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War Myths: What not to believe
National Review ^ | 9/20/01 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 09/20/2001 11:01:22 AM PDT by Jean S

War Myths
What not to believe.

By Victor Davis Hanson, author most recently of Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power.
September 20, 2001 1:40 p.m.

. We have incurred legitimate hatred from the radical Islamic states.
Nothing could be further from truth. The Taliban, the mullahs in Iran, and other assorted fundamentalists despise the United States for its culture and envy it for its power. The wealth, technology, and freedom of America's global culture — from bare navels to the Internet — have challenged fundamentalists, who are wedded to a medieval world of perpetual stasis. That terrorists use frequent-flyer miles and cell phones to kill us only sharpens that paradox, and accentuates their dual sentiments of envy and inadequacy. For the record, in the last ten years, the United States freed the Arab and Islamic state of Kuwait, opposed Saddam Hussein and his murder of Islamic Kurds and Shiites, prevented Muslim Afghanistan from becoming a Soviet satrapy, and saved the Muslims of Bosnia and Kosovo from extinction — as European and "moderate" Arab states watched the carnage of their neighbors and kin. The majority of the terrorists that surround bin Laden are from the upper and middle classes of Arab society, are highly educated, and are driven to murder by hatred and envy, not hunger or exploitation. They are a world apart from the starving in South America and Africa, who do not crash airliners into office towers. These terrorists hate us for who we are, not what we have done.

2. The Arab and Muslim worlds are formidable.
In fact, despite being over a billion strong, they are not monolithic and are at their weakest since the 15th or 16th century. There is not a single Arab democracy, nor one truly free populace. Like the Ottomans of the past, who made poor copies of Venetian cannon, so too the fundamentalists are parasitic upon Western culture, their societies unable to mass-produce, or even create, a single one of the weapons they employ. The economies of the larger Muslim world — from Indonesia and Iran to Lebanon and Palestine — are in shambles, ruined by either autocracy or theocracy. Moreover, new coalitions are emerging that will only further isolate Muslim states, in which even mainstream clerics and intellectuals have not successfully reconciled the unfettered dynamism of global capitalism and technology with the doctrines of the Koran. In response, the United States will gradually gravitate toward tough nuclear powers like Russia and India, whose secular democracies have long-standing affinities with the West — and deep enmity toward Islamic fundamentalism.

3. The moderate Arab countries are our friends.
We also need to revisit the myth of the "moderate" Arab countries. Most are moderate in only a relative sense, the way an opportunist like Franco was a moderate fascist in comparison to Hitler, or a wily Tito a moderate Communist as opposed to Stalin. We must accept the bitter truth that states like Palestine, Egypt, Syria, and others — despite American deference and occasional aid — are not our friends, much less our allies. Their citizens do not vote freely; their media is controlled and censored; women are not fully liberated, if at all; and they are growing less, not more, tolerant of religious and cultural diversity. While the United States should not gratuitously incite societies like Jordan (a supporter of Iraq in the Gulf War), Egypt, or Saudi Arabia, we must reexamine our relationships with them — from military assistance to foreign aid to travel and immigration. One of the more frustrating facets of the American media has been their reluctance (or inability) to show the grassroots celebration — going on in the streets of Palestine, Pakistan, Egypt, and other countries — of 6,000 American deaths. We should pay close attention to what the upscale parents of the terrorists now profess to European journalists: They may well be representative of Arab "moderates" in Egypt and Lebanon, and yet, with perfect consistency, either deny their progeny's involvement, spin myths about CIA conspiracies, or suggest that the attacks were warranted.

4. Fundamentalist terrorism cannot be eliminated.
This fear too is erroneous. Terrorist organizations like bin Laden's, the Hezbollah, and Islamic Jihad are not as formidable as either German Nazism or Japanese militarism, both of which were exterminated within five years of America going to war and have not plagued the planet since. The Waffen SS, Gestapo, the Kamikazes, and the Japanese army at Bataan were all more horrific than the Taliban. Terrorism is a tumor with tentacles, but these can be excised by frequent and continued air strikes, coupled with sudden ground incursions and ongoing counterinsurgency. The hosts can be given a series of ongoing ultimatums: to surrender suspects, demolish camps, and cease monetary support — or face the month-by-month, systematic destruction of their military assets, banks, and communications. Add in financial, economic, and cultural ostracism, and terrorism can and will be crushed — if the United States is willing to give treasure and lives for the greater good and for our children's future.

