Source:
http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson.shtml
The 1930s, Again
A hard rain is going to fall.
By Victor Davis Hanson, author most recently of Carnage and Culture:
Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power.
March 25, 2002 8:30 a.m.
n some ways in our war against the terrorists we are like the democracies
of the late 1930s. They knew that there was more to Hitler than his
avowed quest for the return of the Sudetenland or the Alsace-Lorraine.
They sort of suspected that an entire, venerable culture in Germany and
Japan had gone off the deep end. And while there was a certain logic to
Hitler's diatribes that a moralistic England had no more right to distant
India than did Germany to nearby Danzig, most deep-down knew that such
parlor-game banter simply masked a much larger dilemma � how to corral a
very powerful dictatorship and its axis that wished dominance not
coexistence, and whose fuel was brutal force and autocracy, not democracy
and freedom.
For England, most of Western Europe, and the United States, reeling under
recent economic depression and hardly recovered from the sheer horror of
the First World War � carnage unlike any in the long history of warfare �
the idea of forceful resistance was little short of insanity. Filmstrips
of German Panzers, thousands of Japanese shouting "Banzai!,"
and even Mussolini's comically delivered, but hateful rants overwhelmed
the senses.
How could one stop such madness? And might it just go away with proper
diplomacy? And why did "militarists" in the West insist on
rearming and thereby "provoking" war? And was not there some
truth to German grievances and Japanese hurts? And did anyone really wish
to risk millions of innocent Americans and British to kill equally
innocent, although perhaps mesmerized, Germans? Who was stirring up such
animosity?
We are in a similar dilemma � in our hesitation about Iraq, our pressure
on Israel, and our worries about mission creep in pursuing the killers.
Can't the Jews and Arabs just get along? If Israel would just give back
all of the West Bank, wouldn't there be peace? Didn't we just fight in
the Gulf a mere decade ago? How do we know that Saddam Hussein really has
such dreadful weapons? Shouldn't our allies get involved too? Do these
undemocratic Muslim countries really dislike us all that much? Who can
trust polls anyway? Why are these saber-rattlers trying to get us into a
war?
And so we Americans, like those 70 years ago who so wanted a perpetual
peace, pray for a return of sanity in the Middle East. We chose to ignore
horrific stories of Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia � the embryo of 9/11. We
are more amused than shocked that madrassas have taught a generation to
hate us. When mullahs in Iran speak of destroying Israel we wince, but
also shrug. We want to see no real connection between madmen blowing
themselves up to kill us in New York and the like-minded doing the same
in Tel-Aviv. We put our trust in peace with a killer like Mr. Arafat, who
packs a gun and whips up volatile crowds in Arabic. All the while, no
American statesman has the guts to tell the Arab leadership that statism,
tribalism, fundamentalism, gender apartheid, and autocracy � not America,
not Israel � make their people poor, angry, and dangerous.
Rather than preparing for what our enemies are preparing for us, we look
to gestures of appeasement. Does not the Islamic world appreciate the
presence of General Zinni? Do we not give billions to Arab countries? Did
we not save Kuwait and Muslims throughout the globe? Who in the Arab
world could really think that the murderous Taliban were preferable to
the present more enlightened government in Afghanistan? And although
Middle Eastern males blew up our planes, people, and monuments, have we
not had a national discussion about the evils of profiling those from the
Middle East in our airports and stations? Don't Muslims tell their
kindred back home how much freer they are in America than in Iraq or
Syria?
Like the dashed hopes of the 1930s such faith is not only misplaced, but
also dangerous. The efforts of countries like Iraq to acquire nuclear
weapons might under the present pressures grow dormant, but they will not
cease. A nuclear Pakistan is a tottering military dictatorship away from
Armageddon. Bribed autocracies in Jordan and Egypt are allies only in the
sense that their unelected leaders promise to jail their nuts and
fundamentalists who otherwise might turn on them as well as on us. Polls
everywhere in the Middle East reveal not mere anguish, but real enmity
toward Americans. Public pronouncements in Iran are not any less hateful
than what emanated from Berlin in 1936. Thousands of al Qaeda killers
have escaped � and thousands more are angry over the death of the
comrades and kin and planning carnage for us as we sleep.
Only a few of us Americans really take the Islamic world at its word �
that one in three is reported to think (representing, say, a small number
of around 200 million?) that the murder of 3,000 Americans was justified;
that two of three believed no Arabs were involved; and that even higher
poll numbers reflected real antipathy for the West.
