Power and the Presidency, From Kennedy to Obama
For the past 50 years, the commander in chief has steadily expanded presidential power, particularly in foreign policy
- By Robert Dallek
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 6)
When it came to Vietnam, where he felt compelled to increase the number of U.S. military advisers from some 600 to more than 16,000 to save Saigon from a Communist takeover, Kennedy saw nothing but trouble from a land war that would bog down U.S. forces. He told New York Times columnist Arthur Krock that “United States troops should not be involved on the Asian mainland....The United States can’t interfere in civil disturbances, and it is hard to prove that this wasn’t the situation in Vietnam.” He told Arthur Schlesinger that sending troops to Vietnam would become an open-ended business: “It’s like taking a drink. The effect wears off, and you have to take another.” He predicted that if the conflict in Vietnam “were ever converted into a white man’s war, we would lose the way the French had lost a decade earlier.”
Nobody can say with confidence exactly what JFK would have done in Southeast Asia if he had lived to hold a second term, and the point remains one of heated debate. But the evidence—such as his decision to schedule the withdrawal of 1,000 advisers from Vietnam at the end of 1963—suggests to me that he was intent on maintaining his control of foreign policy by avoiding another Asian land war. Instead, the challenges of Vietnam fell to Lyndon Johnson, who became president upon Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963.
Johnson, like his immediate predecessors, assumed that decisions about war and peace had largely become the president’s. True, he wanted a show of Congressional backing for any major steps he took—hence the Tonkin Gulf Resolution in 1964, which authorized him to use conventional military force in Southeast Asia. But as the cold war accelerated events overseas, Johnson assumed he had license to make unilateral judgments on how to proceed in Vietnam. It was a miscalculation that would cripple his presidency.
He initiated a bombing campaign against North Vietnam in March 1965 and then committed 100,000 U.S. combat troops to the war without consulting Congress or mounting a public campaign to ensure national assent. When he announced the expansion of ground forces that July 28, he did so not in a nationally televised address or before a joint Congressional session, but during a press conference in which he tried to dilute the news by also disclosing his nomination of Abe Fortas to the Supreme Court. Similarly, after he decided to commit an additional 120,000 U.S. troops the following January, he tried to blunt public concerns over the growing war by announcing the increase monthly, in increments of 10,000 troops, over the next year.
But Johnson could not control the pace of the war, and as it turned into a long-term struggle costing the United States thousands of lives, increasing numbers of Americans questioned the wisdom of fighting what had begun to seem like an unwinnable conflict. In August 1967, R. W. Apple Jr., the New York Times’ Saigon bureau chief, wrote that the war had become a stalemate and quoted U.S. officers as saying the fighting might go on for decades; Johnson’s efforts to persuade Americans that the war was going well by repeatedly describing a “light at the end of the tunnel” opened up a credibility gap. How do you know when LBJ is telling the truth? a period joke began. When he pulls his ear lobe and rubs his chin, he is telling the truth. But when he begins to move his lips, you know he’s lying.
Antiwar protests, with pickets outside the White House chanting, “Hey, hey, LBJ, how many kids did you kill today?” suggested the erosion of Johnson’s political support. By 1968, it was clear that he had little hope of winning re-election. On March 31, he announced that he would not run for another term and that he planned to begin peace talks in Paris.
The unpopular war and Johnson’s political demise signaled a turn against executive dominance of foreign policy, particularly of a president’s freedom to lead the country into a foreign conflict unilaterally. Conservatives, who were already distressed by the expansion of social programs in his Great Society initiative, saw the Johnson presidency as an assault on traditional freedoms at home and an unwise use of American power abroad; liberals favored Johnson’s initiatives to reduce poverty and make America a more just society, but they had little sympathy for a war they believed was unnecessary to protect the country’s security and wasted precious resources. Still, Johnson’s successor in the White House, Richard Nixon, sought as much latitude as he could manage.
Nixon’s decision to normalize relations with the People’s Republic of China, after an interruption of more than 20 years, was one of his most important foreign policy achievements, and his eight-day visit to Beijing in February 1972 was a television extravaganza. But he planned the move in such secrecy that he didn’t notify members of his own cabinet—including his secretary of state, William Rogers—until the last minute, and instead used his national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, to pave the way. Similarly, Nixon relied on Kissinger to conduct back-channel discussions with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin before traveling to Moscow in April 1972 to advance a policy of détente with the Soviet Union.
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Comments (13)
Hi Robert Dallek Thanks for your diamond short on the 'Power of the President of US'. It is useful for students and upcoming lawyers as in an International. Kaakarla R Murthy Advocate India.
Posted by Kaakarla R Murthy on December 30,2012 | 01:41 PM
Excluding commander in chief, which of the presidents role do you think has the most influnce?why?
Posted by bobby on November 19,2011 | 04:15 AM
Republic v. Empire Robert Dallek’s scholarly and evenhanded essay on the “Power and the Presidency” made me harken back to a period when I attended an unnatural number of government and history courses that included texts dealing with the growing power of the presidency, the federal government and the United States in such a way that, unlike Dallek, almost unfailingly power-sprayed the narrative with a triumphant celebratory gloss. Maybe today we are arriving at a time when increasing numbers of Americans are increasingly suspicious that this never-ending growth in the power of a republic is inexorably leading to empire and to an empire’s end.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on November 8,2011 | 11:53 PM
Wow, some rather vitriolic commentary in the comments. I don't believe Smithsonian was attempting to endorse any president, or make any political statement pro or con. As to the comments about LBJ. Please, the man was no saint, but he also did some incredible good. The war on hunger and expanding medicare just to name 2! Then there's the opening comment conspiracy theory. I'll just leave that one be, though it's a shame this very good article has to be clouded by such ignorance and short term memory.
