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Lions of Michigan Golden Presidents Banquet, Grand Rapids, MI, May 22, 1970
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4526287
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Lions of Michigan Golden Presidents Banquet, Grand Rapids, MI, May 22, 1970
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This file contains material relating to Neville Chamberlain, Winston Churchill.
collections
Gerald R. Ford Congressional Papers
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Cambodia
Peace movements
Vietnam War, 1961-1975
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1970
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1970
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The original documents are located in Box D29, folder "Lions of Michigan Golden Presidents Banquet, Grand Rapids, MI, May 22, 1970" of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. The Council donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box D29 of The Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library LIONS OF MICHIGAN GOLDEN PRESIDENTS BANQUET, GRAND RAPIDS, 6:30 P.M., FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1970. THESE SEEM TO BE DARK HOURS, BUT I SEE THEM AS THE BEGINNING OF THE DAWN. THESE ARE CONFUSING DAYS, "FOR NOW WE SEE THROUGH A GLASS, DARKLY,' BUT THE TIME WILL SOON COME WHEN WE WILL KNOW THE SITUATION NOT ONLY IN PART BUT IN WHOLE. THAT IS HOW I VIEW THE EXPLOSIVE DEVELOPMENTS WHICH HAVE OCCURRED SINCE PRESIDENT NIXON ON THURSDAY, APRIL 30, ORDERED THE COMMUNIST SANCTUARIES IN CAMBODIA CLEANED OUT BY SOUTH VIETNAMESE AND U.S. TROOPS. THE PRESIDENT'S ANNOUNCEMENT FORD & LIBRARY GERALD AMAZED MANY AMERICANS. IT TOOK THEM BY -2- SURPRISE. IT WAS ONLY 10 DAYS EARLIER THAT MR. NIXON HAD ANNOUNCED WE WOULD BE PULLING AN ADDITIONAL 150,000 G.I.'S OUT OF VIETNAM OVER THE NEXT 12 MONTHS. INSERT THE RESULT HAS BEEN OVER-REACTION ON THE PART OF THOUSANDS OF OUR PEOPLE. EMOTION HAS COMPLETELY OVERWHELMED REASON, BOTH IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES AND ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. FEVERED IMAGINATIONS HAVE FUZZED UP THE FACTS AND CREATED A SERIES OF CONFRONTATIONS IN THIS COUNTRY. THE CRISIS WILL COOL -- AM CERTAIN OF IT. THE COUNTRY WILL COME OUT ALL RIGHT IN THE END, AND THAT IS ALL THAT MATTERS. BUT LET ME IN THE MEANTIME GIVE YOU MY VIEW OF THE PRESIDENT'S CAMBODIAN DECISION. -3- IN HIS BOOK, "PROFILES IN COURAGE," THE LATE PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY SAID. "A MAN DOES WHAT HE MUST -- IN SPITE OF OBSTACLES AND DANGERS AND PRESSURES." THAT IS WHAT PRESIDENT NIXON DID WHEN HE ORDERED OUR TROOPS INTO CAMBODIA. HE DID WHAT HE FELT HE MUST DO, WHAT HE FELT WAS RIGHT. THIS WAS TRULY AN ACT OF COURAGE. IT REQUIRED MORE COURAGEOUS LEADERSHIP THAN THAT DEMANDED OF PRESIDENTS WILSON AND ROOSEVELT DURING THE DARKEST DAYS OF WORLD WARS I AND II BECAUSE THOSE CHIEF EXECUTIVES KNEW THE AMERICAN PEOPLE WERE BEHIND THEM. PRESIDENT NIXON, ON CAMBODIA, MADE THE LONELIEST OF DECISIONS. HE DID WHAT HE BELIEVED WAS RIGHT EVEN THOUGH HE KNEW IT WOULD BRING THE ANTIWAR FORCES -4- ON THE CAMPUSES SPRINGING TO THE BARRICADES ONCE AGAIN AND HIS OPPONENTS IN THE SENATE SHOUTING THAT CONSTITUTIONAL POWER HAD BEEN ABUSED. ABRAHAM LINCOLN ONCE SAID. "IF THE END BRINGS ME OUT ALL RIGHT, WHAT IS SAID AGAINST ME WON'T AMOUNT TO ANYTHING. IF THE END BRINGS ME OUT WRONG, TEN ANGELS SWEARING I WAS RIGHT WOULD MAKE NO DIFFERENCE." IT WAS IN THAT LIGHT THAT PRESIDENT NIXON ORDERED U.S. FORCES TO JOIN IN THE CAMBODIAN OPERATION. HE KNEW VERY WELL HE WAS DESTROYING THE CALM HE HAD CREATED IN THE NATION WITH HIS STEADY TROOP WITHDRAWALS FROM VIETNAM AND HIS ANNOUNCEMENT THAT 150,000 MORE MEN WOULD BE WITHDRAWN. HE REALIZED FULLY THAT HE WOULD BE TRIGGERING A NEW ROUND OF ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATIONS. -5- BUT HE DID WHAT HE HAD TO DO. /NSERT I THINK THE END WILL BRING PRESIDENT NIXON AND THE NATION OUT ALL RIGHT THERE IS REASON TO BELIEVE THAT THE CAMBODIAN DECISION HAS DEALT THE ENEMY A HARD IF NOT STAGGERING BLOW IN THE VIETNAM CONFLICT. THE CAMBODIAN ACTION MIGHT WELL MARK A TURNING POINT IN THE WAR IT COULD PROVE TO BE A MASTERSTROKE. FEEL SURE IT WILL SHORTEN THE WAR. AS FOR THE PUBLIC REACTION TO THE PRESIDENT'S MOVE, LET US KEEP IT IN PERSPECTIVE. THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES HAS FIRMLY REJECTED ALL ATTEMPTS BY THOSE WHO OPPOSE THE CAMBODIAN DECISION TO EMASCULATE THE PRESIDENT'S POWERS AS COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF OF OUR ARMED FORCES. GERALO FORD LIBRARY AND, SPEAKING ONLY FOR MY OWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT IN MICHIGAN, I CAN -6- TELL YOU THAT THE SENTIMENT OF MANY OLDER AMERICANS IS RUNNING STRONGLY AGAINST THE SOMETIMES OBSCENE AND SOMETIMES VIOLENT WAYS IN WHICH SOME COLLEGE STUDENTS ARE EXPRESSING THEIR REACTION TO THE PRESIDENT'S DECISION. THERE HAVE ALWAYS BEEN DIFFERENCES BETWEEN AGE GROUPS. THE SPLIT WE ARE WITNESSING TODAY IS PROBABLY MORE SEVERE THAN WE HAVE EVER SEEN. BUT I AM CONVINCED THAT THE KIND OF DISSENT WE HAVE SEEN AT KENT STATE UNIVERSITY AND JACKSON (MISS.) STATE COLLEGE -- DISSENT THAT ERUPTS INTO BLOODSHED AND KILLING -- WILL NOT BECOME A PART OF THE AMERICAN