When Julian Assange was arrested, he was holding up a copy of Paul Jay’s book, “Gore Vidal’s History of the National Security State.” This mini-documentary is the original 2005 interview with Vidal, upon which the book is based. We are republishing on the occasion of the release of Julian Assange after five years in prison.
Narrator
We stand in the presence of an awakened nation. Mainly it is a new age.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
The bad news and the good news. The defeats and the victories. The changing fortunes of war.
Harry S. Truman
We’re going to maintain the military bases necessary for the complete protection of our interests and of world peace.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
We face a hostile ideology, global in scope, ruthless in purpose, and insidious in method.
John F. Kennedy
Let all our neighbors know that we shall join with them to uphold aggression or subversion anywhere in the Americas.
George W. Bush
By seeking weapons of mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger. They could provide these arms to terrorists, giving them the means to match their hatred. They could attack our allies or attempt to blackmail the United States.
Gore Vidal
Hollywood and Washington had always seemed to me, since I’ve spent a good deal of time in both politics and movies, there’s a symbiotic relationship. They both deal with illusions, and reality doesn’t often play much of a part in fictional narratives, which is, after all, what we do in a movie on the screen and what we do with a candidate in politics. They belong together.
The first person to realize that was Woodrow Wilson. He was trying to get us into World War I. You had to get Hollywood aboard to get them to make movies demonizing the Germans. And Hollywood never looked back or forward. And every President since has known that the movies, if you could harness them, were the way to get your program across, particularly if you wanted to go to war. That was the way to get people excited.
Roosevelt first had radio because he had a great speaking voice and everyone liked to hear the President. I’ll never forget this one. You’ll never hear this again from a President, but Singapore had just fallen to the Japanese. Tonight the news is all bad.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
So far, the news has been all bad.
Gore Vidal
Well, at that moment, the entire country, “we’ll help you, Mr. President. We want the news to be good for America again.” Oh, God. How he played the people, it’s superb. Then newsreels came along. He proved to be just as good at newsreels as he was as a voice. And he used to call them his Garbos. And you’ll see him sitting at his desk.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Through the news shown on the screen. I want to thank the many thousands who have telegraphed and written to me since the election.
Gore Vidal
Well, my little dog Fala has joined me here. You can see him sitting in the corner. He’ll join us in a minute, and they play. They had the little dog. He had his grandchildren. He had Eleanor [Roosevelt]. I mean, it was just glorious stuff.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
To all of you, I say we can now march forward, all of us together.
Gore Vidal
And he got the New Deal through and built up the fleets and the air force that defeated the Germans and the Japanese. He’s our first Emperor, and he did it through radio, and he did it through newsreels in those days, which would be like television now. He would have been just as good on TV. Except they wouldn’t let him on because he said substantive things. We’re sorry, Mr. President, but this is not the message that Westinghouse wants to put out.
The difference between Roosevelt and [Harry S.] Truman, his successor, is enormous. Roosevelt, in his first inauguration, says we have nothing to fear but fear itself.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
Gore Vidal
Then comes Harry Truman.
Harry S. Truman
There is a power, a monolithic power, in the world today. That power is communism forever on the march.
Gore Vidal
And he’s frightening us about this terrible enemy called Russia and communism. Just saw the difference; it’s night and day, night and day. Roosevelt hit the affirmative side and swept the nation. Truman got us deeper and deeper into great trouble and stirred the pot. And out of the pot comes [Joseph] McCarthy. Out of it comes the House on American Activities Committee. Out of it comes you’re not a good American. You are seen reading a book without moving your lips, that is a sure sign of a communist, and I speak as a U.S. Senator. That was the game.
Narrator
This our country and all its people could be in danger of nuclear attack. In minutes by enemy missiles. In hours, by enemy aircraft. Our cities, our farms, our factories.
Gore Vidal
Well, I think I saw through the myths of the Cold War almost from the beginning. I was a Washington political kid from a political family. The joker in the deck was Roosevelt’s death. Everyone who knew him knew he was dying. He was elected President four times. In the last race, it was clear that he was a dying man, but he had all his marbles. He had all of his marbles at Yalta. He got more out of [Joseph] Stalin than Stalin got out of him.
