954 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN PAGE ONE Foreign Policy in Perspective: 1952-54 By DANIEL WIT Visiting t Asstant 'rote,r Department o Politial Science LEADING Republicans have said that their "dynamic, new, foreign poicy" has "eliminated war," ended appease- ment of the Communists, created a strong Asian policy and "laid it on the line" tc our European allies in order to compel them to carry their full load in the st rug- gle against the Soviets. Former President Truman has noted "blunder after blunder" in the conduct of our foreign affairs since 1952, while other Democrats have charged the Ad- ministration with complete confusion, war mongering and total ineptness. Amidst all this sound and fury, bluster and bravado-intensified of late by pant- ing politicians frantically charging to- wards the electoral finish line-what ba- sic significance can be found in the course of American foreign policy during the last two years? What sort of reasonable objective analysis can be made? To begin with, one must realize that, in the policy conflict between isolation- ism on the one hand and some form of collective security. support, for interna- tional organization and participation in balance of power politics on the other, isolationism has gained only miccority political support in the United States since 1932. The reasons for this derive from the very nature of the Twentieth Century and America's position in it. The mass of the population and its leaders have found it extremely difficult to ignore the fact that technology has almost destroyed the relative insularity of Nineteenth Century America. Know- ledge of the existence of Soviet bombers capable of reaching us in some half doz- en hours across the Arctic has forced most Americans into an awareness of the fact that the world is really round-that Europe and Asia are not just remote continents on the other side of vast ex- panses of water which function as im- pregnable defenses for the U.S. Frequent headlines which describe American dependence for vital resources on areas outside the Western Hemisphere, the degree of popular, physical, psycho- logical, and material participation in the struggle to defeat Germany and Japan, and the post-war position of leadership thrust upon us have all served to height- en American insight into the nature of our involvement with the rest of the world. One must indeed be living in an ivory tower to be able to ignore the ex- tent to which isolationism, today, rep- resents no more than meaningless nega- tivism incapable of resolving any of our foreign policy problems but fully capable of promoting our collective assassination THAT SUCH was realized by all major post-war points of view was clearly demonstrated during the "great debates" which raged from 1947 to 1952. For in the course of those widely publicized ex- changes concerninog the definition and propriety of the Trman Administration's containment policy, both of the leading critics of elaborate U.S. involvement in global leadership-former Senator Taft and ex-President Hoover-insisted with some measure of validity that they were not traditional isolationists, either. Sen- ator Taft thus argued in behalf of ex- tremely limited American military aid to Europe and avoidance of military en- tanglements on the Asian mainland un- less and until the Europeans could them- selves produce armed might capable of stopping the Russians in the event of an attack. Even Mr, Hoover, however-whose position was more extreme than Taft's- emphasized the importance to American security of a friendly British bastion while agreeing with Senator Taft on the necessity for great air and naval power based outside what he felt to be our' Western Hemisphere Gibraltar. In effect then, by 1952 the cause of full blown isolationism was pretty dead, The real foreign policy alternatives Invoved either the perpetuation of some combina - Death of Isolationism Has Led to Many Splits pulling out of Korea or launching a new efort to units the peninsula by force- these two alternatives having been sug- gested by neo-isolationists and aggressive nationalists respectively' The restoration to national sovereign- ty and the remilitarization of both Japan and Germany-commenced under Presi- dent Truman-has been brought much closer to complete accomplishment in a continuation of the policy of building up foreign power in key areas with the hope that it will remain anti-Communist and pro-American. The NATO regional col- lective security system established under Mr. Truman has been continued as a mainstay of containment, while the same policy has also been applied to South- east Asia in a less inclusive and less co- hesive SEATO. The numbers of Americans in uniform has remained about the same, though Secretary Wilson's emphasis on military economy and strength through reduced expenditures somewhat resembles thos views whose application eventually pro- duced the dismissal of Louis Johnson for shortsightedness. In addition, the Tru- man gamble on EDC was continued and, though it failed, did at least generate enough pressure to produce the recent London and Paris agreements to estab- lish a less supra-national Franco-Ger- man reconciliation. Finally vocal sup- port for the United Nations has reman- ed relatively firlm