Oliver Stone's Untold History of The United States (2012) s01e08 Episode Script

Reagan, Gorbachev & Third World: Rise of the Right

1 The american nation cannot, must not, and will not permit the establishment of another communist government in the western hemisphere.
If America's soul totally becomes poisoned part of the autopsy must read Vietnam.
Let us be united in peace let us also be united against defeat.
For General Electric, here is Ronald Reagan Good evening ladies and gentlemen tonight it's my pleasure to appear in the General Electric theater In 1970, attorney general John Mitchell gloated: 'This country is going so far right that you're not going to recognize it.
' But how much further to the right could the US go? In 1970 there was Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, nuclear threats, surveillance, sabotage, dirty tricks, official lies, racial polarization, crime, and still to come were war on drugs, Chile and Watergate.
But compared to the world that Ronald Reagan and George W.
Bush would usher in, one could almost look back nostalgically on the Nixon era.
Right-wing forces have always operated freely and openly in the dark chasms of American life where racism, militarism, imperialism and blind devotion to private enterprise festered.
The raw underbelly of fanaticism has spun groups as disparate as the Ku Klux Klan Nazi party the Liberty League the American First'ers the John Birch'ers the McCarthyite's and the Tea Party spilling either hatred, bigotry or simply ignorance of history.
Beginning with Nixon's courting of a new republican south and the success of George Wallace as a third party candidate these forces migrated from the fringes of American politics and the nether reaches of rationality to a new home in the republican party which gradually banished its once thriving moderate and liberal wings.
Nixon had once said, domestic politics interested him about as much as But on his watch, whether he liked it or not, 18 year-olds won the vote censorship declined, and gays and lesbians emerged from the shadows.
He established the EPA, the Environmental Protection Agency supported the equal rights amendment and new regulations governing the health of workers and even strengthen the voting rights act.
His former right-wing allies were belatedly recognizing that this was not the 1950s anti-communist hatchet man Richard Nixon they had known Though he was pulverizing southeast Asia, he horrified the right when he turned around and, seeking to ease the stresses of US land war in Asia, recognized red China in 1972.
And on top of that, he went to the Soviet union and signed the historic SALT 1 treaty, placing limits on missile and anti-missile systems.
When Nixon took the country off the gold standard and imposed wage and price controls in 1971, and then pulled all of remaining US troops out of Vietnam in '73, it seemed he had lost his mind and totally betrayed his base.
By the time of Watergate, Nixon had made far too many enemies on both left and right that he could afford.
Facing a probable impeachment, he resigned on aug.
9, 1974.
The presidency was now in the hands of the amiable Gerald Ford, a man who, Lyndon Johnson said, could not fart and chew gum at the same time.
As we can see the Ford popularity is certainly on a sharp rise here Ford announced that our long national nightmare is over.
But, sending all the wrong signals, pardoned Nixon: an absolute pardon onto Richard Nixon for all offenses against the US which he, Richard Nixon, has committed or may have committed.
But, even more troubling for the future was that, Nixon's fall brought out the deepest impulses of rage and revenge from the core of Nixon's new republican party.
His legendary anger became theirs, but now directed against the government itself.
Reinvigorated by anger at a so-called liberal media which had played such a toxic role in their mind in distorting Vietnam and driving Nixon from the presidency, a network of conservative think-tanks as well as rich foundations invested large sums of money to push for their agendas.
Among these was a radical return to the concept of privatization that had been, in their minds, destroyed by Roosevelt's loathed new deal.
Roosevelt's old enemies, the money class, were back.
The burgeoning right-wing network had little use for a relative moderate like Gerald Ford and itched to put a real right-winger like former governor Reagan of California into the white house.
Bowing to pressure, Ford and Donald Rumsfeld -a young congressman who'd made a name attacking the Soviets in the '60s- engineered a major cabinet check-up known as the Halloween Day Massacre in oct.
'75.
Rumsfeld, who Nixon had called a ruthless little bastard, took over Defense.
Kissinger, staying on at State, lost his national security post to gen.
Brent Scowcroft Bush took over the CIA and Dick Cheney, a protégé of Rumsfeld's, replaced him as Chief of Staff.
Vice-president Nelson Rockefeller, a moderate, was forced off the ticket in '76.
Rumsfeld helped block a new SAL treaty, and Ford banished the term détente, associated now with Henry Kissinger from the white house.