WAY OF LIFE PRESIDENT NIXON HAS MADE A LISTENING SPECIAL EFFORT TO OPEN UP LINES OF COMMUNICATION WITH OUR YOUNG PEOPLE. HIS LIBRARY EARLY DAWN VISIT TO TALK WITH A GROUP OF -7- COLLEGE STUDENTS AT THE LINCOLN MEMORIAL IN WASHINGTON IS EVIDENCE OF THAT. HE ALSO INSTRUCTED MEMBERS OF HIS WHITE HOUSE STAFF TO ENGAGE IN DIALOGUES WITH COLLEGE STUDENTS OUR YOUNG PEOPLE MUST BE MADE TO REALIZE THAT VIOLENCE IS NOT THE WAY TO RESOLVE ISSUES IN AMERICA. THEY MUST REALIZE THAT THROWING ROCKS AT NATIONAL GUARDSMEN IS NOT THE ANSWER, EITHER. AND THEY SHOULD REALIZE THEY ARE BEING MISLED BY MILITANT RADICALS WHEN THEY ARE URGED TO KILL OR TO DESTROY BUILDINGS AND OTHER PROPERTY. I BELIEVE THAT FOR THOSE WHO ENGAGE IN VIOLENCE ON THE CAMPUS, THE ONLY REDRESS IS FOR THE COLLEGE AUTHORITIES TO ADMINISTER STERN DISCIPLINE. WE MUST NOT, WE CANNOT, TOLERATE VIOLENCE AND GERALD FORD LIBRARY EXPECT OUR SOCIETY TO BEAR THE STRAIN. -8- BLOODSHED STEMMING FROM THE ACTIONS OF AN IRRATIONAL FEW MUST BE AVOIDED ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES AND CITY STREETS. I AM PLEASED THAT THE MASSIVE ANTIWAR GATHERING IN THE NATION S CAPITAL ON SATURDAY, MAY 9, WAS PEACEFUL FOR THE MOST PART. I THINK THIS WAS A TRIBUTE BOTH TO A MAJORITY OF THE YOUNG PEOPLE WHO JOURNEYED TO WASHINGTON FOR THE DEMONSTRATION AND ALSO TO THE WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT WHICH EXHIBITED GREAT RESTRAINT IN HANDLING THE MAMMOTH CROWD. THE DEMONSTRATION IN WASHINGTON OFFERED A SHARP CONTRAST TO WHAT HAPPENED AT KENT STATE AND JACKSON STATE. WHAT TRANSPIRED AT KENT AND JACKSON, WHERE STUDENTS WERE SHOT AND KILLED, CAN ONLY BE DESCRIBED AS SENSELESS TRAGEDY. -9- WE MUST, AND I PRAY THAT WE WILL, FIND A BALANCE OF REASON AND MODERATION IN THE DAYS AHEAD. IT IS MY DEEP HOPE THAT THE AMERICAN PEOPLE WILL FIND IT POSSIBLE TO JOIN IN SUPPORT OF THE PRESIDENT AS TEMPERS COOL AND PASSIONS FADE. I ASK THOSE WHO DISAGREE WITH THE PRESIDENT TO GIVE PEACE A CHANCE BY GIVING HIM A CHANCE. HE HAS SAID ALL OF OUR TROOPS WILL BE OUT OF CAMBODIA BY THE END OF NEXT MONTH. I DO NOT THINK THAT IS TOO LONG A TIME TO ALLOW FOR A PUBLIC DECISION ON THE RIGHTNESS OF THE PRESIDENT S ACTION. AS FOR ME, I THINK THE PRESIDENT IS PROFOUNDLY RIGHT IN WHAT HE HAS DONE. AND I AM MOST DISTURBED BY WHAT I FEEL IS AN IRRATIONAL WAVE OF -10- NEO-ISOLATIONISM IN THIS COUNTRY -- NOT ONLY ON OUR COLLEGE CAMPUSES BUT IN THE UNITED STATES SENATE. THERE ARE STRANGE PARALLELS -- BUT I THINK UNMISTAKEN PARALLELS -- BETWEEN THE ANTI-MILITARISTS AND NEO-ISOLATIONISTS OF TODAY AND THE PACIFISTS AND ISOLATIONISTS OF THE 1930's. MANY OF YOU REMEMBER THE 1930'S. YOU RECALL WHEN HITLER'S BOOK, "MEIN KAMPF," WAS FIRST PUBLISHED. FEW PEOPLE IN THIS COUNTRY TOOK THAT BOOK SERIOUSLY. THE UNITED STATES HAD ENGAGED IN UNILATERAL DISARMAMENT AFTER WORLD WAR I, IN THE PERIOD LEADING INTO THE THIRTIES. WE WERE LIVING IN A DREAM WORLD. WE SAID WAR JUST COULDN'T HAPPEN. AND IF IT DID HAPPEN TO SOMEBODY ELSE WE WOULD JUST NOT BECOME INVOLVED. THE MENTALITY OF THE GERALD FORD LIBRARY ENTIRE COUNTRY WAS ATTUNED TO WHAT BECAME -11- KNOWN AS THE "FORTRESS AMERICA" CONCEPT IT WAS A REPUBLICAN, SENATOR GERALD P. NYE OF NORTH DAKOTA, WHO LED THE FORTRESS AMERICA FORCES IN THE 30's. TODAY ISOLATIONISM IS BEING PREACHED BY LEADING DEMOCRATS IN THE SENATE, TOGETHER WITH A FEW REPUBLICANS. NYE BLAMED WAR ON THE INTERNATIONAL BAKERS AND THE ARMS MANUFACTURERS. TODAY WE SEE MILITANT YOUTHS BURNING DOWN OR DAMAGING BANK BUILDINGS, LOOTING THE FILES OF A NAPALM MANUFACTURER, PREVENTING COLLEGE CAMPUS APPEARANCES BY RECRUITERS FOR DEFENSE INDUSTRIES, FIGHTING ANY AND ALL MILITARY RESEARCH AND NEW WEAPONS DEVELOPMENTS. THERE WERE PROTESTS IN THE 30's AGAINST COMPULSORY MILITARY TRAINING, AND SO A NUMBER OF LAND GRANT COLLEGES MADE LIBRARY MILITARY DRILL OPTIONAL. TODAY WE FIND -12- STUDENTS BURNING DOWN ROTC BUILDINGS OR FORCING COLLEGE ADMINISTRATIONS TO DROP ROTC FROM THE CURRICULUM. AND TODAY, TOO, WE HAVE DRAFT CARD BURNING AND THE POURING OF BLOOD ON DRAFT CARD FILES. AS A RESULT OF ANTIWAR HEARINGS IN THE EARLY 30's BY A COMMITTEE SENATOR NYE HEADED, THE CONGRESS IN 1935 APPROVED WHAT BECAME KNOWN AS THE NEUTRALITY ACT. THAT LEGISLATION WAS SIMILAR TO A RECENTLY-ENACTED SENATE RESOLUTION LIMITING THE USE OF U.S. GROUND TROOPS IN LAOS, AND IT WAS SIMILAR TO THE AMENDMENTS AIMED AT CUTTING OFF THE USE OF U.S. TROOPS IN CAMBODIA. THROUGHOUT THE THIRTIES THE ANTIWAR SENTIMENT WAXED STRONG, AND IT IS GROWING TODAY. IN THE THIRTIES HITLER BUILT A TREMENDOUS WAR MACHINE AND GRABBED OFF GERALD FORD LIBRARY LARGER AND LARGER PIECES OF TERRITORY -13- ADJOINING GERMANY. TODAY THE SOVIET UNION FEEDS THE COMMUNIST WAR EFFORT IN VIETNAM, FUELS THE ARAB MILITARY FORCES IN THE MIDDLE EAST EVEN TO THE POINT OF SENDING SOVIET PILOTS THERE, AND CONTINUES AMASSING THE MOST HORRIBLE AND THREATENING ARRAY OF ARMAMENTS. IN THE 30's AMERICA SLEPT. AND SO DID ENGLAND. THOSE OF YOU OF MY GENERATION REMEMBER A GAUNT-LOOKING BRITISHER WHO JOURNEYED TO MUNICH TO MEET WITH ADOLF HITLER AND AGREED THAT PART OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA SHOULD GO TO NAZI GERMANY. IT WAS NEARLY 32 YEARS AGO THAT THE BRITISH PRIME MINISTER WITH THE WING COLLAR, MOUSTACHE AND UMBRELLA RETURNED FORD TO ENGLAND DECLARING HE HAD ACHIEVED LIBRARY "PEACE WITH HONOR. PEACE FOR OUR TIME." YOU REMEMBER. HE STEPPED OFF A PLANE -14- AT HESTON AIRDROME OUTSIDE OF LONDON AND WAVED HIS "PEACE FOR OUR TIME" MEMORANDUM SIGNED BY ADOLF HITLER. NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN'S "PEACE FOR OUR TIME" LASTED LESS THAN ONE YEAR. IT CULMINATED IN A WAR WHICH ENGULFED THE WORLD AND RESULTED IN 1,078,162 AMERICAN CASUALTIES, WITH 292,131 G.I. COMBAT DEATHS AND 115,185 AMERICAN DEATHS DUE TO NON-COMBAT CAUSES. CHAMBERLAIN WAS WELL-INTENTIONED. YET ALL WHO CHEERED HIM WHEN HE WAVED HIS MEMO FROM HITLER ON SEPTEMBER 30. 