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  • America's remarkable 28th president

    Woodrow Wilson

    Negotiating world peace

    America's remarkable 28th president

    Sep 7th 2013

    Both eyes on posterity

    Wilson. By A. Scott Berg. Putnam Adult; 832 pages; $40. To be
    published in Britain in October by Simon & Schuster; £30. Buy
    fromAmazon.com, Amazon.co.uk

    `WE SAVED the world,' President Woodrow Wilson said in 1918, `and I do
    not intend to let those Europeans forget it.' Wilson was sailing to
    Europe for a peace conference that would shape the world's future. The
    first world war had ended, and the president was determined to create
    an international governing body to prevent such massive bloodshed from
    ever happening again. Europeans welcomed him with unabashed cheers. It
    was the first time a sitting American president had stepped onto their
    soil.

    Less than a year later, Wilson had a stroke and lay bed-bound at the
    White House. His dreams of a League of Nations would take hold, but he
    could not persuade America to join. Powerful Republicans in the Senate
    feared yielding sovereignty (a familiar refrain today). The result was
    that the Senate did not ratify the Treaty of Versailles, which created
    the league and set the terms of the peace. It became Wilson's greatest
    disappointment.

    Negotiating world peace was not what Wilson had in mind when he took
    office in 1913. Instead he had grand plans for reforming his own
    country. He spent the first years of his presidency dismantling
    tariffs, introducing a new federal income tax, battling the
    anti-competitive activities of big business and creating the Federal
    Reserve system of banks. His victories were big, and other landmarks
    soon followed, such as the approval of the 1920 constitutional
    amendment allowing women to vote.

    A. Scott Berg, who won a Pulitzer prize for his life of Charles
    Lindbergh, has written a detailed account lionising the man who, he
    says, experienced `the most meteoric rise in American history'. After
    serving as president of Princeton University, Wilson spent just two
    years as governor of New Jersey before a tide of progressivism carried
    him to the presidency. Wilson tried to keep America out of the war.
    But faced with the inevitable by the spring of 1917, he quickly built
    an industrial war machine that left a legacy of American might.

    There is plenty to dislike about Wilson. Despite his Presbyterian
    morality, he was a racist. Born in the South shortly before the civil
    war, he oversaw the segregation of federal agencies as well as the
    armed forces. His policies left blacks `discouraged and bitter', in
    the words of Booker T. Washington, a renowned educator. Another bad
    decision was clinging to the presidency after his stroke, leaving his
    second wife, Edith, in near-total control of his activities.

    Caught up in the day-by-day lurch of Wilson's presidency, Mr Berg
    fails to analyse some of history's most pressing questions. How did
    Wilson, who grew up in southern states devastated by America's civil
    war and resentful of harsh federal oversight afterwards, agree to a
    peace treaty that humiliated Germany? And what might have happened if
    America had joined the League of Nations, as Wilson had so desperately
    wanted? The league failed in its basic objective of securing the world
    against another great war. But a more enduring intergovernmental body,
    the United Nations, grew out of the next conflagration. Mr Berg stops
    at Wilson's death. For better and worse, the story of the 28th
    president goes on.

    >From the print edition: Books and arts

    http://www.economist.com/news/books-and-arts/21584957-americas-remarkable-28th-president-negotiating-world-peace




    From: A. Papazian
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