Modern History Sourcebook:
Senator Fulbright:
Appraisal of US Policy in the Dominican Crisis, September 15, 1965
.I was in doubt about the advisability of making a statement on the Dominican
affair until some of my colleagues made public statements on the floor. Their views on the
way in which the committee proceedings were conducted and, indeed, on the Dominican crisis
as a whole, are so diametrically opposed to my own that I now consider it my duty to
express my personal conclusions drawn from the hearings held by the Committee on Foreign
Relations. . . .U.S. policy in the Dominican crisis was characterized initially by over-timidity and
subsequently by over-action. Throughout the whole affair it has also been characterized bv
a lack of candor.These are general conclusions I have reached from a painstaking review of the salient
features of the extremely complex situation. These judgments are made, of course, with the
benefit of hindsight and, in fairness, it must be conceded there were no easy choices
available to the United States in the Dominican Republic. Nonetheless, it is the task of
diplomacy to make wise decisions when they need to be made and U.S. diplomacy failed to do
so in the Dominican crisis. . . .I am frankly puzzled as to the current attitude of the U.S. Government toward reformist
movements in Latin America. On the one hand, President Johnson's deep personal commitment
to the philosophy and alms of the Alliance for Progress is clear; it was convincingly
expressed, for example, in his speech to the Latin American Ambassadors on the fourth
anniversary of the Alliance for Progress-a statement in which the President compared the
Alliance for Progress with his own enlightened program for a Great Society at home. On the
other hand, one notes a general tendency oil the part of our policy makers not to look
beyond a Latin American politician's anti-communism. One also notes in certain Government
agencies, particularly the Department of Defense, a preoccupation with counterinsurgency,
which is to say, with the prospect of revolutions and means of suppressing them...It is of great importance that the uncertainty as to U.S. alms in Latin America be
resolved. We cannot successfully advance the cause of popular democracy and at the same
time align ourselves with corrupt and reactionary oligarchies; yet that is what we seem to
be trying to do. The direction of the Alliance for Progress is toward social revolution in
Latin America; the direction of our Dominican intervention is toward the suppression of
revolutionary movements which are supported by Communists or suspected of being influenced
by Communists. The prospect of an election in 9 months which may conceivably produce a
strong democratic government is certainly reassuring on this score, but the fact remains
that the reaction of the United States at the time of acute crisis was to intervene
forcibly and illegally against a revolution which, had we sought to influence it instead
of suppressing it, might have produced a strong popular government without foreign
military intervention. Since just about every revolutionary , movement is likely to
attract Communist support, at least in the beginning, the approach followed in the
Dominican Republic, if consistently pursued, must inevitably make us the enemy of all
revolutions and therefore the ally of all the unpopular and corrupt oligarchies of the
hemisphere. . . .It is not surprising that we Americans are not drawn toward the uncouth revolutionaries
of the non-Communist left. We are not, as we like to claim in Fourth of July speeches, the
most truly revolutionary nation on earth; we are, on the contrary, much closer to being
the most unrevolutionary nation on earth. We are sober and satisfied and comfortable and
rich; our institutions are stable and old and even venerable; and our Revolution of 1776,
for that matter, was not much of an upheaval compared to the French and Russian
revolutions and to current and impending revolutions in Latin America, Asia, and
Africa....We must try to understand social revolution and the injustices that give it rise
because they are the heart and core of the experience of the great majority of people now
living in the world. . . .It is the revolutionaries of the non-Communist left who have most of the popular
support in Latin America. The Radical Party in Chile, for example, is full of 19th century
libertarians whom many North Americans would find highly congenial, but it was recently
crushed in national elections by a group of rambunctious, leftist Christian Democrats. It
may be argued that the Christian Democrats are anti-United States, and to a considerable
extent some of them are-more so now, it may be noted, than prior to the intervention of
the United States in the Dominican Republic - but they are not Communists and they have
popular support. . . .The movement of the future in Latin American is social revolution. The question is
whether it is to be Communist or democratic revolution and the choice which the Latin
Americans make will depend in part on bow the United States uses its great influence. It
should be very clear that the choice is not between social revolution and conservative
oligarchy but whether, by supporting reform, we bolster the popular non-Communist left or
whether, by supporting unpopular oligarchies, we drive the rising generation of educated
and patriotic young Latin Americans to an embittered and hostile form of communism like
that of Fidel Castro in Chile [sic].In my Senate speech of March 25, 1964, I commented as follows on the prospect of
revolution:I am not predicting violent revolutions in Latin America or elsewhere.
