Read The Selected Essays of Gore Vidal Online
Authors: Gore Vidal
Name | Locale |
Steel Box/Golden Python | Johnston Island |
Sharp Edge | Liberia |
COLD WAR ERA
Name | Locale |
Classic Resolve | Philippines |
Hawkeye | St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands |
Nimrod Dancer | Panama |
JUST CAUSE | Panama |
Promote Liberty | Panama |
ERNEST WILL | Persian Gulf |
PRAYING MANTIS | Persian Gulf |
Blast Furnace | Bolivia |
EL DORADO CANYON | Libya |
Attain Document | Libya |
Achille Lauro | Mediterranean |
Intense Look | Red Sea/Gulf of Suez |
URGENT FURY | Grenada |
Arid Farmer | Chad/Sudan |
Early Call | Egypt/Sudan |
Dates | U.S. Forces Involved |
26 Jul 1990â18 Nov 1990 | |
May 1990â08 Jan 1991 |
Dates | U.S. Forces Involved |
Nov 1989âDec 1989 | |
20 Sep 1989â17 Nov 1989 | |
May 1989â20 Dec 1989 | |
20 Dec 1989â31 Jan 1990 | |
31 Jan 1990â?? | |
24 Jul 1987â02 Aug 1990 | |
17 Apr 1988â19 Apr 1988 | |
Jul 1986âNov 1986 | |
12 Apr 1986â17 Apr 1986 | |
26 Jan 1986â29 Mar 1986 | |
07 Oct 1985â11 Oct 1985 | |
Jul 1984âJul 1984 | |
23 Oct 1983â21 Nov 1983 | |
Aug 1983âAug 1983 | |
18 Mar 1983âAug 1983 |
Name | Locale |
U.S. Multinational Force [USMNF] | Lebanon |
Bright Star | Egypt |
Gulf of Sidra | Libya/Mediterranean |
RMT (Rocky Mountain Transfer) | Colorado |
Central America | El Salvador/Nicaragua |
Creek Sentry | Poland |
SETCON II | Colorado |
EAGLE CLAW/Desert One | Iran |
ROK Park Succession Crisis | Korea |
Elf One | Saudi Arabia |
Yemen | Iran/Yemen/Indian Ocean |
Red Bean | Zaire |
Ogaden Crisis | Somalia/Ethiopia |
SETCON I | Colorado |
Paul Bunyan/Tree Incident | Korea |
Mayaguez Operation | Cambodia |
New Life | Vietnam NEO |
Frequent Wind | Evacuation of Saigon |
Eagle Pull | Cambodia |
Nickel Grass | Mideast |
Garden Plot | USA Domestic |
Red Hat | Johnston Island |
Dates | U.S. Forces Involved |
25 Aug 1982â01 Dec 1987 | |
06 Oct 1981âNov 1981 | |
18 Aug 1981â18 Aug 1981 | |
Aug 1981âSep 1981 | |
01 Jan 1981â01 Feb 1992 | |
Dec 1980â1981 | |
May 1980âJun 1980 | |
25 Apr 1980 | |
26 Oct 1979â28 Jun 1980 | |
Mar 1979â15 Apr 1989 | |
06 Dec 1978â06 Jan 1979 | |
May 1978âJun 1978 | |
Feb 1978â23 Mar 1978 | |
1978â1978 | |
18 Aug 1976â21 Aug 1976 | |
15 May 1975 | |
Apr 1975 29 Apr 1975â30 Apr 1975 | |
11 Apr 1975â13 Apr 1975 | |
06 Oct 1973â17 Nov 1973 | |
30 Apr 1972â04 May 1972 | |
Jan 1971âSep 1971 |
Name | Locale |
Ivory Coast/Kingpin | Son Tay, Vietnam |
Graphic Hand | US Domestic |
Red Fox [Pueblo incident] | Korea theater |
Six Day War | Mideast |
CHASE | various |
Powerpack | Dominican Republic |
Red Dragon | Congo |
[NONE] | Chinese nuclear facilities |
Cuban Missile Crisis | Cuba, Worldwide |
Vietnam War | Vietnam |
Operation Ranch Hand | Vietnam |
Operation Rolling Thunder | Vietnam |
Operation Arc Light | Southeast Asia |
Operation Freedom Train | North Vietnam |
Operation Pocket Money | North Vietnam |
Operation Linebacker I | North Vietnam |
Operation Linebacker II | North Vietnam |
Operation Endsweep | North Vietnam |
Operation Ivory Coast/Kingpin | North Vietnam |
Operation Tailwind | Laos |
Berlin | Berlin |
Laos | Laos |
Dates | U.S. Forces Involved |
20 Nov 1970â21 Nov 1970 | |
1970â1970 | |
23 Jan 1968â05 Feb 1969 | |
13 May 1967â10 Jun 1967 | |
1967â1970 | |
28 Apr 1965â21 Sep 1966 | |
23 Nov 1964â27 Nov 1964 | |
15 Oct 1963âOct 1964 | |
24 Oct 1962â01 Jun 1963 | |
