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Victor Davis Hanson: Our Primordial World, Pride and Envy are what make this war go 'round
NRO ^ | January 16, 2004 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 01/16/2004 5:48:37 AM PST by Tolik

Throughout the last two years of war, we have confronted a variety of what we thought were strange occurrences: the conquest of Iraq in a mere three weeks, the subsequent Iraqis' looting of their own infrastructure, the counterinsurgency operations inside the Sunni Triangle and the weird yearning there for cutthroat Saddam's return, the sudden wave of suicide bombings worldwide, and the split between old and new Europe. In many cases Americans have been bewildered by such developments, and have attempted to apply reason to a world that does not always care much for logic.

Following September 11, our therapeutic industry — the campuses, the media, the intelligentsia, and many on the political Left — almost immediately sprung into action to insist that such hideous terrorist acts were symptomatic of wide-scale poverty and oppression in the Middle East, much of it caused by the United States. True, Islamic fascism scavenges on the self-induced misery of hereditary autocracy so endemic in the Arab world; but the hijacking murderers of September 11 were themselves hardly poor or illiterate. And their mastermind bin Laden talked of pride, envy, and power — seldom poverty or inequality. This was a creature, after all, who belonged to a world of the "strong horse," "honor" killings, throwing shoes, and fist-shaking, more at home in the tenth than 21st century.

Where Americans see skill and subtlety in taking out Saddam Hussein and a costly effort to liberate a people, many Iraqis, even as they taste freedom, drive new cars, and see things improve, talk instead of humiliation, hurt pride, or anger at their own impotence — whether whining over the morticians' make-up work on Qusay, or ashamed about Saddam's pathetic televised dental examination. Iraqis scream on camera that we should not stay another minute, but even more often whisper that we better not leave yet. Too often they seem to be mostly angry that we, not they, took out Saddam Hussein. While the tyrant's departure was a "good" thing, it would have been even better had he killed a few thousand Americans in the process — if only to restore the sort of braggadocio lost by the Baathist flight and antics of a mendacious Baghdad Bob.

Israel suffers from the same dilemma of dealing with others' hurt pride as we do. It created a relatively humane society throughout the West Bank from 1967-1993 — and raised the standard of living, and promoted individual freedom for Palestinians in way impossible elsewhere in the Arab world. But all that won no gratitude; instead, it stoked the fury arising from Arabs' sense of weakness and self-contempt. In the world of the Palestinian lobster bucket, Israel's great sin is not bellicosity or aggression, but succeeding beyond the wildest dreams of its neighbors. How humiliating it must be to be incapable of even muttering the word "Israel" (hence the need for "Zionist entity"), but nevertheless preferring an Israeli to a Palestinian ID card.

Indeed Anwar Sadat, by his own admission, went to war in 1973 not to liberate outright the Sinai (that was militarily impossible), but to show the Arab world he could surprise — and for three to four days even stun — the Israelis, and thereby restore the wounded "pride" of the Egyptians. We think that the total encirclement of his Third Army was a terrible defeat — saved from abject annihilation by American diplomacy and Soviet threat. Egyptians saw it instead as a source of honor that it even got across the canal.

We are puzzled, too, at the fury of the "old" Europeans. We think, somehow, that such sophisticated Westerners have surely transcended Middle Eastern tribal chauvinism, and must have other legitimate grounds for their strange new religion of anti-Americanism. But is their venom any surprise, really? Has a Germany or France really left its past behind? The Cold War was merely a tranquilizer that suppressed all the old human urges and appetites, a sort of forced unity brought on by the shared fear of nuclear annihilation — one that disappeared the minute Soviet divisions creaked on home.

The old truth that resurfaced was that the United States destroyed the Spanish empire in 1898, and was pivotal in derailing the Prussian imperial dream in 1918 and in annihilating the Third Reich. It inherited by default much of the role of the British dominion, did nothing in Suez, Algeria, or Southeast Asia to rescue the tottering French Empire, and almost alone bankrupted and dismantled the Soviet imperium. In other words, past notions of European grandeur are no more — and somewhere in that equation of ruin were the mongrel, tasteless Americans, who are now at it again, ending rather easily the fascistic cabals of Milosevic, Mullah Omar, and Saddam Hussein.

Reasonable people might suggest that Europeans and Russians would welcome these events, as no sane person could be fond of today's megalomaniacs, or even the legacy of monsters like Napoleon, Hitler, or Stalin. But then Dominique de Villepin wrote a hagiography of the little emperor, and Russians talk grandly of the old days when Soviets were feared and respected, not denizens of a motley conglomeration of squabbling, corrupt republics from Chechnya to Georgia.

