GREAT truths," said Dwight Eisenhower last week at Milwaukee, "can, at times, be startlingly simple." The great truth Ike had in mind: the opposition of Communism and freedom. Said Ike:
"Communism and freedom . . . signify two titanic ideas, two ways of life, two totally irreconcilable beliefs in the nature and destiny of man. The onefreedomknows man as a creature of God, blessed with a free and individual destiny, governed by eternal moral and natural laws.
"The secondCommunismclaims man to be an animal creature of the state, curses him for his stubborn instinct for independence, governs with a tyranny that makes its subjects wither away . . .
"Only a few years ago, many moved among us who argued cunningly against this plain truth. Their speech was persuasive and their vocabulary very clever. Remember? It went like this: 'After all, while we stand for political democracy, they stand for economic democracy . . .'
"We must never forget that sophisticated lie. We will never forget it. For it partly poisoned two whole decades of our national life. It insinuated itself into our schools, our public forums, some of our news channels, some of our labor unions andmost terrifyinglyinto Government itself . . .
"These years have indeed been a harrowing time in our history. It has been a time of both honest illusion and dishonest betrayalboth terribly costly. It has been a time that should have taught us, with cold finality, the truth about freedom and Communism."
"Proud Prisoners." "Most of us ... have learned. An important few have not ... They are the proud prisoners of their own mistakes." The men who did not learn about Communism, Eisenhower implied, were the followers of Harry Truman and Adlai Stevenson, both of whom he proceeded to quote. "They are those who cheered the blithe dismissal of the Alger Hiss case as 'a red herring.' They are those who applauded two weeks ago when an Administration Democrat grandly declared that Communists in our national life were 'not very important' and he advised that we should not waste time chasing 'phantoms' . . .
"Perhaps," said Ike, "my deep concern is sharpened by personal experience and personal knowledge. I know what fifth columns can do to a free nation . . . and I know personally what alertness was requiredboth in our wartime operations and in NATO planningto guard against espionage. I learned that national secrets and national security can be guarded and that there are ways to defeat the cleverest of spiesNazi or Communist ... In the entire American record in Europe there is no single instance where the enemy gained essential information of our plans through the medium of spies or subversive agents."