5. The crisis is an international problem.
In theory, of course it is, and we should welcome assistance from our traditional allies and enlist indigenous resistance groups in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the United States must be prepared to act alone, especially as casualties mount and terrorist reprisals increase. Nor should we welcome alliances with past terrorist culprits that will haunt us later and erode the moral high ground.

The United Nations is not only as impotent as the old League of Nations, but lacks the former's idealism and has become ever more morally bankrupt. Once the fighting starts, despite initial pledges of support, the Europeans will probably extend words of encouragement but lend no real material or military assistance of any value. We cannot expect the French to remember Normandy Beach or the Germans the Berlin airlift. Indeed, most Europeans have already forgotten American intervention on their doorstep to stop the recent holocaust in the Balkans. We should neither lament nor be angered by their hypocrisy, but rather expect it, and realize what a different country America is and always has been compared to its European allies. We must be ready to be lectured by the Swedes who passed on World War II, ignored by the Swiss who profited from it, and hectored by the French who nearly lost it. America needs and welcomes friends, but the absence of such should not deter our response to avenge our own dead and protect our innocent.

6. War has never solved anything.
Quite the contrary. The three greatest scourges of the 20th century — Nazism, Japanese militarism, and Soviet Communism — were defeated through war or continued military resistance. More were killed by Hitler, Stalin, and Mao outside of combat than died in World Wars I and II. War, as Sherman said, is all hell, but as Heraclitus admitted it is also "the father of us all." Wickedness — whether chattel slavery, the gas chambers, or concentration camps — has rarely passed quietly into the night on its own. The present evil isn't going to either.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
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1 posted on 09/20/2001 11:01:22 AM PDT by Jean S
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To: JeanS
Excellent post. Thank you.
2 posted on 09/20/2001 11:06:34 AM PDT by Peach
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To: JeanS
This one is worth distributing to friends and family. It succinctly states a lot of what I've been trying to tell them.
3 posted on 09/20/2001 11:06:56 AM PDT by Joe Bonforte
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To: JeanS
Bump.
4 posted on 09/20/2001 11:07:08 AM PDT by Jacvin
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To: JeanS
Amen.
5 posted on 09/20/2001 11:11:10 AM PDT by Spiff
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To: JeanS, bang_list
Tyranny Response Team BUMP!
6 posted on 09/20/2001 11:16:30 AM PDT by Hail Caesar
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To: JeanS
Great find! I'm just so tired of these lies being spewed at me from all around. Bump!
7 posted on 09/20/2001 11:18:58 AM PDT by JenB
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To: Peach
BUMP
8 posted on 09/20/2001 11:20:17 AM PDT by follow your bliss
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To: JeanS
Send this to LewRockwell.com.
9 posted on 09/20/2001 11:22:03 AM PDT by saminfl
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To: JeanS
Excellent.

Bookmarked and a bump for future reference.

10 posted on 09/20/2001 11:22:08 AM PDT by porte des morts
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To: JeanS
... the fundamentalists are parasitic upon Western culture, their societies unable to mass-produce, or even create, a single one of the weapons they employ.

Yes. Recommended reading on that theme: Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey.

11 posted on 09/20/2001 11:24:39 AM PDT by dighton
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To: JeanS
Superb analysis; bookmarked for future reference. Thank you!
12 posted on 09/20/2001 11:28:35 AM PDT by Jim Scott
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To: JeanS
bump for later
13 posted on 09/20/2001 11:32:36 AM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: JeanS
bump for later
14 posted on 09/20/2001 11:33:36 AM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: JeanS
"For the record, in the last ten years, the United States freed the Arab and Islamic state of Kuwait, opposed Saddam Hussein and his murder of Islamic Kurds and Shiites, prevented Muslim Afghanistan from becoming a Soviet satrapy, and saved the Muslims of Bosnia and Kosovo from extinction ? as European and "moderate" Arab states watched the carnage of their neighbors and kin."

