Eisenhower, Dulles and Brinkmanship
Eisenhower:
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| Striking resemblance |
· He saw the USSR as a “implacable enemy” seeking “world domination”
· The US needed to “learn to subvert, sabotage and destroy our enemy by more clever, more sophisticated, and more effective methods than those used against us”
· “we can never rest” was his slogan during his 1952 campaign
· He used his speeches to bow to both sides of the political system
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| "I am on the brink of smiling" |
John Foster Dulles:
· He was blunt and referred to containment as a treadmill policy
· It cost too much in taxes, Republicans saw it as “negative, futile and immoral”
· He described the American view of communism extremely well, he believed that all of the world wanted to be like America and that communism was the evil that challenged freedom
· He was a devoted Christian and highly successful corporate lawyer
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| woof woof |
How did Eisenhower get top dog?
· Corruption in the Truman campaign
· McCarthy charges
· Promise to end the war in Korea
· He came at a time of high tension but little resolution, his forceful approach brought a breath of life into the administration
· His leadership wouldn’t retreat to isolationism or settle for containerisation, they were going to be internationalist
· They promised to liberate the enslaved (however liberation may come at the cost of the world and the lives of the enslaved)
· As a result, Eisenhower gained a Landslide victory in 1952
Opposition to being internationalist:
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| The Republican version of Destinies Child |
· The Republicans were tied to conservative views and focused on balancing the budget and cutting taxes
· All of Eisenhower’s cabinet were businessmen, bar Dulles, who believed that an unbalanced federal budget was immoral
· All the cuts would reduce the amount of spending on the Defence Department
· Cuts made liberation more difficult
Second thoughts?
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| Make up your god damn mind |
· Eisenhower was critical of containment, but settled for an armistice in Korea July 1953
· This enraged: General MacArthur, President Rhee and many Republicans. As they wanted to liberate North Korea
· Eisenhower’s contradiction was justified through claiming that the price of victory was too high
· In practise his administration would continue containment but during speeches rally up the public, speeches provided emotional satisfaction
· Speeches were used to hide the fact that the Republicans did nothing about the promise of liberation
Where’s the liberation at???
· They shut down the Korean war, cut corporate taxes and reduced the size of the armed forces. NOT LIBERATION
· They did their best at containment but unlike Truman they wouldn’t use troops to ensure it
· The New Look policy rejected NSC 68, spending on defence could no longer be up to 20% of the GNP
· But was liberation necessary? Tensions were lessening, the Korean war had reached peace and Stalin had died in March 1953
· The World was less dangerous so was containment actually the right policy and the Republican’s contradiction worth it?
Was Eisenhower a weakling?
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| Dulles vs Eisenhower |
· He slated containment, then adopted it
· Between 1953 and 1955 the US could have easily destroyed the Soviet Union
· The Eisenhower administration retrained
· During the 8 years in power the administration experienced many war scares
· The Soviet Union developed long-range bombers, ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons but the defence budget still remained at $35-$40bn
· They had the power to destroy the USSR, and yes, they could retaliate but they couldn’t defend themselves
Bodging the budget
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| "Can we have some more please sir?" |
· The greatest opposition Eisenhower faced with the budget was the army
· His refusal to increase the budget resulted in the resignation of three army Chief of Staff, Maxwell Taylor being one of them
· The army wanted the budget to be larger to allow for flexibility to meet communist threats
· The budget locked the army in the US
· The army argued that they needed a large standing army, with specialised divisions, elite groups, a wide variety of weapons, an enormous transportation capacity
Eisenhower- we need a “balance between minimum requirements in the costly implements of war and the health of our economy”
Bombs, bombs, bombs:
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| Kablam! Maybe I should make this a Doctor Who blog... |
· Eisenhower believed that a WWIII would be based around the use of tactical nuclear weapons and strategic air power
· His plan was to use the technology to mediate conflicting political goals
· The US also developed smaller atomic weapons that could be used tactically on battlegrounds
· If there was a major military confrontation “those weapons would come into use”, massive retaliation as defined by Dulles
· Massive retaliation was to act as the chief instrument of containment: introducing Brinkmanship
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| "See you in Vietnam mes amis" |
Bonjour Brinkmanship:
· It was a tactic to support containment if the situation was right
· “you have to take chances for peace” it is about “the ability to get to the verge without getting into the war is the necessary art”
· During the Life article Dulles cited three instances of going to the brink, all being in Asia.