But the people wanted change, and in the interest of the presidency in 1976, the governor Jimmy Carter a former peanut farmer and long time sunday school teacher from Plains, Georgia who narrowly defeated Ford.
Carter was anything but a typical candidate.
He sought to end the arms race, revive détente, restore America's moral standing and learn from Vietnam, saying: Never again shall our country become militarily involved in the internal affairs of another nation, unless there's a direct and obvious threat to the security of the US.
He said at the UN that the US would cut its nuclear arsenal by 50% if the Soviets did the same.
Following his gut, Carter scored some significant early successes.
He helped secure the Camp David Accords in 1978 leading to Israeli withdrawal from Egyptian territory captured in the 1967 war and established diplomatic relations between the two countries.
He negotiated a SALT 2 treaty with the Soviets mandating a reduction in nuclear missiles and bombers.
But Carter knew little about foreign policy and had been deeply influenced by the ideas of Zbigniew Brzezinski, his national security advisor.
An professor and fierce anti-communist he tapped the rising, though still little known, Carter from membership in the a group founded by Chase Manhattan Bank chairman David Rockefeller in 1973 to bolster the world capitalist order.
With 180 elite members and offices on 3 continents, most rejected the rigidity of right-wing anti-communism.
But Brzezinski, like Kissinger before him, marginalized the moral liberal secretary of State, and engineered a return to cold war orthodoxy.
He bragged about being the first Pole in 300 years in a position to really stick it to the Russians.
Massive US arms sales to Iran, half of all US sales worldwide, had kept the unpopular Shah in power, and despite his dismal human rights record Carter shared a lavish new year's eve in Tehran: There is no leader with whom I have a deeper sense of personal friendship.
Iran, because of the great leadership of the Shah, is an island of stability in one of the more troubled areas of the world.
Within a year the Shah had imposed martial law, and his troops shot down 100s in the street.
Fearing that Soviets would occupy Iran's oil fields in this chaos Brzezinski warned Carter that the US now faced Two months later the Shah fled for his life.
Ayatollah Khomeini returned from exile demanding the Shah's return to face trial.
Carter, under pressure from Brzezinski, Kissinger and David Rockefeller allowed the Shah into the US for medical treatment of his cancer infuriating the Iranian public: The US embassy in Tehran has been invaded and occupied by Iranian students.
Americans inside have been taken prisoner.
In november, students burst into the embassy and seized 52 american hostages whom they held for 444 days, effectively destroying Carter's presidency.
Crises seemed to be flaring all over.
Central america, after suffering decades of poverty, brutality and corruption under US backed right-wing dictators, was ready to explode by the late 1970s.
In Nicaragua, the Sandinistas seized power in july of '79 Latin America’s first successful revolution since Cuba's 20 years earlier and began an ambitious program of land, education and health reform.
Brzezinski argued for military intervention fearing the revolutionary would establish forces in neighboring Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador where 40 families had ruled for over a century.
Right-wing death squad murders and tortures increased and the progressive Salvadorian archbishop Oscar Romero was assassinated in 1980.
Later that year the FMLN insurgents were on the brink of another successful revolution when Carter, pressured by Brzezinski, restored significant needed military aid to the government.
Another storm was brewing in Afghanistan, an impoverished remnant from the British empire where life expectancy was 40 years.
Only 1 in 10 could read and most lived as no-man's or farmers in muddy villages scarcely different from when Alexander the Great had passed through 2000 years before.
It was in july 1979 that Brzezinski had Carter sign a little known directive for secret aid to the Islamic fundamentalist opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul.
In that day Brzezinski proudly noted that His intention was to drag them into their own Vietnam.
Brzezinski understood the Soviet's fear that the Afghan insurgency might spark an uprising by the 40 million muslims in Soviet central asia.
He compared it in its effect on the US to a communist insurgency in Mexico.
The Soviets concluded correctly that the americans were instigating the insurgency.
possibly with help from China.
But they still hesitated to intervene.
Veteran foreign minister Gromyko knew that With their top heavy bureaucratically ossified economy stagnating, the Soviets saw arms control as their chance to finally escape the wartime treadmill.
The provocation worked.
President Brezhnev, a Stalin unimaginative Soviet leader insisting the war would be over in 3 to 4 weeks, launched a full scale invasion of 80,000 Soviet troops into Afghanistan on christmas day 1979.
