GRENADA AGAIN: LIVING WITHIN THE LAW

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404440106-0
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 29, 2010
Sequence Number: 
106
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Publication Date: 
December 14, 1983
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OPEN SOURCE
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/29: CIA-RDP90-00552R000404440106-0 ARTICLE APPEARED 01; PAGE.' O WALL STREET JOURNAL 14 December 1983 Grenada Again: Living Within the Law BV ARTHUR. SCHLESINGER JR. In the dozen years since The Wall Street Journal nobly opened its pages to periodic heresies by me, nothing I have written has brought down on my head such a torrent of hilmination and abuse as a recent column questioning the virtue of the sneak Ameri- car, military attack on Grenada. I have been vilified in unprintable. language, in- structed to go back to where I came from (Columbus, Ohio, actually) and denounced as an agent of the Kremlin. At the risk of provoking the customers still more, let me try again; for I think an important point is involved for all who love America. So please, everybody, stay calm for a moment, and let us reason together or, the question of the relationship between law and foreign policy. Until recently, most Americans re- garded the establishment of neutral stan- dards of international behavior as vital to the interests of the U.S. International law is far from omnipotent. But it is far from negligible, too, and the steady extension'of its reach is the necessary condition of last- ing peace. It surely continues to be in our national interest to uphold the rule of due process in the world, however imperfect that rule may be. It is surely not in our national interest to set an example to the world of the subordination, when it may please as, of law to force. Pearl Harbor Six months before the U.S. launched its sneak military attack on Grenada, Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan observed in a speech at the National Humanities Center, "A measure of the current disorientation in American foreign policy derives from our having abandoned, for all practical pur- poses, the concept that international rela- tions ... can and should be governed by a regime of public international law." The New York Democrat cited his service on the Senate Select Committee on to i- ce, where CIA covert operations, in their nature violative of treaty law, were under constant review. "To mv recollec- tion," he said, "in six and more years of seeming v intermiitab e --closed_ hearings and briefings, I do not ever recall hearin a discussion of lezal o igations o any kind." In abandonin a conception of world or er that, if arguab e, was none tress _coherent. Mr. Moynihan concluded, the M 'asnotrz.K ej conception. No normative conception. t at is. If we don't believe in law, then what do we believe in? This mon I marks the 42nd anniversary of Pearl Harbor. Why is Dec. 7, 1941, a date that will live in infamy? Because on that day the Japanese launched, without warning, a sneak attack against the U.S. But at least Japan was picking on someone its own size. In Grenada we attacked, with- out warning, a hapless island of 110,000 people possessing neither army nor navy nor air force. Judging by the popular jubi- lation that followed this glorious victory, by the self-satisfaction of the administra- tion and by the ignominious collapse-with a few brave exceptions like Pat Moynihan, Alan Cranston, George McGovern, Gary. Hart-of the Democratic opposition, the in- vasion of Grenada is esteemed as "one of the proud moments of American history. Are we to conclude that Pearl Harbors are splendid when we are the perpetrators and wicked only when we are the victims? The administration has submitted the need to rescue American citizens as the pretext in international law for its action. The protection of U.S. citizens would in- deed be a legitimate reason for a rescue mission. But in this case the danger to. American citizens was not in advance of the invasion, but in consequence of it. President Reagan himself in his ad- dress to the nation confessed that the in- ya ers "had little intelligence information about conditions on the island." In any case, rescue missions-there have been at least 80 of them in our history-never be- fore required the invasion of a country, the , overthro ernment and the mili- ta occupation of its soil. Had the Soviet pion carried out a similar operation on the same pretext, no one would have been more rightly and righteously indignant over Soviet lawlessness than the current president of the U.S. The legal fig leaves offered by the ad- ministration have been so perfunctory as to imply a conviction that law is irrelevant to the American conduct of the Cold War. The Grenada invasion provides the answer to the question with which Sen. Moynihan concluded his speech in April. The Rea. gan administration has replaced the con- cept of a regime of public international law with the concept of the U.S. as a law unto itself.' Worse, some of us rejoice in the very boldness of the U.S. in liberating itself from the shackles of legal procedure. Even this admirable newspaper declared that the world's judgment of Grenada must not be confused by the scruples and technicali- ties of international lawyers. Now it may well be that the assump- tion by the U.S. of a lawless role in inter- national affairs will have in the short run an admonitory effect. H.R. Haldeman has STAT told us that President Nixon used to es- pouse what he called the "Madman The- ory," according to which other countries, if they thought the U.S. was capable of any- thing, would be more likely to do what we wanted. Doubtless the Madman Theory can -work for a while. It worked well en- ough for Hitler and Stalin. The invasion of Grenada has very likely had a chastening effect on Nicaragua and Cuba. But is it really the example we wish to set for the world? Are Hitler and Stalin now to be American models? The Madman Theory is degrading and corrupting for us. It de- means and disgraces the nation of Wash- ington and Lincoln. It can never form the basis for honorable and lasting peace. There are moments in history when the law of self-preservation must override all other considerations, whether of interna- tional or domestic law. As Justice Arthur Goldberg once wrote in a Supreme Court decision, the Constitution is "not a suicide pact." But these moments are exceedingly rare. Soviet nuclear weapons in Cuba in 1962 represented an infinitely greater threat to the U.S. than anything that took plate in Grenada, but the Kennedy admin- istration rejected the idea of a sneak mili- tary attack. What might the outcome for world peace have been had the current crowd been in power in 1962? No one in his senses can claim that the life of the U.S. was at stake in Grenada. What we end up with, rather, is the situa- tion well described by Abraham Lincoln in 1848: "Allow the President to invade a neighboring nation, whenever he shall deem it necessary to repel an invasion .. . and you allow him to make war at plea- sure..... If, today, he should choose to say he thinks it necessary to invade Can- ada, to prevent the British from invading us, how could you stop him? You may say to him, 'I see no probability of the British invading us' but he will say to you 'be si- lent: I see it, if you don't.' It is perhaps a measure of our decline as a democracy that we would no longer be much surprised if we picked up the news- paper tomorrow and read that President Reagan had invaded a new country-Nica-' ragua or Syria. For the Reagan Doctrine is dangerously elastic. Nearly every country' in the world contains American citizens to, be declared in potential danger. Nearly ev- ery country in the world can be defined as of strategic importance to American secu- rity-if not directly in itself, then indirectly- through the convenient doctrine of "credi- bility," by which every local conflict is in- vested with global significance and be- .c0n7uvUFo Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/29: CIA-RDP90-00552R000404440106-0