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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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21 | <strong>The</strong> Year <strong>of</strong> Living<br />

Dangerously<br />

RonALd ReAgAn And tip o’neiLL, two old Irishmen who guffawed<br />

for the cameras, quickly found that familiarity bred contempt.<br />

O’Neill described Reagan as “a cheerleader for selfishness” <strong>and</strong>, in<br />

a tactical masterstroke, gave him enough rope early on to hang himself in<br />

deficits as the recession persisted. Yet after Reagan narrowly survived an<br />

assassination attempt two months into his presidency, the speaker was<br />

the first outsider admitted to his bedside. Eyes brimming with tears,<br />

O’Neill knelt <strong>and</strong> took the president’s h<strong>and</strong>. Together they recited the 23 rd<br />

Psalm. Two years later, the mid-term elections answered O’Neill’s prayers,<br />

not Reagan’s. <strong>The</strong> Lord works in mysterious ways. 1<br />

Gorton summed it up: “1981 was the Year <strong>of</strong> the President. 1982 was<br />

the Year <strong>of</strong> the Senate Republicans. 1983 is the Year <strong>of</strong> Living Dangerously.” 2<br />

In his budget for Fiscal Year 1984, Reagan called for a 10 percent boost<br />

in military spending <strong>and</strong> ratcheted up his rhetoric <strong>of</strong>fensive against the<br />

Soviet Union. Reagan noted that the Pentagon’s share <strong>of</strong> federal spending<br />

had plummeted from nearly 50 percent in 1960 to less than 24 percent in<br />

1980. <strong>The</strong> president also envisioned American knowhow developing a<br />

space shield against strategic ballistic missiles. Domenici rolled his eyes.<br />

God only knows what that would cost. O’Neill chortled over this disarray<br />

in the ranks: <strong>The</strong> deficit was heading for the moon <strong>and</strong> Reagan wanted to<br />

play “Star Wars.”<br />

Gorton backed the president but was underwhelmed by Weinberger’s<br />

stewardship <strong>of</strong> Defense. He winced when it was revealed that Boeing was<br />

charging the Pentagon $1,118.26 apiece for the plastic caps fitted to stools<br />

in AWACs planes—<strong>and</strong> procurement paid it. Snafus like that provided<br />

more ammunition for persistent Pentagon critics like Senator Grassley,<br />

who asked, “Why should we dump huge sums <strong>of</strong> money into the Defense<br />

Department when it is rotting with bad management?” 3<br />

House Democrats <strong>of</strong>fered the Pentagon a 4 percent boost <strong>and</strong> proposed<br />

189

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