The inexperienced Carter hyperbolically called the invasion the greatest threat to world peace since WW2.
A NY Times columnist felt compelled to remind them of the Berlin blockade, the Korean war, the Suez crisis, Cuban missile crisis, and the war in Vietnam.
Carter withdrew the US ambassador and took SALT 2 off the table.
He cut trade between the two countries, banned US athletes from the upcoming Moscow olympics and sent his defense secretary Chinese leaders about military ties.
He effectively extended the Truman doctrine to the adjacent Persian gulf region, including Iran which now would be regarded as a US vital interest.
Muslim nations condemned the Soviet aggression.
Saudi Arabia sent money, and thousands of young muslims from all over the middle east now began the journey to Afghanistan for jihad, holy war against the Soviet infidels.
Brzezinski traveled to meet with the dictators of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to work out financial and military aid for the holy warriors who were particularly upset over the Soviet supported government's reforms to emancipate and educate their women.
Brzezinski has repeatedly denied having any regrets about fueling Islamic fundamentalism which would blow back against US on 9/11 and plague it for years to come.
because your cause is right and God is on your side.
Later he would say: What is more important in world history? Taliban or the collapse of the Soviet empire? Some agitated muslims or the liberation of central europe and the end of the cold war? At what price? In seeking to destroy the Soviet empire, Brzezinski instead destroyed Jimmy Carter's presidency.
Carter never fulfilled his promise to reduce defense spending increasing it from 115 billion to 180 billion.
Carter more than doubled the number of warheads aimed at Soviet union.
Carter even repudiated his earlier criticism of the Vietnam war.
Vietnam veterans became Carter's policies ironically in the end laid the groundwork for the even more extreme actions that Ronald Reagan would bring to the white house.
It's morning again in America.
Today more men and women will go to work than ever before in our country's history.
With interest rates and inflation down more people are buying new homes and new families can have confidence in the future.
America today is prouder, and stronger, and better.
Why would we want to return to where we were less than 4 short years ago? There's never been a president quite like Ronald Reagan with his charm, humor, elegant good looks and driving compulsion to transform America into a conservative fortress.
A foxy home-spun actor turned General Electric pitchman, Reagan served 8 years as California's governor.
He was underrated by many as a B-actor in Hollywood, and titled his first autobiography 'where's the rest of me?' based on his 1942 movie Kings Row, a gothic classic about small town America.
In the film, his legs were amputated by his girlfriend's sadistic surgeon father.
The film marked his transition from new deal liberal to cold war conservative.
He had discovered his missing half in his fight against communism; a fight that, as president of the Screen Actors Guild, turned him into a highly public crusader against the red menace as well as a secret FBI informer who denounced colleagues as communists.
Political consultant Roger Ailes who would later create Fox News, drawing on tactics he'd developed with Richard Nixon, reminded the 73 year-old Reagan 'he got elected on themes, not details'; happy thoughts like Morning in America, or the puritan belief that America was the shining city on a hill.
His critics were 'defeatists who would blame America first' or there were dark fictional themes such as We're in greater danger today than we were in the day after Pearl Harbor.
Our military is absolutely incapable of defending this country.
The facts never quite mattered if there was a good punch line.
He loved to repeat the story about the Chicago welfare queen with 80 names, 30 addresses and 12 social security cards who had a tax-free income of 150,000 dollars.
He preferred films to reading and had visual aids, especially prepared on issues such as the Soviet threat or the problem in the middle east.
For meetings even with a few people in the room, Reagan would read his lines like an actor from 3x5 index cards.
At one meeting with US automobile leaders he read from the wrong cards until he finally caught on.
He liked to go home to his beloved wife Nancy punctually late in the afternoon, exercise, eat dinner in his pyjamas, watch TV and be in bed early.
There is one sign the Soviets can make that would be unmistakable, that would advance dramatically the cause of freedom and peace.
General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization, come here to this gate.
Mr.
Gorbachev, open this gate.
Mr.
Gorbachev, tear down this wall.
Less than 2.
5 years later, the wall did indeed come crashing down.
And by 1991 the Soviet empire had collapsed.
The cold war was over.
Many credit Reagan with winning it.
Admirers lionized him as the greatest president since WW2, one of the greatest ever.
