Elusive Victories_ The American Presidency at War-Oxford University Press (2012)

(Axel Boer) #1

426 notes to pages 347‒358



  1. Gideon Rose, How Wars End: Why We Always Fight the Last Battle (New
    York: Simon and Schuster, 2010).

  2. Although wars have put an end to liberal presidents’ eff orts to expand the
    federal government, some groups have received expanded social benefi ts
    as a reward for their wartime sacrifi ces. Near the end of the Second World
    War, Congress approved the GI Bill of Rights, a package of education and
    housing benefi ts for those who served in the armed forces. As I noted, the
    British response to popular demands for increased social benefi ts covered
    the entire population, but the British people as a whole had suff ered
    far more and for far longer than Americans had. Sometimes Americans
    who did not serve in uniform have pressed a claim that their wartime
    contributions be recognized. Women parlayed their eff orts on behalf of
    mobilization in the First World War into approval of the constitutional
    amendment that granted them the right to vote. So long as the United
    States fi ghts wars with a professional military and no broad social mobi-
    lization, however, it is unlikely that any other group will be able to build
    on the idea of wartime sacrifi ce as the basis for receiving social benefi ts.

  3. Rose, How Wars End , 284–85.

  4. John F. Kennedy popularized this phrase after the Bay of Pigs fi asco in
    1961, but the quote has been attributed to several earlier public fi gures.

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