through the tendenev since 1947 to by-pass it through resort to multi-lateral and regional negotiations has also been continued and expanded AS FAR AS "new" oreic policy acti- vities are concerned, the novel gen- erally has been more verbal than real. During the last two years there thus has been a good deal of talk of substituting "dynamism" for "appeasement," but in the one outstanding "hot war" which did pose a test-namely, Indo-China-it was decided not to intervene to present the area from falling to the Communists. As a result, that other "new technique- "massive retaliation"-seems to have taken its place alongside pronouncements about the liberation of the Communist enslaved peoples and threats to our al- lies of "agonizing reappraisal" as addi- tional evidence of a much noted American foreign policy propensity to reverse "Ted- dY" Roosevelt's doctrine and engage in bravado without concern for our ability or willingness to back up the shouting a traditional situation which Walter Lipp- mann has described so effectively in his U.S. Foreign Policy book). How then should we evaluate our for- eign policy frori 1952 to 1954? The ans- wer would seem to be that it has remained within the broad non-isolationist policy outlines approved by most of the citizenry and teadership of this era; that it has continued our national effort to stem the Communist tide by resort to regionaI collective security systems in order to deter and counterbalance the might of our opponents; that it has sought these objectives while simultaneously attempt- ing economies in armed forces expecndi- tures and emphasizing military over eco- nomic aid to the non-Communist world; and, finally, that while we have contin- ued to avoid World War III, the Com- munist world has not only retained it pre-1952 dimensions but has expanded beyond them. We remain on the defen- sive, and we remain in great jeopardy' With his first issue of the Sund'y Magazine, The Daily takes on a new project. Appearing every two weeks as a regular section of the Sunday Daily, the Magazine will in- clude features ol music, ar, lite- ature, movies, politics, fashions and sports. Occasionally, an entire Mag- azine issue will be devoted to the job of covering one subject, AT THE ART MUSEUM-Described as a "very good reproduction," this copy of the famous "Victory of Samothrace" dominate, the main hall of the Univer- sity Museum of Art in Alumni Memorial ftall. tionl of collective security and balance of power politics, capped by continued thou'h no longer excessively optimistic participation in the United Nations, or that might be called the Taft-Hoover neo-isolatioism. THE CAPTURE of tie Republican nom-. ination in 1952 by General Eisen- hower settled the "great debate" as far as official policy was concerned. For, the Eisenhower defeat of Taft constituted one more victory for the advocates of an American foreign policy of active inter- national leadership. Prior to his nomina- tion, M Eisenhower had made it very clear in testimony before the Senate committees and in debate by press con- ference with Senator Taft that he re- garded any withdrawal from Europe or reliance on air and naval power as an invitation to disaster. In fact, during the last few months preceeding the Repubhi- can Convention, Eisenhower openly stat- ed that he had become interested in the Presidential nomination not so much through opposition to the Truman poli- cies as through fear that the neo-isola- tionists would take over the Republican party and then go on to capture the White House, It was this very agreement' on major foreign policy alternatives with the Democrats, as well as the General's vote-getting possibilities, which also led so many Democrats to urge earlier that their nomination be offered to the future Republican President. Moreover, the mo 'C powerful Hisenho er supporter amn Republica "cv--GoverinMr Dc 1 ciahad h - self clearly indicated prior to 1952 that he was in favor of a policy of global containment of the Soviet Union which went beyond the Truman position of com- mitting us to defend key areas through partial mobilization. The stated Dewey view was that we should draw a line around the globe and then engage in full mobilization in order to defend it against any Russian incursion. rHE PERIOD from 1947 to 1952, there- fore, indicated quite clearly that an Eisenhower Administration, whether in behalf of the Democrats or the Republi- cans, would perpetuate the T. R. Roose- velt-Wilson-F.D.R-Truman advocacy of U.S. leadership in world affairs. In addi- tion, the Eisenhower-Dewey views ex- pressed during the same period made it a good bet that 1952 to 1954-with Mr. Dewey's former foreign affairs advisor as Secretary of State-would not involve any drastic departure from the containment policy embarked upon in 1947 by Mr. Truman. From the hindsight of 1954, the ex- pected has generally occurred. A foreign policy combining aspects of collective se- curity, balance of power, and support for the United Nations has been conducted with some new verbal twists but also with a continuation of many of the same strengths and weaknesses characteristic of "Trumanismo" During the last two years the Eisen- hower Administration thus has com- pleted the Koe an truce negotiations in- oitaed 'Vbyis predeeaor instead of just