Still less am I advocating them. I wish only to suggest that violent social revolutions
are a possibility in countries where feudal oligarchies resist all meaningful change by
peaceful means. We must not, in our preference for the democratic procedures envisioned by
the Charter of Punta del Este, close our minds to the possibility that democratic
procedures may fail in certain countries and that where democracy does fail violent social
convulsions may occur.I think that in the case of the Dominican Republic we did close our minds to the
causes and to the essential legitimacy of revolution in a country in which democratic
procedures had failed. That, I think, is the central fact concerning the participation of
the United States in the Dominican revolution and, possibly as well, its major lesson for
the future....The United States intervened in the Dominican Republic for the purpose of preventing
the victory of a revolutionary force which was judged to be Communist dominated. On the
basis of Ambassador Bennett's messages to Washington, there is no doubt that the threat of
communism rather than danger to American lives was his primary reason for recommending
military intervention. . . .. . . The evidence does not establish that the Communists at any time actually had
control of the revolution. There is little doubt that they had influence within the
revolutionary movement, but the degree of that influence remains a matter of speculation.The administration, however, assumed almost from the beginning that the revolution was
Communist-dominated, or would certainly become so, and that nothing short of forcible
opposition could prevent a Communist takeover. In their apprehension lest the Dominican
Republic become another Cuba, some of our officials seem to have forgotten that virtually
all reform movements attract some Communist Support, that there is an important difference
between Communist support and Communist control of a political movement, that it is quite
possible to compete with the Communists for influence in a reform movement rather than
abandon it to them, and, most important of all, that economic development and social
justice are themselves the primary and most reliable security against Communist
subversion. . . .Intervention on the basis of Communist participation as distinguished from control of
the Dominican revolution was a mistake in my opinion which also reflects a grievous
misreading of the temper of contemporary Latin American politics. Communists are present
in all Latin American countries, and they are going to inject themselves into almost any
Latin American revolution and try to seize control of it. If any group or any movement
with which the Communists associate themselves is going to be automatically condemned in
the eyes of the United States, then we have indeed given up all hope of guiding or
influencing even to a marginal degree the revolutionary movements and the demands for
social change which are sweeping Latin America. Worse , if that is our view, then we have
made ourselves the prisoners of the Latin American oligarchs who are engaged in a vain
attempt to preserve the status quo-reactionaries who habitually use the term
"Communist" very loosely, in part out of emotional predilection and in part in a
calculated effort to scare the United States into supporting their selfish and discredited
aims. . . .In the eyes of educated, energetic and patriotic young Latin Americans - which is to
say the generation that will make or break the Alliance for Progress-the United States
committed a worse offense in the Dominican Republic than just intervention; it intervened
against social revolution and in support, at least temporarily, of a corrupt, reactionary
military oligarchy.It is not possible at present to assess the depth and extent of disillusion with the
United States on the part of democrats arid reformers in Latin America. I myself think
that it is deep and widespread. . . .The tragedy of Santo Domingo is that a policy that purported to defeat communism in the
short run is more likely to have the effect of promoting it in the long run. Intervention
in the Dominican Republic has alienated - temporarily or permanently, depending on our
future policies-our real friends in Latin America. These, broadly, are the people of the
democratic left. . . .By our intervention on the side of a corrupt military oligarchy in the Dominican
Republic, we have embarrassed before their own people the democratic reformers who have
counseled trust and partnership with the United States. We have lent credence to the idea
that the United States is the enemy of social revolution in Latin America and that the
only choice Latin Americans have is between communism and reaction.If those are the available alternatives, if there is no democratic left as a third
option, then there is no doubt of the choice that honest and patriotic Latin Americans
will make: they will choose communism, not because they want it but because U.S. policy
will have foreclosed all other avenues of social revolution and, indeed, all other
possibilities except the perpetuation of rule by military juntas and economic oligarchies.
. . .The Foreign Relations Committee's study of the Dominican crisis leads me to draw
certain specific conclusions regarding American policy in the Dominican Republic and also
suggests some broader considerations regarding relations between the United States and
Latin America. My specific conclusions regarding the crisis in Santo Domingo are as
follows:First. The United States intervened forcibly in the Dominican Republic in the last week
of April 1965 not primarily to save American lives, as was then contended, but to prevent
the victory of a revolutionary movement which was judged to be Communist-dominated. The
decision to land thousands of marines on April 28 was based primarily on the fear of
"another Cuba" in Santo Domingo.Second. This fear was based on fragmentary and inadequate evidence. There is no doubt
that Communists participated i n the Dominican revolution on the rebel side, probably to a
greater extent after than before the landing of U.S. marines on April 28, but just as it
cannot be proved that the Communists would not have taken over the revolution neither can
it be proved that they would have. There is little basis in the evidence offered the
committee for the assertion that the rebels were Communist-dominated or certain to become
so; on the contrary, the evidence suggests a chaotic situation in which no single faction
was dominant at the outset and in which everybody, including the United States, bad
opportunities to influence the shape and course of the rebellion.Third. The United States let pass its best opportunities to influence the course of
events. The best opportunities were on April 25, when Juan Bosch's partv, the PRD,
requested a "United States presence," and on April 27, when the rebels,
believing themselves defeated, requested United States mediation for a negotiated
settlement. . . .Fourth. U.S. policy toward the Dominican Republic shifted markedly to the right between
September 1963 and April 1965. In 1963, the United States strongly supported Bosch and the
PRD as enlightened reformers; in 1965 the United States opposed their return to power on
the unsubstantiated ground that a Bosch or PRD government would certainly, or almost
certainly, become Communist dominated. Thus the United States turned its back on social
revolution in Santo Domingo and associated itself with a corrupt and reactionary. military
oligarchy.Fifth. U.S. policy was marred by a lack of candor and by misinformation. The former is
illustrated by official assertions that U.S. military intervention was primarily for the
Purpose of saving American lives; the latter is illustrated by exaggerated reports of
massacres and atrocities by the rebels-reports which no one has been able to verify. It
was officially asserted, for example, by the President in a press conference on June 17
according to an official State Department bulletin-that "some 1,500 innocent people
were murdered and shot, and their heads cut off." There is no evidence to support
this statement, . . .Sixth. Responsibility for the failure of American policy in Santo Domingo lies
primarily with those who advised the president. In the critical days between April 25 and
April 28, these officials sent the president exaggerated reports of the danger of a
Communist takeover in Santo Domingo and, on the basis of these, recommended U.S. massive
military intervention. . . .Seventh. Underlying the bad advice and unwise actions of the United States was the fear
of another Cuba. The specter of a second Communist state in the Western Hemisphere-and its
probable repercussions within the United States and possible effects on the careers of
those who might be held responsible-seems to have been the most important single factor in
distorting the judgment of otherwise sensible and competent men.
Source:from the Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the 89th Congress, Ist
Session, Volume III, No. 170, Daily Edition (September 15, 1965), pp. 22998-23005.
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