Gabriel Kolko died Monday at his home in Amsterdam. Kolko, author of The Triumph of Conservatism, Anatomy of a War: the United States, Vietnam and the Modern Historical Experience, and Century of War: Politics, Conflicts and Society Since 1914, was one of the pre-eminent historians of our time.
Born in Paterson, New Jersey in 1932, Kolko attended Kent State University and received his doctorate in history from Harvard. Along with Saul Landau, Kolko was one of the circle of historians trained at University of Wisconsin by the great William Appleman Williams. Kolko taught history for many years at York University in Toronto and moved to Amsterdam soon after his retirement. Kolko’s books on the progressive era, the Cold War, Vietnam and the war on terror stand as some of the most trenchant and revealing documents of our time. Prof. Kolko's work continues to have a profound influence on my thinking and it was my privilege to read and contemplate his many influential books and monographs. If "blame" must be assigned for my understanding of how the world works, Kolko takes a significant share and for that I remain grateful.
While always an unapologetic and principled leftist, Kolko's peerless scholarship would in time transcended ideological boundaries. Never achieving the celebrity status of contemporaries like Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn, he nonetheless stands head and shoulders above his more well known colleagues in terms of quality and depth of scholarship. One of the most important of the so-called revisionist historians, Kolko's "The Limits of Power: The World and United States Foreign Policy, 1945-1954" set the standard for subsequent works on the Cold War and remains to this day one of the most important analytic studies of evolving U.S. policy in this period.
Kolko rightfully saw the Cold War less as a product of Soviet expansionism but rather an American attempt to promote its singular brand of free trade and corporate hegemony with the goal of restructuring the world so that big business could trade, operate, and profit without restrictions. For Kolko, the central foreign policy concern for American elites was not the publicly stated containment of communism, but rather the extension and expansion of the unique form of American capitalism oriented toward the economic power and needs of ruling class business elites. To these Brahmins, the biggest threat to this hegemony was not Soviet power - which they rightly understood as a Potemkin village - but rather a skeptical Congress and a public hungry for peace and the dividends due them after their sacrifice and personal loss in the Second World War. As plainly stated by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Arthur Vandenberg during the run up to the Truman Doctrine and its nearly half billion dollar aid package to Greece, American politicians and their elite benefactors understood that the only way to get a war weary nation on board was to "scare the hell out of the American people." Fear of communism would become a well-worn technique of political mobilization at home and remain a principle feature of American life even to our own day.
Equally compelling was Kolko's study on the nature of the American political economy. In such works as "Railroads and Regulation, 1877–1916," and "Main Currents in Modern American History," Kolko correctly identified America as a nation where the rich rule and the rest obey. The ruling class, according to Kolko, defines the essential preconditions and functions of the larger American social order. The central goal in the post-Civil War historical experience remains the security and continuity of business elites and their institutions of power. Kolko's work described America’s political order as one producing vast riches for a few and poverty and inequality for the majority. Over the decades Kolko's thesis has steadily moved from a once radical interpretation to the prevailing view. To Kolko, this ruling class remains the final arbiter and beneficiary of the existing structure of American society and politics at home and of United States power abroad.
Kolko's "Triumph of Conservatism" is a singular piece of scholarship upending long established notions of the so-called Progressive Era. It dispensed with comforting yet ahistorical liberal myths about benevolent reformers and equally spurious conservative myths about independent, market-loving businessmen. In it Kolko argued that big business played a major role in designing and imposing the regulations of the Progressive era as a means of containing "ruinous competition." Fearing this competition and the subsequent diffusion of their economic power, business elites turned to the federal government to "rationalize" the economy and make it safe for monopoly. In today's environment where large multinational corporations and banking interests operate with impunity this view seems obvious. But it was Kolko who first proposed that the federal government came to intervene in the economy not because there was too much monopoly, but too little of it. And while Kolko initially bristled and puzzled over the libertarian adoption of this thesis, he eventually softened his resistance and in time came to speak favorably of libertarian scholarship on such subjects as the New Deal. Much to the dismay of doctrinaire socialists and Soviet apologists, Kolko unequivocally rejected the socialist tradition in his 2006 book "After Socialism." While remaining a principled leftist to his last day, Kolko declared socialism irreversibly dead both in practice and theory.
I count Kolko, along with William A. Williams, Guenter Lewy, Gar Alperovitz, Walter LaFeber and Carl Oglesby, as one of my "intellectual fathers." Approaching their work as a young man, they instilled in me a desire for ceaseless questioning of orthodoxy guided by rigorous scholarship. I continue to be challenged and enthralled by them in my old age.
