steve Kellerman is a life-long WOBBLY --- apologies to those who are seeing
this twice --- I think I agree with this entire analysis ...

One mini fact -- when Volcker raised interest rates in 1979 setting the
stage for a SHORT but SHARP recession which I think JUST lasted six months
in 1980 (costing Carter the re-election) Carter was the only President
since Eisenhower to not engage in ANY expansionary fiscal policy to counter
the recession --

One quibble -- NIXON may have wanted to "zap" labor but ALL his policies
(EPA,OSHA,pushing the FED to lower interest rates) followed by FORD with a
gigantic tax cut to fight the 1975 recession were the HIGH TIDE of
Keynesian Economics which CARTER set out to "bypass" with deregulation and
the capital gains tax cut of 1978.

SO CARTER was the true turning point away from the US pale version of
social democracy to neoliberalism

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Steve Kellerman <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Jan 1, 2025 at 11:51 AM
Subject: Jimmy Carter
The trotskyite take on Jimmy Carter (also the hero of the old joke whose
punchline is "Is that you, Bubba?")

The death of former President Jimmy Carter, at the age of 100, has become
the occasion for his public canonization, as the corporate media, former
and current US presidents Biden, Trump, Clinton and Bush, and a multitude
of leaders of world capitalism join hands to praise Carter as an advocate
of peace, human rights and aid to the poor and downtrodden.
President Jimmy Carter speaks about energy before a joint session of the
Congress in Washington, April 21, 1977. House speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill
is at right, and Vice President Walter Mondale is at left. [AP Photo/AP
file photo]

Carter left office in January 1981, so more than half of all Americans, and
far more than half of the world’s population, have no memory of his
presidency. They perhaps know something of his post-presidency, which
combined humanitarian efforts in the poorest countries in the world—Habitat
for Humanity, campaigns against guinea worm and other debilitating
diseases—with occasional diplomatic missions on behalf of American
imperialism.

The question for the working class is not to evaluate Carter as a human
being in comparison to those who succeeded him in the White House. The
downward curve is unmistakable, reflecting the decline of the American
ruling class as a whole, culminating in the senile warmonger Biden and the
demented fascist Trump.

The purpose of this brief review of the history of Carter’s presidency is
to make a Marxist assessment of a president who, like all the leaders of
American imperialism, defended the interests of the capitalist ruling elite
against its overseas enemies and, above all, against the working class at
home.

Carter’s four-year presidency was a critical transition point in American
politics. It marked a definitive shift in the political trajectory of the
Democratic Party, which was moving sharply to the right, breaking its
association with the policies of limited social reform. These were begun
under Roosevelt’s New Deal in the 1930s and continued through the “Fair
Deal” of Truman, the “New Frontier” of Kennedy and the “Great Society” of
Lyndon Johnson, ending in the debacle of the Vietnam War in the 1960s.

The Nixon administration too was shipwrecked by the war in Vietnam, and the
overall decline in the economic position of American capitalism, expressed
most starkly in the ending of dollar-gold convertibility in August 1971.
Nixon turned sharply against the working class, but he could not pursue
efforts to suppress wages struggles and impose austerity as his
administration disintegrated in the Watergate scandal. Nixon was forced to
resign in August 1974, succeeded by Gerald Ford, his unelected vice
president. Ford’s pardon of Nixon and his inability to contain inflation
led the ruling elite to seek a replacement who could, at least temporarily,
provide some stability.
President Jimmy Carter, center, is flanked by Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin and Egypt's President Anwar Sadat as they faced newsmen at
the conclusion of their discussions toward Middle East Peace moves at
Carter's Camp David retreat in Maryland in September 1978. [AP Photo/AP
file photo]

The federal government was widely discredited, not only by the Watergate
break-in and cover-up that led to Nixon’s resignation, but by a whole
series of revelations of government criminality: the FBI’s COINTELPRO
program of illegal surveillance, provocation and even murder; the CIA
assassinations and coup plots exposed in the Church committee
investigation; the identification of the US government with such crimes as
the military coup in Chile, in which tens of thousands of youth and workers
were slaughtered.

Carter’s function was to refurbish the bloodstained record of American
imperialism, after decades of wars, coups and assassinations, with the
ludicrous pretense that the foreign policy of the most powerful imperialist
nation would now be based on the defense of “human rights.” At the same
time, in the wake of the open criminality and corruption of the Nixon
administration, Carter projected an image of piety and personal modesty and
pledged to establish a government that would “never lie to you.”

