JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn
now to the untold history of the United States. Academy Award-winning
filmmaker Oliver Stone has taken on three American presidents in JFK, Nixon and W.
A Vietnam War veteran, he was decorated with a Bronze Star and a Purple
Heart. As a filmmaker, he’s tackled the most controversial aspects of
the war, of the Vietnam war, in his classics Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July. He revealed the greed of the financial industry in the Hollywood hit Wall Street and the sequel, Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps. And he’s explored Latin America through his films Salvador, Comandante and South of the Border.
AMYGOODMAN:
Now Oliver Stone and historian Peter Kuznick from American University
have teamed up to produce a 10-part Showtime series called Oliver Stone’s Untold History of the United States.
It also features a companion book with a similar name. Drawing on
archival findings and recently declassified documents, the filmmakers
critically examine U.S. history, from the atomic bombing of Japan to the
Cold War, to the fall of communism, and continuing all the way through
to the Obama administration. This is the trailer for the Showtime
mini-series.
OLIVERSTONE:
History is exciting, and I want to make it as exciting as it can be. We
take a history subject, and we make it not only dramatic, but we are
compassionate. I always felt there’s a disconnect about what’s
officially reported and what actually happened. We can’t accept the
stuff that’s handed down. This is the key to the whole series, is to
find out how we got to where we are and who we are. It’s great, great
story.
AMYGOODMAN: That was the trailer for Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick’s 10-part Showtime series called The Untold History of the United States.
The first episode of the series aired on Monday night on Showtime.
It’ll re-air on Monday evenings at 8:00 p.m., is also available on
demand.
For more, the award-winning director Oliver Stone joins us here in
New York, and we’re joined by his co-author, Peter Kuznick, professor of
history and director of the Nuclear Studies Institute at American
University.
We welcome you both to Democracy Now! Oliver Stone, you’ve been working on this for years, unbeknownst to many people. Why?
OLIVERSTONE:
The trailer looked pretty epic. From here to here—it’s like a Cecil B.
DeMille movie, from 1940s to—it was a big job, four-and-a-half years,
off and on. I did do three feature films and two documentaries during
that period. But Peter was on the—we started in 2008, and it’s been
four-and-a-half.
We recently discussed Wallace and the bomb in 1997, when he was
teaching at American University and I was there in one of his classes.
And we talked about making a documentary of about an hour, hour and a
half. He’s an expert on the atomic—on weaponry, and especially the
atomic bomb. He founded the Department of Nuclear Studies in
American—and Wallace is—Henry Wallace, as he can explain to you, is a
key to the link: Would we have dropped the bomb? That’s the origin myths
of this. Every school kid—still, my daughter in her school, in private
school, in good school, is still learning this: We dropped the bomb
because we had to, because the Japanese resistance was fanatic, and we
would have lost many American lives taking Japan. This is one—there’s no
alternative to that story. And we are beginning the process in chapter
one, two and three of saying the bomb did not have to be dropped for
strategic reasons and also because it was morally reprehensible. But
strategically, it made no sense.
AMYGOODMAN: Professor Kuznick, why?
PETERKUZNICK:
It made no sense because the Japanese were already defeated. They were
looking for a way out of the war. United States knew they were defeated.
Truman refers to the intercepted July 18th telegram as "the telegram
from the Jap emperor asking for peace." The United States—
AMYGOODMAN: From the Japanese emperor asking for peace.
PETERKUZNICK:
The Japanese, yeah, but that was called—he says "the Jap emperor asking
for peace," is Truman’s exact words on that. Everybody else knew that
they were militarily defeated and looking for a way out. But the people
who knew that the best were the Russians, because they were trying to
get the Russians to intervene on their behalf to get them better
surrender terms, and also because—their strategy was to welcome American
invasion and then to conflict heavy damages and then force better
surrender terms. But once the Russians invaded, then that undermined
both their diplomatic strategy and their military strategy. So that was
what really ended the war. It was not the bombing. We had already been
bombing Japanese cities. We had firebombed over a hundred cities.