After 30 years of listening to nauseating chanting from Teheran to
Islamabad to Nablus, hearing the childish rants about "The Mother of
All Battles" and "The Great Satan," and witnessing
presidents from Carter to Bush burned in effigy, the ritual torching of
the American flag, the misspelled banners of hatred, the thousands of
paint-by-the-numbers posters of psychopaths from Khomeini to bin Laden,
televised threats that sound as hideous as they are empty, Nazi-inspired
anti-Semitism, embassy takeovers, oil-boycotts, hijacked planes, cars,
and ships, lectures from unelected obese sheiks with long names and gold
chains, peacekeepers incinerated in their sleep, murders at the Olympics,
bodies dumped on the tarmac of airports, shredded diplomats, madmen in
sunglasses in Iraq, Syria, and Libya, demented mullahs and whip-bearing
imams in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Iran, continual televised murders of
Americans abroad, our towers toppled, our citizens butchered, our planes
blown up, hooded Klansmen in Hamas and Hezbollah, killers of al-this and
Islamic-that, suicide bombers, shrill turbaned nuts spouting hatred on
C-SPAN broadcasts, one day the salvation of Kuwait, the next sanctions
against the swallower of Kuwait, the third day fury against the sanctions
against the swallower of Kuwait, the fourth day some grievance from 1953,
the fifth another from A.D. 752; and all the time sanctimonious
fingerpointing from Middle Eastern academics and journalists who are as
bold abroad in insulting us as they are timid and obsequious under
dictators at home in keeping silent, I've about had it. No mas. The
problem is you, not us � you, you, you�.
I don't listen any more to the apologies and prevarications of our whiney
university Arabists, our equivocators in the state department, and the
really tawdry assortment of oil men, D.C. insiders, bought and paid for
PR suits, and weapons hucksters. The truth is that a large minority of
the Middle Eastern world wishes a war with America that it cannot win �
and much of the rest is apparently either indifferent or amused.
So we should stop apologizing, prepare for the worst, hope for the best,
and accept this animosity � just as our forefathers once did when faced
by similar autocrats and their captive peoples who threatened us in 1941.
I don't know about the rest of America, but I am proud that thugs like
Khaddafi, murderers like Saddam Hussein, inquisitionists like the mullahs
in Iran, criminals in Syria, medieval sheiks in the Gulf, and millions of
others who do not vote, do not speak freely, oppress women, and are not
tolerant of religious, gender, or ethnic diversity don't like me for
being an American. I would find it repugnant if they did.
No, their hatred is a badge of honor, and I would have it no other way. I
am tired of the appeasers of the Middle East on our Right who fawn for
oil and trade, and those pacifists and multiculturalists on the Left who
either do not know, or do not like, what America really is. I'd rather
think of all the innocent dead on 9/ 11 than give a moment more of
attention to Mr. Arafat and his bombers.
The truth is that there is a great storm on the horizon, one that will
pass � or bring upon us a hard rain the likes of which we have not seen
in 60 years. Either we shall say "no more," deal with Iraq, and
prepare for a long and hard war against murderers and terrorists � or we
will have more and more of what happened on 9/11. History teaches us that
certain nations, certain peoples, and certain religions at peculiar
periods in their history take a momentary, but deadly leave of their
senses � Napoleon's France for most of a decade, the southern states in
1861, Japan in 1931, Germany in 1939, and Russia after World War II. And
when they do, they cannot be bribed, apologized to, or sweet-talked �
only defeated.
In that context, we see much of a whipped-up Arab world entering this
similar period of dangerous unreality. The problem is them and their
unelected and unfree regimes, not us � just as it was Hitler, not us;
Tojo, not us; Mussolini, not us; and Stalin, not us � just as it always
is when unelected maniacs take control and hijack an entire country and
culture. We can either step up and stop Islamic fundamentalism, Arab
terrorists, and Middle Eastern dictators or we can step back and watch it
all continue to grow. If 9/11 was the beginning of a war, then we should
remember that wars usually end when one, not both sides, win
Edward ><+>
If you have fifty problems and one of them is government, you have only
one problem.
http://www.global-connector.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/reality_pump/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Re: [CTRL] "A hard rain is going to fall." Edward Britton
- Re: [CTRL] "A hard rain is going to fall." Joshua Tinnin
- Re: [CTRL] "A hard rain is going to fall.&quo... Edward Britton
- Re: [CTRL] "A hard rain is going to fall.... Joshua Tinnin
- Re: [CTRL] "A hard rain is going to f... Edward Britton
- Re: [CTRL] "A hard rain is going... Joshua Tinnin