1938, DECLARED YEARS LATER. "WE SHOULD HAVE STOPPED HITLER AT MUNICH." THERE ARE CURIOUS PARALLELS BETWEEN 1938 AND 1970. THE PACIFISTS AND NEO-ISOLATIONISTS OF 1970 ARE WELL-INTENTIONED TOO GERALD R. LISRABY FORD I AM NOT ADVOCATING REVIVAL OF -15- THE COLD WAR WITH THE SOVIET UNION. I WOULD BE THE LAST PERSON IN THE WORLD TO URGE THAT. BUT I SAY WE MUST NOT ABANDON PRINCIPLE IN PURSUIT OF PEACE. I BELIEVE THAT IS THE SUREST ROAD TO DISASTER. I BELIEVE WE SHOULD SEEK A DETENTE WITH THE SOVIET UNION WHATEVER HAPPENS IN VIETNAM. I WAS MOST PLEASED TO HEAR THE PRESIDENT PREDICT THAT AN AGREEMENT WILL COME OUT OF THE SALT TALKS. AT THE SAME TIME, I AM SURE WE WILL NOT SCRAP OUR PRINCIPLES IN ORDER TO ACHIEVE THAT AGREEMENT -- AND NEITHER SHOULD WE SCRAP OUR PRINCIPLES IN VIETNAM. WINSTON CHURCHILL IN 1938 CALLED NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN'S "PEACE IN OUR TIME" AGREEMENT A MATTER OF TAKING "THE LINE OF LEAST RESISTANCE." HE SAID AS MUCH IN A LIBRARY THOROUGHLY IGNORED SPEECH IN THE -16- BRITISH HOUSE OF COMMONS. BUT CHURCHILL WAS RIGHT. DOES ANY AMERICAN TODAY REALLY BELIEVE THAT THE LINE OF LEAST RESISTANCE IS THE PATH TO LASTING PEACE LET US NOT MAKE THE SAME MISTAKES TODAY WE MADE IN THE THIRTIES. CHURCHILL CALLED THE APPEASEMENT OF HITLER AT MUNICH "A DISASTER OF THE FIRST MAGNITUDE." IN MY VIEW, THE PRESENT ANTIWAR MOVEMENT IN THIS COUNTRY IS A TRAGEDY OF IMMENSE PROPORTIONS BECAUSE IT HAS PRODUCED SOME OF THE MOST IRRATIONAL ATTITUDES EVER EXPRESSED IN AMERICA. I MENTIONED AT THE OUTSET OF MY COMMENTS THAT THESE APPEAR TO BE DARK DAYS. LET ME SAY THIS IS ONLY THE SEEMING AND NOT THE ACTUALITY. IN TRUTH, WE ALL HAVE FORD LIBRARY REASON TO BE CAUTIOUSLY OPTIMISTIC ABOUT -17- THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE IN THIS COUNTRY. WHATEVER THE OUTCRY OVER THE OFFENSIVE IN CAMBODIA, THE FACT REMAINS WE HAVE REVERSED THE COURSE OF THE VIETNAM WAR WE HAVE BEEN WITHDRAWING TROOPS FROM VIETNAM INSTEAD OF PUTTING MORE IN, AND WE ARE MAKING VIETNAMIZATION WORK. WE ARE EMBARKED ON STRATEGIC ARMAMENTS LIMITATION TALKS WITH THE SOVIET UNION, AND THERE IS CAUSE TO HAVE REAL HOPE FOR STRATEGIC ARMS CONTROL. WE HAVE ACHIEVED MAJOR DRAFT REFORM AND WE ARE MOVING STEADILY TOWARD AN END TO THE DRAFT. WE HAVE REORDERED OUR NATIONAL PRIORITIES SO THAT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN TWO DECADES WE WILL BE SPENDING MORE FEDERAL FUNDS ON HUMAN RESOURCES THAN ON FORD MILITARY PROGRAMS. LIBRARY WE HAVE CUT TAXES AND REFORMED -18- THE FEDERAL TAX STRUCTURE. WE ARE NEAR THE POINT OF REFORMING THE SCANDALOUS WELFARE SYSTEM INHERITED FROM A PREVIOUS ERA. WE WILL BE REFORMING THE POSTAL SERVICE DESPITE A GENERAL BELIEF THAT THIS WAS NOT POLITICALLY POSSIBLE. WE ARE MAKING PROGRESS IN FIGHTING THE INFLATION INHERITED BY THE PRESENT ADMINISTRATION, AND I LOOK FOR A MODERATE UPSWING IN THE ECONOMY BEFORE THE END OF THE YEAR WITHOUT A REVIVAL OF STRONG INFLATIONARY PRESSURES. CONGRESS LAST WEEK PASSED AN AMBITIOUS AIRPORT CONSTRUCTION BILL WHICH PUTS THE NATIONAL AIRPORT CONSTRUCTION PROGRAM ON A PAY-AS-YOU-GO BASIS FOR THE R.FORD LIBRARY GETA FIRST TIME IN OUR HISTORY. WE ARE IMPROVING MASS TRANSPORTATION AND HAVE PROPOSED THE MOST FAR-REACHING -19- MASS TRANSIT PROGRAM EVER. WE ARE PROTECTING THE NATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY AND HAVE WRITTEN INTO LAW THE MOST EFFECTIVE COAL MINE SAFETY BILL IN THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN LABOR. WE COULD DO MUCH MORE. WE WILL DO MUCH MORE. LOOKING AT THE RECORD I HAVE JUST CITED, I DO NOT SEE HOW ANYONE WHO IS NOT BLIND TO AMERICA'S AIMS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN SELL THIS COUNTRY SHORT. I DO NOT SEE HOW ANYONE CAN FAIL TO PERCEIVE THE GREAT SURGE OF PROGRESS THAT LIES JUST AHEAD OF US. I, FOR ONE, AM NOT GIVEN TO FEELINGS OF GLOOM AND DOOM. I BELIEVE IN THE GREATNESS OF AMERICA AND ITS PEOPLE. BEREID FORD LIBRARK -20- I BELIEVE, TO PARAPHRASE THE WORDS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, THAT THE END WILL BRING US OUT ALL RIGHT -- END -- FORD LIBRARY "y GERALD Distribution 10 copies Mr. Ford moffice Copy AN ADDRESS BY REP. GERALD R. FORD, R-MICH. REPUBLICAN LEADER, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES BEFORE THE LIONS OF MICHIGAN GOLDEN PRESIDENTS BANQUET AT GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 6:30 P.M. FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1970 FOR RELEASE ON DELIVERY These seem to be dark hours, but I see them as the beginning of the dawn. These are confusing days, "for now we see through a glass, darkly," but the time will soon come when we will know the situation not only in part but in whole. That is how I view the explosive developments which have