Destruction reached 99.5 percent of the city of Toyama. From the
Japanese standpoint, whether it was 200 bombs—200 planes and a thousand
bombs or one plane and one bomb didn’t change the equation. But the
Soviet invasion fundamentally changed it, and that’s what forced the
final surrender.
OLIVERSTONE: In Manchuria on August 9.
PETERKUZNICK: August 9th, yeah.
OLIVERSTONE:
It’s a huge—a huge—Stalin moved a huge army to the East off the
German—from the German frontier to the—and wiped out the Kwantung Army
in about, I think two days or one day.
PETERKUZNICK: Very, very quickly.
OLIVERSTONE:
And it was moving towards Japan. So, if you let a month go by, you
know, if we really are interested in ending this war and using Russian
troops, it’s perfect. We can do it.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, let’s
turn to a clip from the series. This one challenges the prevailing
logic of World War II being the United States’ so-called "Good" War.
OLIVERSTONE:
Generations of Americans have been taught that the United States
reluctantly dropped atomic bombs at the end of World War II to save the
lives of hundreds of thousands of young men poised to die in an invasion
of Japan. But the story is really more complicated, more interesting,
and much more disturbing. Many Americans view World War II nostalgically
as the "Good" War in which the United States and its allies triumphed
over German Nazis and Italian fascism and Japanese militarism. Others,
not so blessed. Remember, World War II is the bloodiest war in human
history. By the time it was over, 60 to 65 million people lay dead,
including an estimated 27 million Soviets, between 10 and 20 million
Chinese, six million Jews, over six million Germans, three million
non-Jewish Poles, two-and-a-half million Japanese, and one-and-a-half
million Yugoslavs. Austria, Britain, France, Italy, Hungary, Romania and
the United States each counted between a quarter-million and a
half-million dead.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Oliver Stone, the "Good" War, and of course the war with the most carnage in the history of the world, right?
OLIVERSTONE:
It’s a huge story. So that’s—it’s where we begin. But we deal with the
three empires, Britain and the U.S. and the rivalry between the U.S. and
Britain. And a lot of school kids don’t know that the British Empire is
a dominant empire and has so many resources around the world. And
Churchill is fighting, among other things, for the retention of the
colonies and, all through the Middle East, the oil supplies, Greece,
very important, North Africa, Egypt, Suez, India, Singapore. And that’s
what he’s trying to get back. And he never—he never starts the Second
Front for about two years. It’s been promised in '42 to Stalin. Stalin
is, meanwhile, rolling the Germans back and winning the war, as the
British and the Americans are "periphery pecking" in retaining the
British colonies for Britain. So, interesting story, the British, for
example, go into Athens in 1944, after they've liberated it, so to
speak, but they end up fighting in street battles with the communist
resistance fighters who fought very heroically against the Nazis. We put
in a—we put in a Nazi—a Greek who was working with the Nazis. Right
away, we put him into the premiership. It’s a dirty story, dirty story.
PETERKUZNICK:
What most Americans don’t know about the war—most Americans think that
the United States won the war. But the reality is that through most of
the war, the American and British combined were fighting 10 German
divisions; the Russians alone were fighting 200 German divisions. That’s
why Churchill says it was the Russians who tore the guts out of the
Nazi army.
AMYGOODMAN: Let’s go back to another clip from your series, The Untold History of the United States.
This one is about Henry Wallace, Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s vice
president and agriculture and commerce secretary. It suggests that the
Midwestern statesman would have put America on a radically different
trajectory had his path to the presidency not been blocked by the
Democratic Party leaders in 1944.
OLIVERSTONE:
Seeing the war clouds gathering clearly on the horizon, Roosevelt
decided to break with precedent and run for a third term in 1940 against
the strongly antiwar Republican candidate Wendell Willkie, a corporate
attorney from Indiana. The stakes were high. The nation might soon be at
war. Roosevelt weighed his options and chose his controversial
secretary of agriculture, Henry A. Wallace, as his running mate. Wallace
had overseen an extraordinary return to agricultural prosperity during
the Great Depression. These policies had been at the heart of the New
Deal. For the urban poor, Wallace also had provided food stamps and
school lunches. He instituted programs for land-use planning and soil
conservation. He carved out his credentials in the New Deal years as an
outspoken anti-fascist. Instead of the scientific community’s best ally,
Wallace spoke out strongly against the building up of false racial
theories in rebuke of the Hitler policies in Germany.
