- The Washington Times - Thursday, February 3, 2011

Martin Anderson works in an ivory tower - literally. From high above Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, Mr. Anderson contemplates Ronald Reagan’s legacy as his centennial arrives on Sunday.

Asked if he thinks Reagan’s stature has risen since he left office in 1989, Mr. Anderson says, “I don’t just think so. I know so.”

Reagan’s reputation has grown, largely thanks to the scholarship of Mr. Anderson and his wife, Annelise, both former Reagan aides and Hoover colleagues of mine. Like prospectors panning for flakes of gold, they routinely sift through boxes and boxes of Reagan’s papers. Their findings pleasantly have surprised even the most stalwart Reaganites.

America’s 40th president succeeded, in part, by not challenging the widespread belief that he was a committed conservative who mainly sold free-market reforms while others fretted over their details and implementation. Reagan’s critics considered him gregarious, perhaps, but ultimately a mere actor who read whatever lines he was handed by such advisers as Ed Meese and the late Mike Deaver. The equally late Democratic eminence Clark Clifford famously dismissed Reagan as “an amiable dunce.”

The Andersons’ book - “Reagan, in His Own Hand” - detonated this myth. They discovered 670 scripts for commentaries that the former California governor aired on 236 radio stations from 1975 to 1979. Reagan offered his specific prescriptions on taxes, regulation, peace through strength, and even oceanic mineral content as concerned the Law of the Sea Treaty. Those scripts consisted of sheets of yellow paper brimming with Reagan’s own handwriting.

Rather than being a mere mouthpiece for his staff, Reagan himself researched and addressed topical issues with philosophical consistency and concrete evidence to bolster his opinions.

The Andersons cross-tabulated, highlighted, color-coded and digitized copies of Reagan’s documents from Hoover’s archives and the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, Calif. Reagan’s prolific pen still keeps them busy.

“We published about a thousand of his letters in ’Reagan: A Life in Letters,’ ” Mr. Anderson says. “There are about 10,000 Reagan letters. We’re still finding more.”

The Pentagon declassified additional papers that helped the Andersons explain how Reagan won the Cold War while barely firing a shot. Here again, Mr. Anderson says Reagan pursued precisely the policy that he wanted. His deputies worked hard to follow him - not the reverse.

Reagan was driven, Mr. Anderson thinks, by something he learned at a Dec. 3, 1981, National Security Council meeting. “Right now in a nuclear war we’d lose 150 mil[lion] people,” Reagan told his diary. “The Soviets could hold their loss down to less than were killed in W.W. II” - about 25 million.

In short, 40 percent of America’s population would bury the other 60 percent before returning to the radioactive rubble. Reagan wanted to do better.

“He was the only person who was smart enough to know what to do,” Mr. Anderson says. “And he did it.”

Thus, Reagan launched a tax-cut-fueled economic expansion and an aggressive military buildup, including missile-defense research. After seven exhausting decades of “scientific socialism,” the Soviet Union could not keep up.

Reagan also engaged Russia in high-stakes diplomacy, which finally succeeded after Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev concluded that resistance was futile and accepted deep arms reductions.

When, exactly, did Reagan win the Cold War? Mr. Anderson cites the June 1, 1988, completion of Reagan’s Moscow summit with Mr. Gorbachev. They jointly declared “their solemn conviction that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought … and their disavowal of any intention to achieve military superiority.”

This reflected Reagan’s singular desire to end mutually assured destruction. Like most of his other policies, this sprang from his well-honed intellect and his deep-seated faith in America’s abilities. He governed with focused self-confidence. As Reagan told his first National Security Council meeting on Feb. 6, 1981: “I will make the decisions.”

“People used to say, ’Reagan was a nice guy. But who was handling all of this stuff for him?’ ” Mr. Anderson marvels. “We didn’t know. And now we do: He was.”

Deroy Murdock is a syndicated columnist and media fellow with Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.

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