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The Fascinating Reagan
Letters
By Andrew Sullivan
[Sunday Times, September 28, 2003] |
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Public life
is a strange thing. We think we know people; we judge them; we psychoanalyze them; we
parody and idolize them. I grew up watching Spitting Image versions of Ronald Reagan. He
was a senile, slobbering fool. He was basically illiterate, knew nothing and wanted to
blow up the planet. At best, he was an actor whose grasp of politics or economics or
diplomacy or anything faintly resembling intellectual life was close to zero.
Even when the extraordinary success of his policies sunk in - the peaceful victory
of the West in the Cold War, the resuscitation of the American economy - it was still hard
to think of him as truly the architect, someone self-aware, self-critical, astute.
And now we have the letters. Hundreds and hudnreds of them - published last week
and extracted in Time magazine. The headlines were all about his confession of sexual
anxiety, and how he managed to overcome feelings of sexual guilt in part by referring to
the (now debunked) research of Margaret Mead on the Polynesians. But when you actually
start reading the letters, it's hard not to be taken aback by something else.
Reagan was a highly articulate, well-read and subtle man. The range of his interests, the
extent of his knowledge and understanding of world events and history, his grasp of detail
are all completely counter to the image we have long held. From developments in Communist
China to the latest economic figures, from isolated dissidents he helped free from the
Soviet Gulag to an intricate account of how the Iran-Contra affair escaped his political
management, we find a man far more clued in than we had been led to believe. Private
letters are among the most intimate of a public person's output. They can reveal more
about a person than many other public documents. And in this case, they really do.
He was extraordinarily humble. Even while in office, he would take hours out of his day to
hand-write detailed and earnest replies to complete no-bodies. After a few hours devouring
the book, I couldn't find a single letter in which he didn't try to end on a conciliatory
or friendly note.
The intelligence of the man is undeniable. There's a detailed letter setting Professor
Arthur Laffer right on petrol taxes; there's a complicated analysis of spending trends in
his administration to another irked correspondent; there's a long explanation of the
crossed wires that led him to pay tribute to dead SS Officers at a cemetery in Bitburg,
Germany. And there's sharp honesty about his strategy for defeating the Soviets as early
as 1982. He tolerated the deficits, he explained, for a long-term reason: "I don't
underestimate the value of a sound economy but I also don't underestimate the imperialist
ambitions of the Soviet Union... I want more than anything to bring them into realistic
arms reduction talks. To do this they must be convinced that the alternative is a buildup
militarily by us. They have stretched their economy to the limit to maintain their arms
program. They know they cannot match us in an arms race if we are determined to catch up.
Our true ultimate purpose is arms reduction." At the time, he was pilloried as a
warmonger by the nuclear freeze movement. Later, critics were stunned by his apparent
volte-face into peace-making. But he knew what he was up to from the beginning. And now we
know for sure.
Of whom is he most critical in private? The press, of course! His recurring metaphor -
actually, it's a constant metaphor - is "lynch mob." And if you enter into the
world of these letters, and the genuinely well-intentioned, kind and humane man behind the
caricature, you begin to get an idea of why he loathed them. But he's also aware of how
irresistible the media can sometimes be. In a letter to Nixon, he recounts, "I'm
always reminded of the Hollywood days and how the people in our business would read the
gossip columns and your first reaction was always how dishonest they were about yourself,
but two paragraphs later you're believing every word when they talk about someone
else."
Of course, this world reflects his own view of reality, and that of the editors of the
volume. But it still runs directly counter to some preconceptions. What, for example, are
we to make of the stereotype of a lazy president, always napping, watching movies rather
than preparing for summits when you come across a passage like this: "This president
doesn't have a nine to five or nine to three schedule, nor does he have a five day week. I
take the elevator up to the living quarters in the White House with reports, briefings,
and memorandums for which there is no reading time during the day. I spend my time until
'lights out' trying to absorb all of that. The same is true of the weekends - when I'm not
attending a summit conference or making a speech somewhere." Reagan's biographers
tend to back him up on this. But Reagan himself used to joke about his own idleness. In
fact, it was a standard laugh-line of his. Was it all a ruse?
But the tenor of a man is something letters do reliably reveal: and there's an old-world
civility to Reagan that has been lost in contemporary American politics, a dignity and
empathy with middle America that is as rare as it is touching. His diligence in
hand-writing long letters to obscure pen-pals, even while holding down the most stressful
and busy job on the planet, leaves me slack-jawed. And then there's the light way he wears
his Christian faith and the winning way he had with words: "During my first months in
office," he wrote an old friend, "when day after day there were decisions that
had to be made, I had an almost irresistible urge - really a physical urge - to look over
my shoulder for someone I could pass the problem on to. Then without my quite knowing how
it happened, I realized I was looking in the wrong direction. I started looking up instead
and have been doing so for quite a while now."
I wonder what, in a few decades' time, we'll be finding out about George W. Bush. |
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