President Sullivan, Mr. Murray,
distinguished guests, Graduates of the class of 2000, it is a
great pleasure and a special honor for me to be with you today. I
stand here also with a great sense of awe, here in this great
college in the presence of so much of our nation's formative
history. I also want to tell the graduating (class of 2000) class
that I know what you are thinking--that I am the only thing
standing between you, your diplomas and the rest of your lives. I
promise to be mercifully briefbut not so brief as Winston
Churchill when he addressed a class of British prep school
students. He got up, said "never, never, never give up" and sat
back down. I subscribe to his theme but I will not be quite that
succinct.
You are very lucky. I expect that you
know that, but may by now take it a bit for granted. You have been
pursuing your studies at the very heart of American history. The
men who early walked these halls and taught in these classrooms
are the ones who intellectualized and then put in place this great
political and social experiment called the United States. The
electricity of their ideas still guides and motivates us. Our
national genius has been to take these founding principles, apply
the lessons of history to them and adapt them to new
circumstances. We need to do that once again. We now find
ourselves in a new era of history, replacing that of the Cold War
-- an era which was incredibly intense and deeply pervasive in
all aspects of our national life.
Relieved from the tension and pressure of
that era, I fear we are becoming complacent. The economy is
booming; there are no great national security threats on the
horizon. Serious scholars proclaim the end of history. So
everything is fine, right? Hardly. The seeds of any number of
major problems are germinating, even as we speak. I will mention
only a few. It would be worse than folly to believe that our
current happy condition is somehow permanent. History has not and
will not end -- as our own turbulent past should help to remind us.
Mankind has done wonders in conquering the material environment --
very little in conquering itself. On the contrary,
history has demonstrated over and over that it is not a benign
force for those who fail to heed its messages. For example, we
quickly forgot the lessons of WWIand had to relive them through
WWII. Now we may already be forgetting the lessons of the Cold
War.
Fifty-three years ago, I sat
(functionally speaking) where you are now sitting. My own
commencement speaker was General Dwight D. Eisenhower. He was a
special hero of mine, but I must confess that I have absolutely no
recollection of anything he talked about. That alone insures my
humility up here. But I do remember thinking "what am I doing
here, about to become a military officer? The war is over. We won,
military service is now a dead end and the military is an
anachronism." Three short years later, my classmates were dying in
Korea.
Let me introduce some perspective. Right
now, 20 years is a long time in your livesbut not in your
lifetimes. Look back 20 years from today. This country was then in
what was perhaps the darkest, most dangerous period of the Cold
War. The United States was struggling with the aftermath of
Vietnam and Watergate. The Soviet Union was suggesting that the
historical correlation of forces in the world was moving against
us, and invaded Afghanistan as if to prove the point. Now, we
canšt actually look forward 20 years, but who at the time of the
invasion of Afghanistan could have predicted the world we are
blessed with now? What we can say today with some confidence is
that the world 20 years hence could be as dramatically different
as today is from 20 years ago.
We can also say -- with some sense of
satisfaction -- that the last 20 years have turned out rather well
from that bleak beginning. That was at least in part because we
worked at it -- and worked hard. And, as a result, history has
given mankind about as blank a slate on which to write as has ever
occurred. We have prosperity, are without mortal enemies, and not
since the Roman Empire has any nation dominated so much of the
globe.
How are we doing with this blank slate?
What should be Americašs role in this new world? The answer is far
from clear. For much of our national life, as declared early on by
President Washington in his farewell address, we generally had the
view that we were on the whole too good for the world - and we were
determined that we would not engage in the balance of power and
dynastic politics of Europe. We saw ourselves instead as the city
on the hill -- a beacon to all, demonstrating manšs ability to live
in liberty and self-government. As John Quincy Adams put it:
"Wherever the standard of freedom and independence has been or
shall be unfurled, there will her (Americašs) heart, her
benedictions and her prayers be. But she goes not abroad in search
of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher to the freedom and
independence of all. She is the champion and vindicator only of
her own."
Woodrow Wilson rejected that conservative
and isolationist tinged phraseology and declared that we should
not be simply a passive symbol and example but instead seek
actively to promote democracy and human rights in the world.
