Sunday, November 8, 2009

Opinion

Truman Firing of MacArthur Hurt Approval Rating but Saved War With Red China

Posted April 9, 2009

Robert Schlesinger, deputy editor for opinion at U.S. News, is author of White House Ghosts: Presidents and Their Speechwriters.

President Harry Truman spoke softly—so much so that some staff had to strain to hear him above the sound of White House renovation. "So the staff won't have to read it in the papers, I'm going to tell you that I fired MacArthur yesterday," Truman said.

President Harry Truman tells radio and television audiences that he has fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur as he broadcasts from the White House in Washington.
President Harry Truman tells radio and television audiences that he has fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur as he broadcasts from the White House in Washington.

It was an otherwise routine April 1951 White House staff meeting. But the statement—that a president with mid-20s approval ratings was relieving an American hero general of command in the midst of an unpopular war—was anything but normal. Frank Pace, the secretary of the Army, was in Asia, Truman added, and would tell MacArthur. "I'd kind of like to announce it myself," he added.

The decision was a long time coming. MacArthur, a former Army chief of staff, Medal of Honor winner, had commanded the Southwest Pacific Theatre in World War II, accepted Japan's surrender, and oversaw that country's occupation in the postwar years. When the Korean War broke out, MacArthur was put in command of United Nations forces against the North. MacArthur had mixed sometimes brilliant military strategy with public pronouncements that often bordered on (or flat out were) insubordination, issuing his own foreign policy dictates and trying to push the United States into a broader war with Red China.

Matters came to a head on April 5, 1951. House Minority Leader Joe Martin read a letter he had received weeks earlier from MacArthur discussing the situation in Asia. "Virtually all that he said was bound to provoke Truman," the historian David McCullough later wrote. Chinese nationalist forces under Chiang Kai-shek should be committed to the Korean war, MacArthur wrote. "Here [in Asia] we fight Europe's war with arms while the diplomats there still fight it with words," MacArthur had written. "If we lose the war to Communism in Asia the fall of Europe is inevitable, win it and Europe most probably would avoid war and yet preserve freedom.... There is no substitute for victory."

Several days of meetings ensued involving Truman's staff and members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, though by all outward appearances, McCullough later wrote, the White House assumed an "unnatural calm." Secretary of Defense George C. Marshall and Secretary of State Dean Acheson urged caution. "If you relieve MacArthur, you will have the biggest fight of your administration," Acheson told Truman. Vice President Alben Barkley and Supreme Court Chief Justice Fred Vinson advocated Marshall's firing. The president listened to his advisers but kept his own counsel. By Monday, April 9, Truman's advisers, including the Joint Chiefs, concluded that MacArthur must go.

Truman signed the orders and—the age of instant global communications still a half-century in the hazy future—arranged for their delivery to his wayward general. They were transmitted via State Department channels (at Marshall's suggestion—such momentous news would surely leak if sent through the military chain of command) to the U.S. ambassador in Korea, who would in turn give them to Pace. He would then personally deliver them to MacArthur. The news would be publicly announced the following morning.

Glitches immediately started popping up in the communications system. Pace was delayed getting the orders. Meanwhile back in Washington, a rumor surfaced at the Pentagon that a Chicago Tribune reporter was preparing to break the story of a "major resignation" in the Far East. White House aides started panicking—the general couldn't be allowed to quit prematurely. Truman, living at the Blair House while the White House was renovated, was informed late in the evening. ("They caught me in my pajamas," he later said.) He ordered a wire be sent directly to MacArthur informing him. "I wasn't going to let the SOB resign on me," Truman told aide George Elsey the next day. "I wanted to fire him!"

Operators on the White House switchboard started calling reporters at home: There would be a 1 a.m. press conference. By the time White House Press Secretary Joe Short was handing the order out to reporters, Truman was back at Blair House, asleep. He slept well: "The thing you have to understand about me is if I've done the right thing and I know I've done the right thing, I don't worry over it," he said. "There's nothing to worry over."

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Reader Comments

Error or "typo"

In the paragraph that begins, "Several days," is the following sentence correct?

"Vice President Alben Barkley and Supreme Court Chief Justice Fred Vinson advocated Marshall's firing."

Did the author mean Marshall or MacArthur? My reading is the latter person.

Treason?

MacArthur was not the great general he and his Republicans supporters want us to believe.

While his Inchon invasion in Korea did surprise the Reds and push them back this was not brain surgery, many generals could have done this.

But MacArthur was clearly aware that the Japanese probably would suddenly attack the Phillipines and he was asleep at the wheel, our planes were mostly shot up on the ground, and his considerable army was defeated in a few months.

It was his EGO that therefore led him to go back to the Phillipines, as if HE was going to save them! Others wanted to concentrate on a less costly route to the east, creating bases to bomb Japan with, which was much more critical to winning [and our submarines].

MacArthur was in a sense a role model for the right wing nuts who wanted to take over the US. For him to not just question but fight the elected government of the US, while he took an oath to take orders, was practically treason! But he was made into a hero by conservatives like the nasty Joe McCarthy.

You have to wonder if all of the odd things about the JFK assassination, and the military-industrial complex connections [which Eisenhower feared], were related to the extremist allies of MacArthur. Including Nixon, who just happened [!?!], to be in Dallas the day before!

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