From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
51 Years Ago:
McCarthy Launches His Crusade
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * February 7, 2001
Fifty-one years ago this week, on February 9, 1950, Joseph McCarthy
launched his crusade. Speaking in Wheeling, West Va., he announced
that he held in his hand a list of 205 known communist spies working in
the U.S. government. Little known outside his home state of Wisconsin
until this moment, his name now became a household word.
McCarthy had won election to the U. S. Senate in 1946, defeating the
famous incumbent Robert LaFollette. After three unimpressive years
in office, he decided that anticommunism would be his ticket to reelection
and greater power. As one journalist later wrote, he was “a political
speculator who found his oil gusher in Communism.”
To understand how so obscure and personally unlikable a man could so
suddenly burst on the national scene, it’s essential to recall the early
days of the Cold War. A large majority of Americans in 1950 believed
that communism was an inherently aggressive ideology and that its chief
proponent, the Soviet Union, sought world domination.
Events in recent years seemed to support this view. In 1948 Stalin
cut off Allied access to West Berlin, prompting Truman to launch a bold,
fifteen-month airlift operation to maintain the noncommunist outpost in
East Germany. In 1949 a stunned American public learned that the
Soviets had tested an atomic bomb, eradicating our nuclear monopoly.
Worse still, Americans believed (correctly, as it turned out) that a Soviet
spy network had been active in gathering American and British nuclear secrets.
Before the nation had time to digest this news, another Cold War shocker
hit: China, the world’s most populous nation and a key U.S. ally, had been
overthrown by Mao’s communist revolutionaries. Aided by subversives,
the Red Menace, it seemed, was on the march.
It was in this tense context that McCarthy aired his accusation that
the U.S. government was riddled with spies. “I have in my hand,”
he said, “a list of 205 [spies] that were known to the secretary of state
as being members of the Communist party and who, nevertheless, are still
working and shaping policy in the State Department.” His words hit
a raw nerve of Cold War fear and cast him suddenly into the national spotlight
as the nation’s foremost anticommunist.
And just as the events of 1948-1949 lent credence to his claims, so
too did subsequent ones. In June 1950, for example, Julius and Ethyl
Rosenberg were arrested on charges of espionage. One month later,
communist North Korea invaded South Korea, touching off the first military
confrontation of the Cold War. McCarthy produced little evidence
to support his claims, but headlines in the nation’s newspapers suggested
he was right.
McCarthy fended off criticism and calls for evidence by making still
louder and grander accusations. He charged that Truman’s administration
was full of Soviet dupes and that war hero Gen. George C. Marshall had
aided “a conspiracy so immense and an infamy so black as to dwarf any previous
venture in the history of man.”
Backed by a huge national following and unchallenged by a Democratic
party loathe to be branded “soft” on communism, McCarthy grew more powerful
by the month. Through committee hearings, investigations, and countless
speeches, he moved through American society like a tornado. Guilt
by accusation was often the order of the day. Thousands of federal
government employees were dismissed as security risks.
Countless others in state and local government, labor unions, colleges
and universities, and the private sector were likewise dismissed as disloyal
or subversive.
McCarthy’s demise finally came in 1954 in a hearing that pitted the
Wisconsin senator against the U.S. Army. Carried on national
TV, the hearings showed McCarthy at his worst – a bombastic, unscrupulous,
and cruel man willing to say or do anything to advance his career.
The final blow came when Joseph Welch, counsel for the Army, asked, “Have
you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense
of decency?”
In the end McCarthy’s fall was as spectacular as his rise. The
Senate voted to “condemn” his actions 67-22 and he quickly faded from prominence.
His heavy drinking grew heavier and his health quickly waned.
He died on April 28, 1957 from complications due to alcoholism. He
was only 48.
McCarthy remains one of the most reviled figures in American history.
Anyone who studies his life – even the staunch and principled anticommunist
– is bound to come away appalled by him.
Yet McCarthy is too important a figure to be merely dismissed as an
opportunistic demon. He didn’t materialize out of thin air – he was
the product of an intensely anxious era. His rise to power should
serve to remind us how easy it is, in times of great fear, to place too
much faith in the dark words of a demagogue who promises salvation if only
given the chance.
HIBERNIAN HISTORY WEEK
Feb 7, 1991: The IRA launches a mortar attack on No. 10 Downing Street,
the residence of British Prime Minister John Major. No one is hurt, but
damage to the building’s façade is considerable.
Feb 10, 1844: Daniel O’Connell, leader of the movement to repeal the
Act of Union, is found guilty of conspiracy and sentenced to a year
in jail.
Feb 12, 1818: Chilean revolutionary Bernardo O’Higgins declares Chile
an independent nation.
HIBERNIAN BIRTHDATES:
Feb 9, 1923: Nationalist and writer, Brendan Behan, in Dublin.
Feb 12, 1958: Actress Andie MacDowell in Gaffney, SC
Feb 13, 1920: Opera soprano, Eileen Farrell, in Willimantic, CT
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2001
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