Lies My Teacher Told Me

(Ron) #1

misleads and mystifies students. Only by disclosing our actions can textbooks
provide readers with rational accounts of our adversaries.


Promise goes on to tell the happy results of our intervention: “Although
there was no immediate Communist threat to Lebanon, Eisenhower
demonstrated that the United States could react quickly. As a result, tensions in
the region receded.” In reality, the civil war in Lebanon broke out again in
1975, with mounting destruction in Beirut and throughout the nation. In 1983 a
whole lot of chaos broke out, so President Reagan sent in our marines again. A
truck bomb then killed 241 marines in their barracks, prompting Reagan to
withdraw the rest. Several textbooks tell of this event, but not one offers
students anything of substance about the continuity of conflict in Lebanon or our
role in causing it. In 2006, “chaos” broke out in Lebanon once more in the form
of a miniwar between the Arab nationalist organization Hezbollah and Israel.
Textbooks’ shallow discussions of Lebanon’s past provide no help to students
seeking to understand this new conflict.


Zaire or the Congo appears in the index of just two older textbooks,
Triumph of the American Nation and the 1991 edition of American Pageant.
Neither book mentions that the CIA urged the assassination of Patrice


Lumumba in 1961.^23 Pageant offered an accurate account of the beginning of
the strife: “The African Congo received its independence from Belgium in
1960 and immediately exploded into violence. The United Nations sent in a
peacekeeping force, to which Washington contributed much money but no
manpower.” There Pageant stops. The account in Triumph of the American
Nation mentioned Lumumba by name: “A new crisis developed in 1961 when
Patrice Lumumba, leader of the pro-Communist faction, was assassinated.”
Triumph says nothing about U.S. involvement with the assassination and
concludes with the happiest of endings: “By the late 1960s, most scars of the
civil war seemed healed. The Congo (Zaire) became one of the most
prosperous African nations.” Would that it were! The CIA helped bring to
power Joseph Mobutu, a former army sergeant. By the end of the 1960s,
Triumph to the contrary, Zaire under Mobutu had become one of the most
wretched African nations, economically and politically. In the first edition of
this book, I predicted “in 1994, Zaire is ripe for a ‘new’ crisis to develop.”
Indeed, soon civil war did erupt in Zaire, forcing Mobutu to flee in 1997.
Various parts of the country have faced continued strife since then, killing
almost four million residents. Today’s students and authors have no basis to

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