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Gilding the Gipper.


REAGAN'S WAR: The Epic Story of His 40-Year Struggle and Final Triumph Over Communism by Peter Schweizer Doubleday, $26.00

PRACTICALLY FROM THE MOment he left office in 1989, there has been a determined effort among conservatives to canonize can·on·ize  
tr.v. can·on·ized, can·on·iz·ing, can·on·iz·es
1. To declare (a deceased person) to be a saint and entitled to be fully honored as such.

2. To include in the biblical canon.

3.
 Ronald Reagan. Republican strategist Grover Norquist Grover Glenn Norquist (born October 19, 1956) is an influential American conservative activist and lobbyist. He currently serves as president of anti-tax lobbying group Americans for Tax Reform.  launched the Ronald Reagan Legacy Project to flood the nation with monuments to the beloved Gipper, affixing his name to streets, subways, and junior high schools in every state and county. A Republican bill to create a Reagan monument on the National Mall was introduced in Congress. There was even talk of adding Reagan's mug to Mount Rushmore.

A similar fever has gripped conservative historians, who, for several years now, have been doing their part to burnish Reagan's image by penning starry-eyed accounts of his presidency that exaggerate his achievements while glossing over any unpleasantness. The latest of these, Peter Schweizer's Reagan's War, is the real Ronald Reagan Legacy Project. It's a monument in print.

Those looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 inside details about the debates and decisions that led to the demise of the Soviet Union won't find them here. Schweizer is a fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institute--along with the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) is a conservative think tank, founded in 1943. According to the institute its mission "to defend the principles and improve the institutions of American freedom and democratic capitalism — limited government, , one of the Vaticans of conservative orthodoxy--who has chosen instead to offer a predictable series of anecdotes that paint a simplistic sim·plism  
n.
The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications.



[French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple
, Hollywood-style tale of how one man's lifelong crusade against Communism brought down the Soviet Union. As a young man, Reagan stood down Red hooligans in Hollywood, where he first recognized that Communism was an unmitigated un·mit·i·gat·ed  
adj.
1. Not diminished or moderated in intensity or severity; unrelieved: unmitigated suffering.

2.
 menace. After reading The Treaty Trap and Power Through Subversion (both written by old friend Laurence Beilenson) in the 1970s, he developed the strategy that years hence would bog down the Soviets in Afghanistan, Angola, and Central America and roll back the frontiers of Communism. The list goes on. And while Schweizer does briefly acknowledge the Iran-Contra scandal, he does so only to cite it as "a testament to Reagan's courage." Schweizer's Reagan is a real-life Jack Ryan: a selfless patriot who always gets it right.

Reagan's War reveals more about the minds of the conservative intelligentsia than it does about Ronald Reagan. According to Schweizer, Reagan's central virtue was his unbending belief in the evils of Communism and his willingness to maintain a steely hard-line in the face of those who lacked his internal fortitude. After all, Schweizer argues, he had "a well-developed plan seeking the demise of the Soviet Union," honed over the course of three decades. The irony is that while the real Reagan did indeed see the Soviet Union as an "evil empire," he became far more flexible than many hard-liners would have liked. (Norman Podhoretz, for one, often worried that Reagan was going soft.)

As more sober-minded historians have pointed out, Reagan was a very different man at the end of his presidency, one whose crusading impulse had given way to a more nuanced understanding of the Soviet threat. While it's true that Reagan's hawkishness almost certainly played a role in helping reformists like Gorbachev overcome more hard-line forces in the former Soviet Union, as Barbara Farnham, a senior associate of the Institute of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University, has written, "He had been transformed from an `essentialist,' who believed that the Soviet Union was governed by an ideology that put no limits on what it could justifiably do to gain its ends of `absolute power and a communist world,' to an `interactionist,' who saw the conflict between the Soviet Union and the United States in terms of mutual misperception mis·per·ceive  
tr.v. mis·per·ceived, mis·per·ceiv·ing, mis·per·ceives
To perceive incorrectly; misunderstand.



mis
." To Reagan's credit, this is hardly the Manichean outlook of an ideologue i·de·o·logue  
n.
An advocate of a particular ideology, especially an official exponent of that ideology.