But the real story is far more complex.
Reagan left behind a bloody trail of death and destruction, but also came excruciatingly close to achieving enduring greatness.
Reagan's disengaged style and lack of foreign policy experience left a void that the administration's anti-communist hawks scrambled to fill.
Leading the pack was William Casey.
The movies could not have invented a man like Casey.
A catholic knight of Malta, he attended mass daily and proclaimed Christianity to anyone who asked his advice.
Statues of the Virgin Mary filled his mansion on Long Island.
He'd been the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and before that he'd worked with the OSS.
According to Casey's deputy Robert Gates the Reaganites saw their arrival as a hostile takeover.
Casey had read Claire Sterling's The Terror Network, and was convinced that Soviet union was behind international terrorism including the recent assassination attempt on the Polish born Pope and a fellow catholic.
The head of the CIA's office for Soviet analysis Melvin Goodman said that much of Sterling's evidence was based on black propaganda anti-communist allegations that the CIA itself had planted in the european press.
Yet, Casey told analysts that he'd learned more from Sterling than from all of them.
Al Hague, the hardcore secretary of State, agreed and thought the Soviets had tried to assassinate him when he was the head of NATO in europe.
Experts knew that the Soviets actually disapproved of terrorism and had not supported the nihilist terrorist groups of western europe.
But Casey and Gates purged analysts who refused to knuckle under, crippling the agency in such a way that, when the Soviet union fell apart later in the decade, the agency was unable to predict it.
At his first press conference using the language of John F.
Dulles and James Forrestal, Reagan quickly reversed almost 2 decades of progress in easing cold war tensions when he declared that the only morality they recognize is what will further their cause meaning they reserve under themselves the right to commit any crime to lie, to cheat in order to attain that America's morality, he insisted, was different: I'd always felt that from our deeds it must be clear to anyone that Americans were a moral people who had always used our power only as a force for good in the world.
In reality, Reagan's election encouraged right-wing elites throughout the 3rd world to take back perceived losses of land or power resulting from indecisive American leadership since Vietnam.
The methods would be cruel.
The colonel who headed the US advisory team in El Salvador said an apt description of US leaders' efforts to test their new post-Vietnam counter-insurgency doctrines and defeat uprisings without a large commitment of US forces.
Many top Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan army officers were trained at the US Army School of the Americas in Panama, and then after 1984 Fort Benning in Georgia.
The emphasis on counter-insurgency techniques honed from Vietnam was expanded.
Visiting neighboring Honduras in 1982 Reagan met with Guatemalan president gen.
Efrain Rios Montt, a born-again evangelical Christian who'd recently seized power in a coup.
Reagan complained that Montt had received a bum rap: I know that president Rios Montt is a man of great personal integrity and commitment.
Roughly 100,000 Mayan peasants living in the region of leftist insurgency would be killed between 1981 and '83 by the Guatemalan army.
Across the Nicaraguan border in Honduras, former members of Somoza's thuggish national guard gathered with Casey's assistance.
They plotted a return to power.
They called themselves the counter-revolutionaries or Contras.
The war began in march of 1982.
Congress then banned the use of government funds to overthrow the Sandinista government.
But Casey and NSC official Oliver North concocted a plot right out of WW2 OSS days; an elaborate, illegal operation aided by Israeli arms dealers.
The US sold missiles to its enemies in Iran at exorbitant prices and used the profits to fund the Contras with Latin American drug dealers often serving as intermediaries and receiving easier access to American markets in return.
The 15,000 men Contra army employing kidnapping, torture, rape and murder, targeted health clinics schools, agricultural cooperatives, bridges and power stations.
I was aware that resistance was receiving funds directly from third countries and from private efforts, and I endorsed those endeavors wholeheartedly.
But let me put this in capital letters I did not know about the diversion of funds.
Reagan and Casey lied to Congress about what the CIA was up to.
According to his deputy Gates, Casey was guilty of contempt of Congress from the day he was sworn in.
Reagan defended the covert war by saying in 1984: The Nicaraguan people are trapped in a totalitarian dungeon by a dictatorship made all the more dangerous by the unwanted presence of thousands of Cuban, Soviet block and radical Arab helpers.
He went so far as to call the Contras the moral equivalent of our founding fathers.