15 Mar 1962â28 Jan 1973 | |
Jan 1962â1971 | |
24 Feb 1965âOct 1968 | |
18 Jun 1965âApr 1970 | |
06 Apr 1972â10 May 1972 | |
09 May 1972â23 Oct 1972 | |
10 May 1972â23 Oct 1972 | |
18 Dec 1972â29 Dec 1972 | |
27 Jan 1972â27 Jul 1973 | |
21 Nov 1970â21 Nov 1970 | |
1970â1970 | |
14 Aug 1961â01 Jun 1963 | |
19 Apr 1961â07 Oct 1962 |
Name | Locale |
Congo | Congo |
Taiwan Straits | Taiwan Straits |
Taiwan Straits | Quemoy and Matsu Islands |
Blue Bat | Lebanon |
Suez Crisis | Egypt |
Taiwan Straits | Taiwan Straits |
Korean War | Korea |
Berlin Airlift | Berlin |
In these several hundred wars against Communism, terrorism, drugs, or sometimes nothing much, between Pearl Harbor and Tuesday, September 11, 2001, we tended to strike the first blow. But then we're the good guys, right? Right.
Dates | U.S. Forces Involved |
14 Jul 1960â01 Sep 1962 | |
23 Aug 1958â01 Jan 1959 | |
23 Aug 1958â01 Jun 1963 | |
15 Jul 1958â20 Oct 1958 | |
26 Jul 1956â15 Nov 1956 | |
11 Aug 1954â01 May 1955 | |
27 Jun 1950â27 July 1953 | |
26 Jun 1948â30 Sep 1949 |
STATE OF THE UNION, 2004
In the 1960s and '70s of the last unlamented century, there was a New York television producer named David Susskind. He was commercially successful; he was also, surprisingly, a man of strong political views which he knew how to present so tactfully that networks were often unaware of just what he was getting away with on theirâourâair. Politically, he liked to get strong-minded guests to sit with him at a round table in a ratty building at the corner of Broadway and 42nd Street. Sooner or later, just about everyone of interest appeared on his program. Needless to say, he also had time for Vivien Leigh to discuss her recent divorce from Laurence Olivier, which summoned forth the mysterious cry from the former Scarlett O'Hara, “I am deeply sorry for any woman who was not married to Larry Olivier.” Since this took in several billion ladies (not to mention those gentlemen who might have offered to fill, as it were, the breach), Leigh caused a proper stir, as did the ballerina Alicia Markova, who gently assured us that “a Markova comes only once every hundred years or so.”
I suspect it was the dim lighting on the set that invited such naked truths. David watched his pennies. I don't recall how, or when, we began our “States of the Union” programs. But we did them year after year. I would follow whoever happened to be president, and I'd correct his “real” State of the Union with one of my own, improvising from questions that David would prepare. I was a political pundit because in a 1960 race for the House of Representatives (upstate New York), I got more votes than the head of the ticket, JFK; in 1962, I turned down the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate on the sensible ground that it was not winnable; I also had a pretty good memory in those days, now a-jangle with warning bells as I try to recall the national debt or, more poignantly, where I last saw my glasses.
I've just come across my “State of the Union” as of 1972. Apparently, I gave it fifteen times across the country, ending with Susskind's program. Questions and answers from the audience were the most interesting part of these excursions. As I look back over the texts of what we talked about, I'm surprised at how to the point we often were on subjects seldom mentioned in freedom's land today.
