Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War on Terrorism



A woman named Coulter cried Treason.

She did it without any reason.

Though we know that she lied,

'Twas perhaps justified;

On her brain, I'm afraid there's a lesion.

Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War on Terrorism is a 2003 book by right-wing author Ann Coulter. Although her first two books were far from good, this was the one that made a large chunk of people realized she, to put it nicely, had a few screws loose. This was the book she infamously defended Joseph McCarthy and accused anybody to the left of her of one of the most serious crimes possible.

Joe McCarthy: Coulter's hero
The book is not even a full two paragraphs done before Coulter starts praising McCarthy, writing "Liberals invented the myth of McCarthyism to delegitimize impertinent questions about their own patriotism." Even conservatives who criticize McCarthy aren't safe, as she says they "engage in ritualistic self-flagellation over the possibility that Joe McCarthy may have said he had in his hands a list of '205' rather than '57' card-carrying Communists." (Or a letter from Secretary of State James Byrnes to Representative Adolph Sabath, which made no mention of communists whatsoever, which he also later claimed. )

The lengths that Coulter goes to in order to defend McCarthy are truly a sight to behold at points. Writing about she notes that his "name has not yet turned up in the Venona cables as a Soviet agent. This glaring oversight can only be attributed to the limited number of cables that have been decoded." Or it could be due to the fact that Lattimore was not a spy for the Soviet Union, that's also rather possible. She goes on to say that "Thanks to Lattimore's learned counsel, U.S. policy-makers abandoned Chiang Kai-shek and supported Mao Zedong." However, that would mean a Soviet spy was convincing the United States to support a man widely hated by the Soviet Union (Mao) and who had little positive to say about the Soviets.

Regarding McCarthy's critics, Coulter does little to actually debunk what they say. She writes on Edward Murrow, the famous CBS journalist who did an episode of his program See It Now on Joseph McCarthy, that he made a "deceptive hatchet piece on him," without any further explanation. Of course, if Murrow really had done such a terrible job, McCarthy could have responded when NBC offered him a chance to go on See It Now a month later, which he took and did little more then make baseless attacks on his critics for half an hour.

However, despite her defending McCarthy, Coulter also makes a point to say that even if everything she said about McCarthy was wrong, that doesn't mean communist spies weren't an issue (which is good for her given how bad she is with facts):

First off, her point about wide dislike of McCarthy being evidence that he had a point is utterly nonsensical. Judas Iscariot, Mao Zedong (whom Ann called "the greatest mass murderer in all of history" ), Osama bin Laden, and Adolf Hitler are all easily far more hated than Joseph McCarthy, yet we hope that Coulter isn't under the impression they were "onto something" on that basis.

Coulter then runs down a series of criticisms of McCarthy, asking "But were Communist spies working for the U.S. government?" between each and every one of them. Now, let's ignore that Coulter spends the rest of this book defending everything she can about McCarthy only to suddenly say his personal faults don't matter and attempt to answer her question: But were communist spies working for the U.S. government? Thomas Powers answered that question rather simply, there were — and they were dealt with long before McCarthy came along:

The same is true about the FBI, which "had just about abandoned its concern with bank robbers and white slavers to turn its full force on Communism," long before McCarthy came along.

Attack on Truman
Lest you think Joseph McCarthy is the only figure Coulter slobbers with praise in this book, rest assured she at least has the decency to not make the entire tract one long rant about the same person. Going with typical Republican dogma, Coulter writes an entire chapter about how Ronald Reagan was the man who won the Cold War, and all the other Presidents weren't involved.

You see, according to Coulter, "all the anti-Communist initiatives eventually taken by the Truman administration came after the 1946 election … 'under pressure from the right.'" Even if Truman did only do these things under pressure from the Republican Party, that doesn't mean he didn't do them. In spite of the fact Truman was doing this in response to conservative demands, Coulter wrote that "conservatives ridiculed the idea of 'containment,' preferring the idea of 'victory.'" It should also be noted that Truman's desire to appease the radical anti-communists in the Republican Party didn't stop him from firing Douglas MacArthur, which Coulter said caused many to "erupt in fury." So exactly how much of Truman's actions were done out of a desire to appease Republicans seems to vary depending on the circumstances quite heavily.

Truman did confront the Soviet Union long before the Republican midterm election victory in 1946. As Joe Conason writes:

What makes A traitor?
Treason is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as "the offense of attempting by overt acts to overthrow the government of the state to which the offender owes allegiance or to kill or personally injure the sovereign or the sovereign's family." If one is waiting for examples of this to be found in her book, they're sadly mistaken. Instead, Coulter seems to define "treason" as simply opposition to whatever America is doing at that given time, or just being on the left politically — that also works.

Under a definition as loose as that, literally anybody could be considered a traitor — including some of the farthest right people in the US. Coulter writes to prove that Democrats hate America "By the time of the 1991 Gulf War, only ten Senate Democrats voted with President Bush to use troops against Saddam Hussein. If the old Democratic Party was merely obstuse, the new Democratic Party was a beachhead of domestic anti-Americanism." However, at the time of the Gulf War, another person opposed to it was Ann Coulter.

In the same regard, right-wing critics of the then-ongoing Iraq War and War on Terror go virtually unmentioned. Pat Buchanan (who defended Nazi war criminals, by the way ) is briefly mentioned for his declaration that "Congress could vote with the Contras or vote with the Communists" and then disappears from the book altogether. Ron Paul gets no mention.

Do you know did our enemies though? Joseph McCarthy! Going back to Joe Conason wrote: