Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Anti-Imperialism in U.S. Foreign Relations
- World War II, Congress, and the Roots of Postwar American Foreign Policy
- The Progressive Dissent: Ernest Gruening and Vietnam
- “Come Home, America”: The Story of George McGovern
- Congress Must Draw the Line: Senator Frank Church and the Opposition to the Vietnam War and the Imperial Presidency
- Dixie's Dove: J. William Fulbright, the Vietnam War, and the American South
- Advice and Dissent: Mike Mansfield and the Vietnam War
- The Reluctant “Volunteer”: The Origins of Senator Albert A. Gore's Opposition to the Vietnam War
- A Delicate Balance: John Sherman Cooper and the Republican Opposition to the Vietnam War
- Friendly Fire: Lyndon Johnson and the Challenge to Containment
- Richard Nixon, Congress, and the War in Vietnam, 1969–1974
- Index
The Progressive Dissent: Ernest Gruening and Vietnam
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Anti-Imperialism in U.S. Foreign Relations
- World War II, Congress, and the Roots of Postwar American Foreign Policy
- The Progressive Dissent: Ernest Gruening and Vietnam
- “Come Home, America”: The Story of George McGovern
- Congress Must Draw the Line: Senator Frank Church and the Opposition to the Vietnam War and the Imperial Presidency
- Dixie's Dove: J. William Fulbright, the Vietnam War, and the American South
- Advice and Dissent: Mike Mansfield and the Vietnam War
- The Reluctant “Volunteer”: The Origins of Senator Albert A. Gore's Opposition to the Vietnam War
- A Delicate Balance: John Sherman Cooper and the Republican Opposition to the Vietnam War
- Friendly Fire: Lyndon Johnson and the Challenge to Containment
- Richard Nixon, Congress, and the War in Vietnam, 1969–1974
- Index
Summary
On August 6, 1964, the seventy-seven-year-old junior senator from Alaska, Ernest Gruening, delivered a brief address in the Senate chambers. The upper chamber was considering the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, which President Lyndon Johnson had submitted to obtain approval for retaliatory air raids against North Vietnam. Though Gruening conceded the difficulty of rebuffing a presidential request “couched in terms of high principle and national interest,” he dissented from Johnson's approach for constitutional, historical, and policy reasons. The Alaskan reminded his colleagues that the aura of increased presidential authority associated with the Cold War did not absolve senators of their “right and duty” to express opinions on foreign policy issues, particularly “if those views embody doubt or dissent.” The specifics of Vietnam policy, Gruening reasoned, made Senate action even more important. He considered the administration's policy inherently contradictory. Though Johnson had contended that only the South Vietnamese could win the war, an “inevitable development” of “our steadily increasing involvement” would be the weakening of the very regime that the president deemed essential to long-term victory. Regardless of the tactical problems, Gruening could detect “no threat to our national security” from a Communist victory in what he perceived as a Vietnamese civil war. Indeed, he claimed, “all [of] Vietnam is not worth the life of a single American boy.” Most important, the military escalation violated traditional American ideals.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Vietnam and the American Political TraditionThe Politics of Dissent, pp. 58 - 81Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003