Friday, May 29, 2015

A Story of Success: The Aid of an International Community and Promotion of a Personal Agenda

            On June 5, 1947, the Secretary of State, George C. Marshall proclaimed from the acclaimed, western, educational hub that is Harvard University, a plan that would revolutionize post World War II Foreign Policy.  This plan was the European Recovery Program, more commonly known and addressed by its dedicative form, the Marshall Plan.  The Marshall Plan is considered by a vast amount of historians as one of the most successful United States Foreign Policy programs in modern history.  The idea was simple, and while explaining his creation, Marshall phrased it as such: “the role of this country should consist of friendly aid in the drafting of a European program and of later support of such a program so far as it may be practical for us to do so.”  However, between 1948 and 1951, the Plan grew tremendously – it directed over $13 billion in aid to help the European nations recover from the Second World War.  Although this seems like an incredulous sum, the plan did indeed successfully recover the European economy, integrate the European countries, and in fact, aid the United States and her dedication to the growth of democracy and the expansion of peoples’ rights. 
            Thus, this generous, collective amalgamation of donative loans seems like a selfless act on behalf of the newly ordained leading world power, the United States; however, at a closer glance, the United States’ Marshall Plan was soaked in a misty spray of self-servitude and anti-communistic undertones.  The United States, through the implemented ideologies of one Secretary of State, forever changed the functions of international relations on this Earth – and although these new functions clearly aided a suffering global economy, they also served the United States’ personal agenda.
            One obvious reason for why the Marshall Plan’s implementation exceeded the prejudiced expectations of success it had been assigned was that nothing of this grand a scale had ever happened in history.  No one nation had ever loaned billions of dollars to many another.  Although this fact is notable, a multitude of other key historical pinpoints evidence why the ingenious Plan functioned like a well-oiled machine.  Primarily, the sheer export of dollars to the affected European nations prevented the United States from receding back into the dark, dim years of the Great Depression.  It also, clearly, aided the trodden Europeans whose economies were destroyed in a similar fashion to their physical landscapes. 
            Additionally, the Plan provided a constant flow of cash from the United States to Europe; and more importantly, an eager market for the United States’ corporations.  After the war, the European people had nothing.  They needed some things; and so the United States swept in and provided them with American things, otherwise known as United States capitalistic productions and consequentially invigorated economical accomplishments.  In turn, Europe got back on her feet.  Her economy began the slow, yet effective climb to recovery, and the United States benefitted from the business of the recovering nations and the parallel, economic image she had created for Europe.  For after the Marshall Plan’s success Europe began to function as a larger entity, which in and of itself, like the United States, gained from an assortment of public union and private economy.  Thus, through the Marshall Plan, the United States, a country of which at the time had barely surpassed its 150th birthday, replicated its economic model on a cluster of nations thousands of years older than she. 
            However, Europe also benefitted from the Marshall Plan in a way that did not directly affect her western counterpart.   The Plan heavily increased the integration of both the nations’ economies and governments.  Arguably, this very successful integration can be said to have laid the stable groundwork for the European Union to actualize.  Over time, the economies stabilized and eventually peace began to exist on the continent, which continues on a grander scale to this very day.  However, without the Marshall Plan, that very delicate peace could have been annihilated by another vengeful Germanic eruption.  Yet, because the Plan allotted West Germany with over $1.2 billion dollars, history did not repeat itself and good was done. 
            In a selfless scope, the United States created good through the Marshall Plan by preventing the duplication of history.  However, through the lens of selfishness, the Marshall Plan played to the United States’ agenda by providing the nation with an unparalleled control of futuristic actions – and as the president of the time, Harry S. Truman said, “Actions are the seed of fate.  Deeds grow into destiny.”  This broad American fate and destiny can be said to stem from the somewhat hidden agenda the United States profoundly externalized through the Marshall Plan.  For by aiding the western nations of Europe, the United States was successfully repressing communistic growth and the expansion of the rivaling USSR’s Iron Curtain.  Thus, through the execution of the Marshall Plan the United States continued her own personal dedication to the growth of democracy and expansion of peoples’ rights – a dedication that firmly roots itself in the United States’ blood. 

            Overall, George C. Marshall’s European Recovery Program, the Marshall Plan, reveled in success and globally revolutionary air like no other previous operation in regard to any nation’s foreign policy.   The Plan successfully recovered the European economy, integrated the European countries, and aided the United States (with both her own economy and her personal agenda as well).  In total, the Marshall Plan now stands in the hall of historic greatness as a successful implementation and international aide-mémoire that true success stems from the triumphs not only of one’s self, but also one’s allies. 

     - J. A. Kind

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