These two instincts have contended for
much of the 20th century, especially sharply since the end of the
Cold War. Are we the worldšs policeman, or its absentee landlord?
We have not yet decided. We intervene in Somalia, Haiti, and
Kosovo, but not in Sudan, Sierra Leone, or Chechnya. We cut our
defense budget, but work our military so hard around the world
that they are leaving their profession in droves. We are more
affected than ever by events in far corners of the world, but we
cut back our embassies and close our consulates -- our eyes and ears
for knowing and understanding what is happening.
The current international buzz word is
globalization. The world is more interdependent than ever
before. National borders are increasingly porous. Capital flows,
communications, information technology, the environment -- all are
beyond the ability of national governments to control or to
protect their peoples from their impact. So how are these
new forces to be controlled, and by whom? Side-by-side with this
growing interdependence, strong political forces are producing an
ever more exclusive -- and intolerant -- particularism, based on ethnic,
religious, cultural or other criteria, which are fractionating
political entities and pulling them farther apart. These are all
potentially revolutionary forces.
It is indeed a complicated world. Beside
these new currents flowing, there are also a number of potentially
serious regional problems developing. This is not the occasion for
geopolitical analysis, but there is one aspect of our current
behavior which is exacerbating all the issues we face. We should
be in an enviable position to deal with the contemporary world
environment. Despite our great power, we seek no territorial gain.
We are the source of the political principles to which most of
mankind aspires, principles so brilliantly enunciated and
enshrined by the giants who made this college great. We have
learned well and take for granted the precepts our forefathers
taught and fought for. But now we have come to be preaching -
rather
than teaching - those precepts around the world - and then grading
countries on the degree to which they approach the standards we
have set. Are we ourselves really that flawless? Should we not be
working with others, rather than preaching at others? In many
quarters of the globe, especially in Europe, whence many of those
very principles came, globalization has become a bad word -
signifying US imperialism, not territorial, but attitudinal.
Any country as powerful as ours would
automatically stimulate envy and resistance, but the rising chorus
of resentment seems beyond that normal reaction. We are
increasingly seen as arrogant, unilateral, and indifferent to the
views and concerns of others. This seems to be becoming --
unconsciously -- a habit. If we are not able to mend our
ways and see ourselves in the perspective of those who look to us
for leadership, we, and consequently the world, will eventually
pay a heavy price.
You are now standing on the threshold of
one of lifešs major transitions. Society has been giving to you
thus far in your lives. That will soon end - if not now, then after
graduate school. We owe the things we cherish most to the
sacrifices of those who went before us. Your parents and
grandparents won WWII and the Cold War, and it is their legacy you
are enjoying now. It is about to be your turn to give. Reflect for
a moment on true essentials. What, for example, would you like
your epitaph to say?
I turn back to Winston Churchill, who
said "You make a living by what you earn; you make a life by what
you give." I would hope that many of you would carefully ponder
those powerful words and consider turning to public service, for
two reasons. First, there is something enormously fulfilling about
being engaged in something bigger than you yourself. It imparts a
satisfying sense of purpose which, in my experience, is not
attained in any other way. And, beyond that, there is a desperate
need in this country for good people to man our government
structures. I well know it is getting more and more difficult to
be a public servant. We have driven many of our best people away.
Your private life is made public; your finances are bared; your
integrity is questioned. But I ask you to consider public service,
not because it is easy, but because it is hard, rewarding - and oh,
so necessary. How well the wonderful things this great nation
stands for will be preserved and projected will depend on the
quality of the people whose hands are on the helm of state.
The characteristics of the world for the
next fifty years - those are your years--will depend inordinately on
the behavior of the United States. Only the US can mobilize the
international community to the tasks which need to be
accomplished. If we do not lead, nothing will be done. It may not
always be that way, but for most of your lives, that will simply
be a fact.
But public service doesnšt necessarily
have to mean joining the government in Washington - or Richmond.
Non-governmental organizations, volunteerism, school boards, local
elected office -- all these are necessary to preserve our wonderful
heritage and pass it on to succeeding generations.
One final word -- set your sights high. It
does no harm - except to your ego -- to fail now and then. Hockey star
Wayne Gretsky said "You miss 100 percent of the shots you never
take." So never be afraid to take your best shot. Thank you, good
luck, and God bless.