Bears repeating. My God, the hypocrisy of these people is nothing short of astonishing.

15 posted on 09/20/2001 11:34:40 AM PDT by RightOnline
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To: JeanS
Hanson has jumped ship from the paleo schooner "Chronicles" to the neo battleship USS "National Review," and really entered into the spirit of things, swabbing the decks, polishing the big guns.

The paleo crew (Chronicles, Lew Rockwell, Antiwar.com) is wrong about a lot of things -- maybe about most things --, but the neo navy (National Review, Weekly Standard, Commentary, on down to the New Republic) is too overconfident, too eager for war, and too enamoured of the big guns.

The wise course would be between the two fleets, and that seems to be where President Bush is sailing.

16 posted on 09/20/2001 12:03:12 PM PDT by x
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To: JeanS, Veronica, Dennisw, Distant Voice
An absolutely excellent read, bookmarked for future reference.

The hosts can be given a series of ongoing ultimatums: to surrender suspects, demolish camps, and cease monetary support — or face the month-by-month, systematic destruction of their military assets, banks, and communications.

This is the essence of the solution to our problem. You'll never completely eliminate the suicidal crazy with a grudge against someone (or everyone) else. Hence there will always be some terrorism. However, the existence of large terrorist organizations able to simultaneously hijack multiple aircraft thousands of miles from their main base and kill thousands of innocents in a single day is entirely a phenomenon of state sponsorship or protection. Eliminate the protection, the money, the weapons, the training camps, the communications infrastructure, the provision of false documents, etc., and you will eliminate groups like Bin Laden's.

If the governments that support terrorism (Algeria, Libya, Sudan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, North Korea & others) don't cease to provide such support, then I favor the World War II solution - invade their countries, destroy their governments and kill (not imprison, kill) the leaders responsible. Do this a few times, and the rest will fall into line. Those that survive may not like us, but who cares? Such actions will put an end to state sponsored terrorism for at least a generation.

17 posted on 09/20/2001 12:06:49 PM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: JeanS
For a terrific quote, try this (I think it'll preach for generations to come):

Terrorism is a tumor with tentacles...

18 posted on 09/20/2001 12:22:09 PM PDT by Migraine
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To: JeanS
The author got it almost all right. The horrors of the Balkans, especially Bosnia, Kosovo and now Macedonia are directly caused by Muslim extremism that has been let loose in the Balkans. Bin Laden's hand is directly controlling Bosnia's Muslim government and the KLA. This is a broad based Islamic terrorist movement that is attacking Western Civilization which has been aided and abetted by Clinton and Albright and their mindless demonization of the Serbs.
19 posted on 09/20/2001 12:24:38 PM PDT by JMS
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To: JeanS
On the point about the Arabs/Muslims being formidable: If they are not an equal adversary, why are we so worried about them? I think the point should be, what can they do to us, regardless of the source of their weaponry or ammunition.

Remember, they initially got here utilizing our legal visas from our unsuspecting immigration system. They trained their pilots in our schools and using our flight simulators. The killers used 3 of our commercial aircraft to destroy the same real estate that a TU-160 Blackjack bomber would be required for, and which would have been unable to enter U.S. airspace undetected. They timed their mission extremely closely and selected large, symbolic, media-spectacular targets in our seats of finance and military power. All the active participants died (willingly), so no one could be directly questioned or held.

Because of this level of genius and cunning, I would submit that these folks are extremely formidable. They are not the paunchy pashas who rule Kuwait, nor the illiterate peasants on the Afghani hillsides. They are led by a man of wealth, with an advanced degree in Engineering, who (if he is truly responsible) has made good on his promise to, at least partially, bring America to its knees (witness the stock market, airline & travel industries' slide, and the impact on international markets).

Take them lightly at your (and our) ultimate peril.

20 posted on 09/20/2001 12:56:13 PM PDT by metal_war
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