Matt Welch | March 18, 2005
The man who invented containment, brainpowered the Marshall Plan, taught roughly a bazillion young poli-sci students, and lived long enough to go in and out of favor with just about every Foreign Policy school, is dead at a ripe 101. I'll leave his legacy for others, and just add that the 1925-50 segment of his memoir is some of the most thrilling diplomatic writing you'll ever read, as our young hero ventures out into the hinterlands of the great Soviet experiment, and discovers -- decades before others allowed themselves to learn -- that the dream was a murderous lie.
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"Events of the past thirty years seem to have proven that he was
right about the Soviets, huh?"
Events that occurred between 40 and 30 years ago seem to prove that
he was right about the misapplication of his containment policy to
Southeast Asia.
Aren't we still "containing" Cuba too? Why?
That's the thing about a government policy: once they get it in
their heads to do something, by god, they'll do it. Regardless of
effectiveness or cost. Adjustment and nuance are forbidden words.
Re-assessment and experimentation are heresy.
On the rare occasions when someone is foolish enough to make a case
for change, he is shouted down as being "heartless" or "soft on X".
On the even rarer occasion when the argument for change carries the
day, you can be sure that the change will be made in the most
dunder-headed and ham-fisted manner possible. Witness California's
energy "deregulation" or W's SS "privatization" plan. And then the
cycle repeats.
*sigh*
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