I just finished reading Nathaniel Philbrick’s Valiant Ambition: George Washington, Benedict Arnold, and the Fate of the American Revolution. It is one of a series that Philbrick has written about the settlement of America by Europeans and the early years of the American Revolution. The book goes into detail about military operations in Pennsylvania, New York, and the surrounding areas during the Revolution, what was happening in key communities, and the inter-personal relationships that shaped America’s fight for independence. Philbrick’s insights into the personalities, skills, ambitions, and human strengths and weaknesses of our early military leaders and their impact on the Revolution are intriguing, but they took on new meaning reading about them as the Trump impeachment movement took shape over the past few weeks.
Arnold has become the paragon of the ultimate traitor over the years. However, he first achieved notoriety as a military leader under George Washington and as the hero of several major battles against the British. But he was also a prideful man whose mistakes and personal animosities cost him leadership roles and the recognition that he felt was due him. Congress passed over him for promotion and, at one point, he was court martialed for his actions. At the same time, he entered into several shady business dealings in an attempt to recover the financial position that he held prior to the Revolution and to support his new wife, who came from a Loyalist family.
Ultimately, he turned traitor. By the time Washington appointed him as commander of West Point—a strategically important site for the defense of New York and the mid-Atlantic states—Arnold had decided to sell information to the British. When he was found out, he fled, eventually joining the British army to fight against his former compatriots. After the war, he remained in Britain, except for a brief, unpopular, stay in Canada, and died in 1801.
As Philbrick paints Arnold’s portrait, the traitor was driven not by ideals or feelings of patriotism to England, but by personal animosities, hurt ego, and, most immediately, the desire to make money. Philbrick describes Washington’s reaction to learning of Arnold’s betrayal this way:
Being a republic, the country they were struggling to create was ruled not by a king or an emperor but by the mutual consent of the governed. Arnold had betrayed not just Washington but every American citizen he had pledged to protect. Since republics rely on the inherent virtue of the people, they are exceedingly fragile. All it takes is one well-placed person to destroy everything. Washington, his face betraying the sadness, anger, and shock of this most recent revelation turned to Lafayette and asked, “Whom can we trust now?”
I finished Valiant Ambition on the day Congress decided to open impeachment proceedings against Donald Trump for encouraging a foreign government to interfere in the 2020 U.S. Presidential election. The evidence was plain that Trump had asked the President of Ukraine for a “favor”—to investigate the son of his main rival in the upcoming election. In the process, we learned that Trump had also told the Russians that he had no problem with their interference in the 2016 election.
As our country steels itself for the upcoming impeachment investigation, let us not forget the lesson of Benedict Arnold.
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