At the time he announced his candidacy for the US presidency, in late 1974,
it would be no exaggeration to describe Carter as an entirely unknown
quantity to the American public. A former aide recalled that Carter went on
the popular quiz show “What’s My Line?” and none of the panelists could
identify him as the governor of Georgia.
President Jimmy Carter listens to Senator Joseph R. Biden
(Democrat-Delaware), as they wait to speak at a fund raising reception at
Padua Academy in Wilmington, Delaware, on February 20, 1978. [AP
Photo/Barry Thumma]

His elevation to the Democratic presidential nomination was the product of
a well-orchestrated effort in ruling circles. Carter was invited onto the
Trilateral Commission, the panel financed by Chase Manhattan banker David
Rockefeller and directed by fanatical anticommunist Professor Zbigniew
Brzezinski to groom advocates for the policies demanded by the financial
elite: fiscal austerity at home and bristling anti-Soviet militarism abroad.
<https://www.wsws.org/en/special/pages/donate.html?utm_source=wsws&utm_medium=in-article-ad&utm_campaign=in-article-ad-nyfund-12-05>

Brzezinski became the foreign policy guru to the Democratic candidate and
then held the position of National Security Advisor—previously occupied by
Henry Kissinger—throughout Carter’s term. There he spearheaded actions
around the world that were the precursors of today’s drive by American
imperialism towards World War III.

The central focus was to prosecute the Cold War as aggressively as
possible. It was Brzezinski who conceived the plan to turn Afghanistan into
“Russia’s Vietnam,” a strategic disaster on the scale of that suffered by
Washington in Southeast Asia, which would undermine the domestic stability
of the Soviet Union. US military aid to Islamist guerrillas fighting the
pro-Soviet government in Kabul ultimately triggered the reactionary Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, a process very similar to the US effort
over the past decade that used NATO expansion to provoke the Russian
invasion of Ukraine.

It was the Carter-Brzezinski foreign policy that brought Saudi
multimillionaire Osama bin Laden to Afghanistan and gave birth to Al Qaeda
and Islamic fundamentalist terrorism. Brzezinski would later remark that “a
few stirred-up Muslims” was a small price to pay for the collapse of the
Soviet Union. As part of this anti-Soviet focus, Carter completed the
Nixon-Kissinger rapprochement with China, giving China full diplomatic
recognition in order to use Beijing against Moscow, which was then
perceived as the greater threat to US world domination.

Much has been made in the past days’ media blitz of Carter’s role in
brokering the 1979 Camp David Accords, which ended the most dangerous
military threat to Israel by cementing a “peace” deal with Egypt. This gave
Israel a free hand to carry out unrestricted attacks on the Palestinian
people, a road that led straight to the ethnic cleansing of the West Bank
by fascistic Jewish settlers and the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

Less has been said about Carter’s announcement that any outside military
threat to the Persian Gulf oil fields would be taken as a major national
security challenge to the United States requiring American military
intervention. The “Carter doctrine” was the US response to the Iranian
Revolution, which overthrew the blood-soaked regime of the Shah, the main
US ally along with Israel, in the Middle East. It set the stage for all the
future American wars in the region, including the 1990-91 Persian Gulf War,
launched by George H. W. Bush, and the 2003 invasion and conquest of Iraq,
carried out by his son, George W. Bush.

All these plans, which prefigured in many ways the current focus of
American imperialist foreign policy, were blown up by revolutionary
upheavals. The most powerful blow came from the Iranian Revolution, which
overthrew the regime of the Shah, who had ruled the country as an absolute
monarch since the CIA-backed coup of 1953 overthrew the elected government
of Mossadegh. The Shah’s secret police, the Savak, had become a watchword
for torture and murder.

Carter set aside his human rights rhetoric when it came to the Shah, since
the despot was the American gendarme of the Middle East, along with Israel,
using his military and oil power as a key imperialist ally. In one
notorious incident, Carter was feted by the Shah at a banquet in Tehran on
New Year’s Eve of 1977. “Iran, because of the great leadership of the Shah,
is an island of stability in one of the more troubled areas of the world,”
Carter declared. “This is a great tribute to you, Your Majesty, and to your
leadership and to the respect and the admiration and love which your people
give to you.” In barely a year, the Shah fled the country as millions took
to the streets against him.

The US government could not crush the Iranian Revolution of February 1979
or even the Sandinista revolution in tiny Nicaragua in the same year, and
Carter was compelled by mounting nationalist pressures in Panama to sign a
treaty to return the Canal Zone by 1999. These were retreats made
unavoidable by popular opposition at home to US military adventures, in the
wake of Vietnam, but they were nonetheless denounced by the right wing of
the Republican Party and became the basis of the election campaign of
Ronald Reagan in 1980.

