Why Reagan was not impeached

Q2 Arts and Humanities European Journal of American Culture Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1386/ejac_00053_1
Peter J. Ling
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Abstract

In the aftermath of Watergate and Vietnam, Congressional investigations uncovered the largely unknown activities of the CIA and other agencies, which included arming and interfering in the domestic politics of regimes in both Central America and Iran. These programmes had also involved supporting reactionary regimes in ways that some saw as drawing the United States into conflicts, like Vietnam, without public knowledge or consent. In 1987, it was revealed that the Reagan administration had operated a clandestine policy in Nicaragua that evaded the restrictions placed upon the executive by the Boland Amendment in terms of aid given to the Nicaraguan Contras and that National Security Council (NSC) staff had lied to Congress and concealed these illegal actions. They had solicited funds from foreign allies and smuggled arms to the Contra insurgents in support of their efforts to topple the Sandinista regime. Contrary to the Arms Export Control Act and to its own publicly stated policy, the administration had also sold arms, particularly missiles, to Iran, which had been branded a sponsor of international terrorism since the Iranian revolution, and which was currently at war with its neighbour, Iraq. Such deals had formed part of ‘arms for hostages’ negotiations that were also contrary to official policy. Finally, it was disclosed that profits from the arms sales had been diverted to fund the Contras and hence to evade Congressional restrictions on funding. This article explores why these illegal actions did not result in President Reagan’s impeachment. It considers the merits of the administration’s claims that this was a ‘rogue operation’ by zealots within the NSC, and the success of its efforts to present Reagan as eager to cooperate with efforts to discover the truth of what had happened. It reviews the interactions between the Tower Commission, Congressional investigations and Office of Independent Counsel probe (Lawrence Walsh) and shows how these contributed to Reagan’s ‘escape’ from impeachment. It reviews the argument that Reagan’s underlying health problems contributed to his lax management of NSC operations and it considers the importance of televised testimony, particularly that of Oliver North, in shaping public opinion in the administration’s favour. Finally, it considers how this significant episode in 1980s politics foreshadowed major trends in US politics that can be seen as culminating in the present, acute partisan divide, Donald Trump’s double impeachment, and a manifest decline in public trust and respect for American political institutions.
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为什么里根没有被弹劾
水门事件和越南事件之后,国会的调查揭露了中央情报局和其他机构基本上不为人知的活动,其中包括武装和干预中美洲和伊朗政权的国内政治。这些计划还包括在没有公众知情或同意的情况下,以一些人认为将美国拖入越南等冲突的方式支持反动政权。1987年,据透露,里根政府在尼加拉瓜实施了一项秘密政策,规避了《博兰德修正案》对行政部门在援助尼加拉瓜反政府武装方面的限制,国家安全委员会(NSC)工作人员向国会撒谎并隐瞒了这些非法行为。他们向外国盟友募集资金,并向反政府武装走私武器,以支持他们推翻桑地诺政权的努力。与《武器出口管制法》及其公开声明的政策相反,政府还向伊朗出售武器,特别是导弹。自伊朗革命以来,伊朗一直被视为国际恐怖主义的赞助者,目前正与邻国伊拉克交战。这些交易构成了“武器换人质”谈判的一部分,也违背了官方政策。最后,据披露,军售利润被转用于资助反政府武装,从而逃避国会对资金的限制。这篇文章探讨了为什么这些非法行为没有导致里根总统被弹劾。它考虑了政府声称这是国家安全委员会内部狂热分子的“流氓行动”的优点,以及政府成功地将里根描绘成渴望与发现所发生事情真相的努力合作的人。它回顾了Tower委员会、国会调查和独立法律顾问办公室调查(Lawrence Walsh)之间的互动,并展示了这些是如何促成里根“逃脱”弹劾的。它回顾了里根潜在的健康问题导致他对国家安全委员会行动管理松懈的论点,并考虑了电视证词,特别是奥利弗·诺斯的证词,在塑造有利于政府的公众舆论方面的重要性。最后,它考虑了20世纪80年代政治中的这一重大事件如何预示着美国政治的主要趋势,这些趋势可以被视为最终导致目前严重的党派分歧、唐纳德·特朗普的双重弹劾,以及公众对美国政治机构的信任和尊重明显下降。
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来源期刊
European Journal of American Culture
European Journal of American Culture Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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