Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Dwight Eisenhower
View through CrossRef
Assessments of Dwight D. Eisenhower’s performance as the Supreme Allied Commander during World War II and the nation’s thirty-fourth president have evolved across the more than seventy-five years from the conclusion of World War II in 1945 to the dedication in 2020 of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial in Washington, DC. Historians have sought to explain Eisenhower’s unlikely rise from his modest upbringing in Abilene, Kansas, to his ascendance to command of western allies in the European theater. Selected over several senior officers in 1942 to command the invasion of North Africa (Operation Torch), Eisenhower initially experienced a series of setbacks and controversies resulting from inexperienced troops, incompetent subordinate leaders, a formidable enemy, and political deals with leaders of Vichy France. Although historians continue to debate his decisions regarding command and strategy in the European theater, they generally praise Eisenhower’s ability to maintain the western alliance amid national rivalries, professional jealousies, strong personalities, and competing political ambitions. Assessments of Eisenhower’s performance as president have undergone a remarkable transformation. Initially ranked in 1961 near the bottom in assessments of presidential leadership, he currently appears within the top tier. Initial accounts in the 1960s portrayed Eisenhower as a bumbling, docile president who appeared to be out of touch with the basic policies and operations of his administration. He appeared unwilling to address the major issues confronting American society, and to defer to his Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles, on matters of foreign policy and national security. For his critics, Eisenhower perilously, inflexibly, and imprudently relied upon the superiority of the nation’s nuclear arsenal to contain communist expansion, then allowed the Soviet Union to beat the United States into space and create a missile gap. Scholars collectively labeled “Eisenhower Revisionists” assessing declassified documents beginning in the mid-1970s forged a revised consensus that Eisenhower was clearly thoughtful, informed, and firmly in command of his administration. Moreover, the nation’s nuclear arsenal retained and even strengthened its predominance of power. “Postrevisionist” analysts generally concur that Eisenhower was clearly the dominant decision-maker and developed an effective policy development process, but they question the efficacy of some of his decisions and policies, including his management of crises in this dangerous period of the Cold War, his increased use of covert operations and propaganda, his approach to decolonization, and his efforts to ease tensions and slow the nuclear arms race.
Title: Dwight Eisenhower
Description:
Assessments of Dwight D.
Eisenhower’s performance as the Supreme Allied Commander during World War II and the nation’s thirty-fourth president have evolved across the more than seventy-five years from the conclusion of World War II in 1945 to the dedication in 2020 of the Dwight D.
Eisenhower Memorial in Washington, DC.
Historians have sought to explain Eisenhower’s unlikely rise from his modest upbringing in Abilene, Kansas, to his ascendance to command of western allies in the European theater.
Selected over several senior officers in 1942 to command the invasion of North Africa (Operation Torch), Eisenhower initially experienced a series of setbacks and controversies resulting from inexperienced troops, incompetent subordinate leaders, a formidable enemy, and political deals with leaders of Vichy France.
Although historians continue to debate his decisions regarding command and strategy in the European theater, they generally praise Eisenhower’s ability to maintain the western alliance amid national rivalries, professional jealousies, strong personalities, and competing political ambitions.
Assessments of Eisenhower’s performance as president have undergone a remarkable transformation.
Initially ranked in 1961 near the bottom in assessments of presidential leadership, he currently appears within the top tier.
Initial accounts in the 1960s portrayed Eisenhower as a bumbling, docile president who appeared to be out of touch with the basic policies and operations of his administration.
He appeared unwilling to address the major issues confronting American society, and to defer to his Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles, on matters of foreign policy and national security.
For his critics, Eisenhower perilously, inflexibly, and imprudently relied upon the superiority of the nation’s nuclear arsenal to contain communist expansion, then allowed the Soviet Union to beat the United States into space and create a missile gap.
Scholars collectively labeled “Eisenhower Revisionists” assessing declassified documents beginning in the mid-1970s forged a revised consensus that Eisenhower was clearly thoughtful, informed, and firmly in command of his administration.
Moreover, the nation’s nuclear arsenal retained and even strengthened its predominance of power.
“Postrevisionist” analysts generally concur that Eisenhower was clearly the dominant decision-maker and developed an effective policy development process, but they question the efficacy of some of his decisions and policies, including his management of crises in this dangerous period of the Cold War, his increased use of covert operations and propaganda, his approach to decolonization, and his efforts to ease tensions and slow the nuclear arms race.
Related Results
Dwight D. Eisenhower and American Foreign Relations
Dwight D. Eisenhower and American Foreign Relations
Probably no American president was more thoroughly versed in matters of national security and foreign policy before entering office than Dwight David Eisenhower. As a young militar...
Dwight David Eisenhower, Dynamic Conservatism, and the Religious Revival of the 1950s
Dwight David Eisenhower, Dynamic Conservatism, and the Religious Revival of the 1950s
Abstract
Dwight D. Eisenhower’s personal behavior, the mood of the 1950s, and shrewd publicity combined to make his administration seem more religious than those of ...
The World Idealized
The World Idealized
Abstract
Dwight’s friendship with Ralph Waldo Emerson and the emergence of New England Transcendentalism deeply affected his thinking and writing. Other forces contr...
Dwight’s Journal of Music
Dwight’s Journal of Music
Abstract
Dwight founded his eponymous Dwight’s Journal of Music in 1852. Although there has long been a certain romanticism that accompanies the notion that Dwight f...
Disliking Ike
Disliking Ike
Although Drew Pearson encouraged Dwight Eisenhower to run for president, he quickly lost his enthusiasm and became a frequent critic. Pearson had hoped that Eisenhower would stand ...
Dwight on the Issues
Dwight on the Issues
Abstract
Dwight’s Journal addressed innumerable topics, but some had a special appeal to Dwight. He allotted space to several major Civil War events—the Emancipation...
Dwight at Brook Farm
Dwight at Brook Farm
Abstract
With few professional prospects, Dwight settled at the socialist-utopian community of Brook Farm, located near Boston. The community attracted all sorts of ...
Years in Days
Years in Days
Abstract
Dwight regained a modicum of freedom when Ditson took over management of Dwight’s Journal, and he took the opportunity to make a Grand Tour of Europe. No so...