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| "Take the picture. I have some weak countries to intimidate with my big bombs' |
Is Dulles dumb?
· His policy views the world as bipolar
· It sees all major decisions as a matter of the free world vs communism
· The policy is oblivious to the diversity of the world and believes that every issue is related to or part of the Cold War
· If there can be such thing as a vain policy this is it
· Dulles was dubbed as immoral and impatient to those who criticised the policy
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| And Brinkmanship takes the lead |
Round 1: Korea
· The dispute was over the Chinese wanting the prisoners of war to be returned home and the US wanting to offer voluntary repartition
· Eisenhower warned that if the war wasn’t ended quickly then it would end “under circumstances of our own choosing”
· The US removed the 7th fleet allowing Chiang to launch bombing raids on mainland China
· Eisenhower’s threat of the wider war involving nuclear weapons and Chiang’s attack the Chinese agreed to voluntary repartition
Round 2: Vietnam
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| This is jaw dropping stuff people, it's anyones game |
· French fighting against the revolutionary aggressor, who were seen as communist agents of Peking and Moscow
· French vs Ho Chi Minch
· Eisenhower urged the French to commit to giving Vietnam independence so that Ho would be exposed as a communist and British + American forces could enter the war
· The French didn’t agree as they didn’t want to give up Vietnam
· However, the war didn’t go well for the French, they were on the brink of defeat
· Dulles and Eisenhower didn’t want to see another loss to communism
· Dulles asked congress if they could enter the war but congress opposed
· April 7thEisenhower said that southeast Asia was like a row of dominoes
· He sought alliances and even wrote to Churchill comparing the threat to Hitler
· Geneva conference April 26th, set up to discuss peace
· The US opposed negotiations as they were funding 75% of the war and didn’t want to compromise
· The Air Force Chief of Staff, Nathan Twining, wanted to use three tactical small atomic bombs to assist the French
· But Eisenhower disapproved as it would be the second time against Asians in a decade
· Brinkmanship failed, Americans walked out of the conference (Dulles refused to return)
· Eventually a truce was reached to temporarily part Vietnam at the seventeenth parallel. But Eisenhower and Dulles were bystanders
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| "I promise coach I will try harder next match" |
Better luck next time:
· As preparation for another event like Vietnam the US needed more allies
· SEATO was formed, to help protect Cambodia, Laos and South Vietnam
· But it wasn’t successful as it didn’t contain India, Burman or Indonesia
· It was embarrassingly white and was an effort for the West to regulate affaires in Asia
· Dulles had to assure the Senate that the New Look policy was succeeding and that bombs not men was the way forward
· He said that if SEATO couldn’t agree then the US was prepared to act alone
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| They have gone and done it! Brinkmanship takes the win, I bet they are going to be celebrating tonight |
Round 3: Formosa Straits
· After Chiang’s attack in 1953 China was ready to retaliate in 1955
· They launched bombing raids on the Tachen islands 230 miles north of Formosa
· They mounted cannons opposite Quemoy and Matsu
· Eisenhower said that if China won then all of Asia was in danger
· He asked congress for authority to use necessary force, the House passed the resolution
· He got a blank check which was a major war scare
· The administration considered dropping bombs
· March 20thDulles threatened to use “new and powerful weapons of precision”
· War would leave China devasted
· Chinese pressure on the islands lessened and the crisis ended
· Brinkmanship had held the line
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| "Don't ask me, I am just Kanye" |
The Next move:
· Vietnam’s struggle showed how loyalty would be the next battleground of the Cold War
· This would be easier for Russia as they weren’t seen as white explorers and colonists
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| Get your act together America, first the Wall Street Crash now this! What are you playing at! |
Brinkmansh*t
· It has scared people, even those in the administration
· The nuclear weapons in 1955 were a thousand times more powerful than those dropped on Japan
· One bomb had more power than all of the explosives in history put together
· New fission bombs were developed
· Churchill was worried so tried to form a summit between the US and the USSR to resolve their differences for the safety of the world
· But that’s for another time…
















Well done (again) on another strong blog post Maxwell. I'm not sure about some of your headings - apart from the obvious one, what's with the Dulles vs Eisenhower? Very good effort though and I hope it has helped develop your understanding of the period.
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