occurred since President Nixon on Thursday, April 30, ordered the Communist sanctuaries in Cambodia cleaned out by South Vietnamese and U.S. troops. The President's announcement amazed many Americans. It took them by surprise. It was only 10 days earlier that Mr. Nixon had announced we would be pulling an additional 150,000 G.I.'s out of Vietnam over the next 12 months. The result has been over-reaction on the part of thousands of our people. Emotion has completely overwhelmed reason, both in the Senate of the United States and on college campuses throughout the country. Fevered imaginations have fuzzed up the facts and created a series of confrontations in this country. The crisis will cool -- I am certain of it. The country will come out all right in the end, and that is all that matters. But let me in the meantime give you my view of the President's Cambodian decision. In his book, "Profiles in Courage," the late President John F. Kennedy said: "A man does what he must -- in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures." That is what President Nixon did when he ordered our troops into Cambodia. He did what he felt he must do, what he felt was right. This was truly an act of courage. It required more courageous leadership than that demanded of Presidents Wilson and Roosevelt during the darkest days of World Wars I and II because those chief executives knew the American people were behind them. President Nixon, on Cambodia, made the loneliest of decisions. He did what he believed was right even though he knew it would bring the antiwar forces (more) -2- on the campuses springing to the barricades once again and his opponents in the Senate shouting that constitutional power had been abused. Abraham Lincoln once said: "If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won't amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right would make no difference." It was in that light that President Nixon ordered U.S. forces to join in the Cambodian Operation. He knew very well he was destroying the calm he had created in the Nation with his steady troop withdrawals from Vietnam and his announcement that 150,000 more men would be withdrawn. He realized fully that he would be triggering a new round of antiwar demonstrations. But he did what he had to do. I think the end will bring President Nixon and the Nation out all right. There is reason to believe that the Cambodian decision has dealt the enemy a hard if not staggering blow in the Vietnam conflict. The Cambodian action might well mark a turning point in the war. It could prove to be a masterstroke. I feel sure it will shorten the war. As for the public reaction to the President's move, let us keep it in perspective. The U.S. House of Representatives has firmly rejected all attempts by those who oppose the Cambodian decision to emasculate the President's powers as commander- in-chief of our armed forces. And, speaking only for my own congressional district in Michigan, I can tell you that the sentiment of many older Americans is running strongly against the sometimes obscene and sometimes violent ways in which some college students are expressing their reaction to the President's decision. There have always been differences between age groups. The split we are witnessing today is probably more severe than we have ever seen. But I am convinced that the kind of dissent we have seen at Kent State University and Jackson (Miss.) State College -- dissent that erupts into bloodshed and killing -- will not become a part of the American way of life. President Nixon has made a special effort to open up lines of communication with our young people. His early dawn visit to talk with a group of college students at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington is evidence of that. He also instructed members of his White House staff to engage in dialogues with college students. (more) -3- Our young people must be made to realize that violence is not the way to resolve issues in America. They must realize that throwing rocks at national guardsmen is not the answer, either. And they should realize they are being misled by militant radicals when they are urged to kill or to destroy buildings and other property. I believe that for those who engage in violence on the campus, the only redress is for the college authorities to administer stern discipline. We must not, we cannot, tolerate violence and expect our society to bear the strain. Bloodshed stemming from the actions of an irrational few must be avoided on college campuses and city streets. I am pleased that the massive antiwar gathering in the Nation's capital on Saturday, May 9, was peaceful for the most part. I think this was a tribute both to a majority of the young people who journeyed to Washington for the demonstration and also to the Washington Metropolitan Police Department which exhibited great restraint in handling the mammoth crowd. The demonstration in Washington offered a sharp contrast to what happened at Kent State and Jackson State. What transpired at Kent and Jackson, where students were shot and killed, can only be described as senseless tragedy. We must ,and I pray that we will, find a balance of reason and moderation in the days ahead. It is my deep hope that the American people will find it possible to join