[French idéologue, back-formation from idéologie, ideology; see
. Perhaps not surprisingly, Schweizer doesn't share this view. Though he pays lip service to the post-Gorbachev softening of Reagan's stance, Schweizer sees it as--you guessed it--perfectly consistent with Reagan's decades-old master plan. The author bases this contention largely on Reagan's adamant refusal to abandon the Strategic Defense Initiative Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), U.S. government program responsible for research and development of a space-based system to defend the nation from attack by strategic ballistic missiles (see guided missile).  and his failure to conclude any new commercial agreements with Moscow at the end of his presidency. By now, Reagan's zeal for SDI (1) (Serial Digital Interface) A physical interface widely used for transmitting digital video in various formats. For electrical transmission, it uses a high grade of coaxial cable and a single BNC connector with Teflon insulation. , based on a profound belief in the immorality of nuclear war, is the stuff of legend, and so his refusal is unsurprising. What is surprising, and overlooked by Schweizer, is Reagan's acquiescence in the decline in U.S. military spending that began under his administration, a far more significant sign than the state of U.S.-Soviet trade relations.

Reagan's dramatic shift from confrontation to constructive engagement paved the way for George Bush's more moderate presidency, which saw the Soviet Union diminish from a fading-but-formidable enemy to a virtual nonentity non·en·ti·ty  
n. pl. non·en·ti·ties
1. A person regarded as being of no importance or significance.

2. Nonexistence.

3. Something that does not exist or that exists only in the imagination.
. Bush accomplished this by taking a lesson from his predecessor. Whereas Reagan pushed a hard-line policy against the Sandinista government in Nicaragua by financing anti-Communist rebels, Bush compromised with Democrats and various Latin American nations to rein in to check the speed of, or cause to stop, by drawing the reins.
to cause (a person) to slow down or cease some activity; - to rein in is used commonly of superiors in a chain of command, ordering a subordinate to moderate or cease some activity deemed excessive.

See also: Rein Rein
 the Contras and bring about the elections that ousted the Sandinistas and ended years of civil war--exactly the kind of wimpy Wimpy

sloppily dressed comic strip character; always “forgets” to pay for hamburgers. [Comics: “Popeye” in Horn, 657–658]

See : Irresponsibility
 move condemned by Reagan's acolytes. (Schweizer glosses over this entirely, indirectly crediting Reagan with the triumph without ever mentioning his successor.) Bush used a similarly thoughtful approach to assemble the Gulf War coalition that defeated Saddam Hussein and to manage the collapse of the Soviet empire.

Reagan's War is less a paean Paean (pē`ən), Paean was an epithet for Apollo, the healer. The paean, a hymn of praise to Apollo and often to other gods, was sung as a prayer for safety or deliverance at battles and other important occasions.  to an actual man than an act of wholesale historical reinvention. Schweizer's Reagan is a caricature, a one-dimensional Commie-fightin' cowboy, who shoots first and ask questions later. All of this is in keeping with the broader Reagan Legacy Project wherein conservatives recast the Gipper as a sort of secular saint, a conservative answer to FDR and JFK. Doing so is a useful way for conservatives today to chasten chas·ten  
tr.v. chas·tened, chas·ten·ing, chas·tens
1. To correct by punishment or reproof; take to task.

2. To restrain; subdue: chasten a proud spirit.

3.
, bully, and cajole (language) CAJOLE - (Chris And John's Own LanguagE) A dataflow language developed by Chris Hankin <clh@doc.ic.ac.uk> and John Sharp at Westfield College.

["The Data Flow Programming Language CAJOLE: An Informal Introduction", C.L.
 those who dare stray from the Church of Reagan--the religion of low taxes, big military budgets, and hawkish foreign policy. It's no accident, then, that Republicans frequently invoke the term "Reaganesque" to describe George W. Bush, as they have lately when advocating hard-line policies like a unilateral U.S. invasion of Iraq that makes no bid for U.N. cooperation. They mean for Bush to be less like his father, the moderate multilateralist, and more like the manly, tough-talking, go-it-alone Reagan of legend. But as Bush demonstrated in his recent speech to the United Nations, he is quite willing to change tack and embrace a more nuanced approach to the national threat. So in that sense, he is indeed "Reaganesque"--just not the Reagan that Schweizer has invented.

REIGNAN SALAM is a writer based in Brooklyn.
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Title Annotation:Reagan's War: The Epic Story of His 40-year Struggle and Final Triumph Over Communism
Author:Salam, Reihan
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2002
Words:1084
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