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Melvin Small. At the Water’s Edge: American Politics and the Vietnam War. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2005. xii + 244 pp. Melvin Small. At The Water’s Edge: American Politics and the Vietnam War. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee Publisher, 2005. xi + 241 pp. $14.95 (paper), ISBN 978-1-56663-647-6; $26.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-56663-593-6. Reviewed by Tuan Hoang (Department of History, University of Notre Dame) Published on H-Diplo (May, 2007) Vietnam Left without the Right Melvin Small is the ideal historian to write on the relationship between the Vietnam War and U.S. domestic politics. He started his career as a specialist on the conjunction of public opinion and foreign policy, and has authored the most comprehensive survey to date on the impact of politics on U.S. foreign policy. He has devoted much time to the studies of the war, and has published both monographs and surveys on several Vietnamrelated topics: Johnson, Nixon, the media, public opinion, and the antiwar movement. Noting that “no one has explicitly studied the domestic side of the Vietnam War” (p. 217), he now reaches into the voluminous historiography on the war and, to a lesser degree, the sixties to write this synthesis-minded survey on the topic. The result is an endnotes-free, Washington-centered, and liberalism-framed narrative that compliments the numerous overviews on the war that emphasize foreign policy. It shows also strong pedagogical qualities and would make a fine addition to the reading list for an undergraduate course on the war, the sixties, or U.S. politics. However, it also leaves out the conservative movement and ought to be supplemented by readings on that very important topic. policies of the Eisenhower, Kennedy, and the early Johnson administrations. Although Eisenhower’s options on Indochina were constrained by the unpopularity of the Korean War and the opposition to intervention from both parties, he was well served by bipartisan support for containment and by the public perception that the Republicans advocated a more muscular policy in Asia. For Kennedy, his decision to send more advisors to South Vietnam stemmed in part from his fear of appearing as an appeaser, and he appointed Republican Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. as ambassador to Saigon out of political calculation, if not necessity. Reelection also figured large, as Kennedy knew that “it could be a fatal political blow to cede Vietnam to the Communists before November 1964” (p. 21). The same concerns affected Johnson, who kept Lodge in Saigon and maintained the U.S. presence in South Vietnam. But in the months after his landslide victory, Johnson still could not escape the limits imposed by domestic politics. He feared that disengagement would arouse fiery opposition from Republicans, southern Democrats, and Robert Kennedy. Even more, he was constrained by his own vision of the Great Society, knowing that he needed to push his legislative program before the midterm elections in 1966, which his party would likely lose. This factor was “uppermost in his calculations as he made the decision in February 1965 to escalate quietly in Vietnam” (p. 38). Small follows conventional chronology and divides the book into ten chapters. The general emphasis is on the impact of the war on domestic politics, but the first two chapters see the reverse: how politics affected the 1 H-Net Reviews It is at this point that the narrative switches emphasis. From time to time, Small points out the effects that domestic politics had on the war, especially on the election cycle. But in the main, he stresses the impact that the war had on politics. Chapters 3-7 cover the years 1965 to 1969, with each chapter taking up one of the years. The war fractured the liberal consensus, and liberals began to abandon Johnson at a time when he most needed their support for the Great Society. Dissatisfaction with the war drove many young people into radical groups or the hippie movement or both. Jewish Americans turned against him in spite of his support for Israel. Even Martin Luther King, who considered Johnson to have done more for African Americans than any president since Lincoln, publicly turned against the war in 1967. Virtually the only major constituency that stuck with Johnson was labor unions, and much of their rationale had to do with the economy. But even the all-powerful economy did not withstand the rising costs of war. Between 1961 and 1964, the United States had a trade surplus of $5.4 billion, but partly due to military spending, it had a trade deficit of $6.4 billion in 1972. cluttered; the parts, well connected into a whole. Instead of inundating readers with information, Small illustrates with a modest but choice amount, be it economic statistics, poll numbers, song titles, or quotations from the temptingly quotable LBJ. The narrative shows few acronyms, no small achievement since the era bore more acronyms of programs and organizations than any other time except for perhaps the New Deal. Most commendable is the author’s controlled and, at times, even dispassionate tone that abstains from polemics without obscuring his views on particular issues or personalities. Notable too are the many crisp and insightful observations sprinkled throughout the book. For example, so pervasive were the effects of the hippie movement on the larger society that