So even our dealings with a more sophisticated Europe are not exempt from such awakened reptilian instincts. Revelations of recent German and French arms sales, French unilateral intervention in the Ivory Coast, the thousands who perished in the August heat wave in Paris, the spooky election-rhetoric in Germany, the holocaust in the Balkans, the oil deals with Saddam Hussein, the wave of anti-Semitism across Europe, or the callous policy toward Israel — all manifestly reveal Old Europe to be hardly a moral place, but in fact one that narrowly protects its own interests, falls back on bias and hate, and indulges in petty nationalism.

Thus we can dispense with the canard that European hostility toward us is enlightened and has much to do with a genuine feeling that a retrograde United States alone endangers the health and safety of the planet. Instead that deductive hostility has everything to do with the sense of European hurt over how successful our boorish nation should not be.

What are we to do? In fact, very little can be done. Perhaps all we can hope for is to understand rather than ameliorate these pathologies, and whenever possible combine tough love with magnanimity. We need to draw as many troops out of Europe as fast as we can within parameters of military sobriety. Only that way will so-called allies ever shoulder their own defense burdens and thereby regain a sense of national accomplishment. Until then we must respond twofold to every verbal assault on us, even as we praise every European minesweeper, canteen, or police contingent that is now in Afghanistan and Iraq — all the while expecting not much more than a grunt or two of appreciation that we are leading the way.

Our universities laugh at these Thucydidean impulses like fear, honor, pride, and envy, and instead cite either economic rationalism — states war because they need or want things — or deep-seated religious or racial hatred. Such rational catalysts can indeed play a role in conflict, especially civil wars, but — as Donald Kagan wrote about wars from antiquity to the Cuban Missile Crisis — they are rarely alone the prime causes of wars. The Falklands were about as necessary to Argentines' national security or gross national product as the Moroccan rocks in the Mediterranean are to Spain, or the Druze villages in the Golan Heights are to Syria. Saddam had enough oil without Iran or Kuwait, and China wasn't looking for oil, farmland, or seeking to implant communism when it invaded Vietnam.

The realization that we have not yet evolved past these baser impulses is critical in this war, since victory entails not merely the military defeat of our often tribal adversaries, but a careful combination of humiliating enemies while allowing credit to go to envious allies and the once defeated. "Hearts and minds" refers not merely to bequeathing good schools, utilities, and safety to Iraqis, but to restoring the pride of the Iraqi people. The trick is for Americans, who sacrifice lives and treasure, and are singularly responsible for the salvation of the Iraqi people, to ignore Arab ingratitude, callousness, and mean-spiritedness and allow them instead the sense of accomplishment that they saved, and are restoring, their own country.

At the risk of sounding monotonous, we cannot win in Iraq until Iraqis, not Americans, are on television — confidently summing up the reconstruction that we in fact are mostly responsible for. All the tiring shoe-shaking, fists in the air, banners, fatwas, and demonstrating we have seen in Iraq — not to mention the dead-end sniping and killing from a dying cabal of criminals — are not explicable just through political or economic gripes, but revolve mostly around wounded pride and a sense of disgrace.

But are not we ourselves subject to these same age-old pathologies? After all, the critics of Mr. Bush claim he went to war to parade American machismo — remember "Smoke 'em out," "Dead or Alive," and "Bring 'em out?" Of course, we are not immune to insecurities, but there are a few mitigating factors that render us less prone to hemorrhaging pride and tribal angst. First, we are the world's most powerful state — indeed, whether we like it or not, the most powerful entity in the history of civilization. With twelve carrier battle groups and another twelve marine transport carriers, we don't have to talk ad nauseam about something as small and insignificant as the Charles de Gaul. When we refer to the Marine Corps we mean a military larger than any single land army in Europe.

Second, and regrettably, Americans are not by nature much interested in the rest of the globe, given our wealth, obsessive consumerism, and self-absorption. The world thought our weak response to past Iranian hostage-taking, the abrupt pull-out from Vietnam, and the insanely stupid withdrawal from Lebanon were catastrophic signs of American weakness as well as dangerous concessions that might encourage our enemies' boldness. And they were absolutely right.

But many Americans? Sure, they were angry at Iranians, Arabs, and Communists. But most were just happy that the hostages came home, and thought the fewer Iranian nuts to hog the news all to the good. The less Americans saw of the Bekka Valley and the more of Cheers!, the better. The fist-shaking of the Arab Street can't even compete with 30-year-old M.A.S.H. reruns.