Narrator
Hoping to solve intricate problems of war and peace, President Roosevelt reaches the Yalta meeting.
Gore Vidal
Roosevelt, the master politician, had made an alliance with Stalin. Stalin, contrary to the propaganda, wanted to be a normal country with other normal countries. He got on with Roosevelt. He understood Roosevelt, and Roosevelt understood him. They were both emperors, and they were both continental powers. So they had hit it off, and they had a number of agreements that would have made Russia a much more civilized, modern, less tyrannous place. Then he drops dead, and the most incompetent little man you could dream of succeeds him.
Harry S. Truman
I have done as you do in the field when the commander falls. My duties and responsibilities are clear. I have assumed them. These duties will be carried on in keeping with our American tradition.
Gore Vidal
Suddenly, Harry Truman who understands nothing about international politics– he was a last-minute choice for Vice President by Roosevelt, who was trying to soothe the right-wing of the Democratic Party, particularly the South, which was racist and Democratic, as it is now racist and Republican. Roosevelt felt he had to hold on to that to hold on to Congress. So he said, “I’ll get rid of Henry Wallace.” Henry Wallace had been his Liberal Vice President, an intelligent and worldly man, and replaced him with Harry Truman, who had many virtues and many demerits. One being he just didn’t know what he was doing in the big league.
Truman proceeded to break every arrangement that Roosevelt had set up for peaceful coexistence with Stalin. And Truman thought, why not just stay armed all the time, thinking about all the money that would be for the military budget each year and how good that would be for General Electric and General Motors. We have remained armed ever since.
Narrator
Production board meetings that we have here in the United States are winning the battle of production.
Gore Vidal
Well, you can’t justify all this money being thrown away. Well, nothing is going to education, nothing to health care. You can’t justify it unless you find an enemy. Well, there are plenty of enemies if you look around for them, and we found them.
Truman was backed by a clever international lawyer called Dean Acheson, who was very empire-minded. He got Truman overexcited by Stalin and communism and how evil it was.
Narrator
Russia had occupied many new territories bringing additional millions of people under communist control and serving notice that Soviet Russia was now a world power to be reckoned with.
Gore Vidal
Truman fell for all of it, or he pretended to. They said, well, Russia’s on the march. They’ve lost 20 million people, and where are they going to march, too? They could barely get out of Middle Europa. They didn’t have enough gas or enough tanks to take their cannons, their artillery back to Russia. They had to have horses drag them back. They were just about finished, and yet we start this thing; the Russians are coming.
Narrator
Mr. Truman delivers his message on the state of the Union.
Harry S. Truman
This is an age when an unforeseen attack could come with unprecedented speed. We must be strong enough to defeat and thus forestall any such attack. For these reasons, we need well-equipped, well-trained armed forces for our own defence should the need arrive.
Gore Vidal
And then he devised the National Security State. Now the National Security State had about seven points to it. One was never negotiate honestly with the Russians. Two was total rearmament and constant rearmament, and develop the hydrogen bomb because they were going to get the atomic bomb one day. In other words, you created a totally militarized economy, which we are to this day.
When Truman announced the National Security State and this huge military build-up in peacetime, Senator [Arthur H.] Vandenberg said, well, while I agree with you about the menace of communism, but if you’re going to get after this long and expensive war, the money you want for a build-up, you’re going to have to scare the hell out of the American people.
Narrator
This boy will grow up acutely aware that there are forces at large alien to his way of life, and he has seen the face and forces of evil. Communism is a word he is learning to understand.
Gore Vidal
Truman said, don’t worry. First thing he did, loyalty oaths. All throughout the government, everybody had to swear a loyalty oath. Throughout the universities, throughout high schools, teachers, you got to go up and swear allegiance to the United States or else you’re a commie. I mean, we had imported fascism. And the only person to stand up against him was the true heir of Franklin Roosevelt, and that was former Vice President Wallace.