even “members of the military on leave wore wigs and torn jeans in order to look like ’normal’ young persons” (p. 61). Or, for Americans who might have privately opposed the war but were even more troubled by the antiwar movement, civil disobedience “on their television screens looked like revolutionary violence” (p. 171). The cumulative effect is high readability for the general public as well as suitability for, again, the university classroom. The 1968 presidential contest saw multiple effects that Vietnam had on politics, such as “law and order” themes by Republican candidates Nixon and Wallace and strikingly similar positions on the war from the convention platforms of both parties. Its Republican winner then had to face a Democratic-controlled and more assertive Congress. Nixon’s programs of Vietnamization and draft reform were direct results of domestic politics, but with the Cambodian invasion, it was again war that affected politics. The invasion prompted stronger congressional opposition as well as renewed antiwar protests. In turn, many Americans who were privately troubled by the war grew angry at demonstrators and hippies for their flag-burning. Much of chapters 8 and 9 is about these spiraling effects, especially during 1971. The year deepened the political and cultural divide, as the antiwar movement staged massive protests and the stories of My Lai and the Pentagon Papers broke to the public. Nixon weathered these events in the short term, and effectively used peace negotiations to beat George McGovern in a landslide. But in the long run, he did not outlast Watergate, which was intrinsically linked to the Pentagon Papers affair. The last chapter is about the war’s political legacies, particularly its effect of deterrence on presidents and its impact on domestic perceptions of presidential candidates. The content, however, is less impressive than its composition. Like most overviews depending on secondary sources, it does not tell what we have not already known. But depending on its overarching framework and degree of inclusiveness, a survey could be more rounded and comprehensive or, conversely, more pointed and narrow. An example of the first kind is Small’s book on Nixon, which is thorough in themes and exhaustive in secondary sources.[1] This volume, however, falls into the second category. It describes well the effects of the war on presidential and (to a lesser degree) congressional politics, and it aptly delineates the breakdown of the liberal consensus. But it says very little on the relationship between the war and the conservative movement, whose rebirth coincided with much of the war’s duration and whose political influence is still strong today. In effect, it leaves out a sizable and growing body of historiography about the New Right. The gap is regrettable, partly because Small is at times cognizant of the budding movement. On the war’s effects on youths, for example, he offers that in addition to the growth of radical groups, “conservative groups grew apace, with the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) signing up more members during the decade than SDS {Students for a Democratic Society] did” (p. 60). This fact Similar to Small’s other surveys, the narrative flows is remarkable, but he neither elaborates nor returns to sure-handedly. The prose is clear; the sentences, un- it, and instead goes back repeatedly to New Left groups 2 H-Net Reviews such as SDS. Which is too bad, since the YAF shows a fascinating angle to the complexity of war and politics, not least for its pro-war but anti-draft positions–and for the fact it has been studied at length.[2] On leading conservatives, Ronald Reagan’s name is first mentioned apropos of Barry Goldwater’s 1964 campaign. The next time we see his name, it is the early 1980s. Yet, this hero to the New Right was among the few supporters of the war to the end; a steadfast opponent of the antiwar movement; and was first elected to the important gubernatorial office in California in 1966–or the very elections that Johnson had feared the Democrats would lose. (That his opponent Edmund “Pat” Brown was also a strong supporter of the war, would have added another fascinating layer to the political struggle on the state level.) The book sticks close to the established view that the “imperial presidency” had its last leg in the Vietnam era. But it also misses a chance to enlighten readers on the conjunction of war and conservative organizations and political battles beyond the Beltway.[3] privately been opposed to the war but were even more upset about antiwar protests. Rightly, too, he mentions in passing that the anger of many union members at flagburning antiwar demonstrators might have accounted for the 1970 senatorial victory of Conservative Party candidate James Buckley. However, the Silent Majority was not exactly silent or, as Small seems to imply in the description of the union “hard hats,” merely angrily reacting to the visibility of hippies and antiwarriors. On the contrary, as shown in a growing number of monographs and broad histories, many members of the Silent Majority were actively mobilizing on grassroots and state levels while capitalizing on the self-destruction of the liberal establishment.[5] In other words, the visible “hard hats” were likely less significant than the more methodical conservatives and libertarians who preferred organizing in the neighborhoods to showing their grievances on the street and to the media. Whether the New Right is the larger story of the Vietnam years, is a question open to debate.