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Guest
Contributor
Damjan
de Krnjevic-Miskovic
Damjan
de Krnjevic-Miskovic, born in what was then the Socialist
Federative Republic of Yugoslavia, is managing editor of
The National Interest and senior fellow at the Institute
on Religion and Public Policy. [go to Guest index]
Ronald
Reagan: Liberator of Nations
Spreading democracy and freedom..
[Damjan de Krnjevic-Miskovic] 6/11/04
Ronald Reagan
is now with them that rest. My land was given a new birth of
freedom because Ronald Reagan
saw that it was
enslaved by an evil as great as there ever has been on earth.
As president, he played a leading role in the liberation of half
of Europe from communism. It is as a great liberator, more than
for anything else, that it is fitting he be remembered. Renowned
indeed will be his grave.
Sixty years ago, as the Allies stormed the beaches of Normandy,
the communists began to occupy Eastern Europe. Liberty and slavery
coexisted in a cold peace for decades. Then came Ronald Reagan.
He understood, following Lincoln, that Europe and then the world
would become all one thing, or all another. And he believed that
his thing, because it was good, could triumph over the other,
because it was evil.
For us who were born in communist countries,
Ronald Reagan was great because he spoke unadorned truths.
He understood what eluded
the convoluted reasonings of cosmopolitan sophisticates and progressives
on both sides of the Iron Curtain: that the communist system
was evil, that it was impossible fully to pursue happiness under
tyranny, that the continued existence of the Soviet block was
an existential threat to the liberal democracies and the principles
for which they stand, and, most importantly, that by the time
he was elected president, it was both possible and prudent actively
to work towards its destruction. “Peace through strength,” was
the phrase, and he knew that life in a world at peace in liberty
would be better than one at peace in tyranny. And that made all
the difference in the world.
Reagan was often attacked for giving simple solutions to complex
problems. Sometimes his critics were right. But on the fundamental
questions, he was the one who was right: his answers, his views,
were not simple in the sense of simple-minded. They were simple
in the sense that they were clear. Evil was evil. Tyranny was
tyranny. Freedom was freedom.
It matters little to his legacy that most people in the former
Soviet Union and elsewhere in the old Soviet sphere were materially,
perhaps even spiritually, better off in the last decade of communism
than they are now. What matters is that Reagan believed, correctly,
that we, subjects of communist regimes, could never determine
our own destiny while we lived under the hammer and the sickle.
That many of us have since the fall of communism, chosen to live
hedonistically, immoderately, is understandable, for a life dedicated
to virtuous actions cannot be lived without the necessary equipment,
namely the habits we can hope to acquire in a regime where citizens
can live in ordered liberty.
Reagan understood that liberal democracy was
such a regime—he
famously termed it “the last best hope of man on earth”—in
part because commerce could flourish throughout the land. With
commerce comes prosperity, with prosperity comes the possibility
to live leisurely, liberally, and thus acquire the security to
accept to rule and be ruled in turn. And then, understanding
all that, Reagan used the prosperity of America to destroy not
only a regime but its ideological underpinnings by saying, simply, “Mr.
Gorbachev, tear down this wall.”
Reagan understood and, most importantly, acted on the understanding,
that a dictatorship in the name of anything was slavery, and
that freedom in the pursuit of happiness was indispensable. That
the American people elected him to the only office that could
help liberate us from tyranny is a testament to their good character
as a nation and a testament to the nobility of the regime that
formed them.
We will not forget Reagan’s courage to accord his deeds
as president with the principles upon which his country was founded,
for he helped bring in a new birth of freedom to the world, he
helped ensure that, as Lincoln said so perfectly, “government
of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish
from the earth.”
Goodbye Mr. President, you liberator of nations. You have outsoared
the shadow of our night, and we tremble a little, feeling, secretly,
that today the spirit of liberty is less secure than it was yesterday. CRO
Damjan de Krnjevic-Miskovic, born in what was then the Socialist
Federative Republic of Yugoslavia, is managing editor of The
National Interest and senior fellow at the Institute on Religion
and Public Policy. An earlier version of this essay appeared
in National Review Online on June 6th.
This
piece first appeared
at In
The National Interest
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