.

 Cold War, hot debate

 Helle Bering

 Anyone who was breathing easier because he thought the Cold
War was over may want to reconsider. As far as CNN goes, the
Cold War is here to stay. On and on it drones on Ted Turner's
network, in the form of the 24-part television series first inflicted
upon the world last summer. Flip channels on any given
evening, and you will likely at some point come upon Kenneth
Branagh's ominous intonations about the Berlin Wall or the evils of
Joseph McCarthy.

Indeed, by now these programs have become as familiar as the
interminable PBS "Nature" features, which invariably begin, "Winter
comes early to Yellowstone," or "As a species, sharks are much
misunderstood." The latter always makes one suspicious that the
producers must have been under the influence of pro-shark
propagandists.

 Equally, what seems to be CNN's not so subtle exercise in
national brainwashing ought to arouse suspicions. Not only are
CNN viewers (both here and abroad by the way) condemned to a
purgatory of endless reruns, Mr. Turner has also arranged to have
both the series and the book that accompanies it distributed in
American schools as teaching materials. Considering how little
history Americans in general manage to absorb, one wonders if
uncritical acceptance of the Cold War according to Ted Turner isn't
a danger here. After all, this was the man who extended his hand
in friendship to the Soviets with the creation of the Goodwill games,
and who later married no less than "Hanoi Jane" Fonda.

 It may be recalled that "Cold War" caused a good deal of
controversy when it was first broadcast, this despite having names
of real substance involved in its production. Sir Jeremy Isaacs of
the BBC, who previously produced "The World at War," an
outstanding panorama of World War II, and John Lewis
Gaddis, who served as consultant to the "Cold War" and is one of
the pre-eminent historians of the period.

 From Jacob Heilbrunn in the New Republic to Charles
Krauthammer in The Washington Post to Arnold Beichman in The
Washington Times and the Weekly Standard, the series was
roundly criticized as an exercise in historical distortion and moral
equivalence. As politically divisive a period in recent history as the
Cold War was, of course, it was destined to produce divisive
historical analysis as well. Before Mr. Turner succeeds in
permeating the national psyche with his perspective, it is therefore
of the greatest importance that counterbalancing arguments be
given due attention.

 Many of these articles can now be found in the best antidote there
is to Turnerized world history: the volume, "CNN's Cold War
Documentary: Issues and Controversy" edited by Mr. Beichman, a
research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a columnist for this
newspaper. (Published by the Hoover Institution Press.) It ought to
accompany every set of Mr. Turner's 24 tapes that goes into
American classrooms.

 Mr. Beichman writes, "I hope that our book will be read by school
boards, school principals, teachers, especially high school
teachers, as demonstrating that the Cold War was not merely a
struggle between a pair of equally demented gorillas whose snarls
and wild swings endangered world peace. In the Cold War, the
enemy of freedom was communism, despite its propaganda claims
to be idealism in action, a claim that the Turner-Isaacs
documentary and textbook appear at times to accept as valid."

 In the interest of fairness, the editor has afforded space to both Mr.
Issacs and Mr. Gaddis to defend their handiwork. Particularly
interesting is Mr. Gaddis's account of the only set of instructions
the creators of "Cold War" ever received from Mr. Turner: "that Cold
War tell its story from an international, not just an American
perspective, and that its tone not be triumphalist." At first blush,
there's nothing unremarkable about these injunctions. But imagine
World War II fit to the same directives, and the fallacy is
immediately apparent. Just imagine the Nazi leadership given equal
time - as the Soviet leadership is given here. Just imagine
producers deliberately staying clear of "triumphalism" as Europe is
freed by the Allies and the concentration camps liberated. Most
would find the result singularly offensive. To treat communism,
whose ultimate death toll far exceeded that of Nazism, with kid
gloves is no less that.

 The contributions of polemicists here are all-important in exposing
the series' specific problem areas. However, the most important -
because they lend the book greater intellectual heft - are
undoubtedly those of Hoover historian Robert Conquest and
Harvard historian Richard Pipes, foremost among experts on the
Soviet Union.

 Particularly where stunning and very compelling documentary
footage is on display, as admittedly it is there, viewers do need the
commentary of competent historians. Mr. Pipes writes, "It is said
that a picture is worth a thousand words, which may be true as far
as conveying impressions goes, but understanding requires a
different approach."

 Mr. Pipes concludes, "Just as it did matter that the Athenians
defeated the Persians, so it mattered that the West defeated the
East in the Cold War." This is the most important lesson of the
20th century, whether Mr. Turner likes it or not.

Helle Bering

--
Kathleen

The imposition of stigma is the commonest
form of violence used in democratic societies.
-- R. A. Pinker

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