HENRYWALLACE:
"George Carver, born into slavery, now a chemist at Tuskegee University
specializing in botany, first introduced me to the mysteries of plant
fertilization. I spent a good many years breeding corn, because this
scientist deepened my appreciation of plants in a way I could never
forget. Superior ability is not the exclusive possession of any one race
or any one class, provided men are given the right opportunities."
OLIVERSTONE:
But Democratic Party bosses feared Wallace’s views, mistrusting his
devotion to principle over politics. It looked like the Wallace
nomination would go up in flames, when Roosevelt, angry and frustrated,
wrote a remarkable letter to the assembled delegates in which he flatly
turned down the presidential nomination.
PRESIDENTFRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT:
"The [Democratic] party has failed ... when ... it has fallen into the
control of those [who] think in terms of dollars instead of ... human
values. ... Until the Democratic Party ... shakes off all the shackles
of control fastened upon it by the forces of conservatism, reaction and
appeasement, ... it will not continue its march to victory. ... The
[party] ... cannot face in both directions at the same time. [Therefore,
I] declin[e] the honor of the nomination for the Presidency."
OLIVERSTONE:
His wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, saved the day. The first president’s wife
ever to address a convention, she told disgruntled delegates that "we
face now a grave situation."
ELEANORROOSEVELT: You cannot treat it as you would treat an ordinary nomination in an ordinary time.
OLIVERSTONE: The party bosses buckled and put Wallace on the ticket. They would, however, come back for their vengeance.
HENRYWALLACE:
I’ve just heard the news of my nomination, and there is just one thing I
want to say. I am confident that under the leadership of President
Roosevelt we shall have a united Democratic Party, victory in November,
and security for the American people.
AMYGOODMAN:
And that was the voice of Henry Wallace, nominated as vice president.
Oliver Stone, your inspiration for this whole series was about Henry
Wallace. Why? Talk about his significance.
OLIVERSTONE:
I would say the inspiration was the bomb, which is perhaps—the atomic
bomb, because I grew up right in that period. I was born right after it.
And I wanted to know—the bomb shaped all our lives, and we lived in
fear of it as we were in school—air raids, we came near the Cuban
missile crisis—and it haunts our policy. We were in a cold war up until
1989, '91, with the Soviets. But it continues on, if you noticed. I
mean, there was no peace dividend. And I'm wondering what happened in
the 1989, ’91 period, all the way through the ’90s. And it just keeps
going into the war on terror, the war on Noriega, the war on drugs. So,
you go back. And I talked to Peter, and he knows a lot about the bomb.
And did the bomb have to start all this? And do we have to keep doing
this?
And the bomb is what leads you to Wallace, because Wallace was a key
figure. He was supposed to be vice president in 1944, the popular
choice; 65 percent of the Democratic voters wanted him. Two percent
wanted Truman. And it’s an inside deal. It’s really ugly. It’s like a
Frank Capra movie, where everything is rigged from the inside. And on
one particular night, it comes down to a moment in time, like nine
seconds, when Wallace almost makes it. He almost squeezes in. The crowd
is cheering, "Wallace! Wallace!" And the bosses convene the convention
that night, and then overnight they turn the—they turn favors and so
forth and money and bribes. So Wallace does not end up as vice
president. Roosevelt dies, and a little unknown party hack, really,
called Harry Truman, at one of the most important times in the history
of the world, becomes—a small man becomes leader of the world, with all
the power, and, frankly, like a George Bush, he blows it.
AMYGOODMAN: Henry Wallace would later run for president.
OLIVERSTONE:
He would, but as unsuccessful third-party candidate, and he was smeared
repeatedly as a communist at that point. But the real drama is the ’44
convention.
PETERKUZNICK:
And Wallace was very much of a visionary. He’s been lost to history.