In 1972, I begin: “According to the polls, our second principal concern today is the breakdown of law and order.” (What, I wonder, was the first? Let's hope it was the pointless, seven-yearâat that pointâwar in Southeast Asia.) I noted that to those die-hard conservatives, “law and order” is usually a code phrase meaning “get the blacks.” While, to what anorexic, vacant-eyed blonde women on TV now describe as the “liberal elite,” we were pushing the carefulâthat is, slowâelimination of poverty. Anything more substantive would have been regarded as communism, put forward by dupes. But then, I say very mildly, we have only one political party in the United States, the Property Party, with two right wings, Republican and Democrat. Since I tended to speak to conservative audiences in such civilized places as Medford, Oregon; Parkersburg, West Virginia; and Longview, Washington, there are, predictably, a few gasps at this rejection of so much received opinion. There are also quite a few nods from interested citizens who find it difficult at election time to tell the parties apart. Was it in pristine Medford that I actually saw the nodding Ralph Nader whom I was, to his horror, to run for president that year in
Esquire
? Inspired by the nods, I start to geld the lily, as the late Sam Goldwyn used to say. The Republicans are often more doctrinaire than the Democrats, who are willing to make smallâvery smallâadjustments where the poor and black are concerned while giving aid and comfort to the anti-imperialists. Yes, I was already characterizing our crazed adventure in Vietnam as imperial, instead of yet another proof of our irrepressible, invincible altruism, ever eager to bring light to those who dwell in darkness.
I should note that in the thirty-two years since this particular State of the Union, our political vocabulary has been turned upside down. Although the secret core to each presidential election is who can express his hatred of African-Americans most subtly (to which today can be added Latinos and “elite liberals,” a fantasy category associated with working film actors who have won Academy Awards), and, of course, this season it's the marriage-minded so-called gays. So-called because there is no such human or mammal category (sex is a continuum) except in the great hollow pumpkin head of that gambling dude who has anointed himself the nation's moralist-in-chief, William “Bell Fruit” Bennett.
Back to the time machine. In some ways, looking at past States of the Union, it is remarkable how things tend to stay the same. Race-gender wars are always on our overcrowded back burners. There is alsoâalwaysâa horrendous foreign enemy at hand ready to blow us up in the night out of hatred for our Goodness and rosy plumpness. In 1972, when I started my tour at the Yale Political Union, the audience was packed with hot-eyed neocons-to-be, though the phrase was not yet in use, as the inventors of neoconnery were still Trotskyists to a man or woman or even “Bell Fruit,” trying to make it in New York publishing.
I also stay away from the failing economy. “I leave to my friend Ken Galbraith the solving of the current depression.” If they appear to know who Galbraith is, I remark how curious that his fame should be based on two books,
The Liberal Hour
, published a few years before the right-wing Nixon criminals tried to hijack the election of 1972 (Watergate was bursting open when I began my tour), and
The Affluent Society
, published shortly before we had a cash-flow problem.
In the decades since this State of the Union, the United States has had more people, per capita, locked away in prisons than any other country, while the sick economy of '72 is long forgotten as worse problemsâand deficitsâbeset us. For one thing, we no longer live in a nation, but in a Homeland. In 1972, “roughly 80 percent of police work in the United States has to do with the regulation of our private morals. By that I mean controlling what we smoke, eat, put in our veinsânot to mention trying to regulate with whom and how we have sex, with whom and how we gamble. As a result our police are among the most corrupt in the Western world.”
I don't think this would get the same gasp today that it did back then. I point out police collusion with gamblers, drug dealers, prostitutes, and, indeed, anyone whose sexual activities have been proscribed by a series of state legal codes that wereâareâthe scandal of what we like to call a free society. These codes are often defended because they are very old. For instance, the laws against sodomy go back 1,400 years to the Emperor Justinian, who felt that there should be such laws because, “as everyone knows,” he declared, “sodomy is a principal cause of earthquake.”
Sodomy gets the audience's attention. “Cynically, one might allow the police their kinky pleasures in busting boys and girls who attract them if they showed the slightest interest in the protection of persons and property, which is what we pay them to do.” I then suggested that “we remove from the statute books all penalties that have to do with private moralsâwhat are called âvictimless crimes.' If a man or a woman wants to be a prostitute, that is his or her affair. Certainly, it is no business of the state what we do with our bodies sexually. Obviously, laws will remain on the books for the prevention of rape and the abuse of children, while the virtue of our animal friends will continue to be protected by the SPCA.” Relieved laughter at this point. He can't be seriousâor is he?
