![]() |
| Pix credit here |
Commemorations of past events sometimes tell one more about the present than the past. That is certainly evident in recent messages from President Trump. One of the President's key policy and discursive focus is on peace: peace through strength, negotiated peace, peace as a cessation of hostilities, and peace as a transactional device necessary to build ether relationships or solidarity r just a platform for engagement (economic, social, cultural or political). On 9 April, and as part of the America at 250 campaign, the President circulated America 250: Presidential Message on the Anniversary of the Surrender at Appomattox.
Key themes are well worn--the preservation of the Union, even at the price of war; and the possibility of solidarity in the aftermath of conflict. Perhaps its key text was this:
General Grant understood that rebuilding a united America depended on the terms of surrender. Rather than demanding harsh punishment for General Lee’s men, he offered a unifying message: “The war is over. The Rebels are our countrymen again.” At last, the war-torn Union began the course for reconstruction and the path to fulfilling the founding principles that first breathed life into our Republic 250 years ago. To this day, the surrender at Appomattox stands as an enduring testament to the resilience of a divided Nation, the strength and resolve of the American people, and the sacred ideals at the heart of our national identity. Today, we recommit to the eternal truth that the United States of America is blessed from on high; bound together by justice; and was, is, and will forever be one Nation under God. (Ibid.)
Its key elements are meant to be (1) "strength and resolve" (of the people, their national identity as a paramount force, (2) as its expression as justice, and (3) exogenously tied to religious principle frame the core of the Trump Administration's discursive (re)construction of the Republic. It is a reconstruction aligned with the core element of the present fundamental political line the return to the American golden age (the US version of the Chinese great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation" (实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦)) in the current era of historical development. It is one that can be achieved from out the the most violent fracture and assumes that what was ripped apart can be put together where solidarity is privileged over retribution.
But it has another element, one that the President brought out about a year earlier in another Memorandum: Presidential Message on the 162nd Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. There the message was also clear--it is necessary to assert strength to bring the opponent to the negotiating table--not to obliterate them, but to draw them to a realistic negotiation of peace in the then current circumstances of the parties. "Emboldened by a string of recent Confederate victories, General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia launched an invasion of the North with a set of clear goals: push the fighting from war-torn Virginia past the Mason-Dixon line, defeat the Union troops on their own soil, and force President Abraham Lincoln into peace negotiations." Indeed, that was what both sides sought through strength and resolve. It was not that the strategy was bad; indeed the opposite was true. It was an excellent strategy--unless you lose. In that case one will come to the negotiating table, but with little to negotiate but surrender. Thus both the strategy and its caution--something that ought to be kept in mind in the context of the current conflict between US/Israel and Iran/allies/proxies. Having committed to peace through strength and resolve, it is something of a disaster to lose either one's resolve or to fail to assert strength fully--where the4 object is the negotiating table and peace. That will determine the role of the parties in the "Appomattox" turn at the end of the US-Iranian conflict.
The full text of the Message follows.