Posted by Leslie C on September 27,2011 | 05:58 PM
This country crashed off coarse and derailed when the government murder of JFK was accomplished without the culprits being held accountable.Conspiracy at the highest levels is a fact, the ONLY explanation for the pristine bullet was that it was a plant.It pointed the guilty finger at Oswold and failed every other test.The Warren Commission was put in place as a shame to put a rubber stamp on the story. From that point on the entire attitude of the government is we can do whatever we want whenever we want to do it as long as we can manipulate the public in going along with it.The charade that we have A Democratic Republic based on the rule and fear of punishment of law has been dispensed with. That's why Nixon got by with Watergate, sending Kissinger to parlay with the Viet Cong, Ford pardoning Nixon,Reagen selling weapons for hostages,Clinton pardoning contributor criminals,Chaney lying about the Iraqi Aluminum tubes ,going so far as selling torture. Abramoff was selling slavery and government extortion of gambling licenses and got a slap on the wrist.So from the Coup De'etat on things have gotten nothing but worse.Imagine the House Committee on Assassinations saying there was probably an organized bunch of assassinations but we lack the courage or dedication to do anything about it.Everyone in this country knows it in their gut and is powerless to do anything about it.
Posted by Lee Stevens on September 9,2011 | 06:09 PM
The Photograph on p. 38, will forever be emblazened in my mind as the most disgusting and despicable photograph the Smithsonian every printed. Granted, it happened, as those of us who lived through that demonic period of American History can attest, however, did we really have to see it again. Many people claim the unlimited power of the presidency shuld be reined in, simply because of the history that one photograph gives truth to. LBJ, despicable, Vietnam disgusting and despicable; and the 60000 plus young American lives that were destroyed because of LBJ and his willingness to satisfy his campaign donor's by continuing to wage that War will go down as the most disgusting thing any president of this nation in history did. 60,000 plus human beings lost their lives and over 200,000 others lost their ability to live a normal life. Just because of LBJ and his demonic need to keep and retain power and satisfy his campaign donors. Makes me proud to be an American. NOT
Posted by Jean Bennett on June 2,2011 | 02:48 PM
A good piece of work.
If space had permitted, reference to Grenada and Panama would have been interesting. And to my taste, a weak moment in the Johnson era was not so much the Dominican Republic episode as the Johnson Administration's handling of that bald Israeli attack on the Liberty.
Nor was the Pueblo a triunph as the months dragged on.
India was part of the LBJ personal foreign policy for sure. That dropping of a loaded atomic weapon off Spain is worth a mention. And the catastrophe of Czechoslovakia, where there were high hopes that were dashed with that Soviet crackdown....
The author knows all this; but mentioning all this helps the Johnson reputation and also hurts it.
Posted by vaughn davis bornet on February 24,2011 | 06:56 PM
The Robert Dallek article entitled, "Power and the Presidency," concerns the assumed war making power of the American presidents. It is indeed informative about the actual uses of the assumed war making power, but does not address the issue if it is constitutional. The power is deemed to be derived from the Commander in Chief clause and is perceived to be a tool in the conduct of foreign affairs. In my book, REPUBLIC LOST, (available on www.Amazon.com) this assumed war making power is discussed and debunked. The Founding Fathers did not give the President war making powers; indeed, they winched at the giving of such power to the President. The notes of James Madison on the debates of the Constitutional Convention clearly show the power to declare war was to be in the legislative branch --the President was not to be trusted to make war. Madison and Elbridge Gerry are the ones who proposed the use of the word "declare" rather than the word "make" war. This would allow the President to repel a sudden attack --remember Pearl Harbor. Madison summarized the sense of the delegates observing: "In time of actual war, great discretionary powers are constantly given to the Executive Magistrate. Constant apprehension of war has the tendency to render the head too large for the body. A standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty. The means of defence ag[ainst] foreign danger have been always the instruments of tyranny at home." Constitutional limitation, --not the fickle lady, politics-- is what safeguards American liberty.
Posted by Jack A. Wilson on February 17,2011 | 02:11 PM
Have to say that our good president Obama has done our contry quite well considering the organized political innuendo railed up against him just because some of his relatives were born in Kenya. Obama is a good Christian man that is stearing this country in a good direction. He deserves good credit for his good work. He has done more work in less than one year than most presidents. Kennedy was good but the only good thing on him was he was honest and good in dealing with circumstances. More people are soon considering Obama for another term as president since he has done so well. That is good news for America!
Posted by American Revolution on January 6,2011 | 03:56 PM
Surely the CIA had a larger role in this story than Dallek has acknowledged.
Posted by James Juhnke on December 29,2010 | 03:58 PM
I also would like to see a map of the attendees at President Kennedy's inauguration in 1961, if one is available. After looking over the magazine article last night, I wondered just how many of the people attending are still alive today.
Posted by ANDREW LISENBY on December 29,2010 | 03:28 AM
Is there somewhere one can go on the Internet to find a list of names of the people in Frank Scherschel's photograph of JFK's inaugural assembly?
Posted by K DIse on December 27,2010 | 12:47 PM
JFK, a great man, a legend never to be forgotten.
Everyone believes to be murdered to the state.
If Obama can even come close he will prove to be one of Americas finest.
Beermatman
http://www.beermatsadvertising.com
Posted by Beermatman on December 24,2010 | 03:15 PM