When I ask my students and other people, nobody knows Henry Wallace
anymore. He was an extraordinary man. When Henry Luce in 1941 said the
20th century must be the American century, the United States could
dominate the world in every way, Wallace countered as vice president,
when he gave his famous speech, when he said the 20th century must be
the century of the common man. He calls for a worldwide people’s
revolution in the tradition of the American Revolution, the French
Revolution, the Latin American Revolution and the Russian Revolution. He
says we have to wipe out monopolies and cartels.
OLIVERSTONE: Not bad versus all the [inaudible].
PETERKUZNICK:
Right—monopolies and cartels. He says we’ve got to end colonialism, end
imperialism, raise standards of livings around the world. And the U.S.
and the Soviets have to collaborate to refashion the world at the end of
the world. That was the vision that he had. The party bosses hated him,
as did the Wall Street people. Wallace said that America’s fascists are
those who think Wall Street comes first and the country comes second.
The anti-labor people hated him. The people against civil rights hated
him. And the people who were against women’s rights hated him. He was
the exemplar of everything good that the Democratic Party has ever stood
for.
AMYGOODMAN: Historian Peter Kuznick and three-time Academy Award-winning director Oliver Stone. We’ll be back with them in a minute.
OLIVERSTONE: You would have liked him, Amy. You would have liked him.
[break]
AMYGOODMAN:
Our guests are three-time Oscar-winning director Oliver Stone as well
as historian Peter Kuznick. And they have written the book, The Untold History of the United States. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, I also want to ask about President Reagan. In your book, Oliver Stone, The Untold History of the United States, you have a chapter titled "Death Squads for Democracy." This is Reagan in 1983 giving an address on Central America.
PRESIDENTRONALDREAGAN:
The strategic importance of Central America, bordering as it does in
the Caribbean, our lifeline to the outside world, two-thirds of all our
foreign trade in petroleum pass through the Panama Canal and the
Caribbean. In a European crisis, at least half of our supplies for NATO would go through these areas by sea.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, talk to us about Reagan and Central America policy.
OLIVERSTONE: Briefly, Ronald Reagan set American policy back like 20 years. There had been attempts at détente,
and he took the Cold War to a new level. He almost took it to the edge
of world war again. You know, he said—constantly he said that the Soviet
Union was ahead of the United States in every military capacity. And he
pumped up—but we never were. In all this time, these 80—70 years since
the Cold War, we were always ahead. But we were always the underdog in
our own mind. So, Central America, in Reagan’s mind, becomes the bulwark
of communists in this country: We’re being threatened again; they’re
coming in; the Sandinistas in Nicaragua are very dangerous, to the
underbelly of Texas and Arizona; they’re going to come up. He’s worried
about Guatemala. He’s worried about Honduras going—going red, and
Salvador, very important. So he starts, basically, a dirty war in these
Central American countries.
I was there. That’s when I went back to the—I made a film called Salvador
and hung out, and I saw soldiers that reminded me of my own experience
in Vietnam, young soldiers in the streets of Tegucigalpa walking around
lost, white skin and all that, and saying, "What are you doing here?"
You know, they don’t know. And I asked them, "Do you remember Vietnam?"
And they shrugged. They said, "Not really. We don’t know much about it,"
or, "We don’t want to discuss it, sir." So, it was death squads,
terror. The right-wing parties of Central America took their nod from
Reagan and killed a lot of—in Guatamala, it was the bloodiest, but
certainly Nicaragua, the Contra war, was a dirty war.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, of
course, you went back years later and told the story of the changing
Latin America, right? As you went country by country, the enormous—
OLIVERSTONE: Oh, South of the Border
was many years later, yeah. That’s in the 1990s. That comes out of the
economics of Reagan. The—South America was decimated by the—really, the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank played a huge role. And
the people turned against it. These are democratically elected new
leaders in the 21st century. They came in because of the policies,
disastrous policies, of Reagan.
AMYGOODMAN: I wanted to get to President Obama before the end of this conversation. In the last chapter of your book, The Untold History of the United States, it’s called "Obama: Managing a Wounded Empire," Oliver Stone.