His moral equivalence were responsible for most of the deaths of the 20 to 30,000 Nicaraguan civilians during the war.
Similar atrocities occurred in neighboring El Salvador, where US trained troops stabbed de-capitated, raped and machine gunned 767 civilians in the village of El Mozote in late 1981, including 358 children under age 13.
Congress ended up funneling almost $6 billion to this tiny country making it the largest recipient of US foreign aid per capita in the world.
Wealthy landlords were running the right-wing death squads that murdered thousands of suspected leftists.
The death toll from the war reached 70,000.
I go, alright, just take her If you send her back they will kill her, rape her, mutilate her You don't know what it's like in El Salvador.
The Salvadoran population of US expanded 5 times, to half a million by 1990, many of these illegal entries.
Yet, Nicaraguan supposedly fleeing communist oppression, if not the Contra war, were allowed into the US.
Many Salvadorans would turn back.
Bogged down in protracted proxy wars in Nicaragua and El Salvador, and haunted by the memory of defeat in Vietnam which he called a noble cause, Reagan hungered for an easy military victory to restore Americans' self-confidence.
In 1983 a powerful truck bomb set off by the anti-Israeli terrorist organization Hezbollah, the Al-Qaeda of its time, blew up a US Marine barracks in Lebanon leaving 241 dead and dealing another devastating blow to US pride.
Two days later US troops invaded not Lebanon, but Grenada a tiny Caribbean island with 100,000 inhabitants.
Reagan claimed it was a Soviet-Cuban colony being readied as a major military bastion to export terror and undermine democracy We got there just in time.
As in one of his old Westerns, he sent 7,000 american soldiers into battle.
Then in media, supposedly for their own safety, he offered government footage instead.
The entire op was bungled from the start.
19 soldiers died and more than 100 were wounded, as a small force of poorly armed Cuban construction workers resisted.
9 helicopters were lost.
The invasion from a military POV was a farce, with the Army awarding almost 275 medals for valor to 7,000 troops of whom only about 2500 saw a limited form of combat.
Well lt.
what are we waiting for? Alright you devil dogs let's take this fucking hell Reagan proudly announced: our days of weakness are over.
our military forces are back on their feet and standing tall.
Halfway across the world, Reagan and Casey transformed Carter's limited support for the Afghan insurgents into the CIA's largest covert operation to date, totalling over $3 billion.
They channeled aid through Pakistan's general Zia, a corrupt dictator who funneled the arms and dollars to the most extreme Afghan-Islamist faction under Gulbuddin Hekmatyar a man of legendary cruelty whose forces were rumored to patrol the bazaars of Kabul throwing viles of acid in the faces of women not wearing full burkas and specialized in skinning prisoners alive.
The CIA provided the insurgents between 2000-2500 US made Stinger missiles.
The US helped both sides in the bloody Iran-Iraq war.
Reagan in 1983 sent special envoy Donald Rumsfeld to Baghdad to re-assure Saddam Hussein of US support.
Under a license from the commerce committee US companies shipped several strains of anthrax later used in Iraq's biological weapons program and insecticides for chemical warfare.
As president, Reagan persisted in the scare talk: So in your discussions of the nuclear freeze proposals I urge you to beware the temptation of pride, the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil.
Let us be aware that, while they preach the supremacy of the state, declare its omnipotence over individual man and predict its eventual domination of all peoples on the earth, they are the focus of evil in the modern world.
In late '82, although US was ahead in every meaningful category, he said: Today, in virtually every measure of military power, the Soviet union enjoys a decided advantage.
And he amped up the defense spending which, by 1985, had increased 35% over 1980 expenditures.
The US arsenal now contained 11,200 strategic warheads, to the Soviet's 9,900 New and upgraded weapon systems rolled off assembly lines including the long delayed and very costly MX program which moved missiles around loops that hid their precise location, making them invulnerable to a Soviet first strike.
Despite massive protests throughout Europe, the US deployed ground launched cruise missiles to Britain, and Pershing 2 missiles to west Germany in november '83.
Some Soviet officials were convinced that a US attack was imminent as relations reached their lowest point in more than 2 decades.
To finance this, he slashed federal support for discretionary programs effectively transferring 70 billion from domestic programs to the military.
He waged war on labor and the poor: If they do not report for work within 48 hours, they have forfeited their jobs and will be terminated.
busting the Air Traffic Controllers union, meanwhile giving elegant parties in the white house for his millionaire friends.
