The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 28°
Humidity: 71%
Wednesday, 12/23/09
Home »   Columnists »   Shribman, David » 


Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookMySpaceDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published November 08, 2009
Fall of BerlinWall ended time of tyrants

WE THOUGHT it meant the end of international contention. We thought it meant the nuclear menace was no more. We thought it meant Russia and America, the two powers of the future envisioned by de Tocqueville, could be friends. We thought it meant the end of espionage. We thought it might even be the end of history.

We were wrong, dead wrong, tragically wrong, about all of it, because we did what great powers always do when they are engaged in great contests. We thought that if only we could get through the Cold War (or World War I, or World War II) we would enter the sunlit uplands, where serenity and prosperity reigned, purchased effortlessly by (and this was the phrase that was brandished in the capital and from coast to coast two decades ago) the peace dividend. To paraphrase Churchill: Some peace. Some dividend.

The realists and pragmatists would deny us these reveries, but great struggles require great hopes and they almost always inspire great myths, and if you do not believe me, consider how bright a world was forecast by the abolitionists during the Civil War or by Woodrow Wilson during the Great War whose sad centenary we are only five years from commemorating. The peace is never as bright as the one we yearn for in the darkness of the storm.

All of this brings us to the fall of the Berlin Wall, which began 20 years ago tomorrow, and to an unrecognized truth:

Even though things have not turned out as we hoped they might in November, 1989 - the eagle has not laid down beside the bear, for example - this is still a world far preferable to the one we occupied at various points in the 20th century, when angry nations seethed at each other across militarized borders separating South and North Korea, and Vietnam, or across the Oder-Neisse Line, the Curzon Line, and multiple other lines in Europe's sand.

Today we face frightful challenges, some involving the economy and some involving national security (global terrorism adds a new form of instability to world affairs), but we ought to remember 1989 as one of the great divides in modern history.

It effectively brought to an end a world struggle, beginning with the Russian Revolution in 1917, between two competing economic systems and ideologies whose adherents believed were irreconcilable. This struggle was the leitmotif of almost all of 20th-century history, even if it was repressed between 1941 and 1945, when for reasons that were nothing more than opportunistic, the two systems united to fight a third system so odious the world had not seen its like before or since.

Indeed, from our vantage point in 2009, it is possible to say that all of history between 1917 and 1989 - the short 20th century, you might say - was preoccupied with this struggle.

It was a large motivation behind Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points; he wanted to offer the world a utopian vision that could compete with Lenin's. It was an important subtext in World War II; Churchill warned of an ascendant Soviet Union even as Franklin D. Roosevelt was cozying up to Stalin at Tehran and Yalta. And it dominated the life of nations big (the two Germanys) and small (Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Korea, Angola, Nicaragua, Grenada) for a half century after World War II.

We still have much to learn from the Cold War. Did we learn the lessons of Munich and appeasement well, or too well? Did our dedication to winning the Cold War allow us almost to lose the best part of the civil-rights movement, many of whose leaders were pilloried for being Moscow sympathizers? Did our zeal to protect freedom in a world where our rivals wished to destroy freedom help to erode our own freedoms? (This last is a question we still might ask.)

In those decades after Bernard Baruch first used the expression "Cold War" - in a speech written by Herbert Bayard Swope - tens of millions of people lived in danger or in fear. A younger generation may giggle smugly at the civil defense videos (all that diving under flimsy school desks), the crumbling and rotting supplies of government-issued biscuits (some of them no doubt still in the basement of post offices and courthouses) and the moral questions of the time (what to do when your neighbor bangs at the door of your fallout shelter?).

But in those days Americans had more to fear than fear itself.

The Cold War contaminated the nation's politics, transforming a two-bit Wisconsin politician from an insignificant man into a devastating noun. It warped the country's economy, stifled its artistic life, and stunted its cultural growth. All that, mind you, in the country with by far the better claim on the moral high ground.

Abroad, the Cold War fed the paranoia of one of the great dictatorships of history and gave a bad name to the liberation movements of dozens of colonial nations whose causes Americans might have embraced in a more rational world.

This is by way of saying that the end of the Cold War was truly one of the beautiful moments of history, even if we awoke to a world full of irredentism and post-ideological struggle that took the form of flames rising from Manhattan skyscrapers, a smoldering gash in the Pentagon, and a hole in a Pennsylvania farm field.

So much of this struggle is in the memory of those who live among us - memories of episodes like the Berlin blockade, the Berlin airlift, and the construction of the Berlin Wall, among many others. We remember these specifics but such memories crowd out the larger triumph, which is far bigger than the victory against Communism.

The collapse of the Berlin Wall brought an end to one of the most terrible eras of history, the time of the tyrants. We have more to celebrate than we think.

David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Contact him at: dshribman@post-gazette.com


Permanent Link

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

Press bias is toward change, controversy | 12/20/2009
Obama's smart but is he tough? | 12/06/2009
Obama is unique, as are all presidents | 11/29/2009
U.S. has much to relearn from China | 11/22/2009
U.S. not ready to decide on Afghanistan | 11/01/2009
Teacher of math, science, life turns 100 | 10/25/2009
The President's Frank Capra moment | 10/18/2009
History doesn't light a path to the future | 10/11/2009
Obama reflects on presidents who faced tougher times | 10/04/2009
Now that G-20 party's over, real work starts | 09/27/2009
WWII revisionism sparks a word war | 09/13/2009
Remembering the battle, 70 summers ago | 08/30/2009

Smith, Kathie
Updated: 5:23 am
Fan-food for football bowl games >>
Hendel, Barbara
Updated: 9:03 am
On the Town: Santa Claus is coming to town
PHOTO GALLERY >>
Walton, Tom
Updated: 4:51 am
A Christmas letter that is apart from all others >>
Emch, Dale
Updated: 8:06 am
6 years probably too long to wait to file injury claim >>
Smith, Kathie
Updated: 8:04 am
Serve savory crepes for a holiday brunch >>
Powell, Mary Alice
Updated: 8:01 am
Southern holidays, travel provoke thoughts of home >>
More columnist stories



Top AP News Videos

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
MOST READ STORIES
1.  Surprised UT professor lands in matrimonial state
2.  GOP rivals in Lucas County take dispute to state chief
3.  Holiday travelers face wintry conditions
4.  Man in standoff receives 7-year prison sentence
5.  Bell keeps police, fire chiefs
6.  Budget, nutrition, preparation: More than just picking food you like
7.  17 staffers to retire from Toledo-Lucas County Public Library
8.  Sylvania school site has critics
9.  25 to be inducted into Monroe hall of fame
10.  Spending plan for 2010 OK'd by Monroe County officials
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  Leo's writes final chapter for family's bookstore
2.  St. Luke's considers merger as losses rise
3.  Bedbug-sniffing canine putting a bite on vermin
4.  Equity firm to acquire Cedar Fair for $2.4B
5.  3 reportedly suspended for Rose Bowl
6.  Owner of Cedar Point to be sold
7.  Toledo mayor to honor civic involvement
8.  Bond set at $700,000 in shooting death of South Toledo man
9.  Freshman killed at train crossing; sophomore girl in critical condition
10.  Tennessee boy, 4, caught wandering streets with beer, stolen gifts


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2009 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®