OLIVERSTONE: Yeah. Yeah, no, it’s a—
AMYGOODMAN: You’re fiercely critical of him, but you also supported him.
OLIVERSTONE:
I supported him because the alternative was more frightening. It’s a
limited choice that Americans have. We live inside now a—no longer a
national security state. I think it’s a global security state. Obama has
made it very clear, as did Romney, that it’s about American power. We
are the, quote, "indispensable" nation in the world, which is a form of
American exceptionalism. And he made it very clear that he is going to
take troops and so forth out of Afghanistan and Iraq, but he is
committing, on a full-spectrum dominance, to a containment of China. He
said it. Hillary Clinton has said the 21st century will be America’s
Pacific century, which is a version, an echo, of Henry Luce’s statement.
So, it doesn’t end. And we’re going to—and you’ll see Obama, I think,
is going to move—make alliances, treaties with countries all around the
world. He’s already expanding the Bush version of security. You know
about the terror state. I guess you have done shows about—he hasn’t gone
back on any of the civil liberty laws. Peter, you want add something?
PETERKUZNICK:
And he’s expanded it. We were so critical of Bush for doing
surveillance against people without judicial review. Obama is targeting
and killing people without judicial review. We’re acting as judge, jury
and executioner now.
AMYGOODMAN: This is President Obama on the secret drug war on CNN—drone war.
PRESIDENTBARACKOBAMA:
It has to be a target that is authorized by our laws. It has to be a
threat that is serious and not speculative. It has to be a situation in
which we can’t capture the individual before they move forward on some
sort of operational plot against the United States. And this is an
example of where I think there’s been some misreporting. Our preference
is always to capture if we can, because we can gather intelligence. But a
lot of the terrorist networks that target the United States, the most
dangerous ones, operate in very remote regions, and it’s very difficult
to capture them. And we’ve got to make sure that, in whatever operations
we conduct, we are very careful about avoiding civilian casualties.
AMYGOODMAN:
There is President Obama speaking. We only have a minute left, but I
was just thinking about the Yemeni cleric Awlaki’s 16-year-old son who
was killed, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, two weeks after his father was
killed, also in a drone strike.
OLIVERSTONE:
The human beings is one—people will hate us more for doing this, and
we’re invading the sovereignty of Pakistan and Yemen and so many
countries. I mean, the United States is acting with impunity. But the
bigger issue is simply that there has been never—in the history of
empires, and they’ve all fallen, no one has a monopoly on any weapon
ever, and whether it’s the atomic bomb—was copied—or the hydrogen bomb.
Or, in this case, Predator drones will be made by other people, and they
will be coming this way or to our—we have 800 bases around the world
under this empire that we’ve created. So, we’re very vulnerable. In most
of them, we’ve created hatred and a desire for revenge.
PETERKUZNICK:
And it doesn’t work. That’s the other point, that when we started our
drone attacks in Yemen, there were 300 members of al-Qaeda there; now
there are 700 or 800 members. It backfires, these policies. We just make
people hate us. We refer—the CIA operators
who target people in Pakistan refer to them as "bugsplats," the people
who are killed there. To the Pakistanis, those are human beings. To the
operators here, they’re bugsplats. That’s the attitude.
OLIVERSTONE:
We have to get some comprehensive peace plan going. We have to join the
rest of the world, and we have to be part of the United Nations, not an
outlier. And that’s where we—
AMYGOODMAN: Well—
OLIVERSTONE: You’re finished—I’m finished?
AMYGOODMAN: Three-time Oscar Award-winning filmmaker Oliver Stone—
OLIVERSTONE: Thank you, Amy.
AMYGOODMAN: —and historian Peter Kuznick, I want to thank you both for being with us. Their book, The Untold History of the United States_. Their 10-part mini-series on Showtime is Mondays, Monday evenings. We will link to it at democracynow.org. And we will continue the conversation after the show.states We’ll post it at democracynow.org.
I’ll be speaking in Los Angeles at the Green Festival, Los Angeles Convention Center, Saturday at 1:00.
Source: Democracy Now