in support of the President as tempers cool and passions fade. I ask those who disagree with the President to give peace a chance by giving him a chance. He has said all of our troops will be out of Cambodia by the end of next month. I do not think that is too long a time to allow for a public decision on the rightness of the President's action. As for me, I think the President is profoundly right in what he has done. And I am most disturbed by what I feel is an irrational wave of neo-isolationism in this country -- not only on our college campuses but in the United States Senate. There are strange parallels -- but I think unmistaken parallels -- between the anti-militarists and neo-isolationists of today and the pacifists and isolationists of the 1930s. Many of you remember the 1930s. You recall when Hitler's book, "Mein Kampf," was first published. Few people in this country took that book seriously. (more) -4- The United States had engaged in unilateral disarmanent after World War I, in the period leading into the Thirties. We were living in a dream world. We said war just couldn't happen. And if it did happen to somebody else we would just not become involved. The mentality of the entire country was attuned to what became known as the "Fortress America" concept. It was a Republican, Sen. Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, who led the Fortress America forces in the 30s. Today isolationism is being preached by leading Democrats in the Senate, together with a few Republicans. Nye blamed war on the international bankers and the arms manufacturers. Today we see militant youths burning down or damaging bank buildings, looting the files of a napalm manufacturer, preventing college campus appearances by recruiters for defense industries, fighting any and all military research and new weapons developments. There were protests in the 30s against compulsory military training, and so a number of land grant colleges made military drill optional. Today we find students burning down ROTC buildings or forcing college administrations to drop ROTC from the curriculum. And today, too, we have draft card burning and the pouring of blood on draft card files. As a result of antiwar hearings in the early 30s by a committee Sen. Nye haeded, the Congress in 1935 approved what became known as the Neutrality Act. That legislation was similar to a recently-enacted Senate resolution limiting the use of U.S. ground troops in Laos, and it was similar to the amendments aimed at cutting off the use of U.S. troops in Cambodia. Throughout the Thirties the antiwar sentiment waxed strong, and it is growing today. In the Thirties Hitler built a tremendous war machine and grabbed off larger and larger pieces of territory adjoining Germany. Today the Soviet Union feeds the Communist war effort in Vietnam, fuels the Arab military forces in the Middle East even to the point of sending Soviet pilots there, and continues amassing the most horrible and threatening array of armaments. In the 30s America slept. And so did England. Those of you of my generation remember a gaunt-looking Britisher who journeyed to Munich to meet with Adolf Hitler and agreed that part of Czechoslovakia should go to Nazi Germany. (more) -5- It was nearly 32 years ago that the British prime minister with the wing collar, moustache and umbrella returned to England declaring he had achieved "peace with honor peace for our time." You remember he stepped off a plane at Heston Airdrome outside of London and waved his "peace for our time" memorandum signed by Adolf Hitler. Neville Chamberlain's "peace for our time" lasted less than one year. It culminated in a war which engulfed the world and resulted in 1,078,162 American casualties, with 292,131 G.I. combat deaths and 115,185 American deaths due to non-combat causes. Chamberlain was well-intentioned. Yet all who cheered him when he waved his memo from Hitler on Sept. 30, 1938, declared years later: "We should have stopped Hitler at Munich. 11 There are curious parallels between 1938 and 1970. The pacifists and neo-isolationists of 1970 are well-intentioned too. I am not advocating revival of the Cold War with the Soviet Union. I would be the last person in the world to urge that. But I say we must not abandon principle in pursuit of peace. I believe that is the surest road to disaster. I believe we should seek a detente with the Soviet Union whatever happens in Vietnam. I was most pleased to hear the President predict that an agreement will come out of the SALT talks. At the same time, I am sure we will not scrap our principles in order to achieve that agreement --- and neither should we scrap our principles in Vietnam. Winston Churchill in 1938 called Neville Chamberlain's "peace in our time" agreement a matter of taking "the line of least resistance.' He said as much in a thoroughly ignored speech in the British House of Commons. But Churchill was right. Does any American today really believe that the line of least resistance is the path to lasting peace? Let us not make the same mistakes today we made in the Thirties. Churchill called the appeasement of Hitler at Munich "a disaster of the first magnitude." In my view, the present antiwar movement in this country is a tragedy of immense proportions because it has produced some of the most