Truman was using a threat that the Russians were going to interfere in the Yugoslav affairs and Greek affairs. And Wallace said this is not a Greek crisis, as the administration likes to tell us; it’s not a Yugoslav crisis. This is an American crisis. We have a government that is now pledging itself and us to fight on the side of any government, no matter how terrible if it says it’s anti-communist or anti-Russian, we’re on their side. And we’re now demanding of every janitor and every schoolhouse in the United States to swear loyalty to the Union. We’ve never done this before. The fact that half the country had been involved in the military should have been quite enough to demonstrate the loyalty of the people of the United States.
Harry Truman is acting like a European dictator and getting away with it. Why? Because the rulers of the country, just the same as now, corporate America that makes its money out of armaments, and graft, and media, thought it was a good idea to frighten the people. The more scared they are, the more they’ll appropriate. More tanks you can sell.
Narrator
Here in Russia, you see the reason why we are spending billions of dollars in defense production. Why your family is paying the highest taxes in our history. The leaders of Russia tell us their only concern is the defense of their own nation. Is this so? Or are they ambitious for world conquest?
Gore Vidal
Everything was militarized to fight communism. Monolithic, atheistic, and godless; it’s much worse than atheistic. Communism forever on the march. So that changed the United States forever. We have never ceased to be a National Security State. We’ve kept on more and more armaments year after year, greater and greater appropriations for the military. So we are in the midst of an arms race which goes on even as you and I sit here and chat. We have been forever at war.
Meanwhile, the empire is chugging along. Harry Truman eventually goes away, and we get Dwight Eisenhower, and he said, thank god we have a President, me. Who understands the military, and they’ll steal everything in sight. These civilians don’t know anything about it, and everything they ask for they’re getting and will be bankrupt by the time they finish. So Eisenhower at least held back the Pentagon.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Good evening, my fellow Americans. We now stand ten years past the midpoint of a century that has witnessed four major wars among great nations. Three of these involve our own country. We have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportion.
Now this conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. We must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
Gore Vidal
And he said this is going to change everything, and the way our country is governed it’s going to change us politically. It will change us spiritually. And then part of the speech, which I’ve always loved, nobody ever quotes it. After all, he’d been President of Columbia University. He said the effect of all of this money coming to our universities, even though it’s for the Physics Department, the Nuclear Departments is going to affect all education. And if the universities are not the home of free investigation, suddenly our knowledge of the world is curtailed by this huge amount of money which will control the responses of everybody, including the History Department.
He didn’t say that, but that was his meaning. So that’s how that started. Did anybody pay attention? No, they didn’t.
Narrator
In the greatest story of a momentous year, John F. Kennedy defeated GOP standard-bearer Richard Nixon in one of the closest presidential elections on record. The youngest man ever elected President takes the burden from the oldest ever to hold the office as America enters the critical and challenging ’60s.
Gore Vidal
Along comes Jack Kennedy. And Jack was very bright about many things, but he was brought up in the house of a very right-wing family, without much imagination, about the rest of the world and without much knowledge of the rest of the world. But Jack was a quick learner. But he arrived with all these right-wing views. Well, where Eisenhower and Truman were two old, tough politicians, neither Truman nor Eisenhower believed in the threat of world communism, but they knew it played for the dumb, dumbs like nobody’s business.
Russians are coming. [Gasp] Communists. Godless, atheists? Godless, atheists. Oh, no. Does this mean that we’ll have to get up at five o clock every morning and commit abortions all day long, under the red flag? Yes, that’s what it means. The dumbest things were pumped into our poor people’s heads, and the Russians weren’t going anywhere this time.
We’re still talking about, well, Jack came to power in 1960. [Nikita] Khrushchev is trying to make changes. Khrushchev has already made his famous speech denouncing Stalin. He’s trying to start a new chapter. Jack, I’m afraid, believed in what the two old presidents knew was cynical nonsense with which they could get elected and get appropriations for the military and just have the country on a platter. Jack was genuinely high-minded. He wanted to free the world, just like [George H. W.] Bush, who loves freedom and liberty and so forth, and so on.
John F. Kennedy
Let the word go forth from this time and place to friend and foe alike that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans born in this century. Tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace, proud of our ancient heritage, and unwilling to witness or permit the small undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed and to which we are committed today, at home, and around the world.