A sense of the 1890's Gilded Age, the Four Hundred of American Society returned to Washington.
In june of '82 almost a million people rallied against the arms race in NY City's Central Park.
Among them was a young Colombia undergraduate named Barack Obama.
The movement unnerved Reagan who saw it as a serious threat to his re-election.
Despite all his bluster, Reagan too feared the possibility of war which he associated with the biblical armageddon.
After watching the enormously popular 1983 ABC tv movie The Day After Reagan wrote in his diary that it Whether influenced by his wife or her astrologer we don't know, but concerned about the bad blood he may have engendered Reagan began to rethink his approach to the Soviet union.
He later wrote in his memoirs: 3 years had taught me something surprising about the Russians.
Many were genuinely afraid of America and Americans.
Incredibly, if this diary is to be believed, it had never dawned on president Reagan that the Soviets might indeed fear a US first strike.
Hoping possibly to appease the growing anti-nuclear sentiment in march of 1983, Reagan proposed the strategic defense initiative, SDI a space-based defense shield around the nation itself; or as his critics called it, Star Wars.
It isn't about retaliation, it's about prevention.
It isn't about fear, it's about hope.
And in that struggle, if you'll pardon my stealing a film line, the force is with us.
The fantasy of star wars became an enormously expensive anti-ballistic missile system.
Despite the fact that no such Soviet project existed, the pentagon had begun research in the 1970s to counter a supposed Soviet breakthrough in energy beam weaponry.
In march of 1985, an extraordinary development changed the course of history.
A 54 year-old agricultural expert like Henry Wallace years before Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet union.
Like Khrushchev, he had survived with his diplomacy, with luck and with a rare degree of honesty, a brutal obstacle course of inefficiency and lies.
He'd travelled wildly in the west and, like Khrushchev, sought above all to improve the lifes of his people.
He saw the problem with clarity.
To achieve parity with the US, the Soviets were spending nearly a quarter of their gross domestic product on defense.
Defense production consumed a highly disproportionate amount of the Soviet budget.
Their planned economy, which had stagnated since the late 1970s, was run by a military-industrial academic establishment immune from reality.
To revitalize society, he knew he would have to slash military spending.
Gorbachev set out to end the arms race and redeploy resources.
He also took steps to end the war in Afghanistan, a conflict, he thought, from the beginning was a fatal error and a bleeding wound.
As a very young man he'd witnessed the horrors of war, and in a series of extraordinary letters to Reagan proposed, like Henry Wallace 40 years earlier, friendship and peaceful competition.
Reagan responded encouragingly.
The two leaders met for the first time in Geneva in november '85 connecting on a human level, if not a political one.
Gorbachev continued writing letters through 1986 calling for the elimination of all nuclear weapons by 2000.
It didn't change Reagan's mindset.
The US announced plans for a new series of nuclear tests and increased support for the mujahideen in Afghanistan.
In oct.
'86 Reagan and Gorbachev met in Reykjavik, Iceland The 2 leaders would come within a few words of changing history forever.
Gorbachev offered a stunningly bold set of disarmament proposals.
Even Paul Nitze, who had done so much to harm relations between 2 countries, observed that the Soviet proposal was Nitze and secretary of State George Schultz urged Reagan to accept a sweeping arms control deal.
Reagan turned to hardliner Richard Perle who feared such a deal would strengthen the Soviet economy.
Perle warned that the agreement would effectively kill Reagan's SDI or Star Wars plan.
Perle and other advisors knew Reagan's vision of SDI was a pipe dream, a fantasy.
Only Reagan believed it would work.
When negotiations stalled, Gorbachev urged Reagan to act boldly.
Reagan shocked observers, 'it would be fine' he said, 'if we eliminated all nuclear weapons'.
Schultz agreed: let's do it.
Gorbachev said he was ready to eliminate nuclear weapons if Reagan restricted SDI testing to the laboratory for 10 years.
Gorbachev and Soviet scientists knew that SDI would do nothing to protect US from a full scale Soviet attack, but feared US moves to weaponize space and recoiled at the thought of giving up the anti-ballistic missile treaty, the only tangible constraint upon the arms race.
Reagan explained that confining tests to the laboratory would damage him politically at home.
They had reached an impasse.