irrational attitudes ever expressed in America. I mentioned at the outset of my comments that these appear to be dark days. (more) -6- Let me say this is only the seeming and not the actuality. In truth, we all have reason to be cautiously optimistic about the immediate future in this country. Whatever the outcry over the offensive in Cambodia, the fact remains we have reversed the course of the Vietnam War. We have been withdrawing troops from Vietnam instead of putting more in, and we are making Vietnamization work. We are embarked on strategic armaments limitation talks with the Soviet Union, and there is cause to have real hope for strategic arms control. We have achieved major draft reform and we are moving steadily toward an end to the draft. We have reordered our national priorities so that for the first time in two decades we will be spending more Federal funds on human resources than on military programs. We have cut taxes and reformed the Federal tax structure. We are near the point of reforming the scandalous welfare system inherited from a previous era. We will be reforming the postal service despite a general belief that this was not politically possible. We are making progress in fighting the inflation inherited by the present Administration, and I look for a moderate upswing in the economy before the end of the year without a revival of strong inflationary pressures. Congress last week passed an ambitious airport construction bill which puts the national airport construction program on a pay-as-you-go basis for the first time in our history. We are improving mass transportation and have proposed the most far-reaching mass transit program ever. We are protecting the national health and safety and have written into law the most effective coal mine safety bill in the history of American labor. We could do much more. We will do much more. Looking at the record I have just cited, I do not see how anyone who is not blind to America's aims and accomplishments can sell this country short. I do not see how anyone can fail to perceive the great surge of progress that lies just ahead of us. I, for one, am not given to feelings of gloom and doom. I believe in the greatness of America and its people. I believe, to paraphrase the words of Abraham Lincoln, that the end will bring us out all right. # # # Distribution 10 copies to Mr. Ford only a Office Copy AN ADDRESS BY REP. GERALD R. FORD, R-MICH. REPUBLICAN LEADER, U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES BEFORE THE LIONS OF MICHIGAN GOLDEN PRESIDENTS BANQUET AT GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 6:30 P.M. FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1970 FOR RELEASE ON DELIVERY These seem to be dark hours, but I see them as the beginning of the dawn. These are confusing days, "for now we see through a glass, darkly," but the time will soon come when we will know the situation not only in part but in whole. That is how I view the explosive developments which have occurred since President Nixon on Thursday, April 30, ordered the Communist sanctuaries in Cambodia cleaned out by South Vietnamese and U.S. troops. The President's announcement amazed many Americans. It took them by surprise. It was only 10 days earlier that Mr. Nixon had announced we would be pulling an additional 150,000 G.I.'s out of Vietnam over the next 12 months. The result has been over-reaction on the part of thousands of our people. Emotion has completely overwhelmed reason, both in the Senate of the United States and on college campuses throughout the country. Fevered imaginations have fuzzed up the facts and created a series of confrontations in this country. The crisis will cool -- I am certain of it. The country will come out all right in the end, and that is all that matters. But let me in the meantime give you my view of the President's Cambodian decision. In his book, "Profiles in Courage," the late President John F. Kennedy said: "A man does what he must -- in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures." That is what President Nixon did when he ordered our troops into Cambodia. He did what he felt he must do, what he felt was right. This was truly an act of courage. It required more courageous leadership than that demanded of Presidents Wilson and Roosevelt during the darkest days of World Wars I and II because those chief executives knew the American people were behind them. President Nixon, on Cambodia, made the loneliest of decisions. He did what he believed was right even though he knew it would bring the antiwar forces (more) -2- on the campuses springing to the barricades once again and his opponents in the Senate shouting that constitutional power had been abused. Abraham Lincoln once said: "If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won't amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right would make no difference." It was in that light that President Nixon ordered U.S. forces to join in the Cambodian Operation. He knew very well he was destroying the calm he had created in the Nation with his steady troop withdrawals from Vietnam and his announcement that 150,000 more men would be withdrawn. He realized fully that he would be triggering a new round of antiwar demonstrations. But he did what he had to do. I think the end will bring