[6] Nonetheless, its history is significant enough to warrant attention, and the book shows little acknowledgement of it and no exposition at all. But at least YAF and Reagan are mentioned in respect to youths and anticommunism; on most other topics, the book leaves out conservatives all together. One instance is the U.S. military. Small devotes several pages to the impact of war crimes on public perception of the military, such as the atrocities at My Lai and the testimonies of John Kerry, which are standard fare in Vietnam War narratives. But the war’s impact on the military was more far-reaching than public perception of war crimes and antiwar veterans. As Anne Loveland illustrates in her monograph on evangelicals and the U.S. military, the Vietnam War marked a monumental shift in the political orientation of military personnel. Once disdained by the military establishment, evangelical Christians stood among those who continued to support the war and, in the end, gained visibility and the support of the military leadership itself.[4] The impact of the war on the Right was possibly just as significant as that on the Left, if not more. But At the Water’s Edge does not explore any of it. In the end, instructors should still consider using this book for their classrooms, since it is well written and provides an arresting narrative of the impact of the war on presidential politics and liberalism. But I also urge them to fill the aforementioned lacuna with one or more articles or book selections on the New Right. Small concludes that the effects of the war “have lingered into the twenty-first century in ways that could hardly have been imagined when President Eisenhower decided in 1954 to save South Vietnam for the Free World” (p. 216). True enough. But the effects were more spiraling and multi-dimensional–and the “water’s edge” of the title even more edgy and pivotal–than they are presented in this volume. Notes [1]. Melvin Small, The Presidency of Richard Nixon (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1999). The overall impression, then, is that the book plays it safe by staying close to well-established themes and long-standing interpretative frameworks that emphasize the roles of liberals and the New Left at the expense of the conservatives. There is more, for instance, about Allard Lowenstein’s too-late-too-little “Dump Johnson” campaign than about George Wallace’s candidacy that took 13.5 percent of the popular vote in 1968. Likewise, the treatment of the Silent Majority falls victim to an interpretation that minimizes the agency of conservatives. Small correctly notes that many Americans might have [2]. See John A. Andrew III, The Other Side of the Sixties: Young Americans for Freedom and the Rise of Conservative Politics (New Brunswick and London: Rutgers University Press, 1997); and Gregory L. Schneider, Cadres for Conservatism: Young Americans for Freedom and the Rise of the Contemporary Right (New York: New York University Press, 1999). A substantial treatment is also found in Rebecca Klatch, A Generation Divided: The New Left, the New Right, and the 1960s (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999). 3 H-Net Reviews [3]. Lou Cannon, Governor Reagan: His Rise to Power (New York: PublicAffairs, 2003). Also offering information about Reagan, anticommunism, and the Vietnam War is William E. Pemberton, Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1997). tive Ascendancy in America (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996); Lisa McGirr, Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001); Jonathan M. Schoenwald, A Time for Choosing: The Rise of Modern American Conservatism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003); and Kurt Schuparra, Triumph of the Right: The Rise of the California Conservative Movement, 1945-1966 (Armonk, NY: ME Sharpe, 1998). For an evaluation of the books cited here and in note 2, see James A. Hijiya, “The Conservative 1960s,” Journal of American Studies 37.2 (2003): 201-227. [4]. See Anne Loveland, American Evangelicals and the U.S. Military, 1942-1993 (Baton Rouge and London: Louisiana State University, 1996), 118-225. [5]. Major works on the New Right include Mary Charlotte Brennan, Turning Right in the Sixties: The Con[6]. On leftist, liberal, and conservative interpretative servative Capture of the GOP (Chapel Hill: University perspectives, see M. J. Heale, “The Sixties as History: A of North Carolina Press, 1995); Godfrey Hodgson, The Review of the Political Historiography,” Reviews in AmerWorld Turned Right Side Up: A History of the Conservaican History 33 (2005): 133-152. If there is additional discussion of this review, you may access it through the network, at: https://networks.h-net.org/h-diplo Citation: Tuan Hoang. Review of Melvin Small, At the Water’s Edge: American Politics and the Vietnam War and Small, Melvin, At The Water’s Edge: American Politics and the Vietnam War. H-Diplo, H-Net Reviews. May, 2007. URL: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=13227 Copyright © 2007 by H-Net, all rights reserved. H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for nonprofit, educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author, web location, date of publication, originating list, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For any other proposed use, contact the Reviews editorial staff at [email protected]. 4