The meeting ended.
As they were leaving the building Gorbachev tried one last time Mr.
president, I'm prepared to go back inside right now and sign the documents we already agreed upon if you drop your plans to militarize space.
Reagan answered reportedly: I'm very sorry.
The US and Russia had come within a hair's breadth of beginning the process of eliminating nuclear weapons thwarted by a Star Wars fantasy, that had hardly entered the lab.
in 1986.
Gorbachev was furious and blamed the failure on Reagan's plan to exhaust the Soviet union economically through an arms race the US subsequently spent well over $100 billion, with final cost projected to exceed $1 trillion.
With the issue of multiple decoys overwhelming this system, among other issues, the creation of an effective Strategic Defensive Initiative to this day is still highy uncertain.
Both sides hoped to revive the talks, but before that could happen a scandal that same month rocked Reagan's administration.
In oct.
of '86 a cargo plane was shot down over at Nicaragua the only survivor admitted it was a CIA operation.
Congressional hearings revealed an administration up to its eyeballs in illegality, corruption, blundering and subterfuge involving American hostages in Lebanon, arms sales to both Iraq and Iran, ill-fated attempts to cultivate non-existent moderates in Tehran and collaboration with a whole set of unsavory characters including Manuel Noriega in Panama.
In a flagrant violation on Congress' ban on government support to overthrowing the Nicaraguan government, Americans also learned that the CIA mined Nicaraguan harbors which provoked the conservative icon sen.
Barry Goldwater to scold Bill Casey I'm pissed off, he wrote, this is an act of violating international law it's an act of war.
Details of the murky convoluted operation consumed much of Reagan's last 2 years.
Pathetically he told a news conference that he was not fully informed of the Iran policy, one aspect of which was seriously flawed.
that so much of this can go on and the president not know it, he is the president of the US, why doesn't he know? because somebody didn't tell him, that's why It was apparent that he had little grasp of and less control over what his underlings were up to: A few months ago I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages.
My heart and my best intentions still tell me that's true.
But the facts and the evidence tell me it is not.
As the Tower board reported, what began as a strategic opening to Iran deteriorated in its implementation into trading arms for hostages.
This runs counter to my own beliefs, to administration policy and to the original strategy we had in mind.
There are reasons why it happened.
But no excuses.
It was a mistake.
As an apology, it wouldn't have worked for Nixon.
But, perhaps Ronald Reagan had too kindly an aura to have to defend himself much less go to prison.
And the Washington establishment apparently concluded that the country could not withstand another impeachment or forced resignation and thus, allowed Reagan to serve out his term.
He left office a befuddled old man.
His subordinates were not so lucky.
Among those convicted of crimes were 2 national security advisors, one of whom attempted suicide, as well as Oliver North and asst.
secretary of State Elliott Abrams who would re-emerge in the 2nd Bush administration.
Defense secretary Weinberger, Abrams and several others were convicted or indicted, but pardoned by the next president.
The CIA director cheated his fate, dying of a brain tumor the day after the hearings began.
Vice-president George Bush managed to avoid prosecution.
He insisted he was but in his private diary, which he never thought he'd be forced to release, he admitted before the scandal began to break As a result, the independent council's final report noted the criminal investigation of Bush was regrettably incomplete.
In the midst of this sordid affair Gorbachev wanting to salvage something came to Washington in dec.
'87 and signed the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty, a major milestone.
It was the first agreement ever to destroy an entire class of nuclear weapons one in which the Soviet union had superiority.
In Afghanistan, Soviet withdrawal began in may 1988.
When the Soviets sought it out the US on collaborating to curb Islamic extremism the US, having achieved its goals, washed its hands of the problems that it had helped to create.
Up to 20,000 Arabs had flooded into Pakistan to join the jihad against the Soviet infidels, among them a very young Saudi construction heir able to support an army of volunteers, Osama Bin Ladin.
Thousands more flocked to Pakistan's madrasas where they were indoctrinated in radical Islam and recruited for jihad often with books produced in Omaha, Nebraska, with USAID funding and distributed by the CIA.
The Saudi's in the 1980s spent $75 billion to spread their brand of Wahabi extremism.
A million Afghans had died in the war.
5 million, 1/3 of the population had fled to Pakistan and Iran.
In the late '80s Islamists linked to Pakistani intelligence seized control of Afghanistan.