President Nixon and the Nation out all right. There is reason to believe that the Cambodian decision has dealt the enemy a hard if not staggering blow in the Vietnam conflict. The Cambodian action might well mark a turning point in the war. It could prove to be a masterstroke. I feel sure it will shorten the war. As for the public reaction to the President's move, let us keep it in perspective. The U.S. House of Representatives has firmly rejected all attempts by those who oppose the Cambodian decision to emasculate the President's powers as commander- in-chief of our armed forces. And, speaking only for my own congressional district in Michigan, I can tell you that the sentiment of many older Americans is running strongly against the sometimes obscene and sometimes violent ways in which some college students are expressing their reaction to the President's decision. There have always been differences between age groups. The split we are witnessing today is probably more severe than we have ever seen. But I am convinced that the kind of dissent we have seen at Kent State University and Jackson (Miss.) State College -- dissent that erupts into bloodshed and killing -- will not become a part of the American way of life. President Nixon has made a special effort to open up lines of communication with our young people. His early dawn visit to talk with a group of college students at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington is evidence of that. He also instructed members of his White House staff to engage in dialogues with college students. (more) -3- Our young people must be made to realize that violence is not the way to resolve issues in America. They must realize that throwing rocks at national guardsmen is not the answer, either. And they should realize they are being misled by militant radicals when they are urged to kill or to destroy buildings and other property. I believe that for those who engage in violence on the campus, the only redress is for the college authorities to administer stern discipline. We must not, we cannot, tolerate violence and expect our society to bear the strain. Bloodshed stemming from the actions of an irrational few must be avoided on college campuses and city streets. I am pleased that the massive antiwar gathering in the Nation's capital on Saturday, May 9, was peaceful for the most part. I think this was a tribute both to a majority of the young people who journeyed to Washington for the demonstration and also to the Washington Metropolitan Police Department which exhibited great restraint in handling the mammoth crowd. The demonstration in Washington offered a sharp contrast to what happened at Kent State and Jackson State. What transpired at Kent and Jackson, where students were shot and killed, can only be described as senseless tragedy. We must ,and I pray that we will, find a balance of reason and moderation in the days ahead. It is my deep hope that the American people will find it possible to join in support of the President as tempers cool and passions fade. I ask those who disagree with the President to give peace a chance by giving him a chance. He has said all of our troops will be out of Cambodia by the end of next month. I do not think that is too long a time to allow for a public decision on the rightness of the President's action. As for me, I think the President is profoundly right in what he has done. And I am most disturbed by what I feel is an irrational wave of neo-isolationism in this country -- not only on our college campuses but in the United States Senate. There are strange parallels -- but I think unmistaken parallels -- between the anti-militarists and neo-isolationists of today and the pacifists and isolationists of the 1930s. Many of you remember the 1930s. You recall when Hitler's book, "Mein Kampf," was first published. Few people in this country took that book seriously. (more) -4- The United States had engaged in unilateral disarmanent after World War I, in the period leading into the Thirties. We were living in a dream world. We said war just couldn't happen. And if it did happen to somebody else we would just not become involved. The mentality of the entire country was attuned to what became known as the "Fortress America" concept. It was a Republican, Sen. Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, who led the Fortress America forces in the 30s. Today isolationism is being preached by leading Democrats in the Senate, together with a few Republicans. Nye blamed war on the international bankers and the arms manufacturers. Today we see militant youths burning down or damaging bank buildings, looting the files of a napalm manufacturer, preventing college campus appearances by recruiters for defense industries, fighting any and all military research and new weapons developments. There were protests in the 30s against compulsory military training, and so a number of land grant colleges made military drill optional. Today we find students burning down ROTC buildings or forcing college administrations to drop ROTC from the curriculum. And today, too, we have draft card burning and the pouring of blood on draft card files. As a result of antiwar hearings in the early 30s by a committee Sen. Nye haeded, the Congress in 1935 approved what became known as the