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- /.2.3. ╚Truman Takes Charge
-
-
- [In the last two years of his term of office, President Truman
- made two controversial decisions that helped establish the
- growing the dimensions, and the limits, of presidential power.
- In 1951, in the middle of the Korean War, he dismissed his
- supreme militry commander, General Douglas MacArthur, for
- insubordination over the conduct of the war and Asian policy in
- general. At the time, many dismayed people thought the wrong man
- was being fired. But there was no doubt of the President's
- authority to do so. The following year, Truman invoked
- constitutional authority to nationalize the steel industry in
- order to break a negotiating deadlock that threatened to lead
- to a critical war- time strike. On this occasion, the Supreme
- Court declared that he did not have the power to do so.]
-
-
- (April 23, 1951)
-
- A White House aide, leafing through a routine sheaf of wire
- copy from the news ticker, started with surprise. He had come
- across the report of Joe Martin's speech, made that afternoon
- in the House, containing General Douglas MacArthur's letter
- endorsing the employment of Chiang Kai-shek's troops to open a
- second front in China. The aide rushed in to the President's
- office. As he read, Harry Truman flushed with anger. As the
- White House leaked the story later, he made his decision then
- & there -- Thursday, April 5 -- that Douglas MacArthur must go.
-
- The press got the mimeographed sheets: "With deep regret, I
- have concluded that General of the Army Douglas MacArthur is
- unable to give his wholehearted support to the policies of the
- United Nations in matters pertaining to his official duties...It
- is fundamental...that military commanders must be governed by
- the policies and directives issued to them in the manner
- provided by our laws and the Constitution.
-
- The man he fired was a military hero, idolized by many.
- MacArthur had done a superb job as Supreme Commander for the
- Allied Powers in the occupation and reconstruction of Japan. He
- was the strongest bulwark against the Far East's Communists, who
- had long cried for his head. If Douglas MacArthur had an admirer
- in the White House set, it was Truman himself, an
- ex-artilleryman with an innate respect for soldiering.
-
- But strong-minded General Douglas MacArthur had set himself
- firmly against the policy of Truman, of his Secretary of State
- Dean Acheson, and of the U.N. itself. Despite repeated efforts
- to silence him, he had spoken up defiantly and deliberately As
- a soldier, Douglas MacArthur well knew that he was risking his
- military career. His bold pronouncements had alarmed U.S.
- allies, especially Britain. In Truman's view, this threatened
- the solidarity of the North Atlantic countries, and embarrassed
- Secretary Acheson in his own plans.
-
-
- (April 30, 1951)
-
- A hush fell over the assembled Congress of the United States
- and the crowded galleries. In the silence, the Doorkeeper's
- voice came clear: "Mr. Speaker, General of the Army Douglas
- MacArthur."
-
- In a great wave, the applause and cheers burst upon the erect
- figure who strode down the aisle. Democrats, Republicans, and
- the crowds in the galleries rose as one, clapped and shouted on
- & on. Across 8,700 miles, through cheering crowds, clouds of
- black headlines and storms of angry argument, Douglas MacArthur
- had come to this podium to make his stand before the nation and
- to state his case to the world. He stood in a trim Eisenhower
- jacket without ribbons or medals back rigid, his face stone --
- a dismissed commander conscious that history plucked at his
- sleeve, peered down at him from the lenses of the television
- camera. He waited, impassively. As silence fell, he began to
- speak slowly, in a deep, resonant voice. "I address you" he
- said, "with neither rancor nor bitterness in the fading twilight
- of life, with but one purpose in mind: to serve my country."
- Applause welled up again, interrupting him as it was to do again
- & again -- in all, some 30 times.
-
- To his critics who charged him with wanting to start a world
- war, MacArthur retorted emphatically: "I know war as few other
- men now living know it, and nothing to me is more
- revolting...But once war is forced upon us, there is no other
- alternative than to apply every available means to bring it to
- a swift end. War's very object is victory."
-
- Attempts to appease Red China are useless, said MacArthur.
- "They are blind to history's clear lesson...Like blackmail,
- (appeasement) lays the basis for new and successively greater
- demands until, as in blackmail, violence becomes the only other
- alternative. Why, my soldiers asked of me, surrender military
- advantages to an enemy in the field?"
-
- He paused dramatically, then said: "I could not answer."
- Douglas MacArthur had hurled his challenge, and was ready to
- make his farewells. "I have just left your fighting sons in
- Korea," he told his hushed audience, "and I can report to you
- without reservation that they are splendid in every way...Those
- gallant men will remain often in my thoughts and in my prayers
- always."
-
- He dropped his voice a little, and went on, "When I joined
- the Army, even before the turn of the century, it was the
- fulfillment of all of my boyish hopes and dreams...The hopes and
- dreams have long since vanished, but I still remember the
- refrain of one of the most popular barracks ballads of that day
- which proclaimed most proudly that old soldiers never die; they
- just fade away.
-
- "And like the old soldier of that ballad, I now close my
- military career and just fade away, an old soldier who tried to
- do his duty as God gave him the light to see that duty.
- Goodbye."
-
-
- (April 21, 1952)
-
- The midnight strike deadline was only 90 minutes away when the
- face of the President appeared on the nation's television
- screens. The voice of Harry Truman came through the
- loudspeakers: "I have to think about our soldiers in Korea...the
- weapons and ammunition they need...our soldiers and our allies
- in Europe...our atomic energy program...our domestic economy."
- Said the president: "We are faced by the possibility that at
- midnight tonight the steel industry will be shut down. This must
- not happen."
-
- If Harry Truman had acted on that sound premise to force a
- settlement in steel, no one could have questioned his course.
- After five months of negotiations, hearings and mediation, the
- steel dispute had come to a dead stop. It was a deadlock
- compounded of errors and intransigence on all sides: steel's
- long refusal to make any wage offer at all without the guarantee
- of a price increase; the C.I.O. steelworkers' insistence on the
- full recommendation of the Wage Stabilization Board (a wage
- package of 26.1 cents an hour plus the union shop); the
- Government's optimism about a settlement.
-
- But Harry Truman did not see that the blame for the deadlock
- rested on all three parties. The man who two years ago thought
- he had no authority to seize the coal mines now claimed the
- power to take over the steel mills "by virtue of the authority
- vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United
- States."
-
-
- (June 9, 1952)
-
- This week the Supreme Court decided that the President of the
- U.S.has no powers other than those named in the Constitution or
- derived from acts of Congress. He holds one of the most powerful
- posts in the world, but he may not make law under any
- circumstances, even in emergencies.
-
- This affirmation of the American doctrine of separate
- legislative, executive and judicial powers is all the more
- striking because every member of the court was appointed by
- Roosevelt or Truman, and some of the Justices (e.g.,
- Frankfurter, Douglas) have been mainsprings of the New-Fair
- Deal.
-
- The nation and the world have long understood that the U.S.
- is strong, but perhaps neither the nation or the world fully
- understand that constitutional government by limited and
- balanced powers is the key of that strength. The court
- trenchantly stated the case for constitutional government at a
- time when it direly needed restating.
-
-