I speak of legalizing gambling. Bingo players nod. Then: “All drugs should be legalized and sold at cost to anyone with a doctor's prescription.” Most questions, later, are about this horrific proposal. Brainwashing on the subject begins early, insuring that a large crop of the coming generation will become drug addicts. Prohibition always has that effect, as we should have learned when we prohibited alcohol from 1919 to 1933; but, happily for the busy lunatics who rule over us, we are permanently the United States of Amnesia. We learn nothing because we remember nothing. The period of Prohibition called the “Noble Experiment” brought on the greatest breakdown of law and order that we have ever enduredâuntil today, of course. Lesson? Do not regulate the private lives of people, because if you do they will become angry and antisocial, and they will get what they want from criminals, who work in perfect freedom because they know how to pay off the police.
What should be done about drug addiction? As of 1970, England was the model for us to emulate. With a population of 55 million people, they had only 1,800 heroin addicts. With our 200 million people we had nearly a half-million addicts. What were they doing right? For one thing, they turned the problem over to the doctors. Instead of treating the addict as a criminal, they required him to register with a physician, who then gives him, at controlled intervals, a prescription so that he can obtain his drug. Needless to say, our society, based as it is on a passion to punish others, could not bear so sensible a solution. We promptly leaned, as they say, on the British to criminalize the sale and consumption of drugs, and now the beautiful city of Edinburgh is one of the most drug-infested places in Europe. Another triumph for the American way.
I start to expand. “From the Drug Enforcement Administration to the FBI, we are afflicted with all sorts of secret police, busily spying on us. The FBI, since its founding, has generally steered clear of major crime like the Mafia. In fact, much of its time and energies have been devoted to spying on those Americans whose political beliefs did not please the late J. Edgar Hoover, a man who hated commies, blacks, and women in, more or less, that order. But then the FBI has always been a collaborating tool of reactionary politicians. The bureau also has had a nasty talent for amusing presidents with lurid dossiers on their political enemies.” Now in the year 2004, when we have ceased to be a nation under law but instead a homeland where the withered Bill of Rights, like a dead trumpet vine, clings to our pseudo-Roman columns, Homeland Security appears to be uniting our secret police into a single sort of Gestapo with dossiers on everyone to prevent us, somehow or other, from being terrorized by various implacable Second and Third World enemies. Where there is no known Al Qaeda sort of threat, we create one, as in Iraq, whose leader, Saddam Hussein, had no connection with 9/11 or any other proven terrorism against the United States, making it necessary for a president to invent the lawless as well as evil (to use his Bible-based language) doctrine of pre-emptive war based on a sort of hunch that maybe one day some country might attack us, so, meanwhile, as he and his business associates covet their oil, we go to war, leveling their cities to be rebuilt by other business associates. Thus was our perpetual cold war turned hot.
My father, uncle, and two stepbrothers graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where I was born in the cadet hospital. Although I was brought up by a political grandfather in Washington, D.C., I was well immersed in the West Point ethosâDuty, Honor, Countryâas was David Eisenhower, the president's grandson, whom I met years later. We exchanged notes on how difficult it was to free oneself from that world. “They never let go,” I said. “It's like a family.”
“No,” he said, “it's a religion.” Although neither of us attended the Point, each was born in the cadet hospital; each went to Exeter; each grew up listening to West Pointers gossip about one another as well as vent their political views, usually to the far right. At the time of the Second World War, many of them thought we were fighting the wrong side. We should be helping Hitler destroy Communism. Later, we could take care of him. In general, they disliked politicians, Franklin Roosevelt most of all. There was also a degree of low-key anti-Semitism, while preâWorld War II blacks were Ellisonian invisibles. Even so, in that great war, Duty and Honor served the country surprisingly well. Unfortunately, some served themselves well when Truman militarized the economy, providing all sorts of lucrative civilian employment for high-ranking officers. Yet it was Eisenhower himself who warned us in 1961 of the dangers of the “military-industrial complex.” Unfortunately, no one seemed eager to control military spending, particularly after the Korean War, which we notoriously failed to win even though the cry “The Russians are coming!” was heard daily throughout the land. Propaganda necessary for Truman's military buildup was never questionedâ¦particularly when demagogues like Senator McCarthy were destroying careers with reckless accusations that anyone able to read
The New York Times
without moving his lips was a Communist. I touched, glancingly, on all this in Nixonian 1972, when the media, Corporate America, and the highly peculiar president were creating as much terror in the populace as they could in order to build up a war machine that they thought would prevent a recurrence of the Great Depression, which had only ended in 1940 when FDR put billions into rearmament and we had full employment and prosperity for the first time in that generation.