From The Center for Vision & Values, Grove City College
By Dr. Paul G. Kengor
Editor’s note: A longer version of this article first appeared at The American Spectator.
This generation has its KAL 007. The stunning downing of Malaysian
flight 17 is strikingly similar to the shock of September 1, 1983, when
the Russians downed a Korean passenger airliner, flight 007, which had
left New York City for Seoul via Alaska. In both cases, the Russian
government vehemently denied any involvement, disparaging anyone who
dared to accuse it of prior knowledge.
Both planes were Asian with similar numbers of dead. KAL had 269
passengers; the Malaysian flight nearly 300. They were mostly Asian
passengers but also Americans—61 Americans in KAL 007 and a much smaller
(still unconfirmed) number in the Malaysian flight. In both cases,
questions arise over why the planes were flying where they were flying.
Exactly what happened with KAL still isn’t entirely clear, but it seems
the computer on the plane’s guidance system was set incorrectly,
allowing it to stray into Soviet airspace. Russian fighter planes
stalked KAL 007 before blasting it out of the sky.
In 1983, Moscow initially denied the dirty deed, with Yuri Andropov,
Vladimir Putin’s former boss at the KGB, insisting on his country’s
innocence. The denials were shattered when the Reagan administration
produced audio of the two Russian pilots communicating as they excitedly
shot the plane. The audio was secured via the National Security
Agency’s exceptional electronic surveillance technology.
But a major difference between September 1983 and July 2014 is the initial reaction of the two presidents.
Obama’s initial response to MH17 has been dissected at length, including my own earlier analysis. He even offended diehard liberals like CNN’s Piers Morgan, and prompted his deep admirer, Chris Matthews, to long for Ronald Reagan. It was extremely disappointing, even as he redeemed himself somewhat with a much stronger assessment the following day.
I will not belabor the point here. Rather, I’d like to underscore another presidential response that I know especially well, and that’s worth remembering—notably, Ronald Reagan’s reaction to a similar situation.
President Reagan was informed of the KAL catastrophe by his closest aide, national security adviser Bill Clark. As Clark’s biographer, I discussed this with him many times.
Reagan was at his ranch in the Santa Ynez Mountains north of Santa
Barbara when he received the news via telephone from Clark. “I told him
Bill Casey [CIA director] just relayed an unsubstantiated report that
the Soviets may have shot down an airliner, possibly Korean,” Clark told
me. Reagan replied to Clark: “Bill, let’s pray it’s not true.”
They prayed, but it was true. The Soviets never let prayer get in the way of their work.
As Clark recalled, “He [Reagan] said, ‘Bill, round table it,’ which
meant bring it to the decision-making process to get the opinions and
recommendations of all the principals in the NSC: Shultz, Weinberger,
Kirkpatrick, Casey….”
Clark called Reagan twice that evening with preliminary information,
first at 7:30 p.m., California time. Clark was in the “Western Situation
Room” at the Biltmore Hotel in Santa Barbara, only a few miles from
Reagan. They were not able to confirm the details until 7:10 a.m. the
next morning.
Reagan was furious. John Barletta, his riding companion at the ranch,
overheard Reagan shout: “Those were innocent civilians. Damn those
Russians!”
Clark told the press that he personally expected the Soviets to
perpetuate the “big lie” technique. He said he wouldn’t be surprised if
the Russians claimed that the commercial airliner was on an American
espionage mission.
Reagan immediately helicoptered to Point Mugu Naval Air Station in
California to board Air Force One for Washington. At 12:35 p.m., from
the tarmac, he spoke to the press,
excoriating the Soviets for committing a “brutal,” “callous,” and
“heinous act”—a “barbaric act,” a “terrorist act.” It was all made
worse, he said, by the fact that the Russians “so flagrantly lie.”
Back in Washington, Reagan immediately met with Clark and the
National Security Council. He publicly lit up the Soviets with more
statements, including a radio address on September 3 and a nationally televised Oval Office speech on September 5, in which he repeatedly denounced Moscow’s “crime” and “massacre.” And there were more statements to come.
In a speech on September 15 to the Air Force Association, Clark
accused Moscow of “mass murder” and a “twisted mentality.” “The
sickening display of Soviet barbarism in the Korean Air Lines massacre
shocked all of us,” Clark said. “But at the same time, this dramatically
brutal act must be deemed consistent with the behavior of a Soviet
government that continues to terrorize and murder the Afghan people,
using chemical weapons on Afghan villages; a Soviet government that
sponsors the repression of the entire Polish nation.”
As evidence that Clark’s words had been pre-approved, the White House
press office distributed the text as an expression of administration
policy. The media didn’t miss it. “Clark Accuses Soviets of ‘Mass
Murder,’” read the headline in the Washington Post.
And yet, while Ronald Reagan was steamed, he was also very careful.
He told Clark flatly: “[L]et’s be careful not to overreact to this. We
have too much going on with the Soviets…. Bill, we’ve got to protect
against overreaction.”
Reagan did not want to start a war over the KAL downing, nor derail
the substantial progress they had made toward cutting nuclear arsenals.
Besides, he was already hammering the Soviets with the economic
sledgehammer (read: economic warfare) and recently announced initiatives
like SDI.
How best to react? Reagan decided to respond primarily with words
rather than yet more sanctions or a military response (which was out of
the question). He deployed one of his favorite weapons against the
Kremlin: the verbal cruise missile. Recall that earlier that year, in
March, Reagan had labeled the Soviet Union an “Evil Empire,” a choice
name that dramatically affected Moscow.
So, throughout September 1983, Reagan torched the Soviets in harsh
terms, even when delivering speeches on other topics or areas of the
world.
On September 25, for instance, Reagan spoke in New York City at the
annual Pulaski Day Banquet. There, he linked the KAL 007 “crime” to the
same Soviet totalitarian evil responsible for the World War II butchery
of Polish military officers in the Katyn forest. “You know that downing a
passenger airliner is totally consistent with a government that
murdered 15,000 Polish officers in the Katyn forest,” he averred. “We
cannot let the world forget that crime, and we will not.”
He did not. Ronald Reagan’s reaction to the Russian downing of an
Asian airliner was one of strength, character, and leadership. It’s
worth knowing and emulating.
Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of political science and executive director of The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College. His latest book is 11 Principles of a Reagan Conservative. His other books include The Communist: Frank Marshall Davis, The Untold Story of Barack Obama’s Mentor and Dupes: How America’s Adversaries Have Manipulated Progressives for a Century.
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