One Rand Corp.
analyst said that the US had to throw the worst crazies against the Soviets.
The reason we don't have moderate leaders in Afghanistan today is because we let the nuts kill them all.
Among the victims of these American armed and trained fanatics were Afghan women who were driven back into the dark ages.
Warned repeatedly that the fanaticism he was unleashing would threaten US interests, Bill Casey insisted the partnership between Christianity and Islam would endure, and in the spring of 1985 even backed the mujahideen cross-border raids into the Soviet union and the hopes inciting Soviet muslims to revolt.
Although Reagan left office in near disgrace, conservatives have annointed him as one the nation's great presidents crediting him with restoring America's faith in itself, after the failed presidencies of Johnson, Nixon, Ford and Carter.
But, what is Reagan's real legacy? Once a Roosevelt democrat, he developed an extreme contempt for government that was legendary.
Yet, he spent enormous sums on the military while cutting social programs for the poor.
He reduced taxes on the wealthy, doubled both the military budget and the national debt, and in a revolutionary change transformed the US from the world's leading creditor nation in 1981 into the biggest debtor nation by 1985.
He deregulated industries, eroded environmental standards, defiantly ripping down the solar panels that Jimmy Carter had put on the white house roof, weakened the middle class, busted unions, heightened the racial divides, widened the gap between rich and poor greed, for lack of a better word, is good and abetted companies in shipping manufacturing jobs abroad.
He deregulated savings and loans institutions, which led to the first giant too-big-to-fail government bail-outs of troubled banks, and failed savings and loans which by 1995 would cost the taxpayers 87 billion dollars.
Under the guise of privatization and Reagan's extolling of market's forces Wall st.
went on an enormous greed-is-good looting binge that resulted in oct.
1987 in the worst stock market collapse since the great depression.
In a parting gift to future conservatives in 1987 the FCC, with Reagan's help, repealed the fairness doctrine which had required broadcasters since 1940's to give adequate and fair coverage to opposing views on issues of public importance.
As a result, Rush Limbaugh and talk radio exploded on the scene finding a massive audience.
This and the gradual loosening of the limitations on the number of stations a company could own had, by 1996, enabled the growth of a right-wing media empire.
With it came a number of interlocked well-funded conservative think tanks that helped shape a new Washington group think.
Playing up fears, resentments and hatred of government by the end of the '90s Clear Channel, Rupert Murdoch's Fox News, Talk Radio Network, Salem Radio, the USA Radio Network, and Radio America as well as the proliferation of cable TV networks had created a movement that would dramatically lower the standards of Amerian political discourse, and in general doomed prospects for progressive change.
The Hoover institution at Stanford a respected conservative mecca described Reagan as a man whose spirit seems to stride over the country watching us like a warm and friendly ghost.
Even democratic presidents like Clinton and Obama, whether pandering to conservative forces or suffering from historical amnesia, would bow to pressure to flaunt their religiosity, extol the virtues of a free capitalist market place, perpetuate the myth of the universal middle class and trumpet the notion of American exceptionalism.
They would feed the insaitable appetite of the military-industrial complex, expand the search for threatening enemies at home and abroad, and move heaven and earth to maintain the resulting empire.
Even in Nicaragua, those scolded Reagan won the long contra war, wrecking its economy and exhausting the local population who would soon lose faith in the Sandinista's ability to bring progress to the country.
By 1990, the religious pro-Washington candidate helped by US funding as well as its embargo triumphed in a democratic election allowed by the supposedly communist Sandinistas who stepped aside peacefully.
As far as Reagan's much role in winning the cold war, the lion's share of credit goes to Mikhail Gorbachev, a true visionary, and it turns out the real democrat.
If Reagan had entered into the sincere partnership offered by Gorbachev as Roosevelt did with Stalin in WW2 the world would have been transformed.
But Ronald Reagan, at the least, let the chance to rid the world of nuclear weapons slip through his fingers because he wouldn't let go of a space fantasy.
Appreciating Gorbachev's extraordinary effort, the leading Soviet expert on US warned his American counterparts: We will do the most horrible thing to you.
We will leave you without an enemy.
Unfortunately, he was wrong.
We're dealing with Hitler revisited.
A totalitarianism and a brutality that is naked and unprecedented in modern times.
And that must not stand.

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