War and the American Presidency FROM THE PUBLISHER
The gravest decision in a democracy is the one to go to war. In this essential new book, which brings a magisterial command of history to the most urgent of contemporary questions, two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., explores the war in Iraq, the presidency, and the future of democracy. Should the United States go it alone, or should it involve the institutions of collective security? Schlesinger points out that unilateralism is the oldest doctrine in American history but that the Second World War marked a turning point. Presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton advanced the principle of collective action; with the Iraq War, however, the younger President Bush reverted to unilateralism.
Furthermore, the traditional argument for war has focused on deterrence and containment. The war in Iraq, however, was undertaken on the principle of preventive war, now known as the Bush Doctrine. Schlesinger notes a long line of presidents who have rejected the preventive war argument. It includes no less a figure than Dwight D. Eisenhower, who said, "preventive war, to my mind, is an impossibility." Eisenhower had military caution in mind, but Schlesinger also points out another problem with the preventive war argument: it requires an accurate crystal ball. Unfortunately, history can suggest nothing but humility with respect to our ability to forecast the future. Schlesinger goes on, pointing out that wartime involves a predictable expansion of presidential power and suppression of dissent. He wonders about the tainted election of 2000 and offers a plan to revamp the electoral college so that the people's choice would more likely make it to the White House.
Finally, what of democracy itself? The world got along without democracy until two centuries ago, and Schlesinger notes chillingly that there is little evidence that constitutional democracy will triumph in the century ahead. The challenge to twentieth-century democracy was secular totalitarianism; that of the twenty-first appears to be religious fanaticism. The search for a democratic alternative is urgent. "Perhaps no form of government," said the great constitutional historian James Bryce, "needs great leaders as much as democracy." And so Schlesinger skillfully ties the very future of democracy to the question of war and the American presidency.
FROM THE CRITICS
Josef Joffe - The Washington Post
… Schlesinger has it right where he transcends passion in favor of prudent principle: "The United States, as it seeks to advance its national interests, will increasingly discover, I believe, that joint action may often be the best way to safeguard those interests." This is not the counsel of wimpishness but of realism. Indifference to consequences was driven by weakness in 1812, by fabulous strength in 2003. In both cases, America might have been better off staying at home rather than going it alone.
Charles A. Kupchan - The New York Times
American history informs Mr. Schlesinger's indictment of the Bush administration, but it also instills his confidence in democracy's "capacity for self-correction." Mr. Schlesinger predicts that the reckless adventurism will not last, noting that "Americans are simply not competent imperialists, as demonstrated in Iraq in 2004." The country's "own humane, pluralistic and tolerant ideals" will ultimately undermine its imperial aspirations. In three concluding essays, Mr. Schlesinger dwells on the need to reinvigorate these ideals, again drawing on the lessons of history to caution against complacency and stress the importance of renewing America's democratic institutions and spirit.
Library Journal
A liberal public intellectual and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner (for The Age of Jackson and A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House), Schlesinger presents cogent essays that provide historical background to the Iraqi War. He condemns the Bush Doctrine, which makes preventive war a tool of American diplomacy, arguing that preventive wars (as opposed to preemptive wars, which are fought to stop an impending attack from a proven enemy) have no historical precedent in the United States. The Iraqi War is an unsuccessful preventive war-a war based on speculation rather than sound intelligence, claims Schlesinger. The author cautions against the return of the Imperial Presidency, a subject he wrote about during the excesses of the Nixon administration, and calls dissent a patriotic response to controversial government actions. He concludes with a warning about using history to determine precisely how events will unfold. Strongly recommended for all public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 5/15/04.]-Karl Helicher, Upper Merion Twp. Lib., King of Prussia, PA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.