Neutrality Act. That legislation was similar to a recently-enacted Senate resolution limiting the use of U.S. ground troops in Laos, and it was similar to the amendments aimed at cutting off the use of U.S. troops in Cambodia. Throughout the Thirties the antiwar sentiment waxed strong, and it is growing today. In the Thirties Hitler built a tremendous war machine and grabbed off larger and larger pieces of territory adjoining Germany. Today the Soviet Union feeds the Communist war effort in Vietnam, fuels the Arab military forces in the Middle East even to the point of sending Soviet pilots there, and continues amassing the most horrible and threatening array of armaments. In the 30s America slept. And so did England. Those of you of my generation remember a gaunt-looking Britisher who journeyed to Munich to meet with Adolf Hitler and agreed that part of Czechoslovakia should go to Nazi Germany. (more) -5- It was nearly 32 years ago that the British prime minister with the wing collar, moustache and umbrella returned to England declaring he had achieved "peace with honor peace for our time." You remember he stepped off a plane at Heston Airdrome outside of London and waved his "peace for our time" memorandum signed by Adolf Hitler. Neville Chamberlain's "peace for our time" lasted less than one year. It culminated in a war which engulfed the world and resulted in 1,078,162 American casualties, with 292,131 G.I. combat deaths and 115,185 American deaths due to non-combat causes. Chamberlain was well-intentioned. Yet all who cheered him when he waved his memo from Hitler on Sept. 30, 1938, declared years later: "We should have stopped Hitler at Munich. 11 There are curious parallels between 1938 and 1970. The pacifists and neo-isolationists of 1970 are well-intentioned too. I am not advocating revival of the Cold War with the Soviet Union. I would be the last person in the world to urge that. But I say we must not abandon principle in pursuit of peace. I believe that is the surest road to disaster. I believe we should seek a detente with the Soviet Union whatever happens in Vietnam. I was most pleased to hear the President predict that an agreement will come out of the SALT talks. At the same time, I am sure we will not scrap our principles in order to achieve that agreement -- and neither should we scrap our principles in Vietnam. Winston Churchill in 1938 called Neville Chamberlain's "peace in our time" agreement a matter of taking "the line of least resistance." He said as much in a thoroughly ignored speech in the British House of Commons. But Churchill was right. Does any American today really believe that the line of least resistance is the path to lasting peace? Let us not make the same mistakes today we made in the Thirties. Churchill called the appeasement of Hitler at Munich "a disaster of the first magnitude." In my view, the present antiwar movement in this country is a tragedy of immense proportions because it has produced some of the most irrational attitudes ever expressed in America. I mentioned at the outset of my comments that these appear to be dark days. (more) -6- Let me say this is only the seeming and not the actuality. In truth, we all have reason to be cautiously optimistic about the immediate future in this country. Whatever the outcry over the offensive in Cambodia, the fact remains we have reversed the course of the Vietnam War. We have been withdrawing troops from Vietnam instead of putting more in, and we are making Vietnamization work. We are embarked on strategic armaments limitation talks with the Soviet Union, and there is cause to have real hope for strategic arms control. We have achieved major draft reform and we are moving steadily toward an end to the draft. We have reordered our national priorities so that for the first time in two decades we will be spending more Federal funds on human resources than on military programs. We have cut taxes and reformed the Federal tax structure. We are near the point of reforming the scandalous welfare system inherited from a previous era. We will be reforming the postal service despite a general belief that this was not politically possible. We are making progress in fighting the inflation inherited by the present Administration, and I look for a moderate upswing in the economy before the end of the year without a revival of strong inflationary pressures. Congress last week passed an ambitious airport construction bill which puts the national airport construction program on a pay-as-you-go basis for the first time in our history. We are improving mass transportation and have proposed the most far-reaching mass transit program ever. We are protecting the national health and safety and have written into law the most effective coal mine safety bill in the history of American labor. We could do much more. We will do much more. Looking at the record I have just cited, I do not see how anyone who is not blind to America's aims and accomplishments can sell this country short. I do not see how anyone can fail to perceive the great surge of progress that lies just ahead of us. I, for one, am not given to feelings of gloom and doom. I believe in the greatness of America and its people. I believe, to paraphrase the words of Abraham Lincoln, that the end will bring us out all right. # # #