history lesson
columns
- The Write Stuff?
Why Biden's plagiarism shouldn't be forgotten.
David Greenberg
posted Aug. 25, 2008 - Waving the Flag
How the "patriotism" debate might actually help Obama.
David Greenberg
posted July 3, 2008 - After the Assassination
How Gene McCarthy's response to Bobby Kennedy's murder crippled the Democrats.
David Greenberg
posted June 4, 2008 - The Greatest Manhunt of World War II
How a black soldier killed an officer, disappeared into the Burmese jungle, and joined a tribe of headhunters.
Brendan I. Koerner
posted May 29, 2008 - Cold Fusion
History suggests an Obama-Clinton ticket could work.
David Greenberg
posted May 22, 2008 - Search for more history lesson articles
- Subscribe to the history lesson RSS feed
- View our complete history lesson archive
The President, the War, and the Military BaseA compelling, new, and entirely mistaken comparison between George W. Bush and Lyndon Johnson.
By Jeff GreenfieldPosted Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2005, at 1:00 PM ET

A well-known psychology test demonstrates that when we hear a list of words associated with a concept like sleep—bed, pillow, night, rest—we recall the word sleep even if that word isn't on the list.
That may explain why many journalists—myself included—thought we saw a link between President Bush's recent Iraq speeches to armed forces audiences and an earlier president struggling with an unpopular war. When Bush spoke at the U.S. Naval Academy, at an Army depot in Pennsylvania, and at an Air Force base in Alaska, wasn't he doing exactly what President Lyndon Johnson did when the Vietnam War was at its peak? Didn't LBJ try to rally the country while standing in front of reliably supportive men and women in uniform?
That was the assumption in much of the analysis. The New Yorker's Seymour Hersh, noting Bush's fondness for military audiences, wrote that "four decades ago, President Lyndon Johnson, who was also confronted with an increasingly unpopular war, was limited to similar public forums." The Seattle Post-Intelligencer's Joel Connelly wrote that, as with LBJ during Vietnam, "uniformed personnel are used for props for speeches." Blogger Joe Gandelman, of Themoderatevoice.com, wrote that Bush's appearances "are starting to seem a bit reminiscent of Lyndon B. Johnson at the height of the Vietnam War, who made many key speeches at military installations, partly out of fears that he'd be met with screeching anti-war demonstrators." This was the same memory I had of the second half of LBJ's presidency.
But that's not the way it was, according to Randall Woods, University of Arkansas history professor and author of the forthcoming LBJ: Architect of American Ambition. With one exception, Woods says, Johnson did not go to military bases to rally public opinion or tout his war policy.
"When he went to bases," Woods says, "it was to talk to troops informally … he didn't stage media events there." The exception, he notes, was a visit to Cam Rahn Bay in South Vietnam in October 1966. The major speeches Johnson made in defense of his Vietnam policy were all at nonmilitary venues: the TV statement on the Gulf of Tonkin incident in August of 1964, a speech at John Hopkins University in April of 1965, his "escalation" press conference in July of that year, and a September 1967 speech at the Texas National Legislative Conference in San Antonio. He also defended his policies in detail in his State of the Union messages.
In fact, it would have been politically dicey for Johnson to give speeches in front of the troops.
"He didn't regard military bases as congenial venues," professor Woods says. "Remember, he was getting a lot of criticism from the right for not going all out." Throughout the war, Johnson would personally approve or veto bombing targets and rejected ideas such as invading North Vietnam. Moreover, the press and public tolerance for public relations was less developed back then: The political press did not yet engage in drama criticism, judging a politician's public appeal by the stagecraft or the setting rather than the message. The idea of a president standing in front of troops backdropped by slogans and banners was not yet even a gleam in young Karl Rove's eye.

So, where did the notion of a Bush-LBJ historical parallel come from? Woods has a hunch that "those who want to criticize Bush would like to draw on a nightmare legacy of Vietnam." But there's another explanation. There is an analogy, just not the military one. Both presidents were imprisoned by their war. Just as President Bush tends to appear before carefully selected, friendly audiences, so, too, did a beleaguered President Johnson duck the public at large.
"He had a fear of anti-war protestors," Woods says. "Not a personal fear, but a fear of being humiliated. He didn't go to a lot of public venues."
So, combine the memory of Lyndon Johnson as a "prisoner" in the White House, retreating from the public square, with the memory of Johnson visiting informally with troops, and what do you get? A vivid, almost wholly inaccurate "memory" of a Lyndon Johnson vainly trying to rally the public behind his policies at friendly military installations.
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- [audio] Astronomer Discovers Black Hole At Center Of Own Marriage
Sun, 07 Sep 2008 01:00:14 -0400 - No One On SWAT Team Wants To Wait In Ventilation Duct With Howard
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 09:00:53 -0400 - [audio] Homicidal Surgeon General May Be Hazardous To Your Health
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 01:00:43 -0400 - » More from the Onion
The New American FamilyAndrew J. Cherlin | The picture-
perfect family? These days, There's no such thing. | Q&A: Mon., 3 p.m.
- Today's Headlines
- Sarah Palin: An Apostle of Alaska
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 21:12:32 GMT - Rethinking the War on Cancer
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 17:55:51 GMT - The Taliban's No. 2 cash source: ransom kidnapping
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 18:01:39 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Bye-Bye, Boomers
Fri, 5 September 2008 16:44:27 GMT - Living Down to Expectations
Thu, 4 September 2008 21:11:52 GMT - Busted Brand
Thu, 4 September 2008 18:58:59 GMT - » More from The Root

history lesson