Gore Vidal
National Security State under Kennedy blossomed, of course. He ordered after the Berlin Wall the biggest build-up in our history until then. It was larger than the one Roosevelt had ordered in 1940. His inaugural address gives it away; we’ll bear any burden to see that liberty, or whatever it was, triumphs around the world.
He saw himself in heroic terms. He wanted to make his mark. Believed in the Cold War, or he believed in a white knight versus the wicked knight. So I think he was more tolerant of the idea of war. He said once, where would [Abraham] Lincoln have been without the Civil War? Just another railroad lawyer? Well, that’s about it. I mean, he figured out wartime presidents just as the silly little thing we have now as President.
They know that’s how you make it in the history books. I remember talking to him when he came back from the Vienna Conference with Khrushchev, and I was full of the usual Liberal complaints. I said, but you know, there seems to be so really little an issue between our side and their side. I said it’s pretty clear Khrushchev isn’t marching anywhere. And Jack quite agreed to that, even though we had to pretend how dangerous the Soviet Union was and they were getting ahead of us. But he said, in this kind of politics, it is the appearance of things that matters.
So the National Security State was doing very well. So, in the long run, we go back to my notion that the only art form the United States has ever created is the TV commercial. That is our art form, And that’s how we control people. And it’s a world of illusions. And it’s a world of false claims.
George W. Bush
We’re fighting and winning the war on terror. Thank you all.
Gore Vidal
Now the National Security State still exists. Only it isn’t communism anymore; it’s terrorism.
George W. Bush
I signed the largest increase in defence spending in a generation.
Gore Vidal
If we had decent media, which we do not have or anything close, these people wouldn’t be allowed to get away with this stuff. They’d just be stopped.
George W. Bush
Iraq continues to flaunt its hostility toward America and to support terror. The Iraqi regime has plotted to develop anthrax, and nerve gas, and nuclear weapons for over a decade. States like these and their terrorist allies constitute an axis of evil arming to threaten the peace of the world.
Gore Vidal
What we’re told about ourselves and our great strengths and how much loved we are, forget it. Our strengths are there, but it’s the kind of strength that blows off your hand while you hold up the grenade. It’s a suicidal strength as well as a murderous one. Remember that practically everything that you’re told about other countries is untrue.
Colin L. Powell
Saddam Hussein is determined to get his hands on a nuclear bomb.
Condoleezza Rice
Iraq provided some training to Al-Qaeda.
Tony Blair
That threat is real.
Dick Cheney
There’s more there than we know.
Donald H. Rumsfeld
There isn’t any debate about it.
George W. Bush
I don’t know what more evidence we need.
Gore Vidal
Well, today, we’re in a peculiar limbo. Nine-Eleven proved to be a pretext for getting rid of the old republic, which has not been in very good shape for a long, long time. Now we’re in a strange, strange situation. There is nothing in our history to guide us. The world is running out of fossil fuels. We’ve got our eye on Iran. We have fields in Iraq. We have our eye on the pipelines that run through Afghanistan, and we have a dictatorial system as best personified by the U.S.A. Patriot Act, which just removes us of our Bill of Rights.
Do we just go further and further along the road toward total war? We’re sort of like somebody going along a minefield dropping matches, waiting to hear the bang. The bang might take us all out. I think everybody should take a sober look at the world about us. This is the most serious thing that has happened in the history of the United States. Knowledge is power. We need an honest new system.
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Gore Vidal was an American writer and public intellectual known for his epigrammatic wit. His novels and essays interrogated the social and sexual norms he perceived as driving American life.
The posting of this Gore Vidal interview, especially on the momentous occasion of Julian Assanges release from over two decades of false accusations and slanderous threats culminating in torturous confinement and illegal imprisonment by none other than the national governments and “higher” courts of the United States and Great Britain.
As an admirer of Vidal’s work and activism for over six decades, and of Assange’s like-minded more current efforts, I salute the work of theanalysis.news for championing the cause of truth and journalistic integrity. THANK YOU!
As Usual,
EA
Thanks for posting this reminder that critical analysis is not something “new and different.” Best to you and yours for this coming New Year!