The final blow on this front, in the eyes of the US ruling elite, was the
hostage confrontation with Iran, triggered by the decision, at the urging
of Brzezinski and Kissinger, to admit the deposed Shah into the United
States, supposedly for “medical treatment.” Iranian students then stormed
the US embassy in Tehran and seized US personnel, demanding the Shah be
repatriated in exchange for the hostages, so that he could be tried for
mass murder and other crimes against the Iranian people.
<https://www.wsws.org/en/special/pages/freebogdan.html>

The crises in Iran and Afghanistan led to two important Carter decisions on
national security policy. The first, made in the wake of a failed hostage
rescue raid that ended in a helicopter crash in the Iranian desert in which
eight soldiers died, was the creation of the Joint Special Operations
Command (JSOC). This is the counterterrorism force which now includes the
Navy Seals, Army Rangers and other elite killer units. The second was the
initiation of a worldwide campaign against the USSR, ranging from the
boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics to a massive strategic weapons buildup,
which foreshadowed the policies carried out by the Reagan administration.
So much for Carter the “peacemaker,” as the *New York Times* headlined its
obituary.

In domestic policy, the shifts inaugurated under Carter were in many ways
even more consequential than those in foreign policy, although these must
be summarized more briefly. Carter was a fiscal conservative, who told
aides he was closer to the Republican Party than to the Democrats on such
issues. His administration balked at any significant expansion of the
social programs established in the 1960s, such as Medicare and Medicaid,
and there was no longer any pretense of a “war on poverty.”

Instead, Carter embraced conventional, right-wing “free market” economics,
including the deregulation of key sections of the economy, beginning with
the airlines, the trucking industry, the railroads and natural gas
production and distribution. In this he was following the same path as
Margaret Thatcher in Britain who came to power in 1979, J. R. Jayawardene
in Sri Lanka (1977), and other ruling class politicians throughout the
world, as they responded to the global crisis of capitalism.

Emphasizing the strategic need for the United States to cut its energy
costs and dependence on oil imports, in the wake of the Arab oil embargo of
1973-74, the Carter administration sided with the coal companies in their
assault on the coal miners, which sparked a 111-day strike by more than
160,000 members of the United Mine Workers. In March 1978, as the strike
ended its third month, Carter issued a back-to-work order under the
anti-labor Taft-Hartley Law. The miners defied the order, and Carter could
not enforce it, even after calling out the National Guard. Only the
betrayals by the UMW and AFL-CIO leaders finally imposed a settlement and
ended the strike.

The Trotskyist movement in the United States, then known as the Workers
League, predecessor of the Socialist Equality Party, fought energetically
to alert the working class to the dangers of the Carter administration,
particularly in the course of the coal miners’ strike, when the *Bulletin*,
the party’s newspaper, was widely circulated in the coal fields. It was so
influential that, according to one UMW official, at a meeting in the White
House, the president brandished a copy of the *Bulletin* and expressed
outrage that it contained details of contract proposals that Carter and the
coal companies were seeking to impose.

Remarkably, there is not even a mention of the coal miners’ strike and the
failed invocation of Taft-Hartley in the lengthy obituaries of Carter
published in the *New York Times* and the *Washington Post*, which set the
tone for the adulatory coverage in the media as a whole. But the experience
of the 1977-78 strike was decisive, both in alienating large sections of
the working class, particularly throughout Appalachia, from the Democratic
Party, and in the loss of political confidence in Carter on the part of the
corporate ruling elite.

The shift to the right under Carter accelerated after his failure to crush
the miners. Wall Street demanded measures that would suppress working class
militancy and make possible a frontal assault on the social gains made by
American workers in the period from the 1930s to the 1970s. To spearhead
this social assault, Carter brought in banker Paul Volcker to head the
Federal Reserve Board in August 1979. Volcker pushed up interest rates to
an unheard of 20 percent, throwing the US economy into recession. Price
inflation at the grocery store and the gas pump, particularly driven by the
Middle East crises, was combined with rapidly rising unemployment.

At the same time, Carter enlisted the trade union bureaucracy in the first
major exercise in corporatism, the federal bailout of Chrysler Corporation.
UAW President Douglas Fraser was brought onto the company’s board of
directors, and the union pushed through cuts in wages, pensions and other
benefits under the rubric of “saving jobs.” This was the starting point of
the transformation of the unions from workers’ organizations, however
limited and bureaucratized, into the industrial police force for big
business which they are today.

In the course of this process, Carter gave the green light to the drafting
of plans for smashing the air traffic controllers’ union PATCO, although
because of his electoral defeat in 1980, the actual destruction of the
union, avenging the humiliation of the government by the coal miners, was
carried out by Reagan. This set the stage for the anti-labor rampage of
broken and betrayed strikes throughout the 1980s.

It is this history, of four of the most consequential years in the class
struggle, globally and within the United States, that must inform any
evaluation of the Carter administration. This review underscores the
central political issue facing the American working class today, as it did
during Carter’s presidency: the urgent necessity of breaking free of the
political straitjacket of the Democratic Party and the whole
corporate-controlled two-party system, and establishing its political
independence through the building of a mass movement of the working class
for socialism.


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