Gabriel Kolko, RIP (1932-2014)
Born in Paterson, New Jersey in 1932, Kolko attended Kent State University and received his doctorate in history from Harvard. Along with Saul Landau, Kolko was one of the circle of historians trained at University of Wisconsin by the great William Appleman Williams. Kolko taught history for many years at York University in Toronto and moved to Amsterdam soon after his retirement. Kolko’s books on the progressive era, the Cold War, Vietnam and the war on terror stand as some of the most trenchant and revealing documents of our time. Prof. Kolko's work continues to have a profound influence on my thinking and it was my privilege to read and contemplate his many influential books and monographs. If "blame" must be assigned for my understanding of how the world works, Kolko takes a significant share and for that I remain grateful.
While always an unapologetic and principled leftist, Kolko's peerless scholarship would in time transcended ideological boundaries. Never achieving the celebrity status of contemporaries like Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn, he nonetheless stands head and shoulders above his more well known colleagues in terms of quality and depth of scholarship. One of the most important of the so-called revisionist historians, Kolko's "The Limits of Power: The World and United States Foreign Policy, 1945-1954" set the standard for subsequent works on the Cold War and remains to this day one of the most important analytic studies of evolving U.S. policy in this period.
Kolko rightfully saw the Cold War less as a product of Soviet expansionism but rather an American attempt to promote its singular brand of free trade and corporate hegemony with the goal of restructuring the world so that big business could trade, operate, and profit without restrictions. For Kolko, the central foreign policy concern for American elites was not the publicly stated containment of communism, but rather the extension and expansion of the unique form of American capitalism oriented toward the economic power and needs of ruling class business elites. To these Brahmins, the biggest threat to this hegemony was not Soviet power - which they rightly understood as a Potemkin village - but rather a skeptical Congress and a public hungry for peace and the dividends due them after their sacrifice and personal loss in the Second World War. As plainly stated by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Arthur Vandenberg during the run up to the Truman Doctrine and its nearly half billion dollar aid package to Greece, American politicians and their elite benefactors understood that the only way to get a war weary nation on board was to "scare the hell out of the American people." Fear of communism would become a well-worn technique of political mobilization at home and remain a principle feature of American life even to our own day.
Equally compelling was Kolko's study on the nature of the American political economy. In such works as "Railroads and Regulation, 1877–1916," and "Main Currents in Modern American History," Kolko correctly identified America as a nation where the rich rule and the rest obey. The ruling class, according to Kolko, defines the essential preconditions and functions of the larger American social order. The central goal in the post-Civil War historical experience remains the security and continuity of business elites and their institutions of power. Kolko's work described America’s political order as one producing vast riches for a few and poverty and inequality for the majority. Over the decades Kolko's thesis has steadily moved from a once radical interpretation to the prevailing view. To Kolko, this ruling class remains the final arbiter and beneficiary of the existing structure of American society and politics at home and of United States power abroad.
Kolko's "Triumph of Conservatism" is a singular piece of scholarship upending long established notions of the so-called Progressive Era. It dispensed with comforting yet ahistorical liberal myths about benevolent reformers and equally spurious conservative myths about independent, market-loving businessmen. In it Kolko argued that big business played a major role in designing and imposing the regulations of the Progressive era as a means of containing "ruinous competition." Fearing this competition and the subsequent diffusion of their economic power, business elites turned to the federal government to "rationalize" the economy and make it safe for monopoly. In today's environment where large multinational corporations and banking interests operate with impunity this view seems obvious. But it was Kolko who first proposed that the federal government came to intervene in the economy not because there was too much monopoly, but too little of it. And while Kolko initially bristled and puzzled over the libertarian adoption of this thesis, he eventually softened his resistance and in time came to speak favorably of libertarian scholarship on such subjects as the New Deal. Much to the dismay of doctrinaire socialists and Soviet apologists, Kolko unequivocally rejected the socialist tradition in his 2006 book "After Socialism." While remaining a principled leftist to his last day, Kolko declared socialism irreversibly dead both in practice and theory.
I count Kolko, along with William A. Williams, Guenter Lewy, Gar Alperovitz, Walter LaFeber and Carl Oglesby, as one of my "intellectual fathers." Approaching their work as a young man, they instilled in me a desire for ceaseless questioning of orthodoxy guided by rigorous scholarship. I continue to be challenged and enthralled by them in my old age.
Gabriel Kolko, RIP (1932-2014)
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