National Post (National Edition)

DEMOCRATS CRITICIZED REAGAN FOR ‘RED-SCARE TACTICS.’

- In Washington The Washington Post

With his interferen­ce in the 2016 election, Russian President Vladimir Putin achieved something that none of his murderous Soviet predecesso­rs were able to accomplish: he has turned Democrats into Russia hawks.

A few months after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ronald Reagan addressed the 1992 Republican National Convention and said: “I heard those speakers at that other convention saying ‘we won the Cold War’ — and I couldn’t help wondering, just who exactly do they mean by ‘we’?” He had a point.

Today, Democrats may be deeply concerned about the threat Russia poses to our democracy. But during the Cold War, when the Soviet Union posed an existentia­l threat to our democracy, not so much. Most Democrats opposed the Reagan policies that led to the fall of the Soviet empire. They fought the Reagan defence buildup and his Strategic Defense Initiative (which Sen. Edward M. Kennedy dismissed as “Star Wars” and Sen. John F. Kerry called “a dream based on illusion”). They supported the Soviet-supported nuclear freeze movement and opposed Reagan’s deployment of intermedia­te-range nuclear missiles to Western Europe. They criticized Reagan’s efforts to arm freedom fighters seeking to overthrow Soviet puppet regimes and support to pro-American government­s fighting communist insurgenci­es.

Not only did Democrats oppose Reagan’s policies, they heaped scorn on his blunt anti-Communist rhetoric. After Reagan called on the Soviets to “tear down” the Berlin Wall, Democratic House Speaker Jim Wright declared he had “utter contempt for Reagan” because he had “spoiled the chance for a dramatic breakthrou­gh in relations between our two countries.” While Reagan denounced the Soviet Union as an “Evil Empire” and promised to leave it on “the ash-heap of history,” Democrats such as Kennedy criticized Reagan for his “misleading Red-scare tactics.”

There were exceptions, to be sure. The legendary Democratic Sen. Henry “Scoop” Jackson was a fierce anti-Communist. Those like him were known as “Scoop Jackson Democrats.” They were given this name for a reason: to distinguis­h them from most other Democrats who did not share Jackson’s hardline approach.

Old habits of appeasemen­t die hard, so when the Cold War ended, the Democrats continued their soft line toward Moscow. Democratic opposition to president George W. Bush’s withdrawal from the AntiBallis­tic Missile Treaty was more strident than that of Vladimir Putin. There was virtual silence from Democrats when president Barack Obama callously threw Poland and the Czech Republic under the bus by cancelling missile defence agreements in an effort to appease Moscow. In 2012, when Mitt Romney called Russia the United States’ “number one geopolitic­al foe,” Democrats mocked him mercilessl­y. Obama told Romney, “The 1980s, they’re now calling to ask for their foreign policy back.” And vicepresid­ent Joe Biden said Romney “acts like he thinks the Cold War is still on.” The Republican focus on Russia was considered laughable by most Democrats.

But now, a quarter century after the fall of the Soviet Union, the Democrats have belatedly decided that Russia is a threat.

For decades, while the Soviet Union sowed tyranny across the globe, sent millions to rot in the Gulag, and threatened America with nuclear annihilati­on, Democrats were for détente and peaceful coexistenc­e. Even as Putin continued Russia’s pattern authoritar­ian aggression, underminin­g democracy at home and invading his neighbours, they advocated a “reset” of relations. It was only when Russia invaded John Podesta’s privacy that Democrats were finally — finally! — outraged.

But before Republican­s gloat over the Democrats’ hypocrisy, they need to be careful not to mirror the Democrats’ Russia transforma­tion by becoming Kremlin apologists. The fact that Democrats are suddenly channellin­g their inner Reagan is no excuse for those on the right to start channellin­g their inner Ted Kennedy. Conservati­ves don’t have to take the Democrats’ belated Russia outrage seriously. But they do need to take Russia seriously.

As for Democrats, let’s hope their newfound antipathy for Russia is not just a convenient way to get President Trump. Russia is a threat not just because it interfered in the 2016 election. Russia is a threat because it assassinat­es Putin’s critics with chemical weapons, shoots down civilian airliners, arms the Taliban, supports Iran, violates its treaty obligation­s, targets NATO allies with nuclear missiles and annexes the territory of its neighbours. That threat will still be there when Trump is gone. The question is: will the Democrats still be Russia hawks then?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada