Recurring throughout our history are the ideas that repressive
governments are doomed to failure; that liberty is a motivating
force; that freedom comes with responsibilities and must be guided
by principles; that the example of our democracy is a challenge to
all forms of political repression and an inspiration to those
desiring to be free. Wilson and Truman took these ideas as the
starting point for their policy formulation and pronouncements.
Truman both acknowledged his indebtedness to Wilson and learned
from his mistakes. This study places the two presidents within the
broader American tradition and explores the way they combined
reverence for the past with innovative policies.
Pierce provides a cohesive argument against those who simplify
and categorize American ideals in order to demean them. Her
findings show that the assumption that Wilson was an idealist while
Truman was a realist distorts our understanding of these men and
denies the seriousness of their positions. She reveals Truman's
brilliance as a foreign policy strategist and his fervency as a
spokesperson for American ideals. He was never willing to dispense
with geopolitics for the sake of internationalism, nor with
internationalism for the sake of geopolitics, but insisted that our
mission and our power were combined threads in our work for
freedom. Truman's wisely construed version of Wilsonianism, which
itself was an interpretation of America's mission and power, holds
great promise for the United States today.
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