Third, the stuff of collective ego and insecurity is often a uniform race, religion, or class that only fuels sensitivity to nationalist insults and perceived slights. America in contrast has always been a brew of faiths, colors, and ethnicities, united by shared values and concerned more with money than with accent, birth, or pedigree. So again, while we are patriotic and don't like bullies, most Americans don't much care about a national ego that must be fed and coddled by other countries. On almost any given day we turn on the television, surf the news channel, see here an Arab burning an American flag, there a European anti-globalization protester torching an effigy of George Bush, yawn, perhaps mumble out loud "Can't these losers get a life," and then plug in a DVD or hit HBO.

As Mr. Bush has grasped, every time we have humiliated our enemies we have gained respect and won security. By the same token, on each occasion we have shown deference to a Mr. Karzai, the Iraqi interim government, and our Eastern European friends, we have helped to create security and stability. Apart from the model of our forefathers who crushed and then lifted up the Germans and Japanese, we could find no better guide in this war than William Tecumseh Sherman and Abraham Lincoln — in that order. The former would remind us that our enemies traffic in pride and thus first must be disabused of it through defeat and humiliation. The latter (who turned Sherman and Grant lose) would maintain that we are a forgiving sort, who prefer restored rather than beaten people as our friends.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: bush; eu; europe; france; germany; iraq; israel; russia; spain; uk; vdh; victordavishanson; waronterror; wot
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1 posted on 01/16/2004 5:48:39 AM PST by Tolik
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To: seamole; xkaydet65; Fury; .cnI redruM; xsysmgr; yonif; SJackson; monkeyshine; Alouette; ...
Victor Davis Hanson moral clarity huge BUMP  [please freepmail me if you want or don't want to be pinged to Victor Davis Hanson articles]

If you want to bookmark his articles discussed at FR: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/k-victordavishanson/browse

His NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp


2 posted on 01/16/2004 5:50:35 AM PST by Tolik
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Brilliant, practically defies excerption. Some best quotes:

...  Americans [...] have attempted to apply reason to a world that does not always care much for logic.

Following September 11, our therapeutic industry — the campuses, the media, the intelligentsia, and many on the political Left — almost immediately sprung into action to insist that such hideous terrorist acts were symptomatic of wide-scale poverty and oppression in the Middle East, much of it caused by the United States.

True, Islamic fascism scavenges on the self-induced misery of hereditary autocracy so endemic in the Arab world; but the hijacking murderers of September 11 were themselves hardly poor or illiterate. And their mastermind bin Laden talked of pride, envy, and power — seldom poverty or inequality. This was a creature, after all, who belonged to a world of the "strong horse," "honor" killings, throwing shoes, and fist-shaking, more at home in the tenth than 21st century.

Where Americans see skill and subtlety in taking out Saddam Hussein and a costly effort to liberate a people, many Iraqis, even as they taste freedom, drive new cars, and see things improve, talk instead of humiliation, hurt pride, or anger at their own impotence ....

Israel suffers from the same dilemma of dealing with others' hurt pride as we do. It created a relatively humane society throughout the West Bank from 1967-1993 — and raised the standard of living, and promoted individual freedom for Palestinians in way impossible elsewhere in the Arab world. But all that won no gratitude; instead, it stoked the fury arising from Arabs' sense of weakness and self-contempt. In the world of the Palestinian lobster bucket, Israel's great sin is not bellicosity or aggression, but succeeding beyond the wildest dreams of its neighbors. How humiliating it must be to be incapable of even muttering the word "Israel" (hence the need for "Zionist entity"), but nevertheless preferring an Israeli to a Palestinian ID card.


3 posted on 01/16/2004 5:57:35 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
He's the best. I find myself e-mailing his columns to people all over the world.
4 posted on 01/16/2004 6:03:11 AM PST by Renfield
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To: Tolik
Another great column from VDH, but he needs an editor who's paying attention. Lobster pot? I think more would immediately grasp the metaphor with "crab pot". There are few of either in inland CA, I presume (VDH's home).

And at the end, we have:

"The latter (who turned Sherman and Grant lose) would maintain that we are a forgiving sort, who prefer restored rather than beaten people as our friends."

This is that rare exception where "lose" should have been "loose", as opposed to the converse. Again, need for an editor.
5 posted on 01/16/2004 6:08:42 AM PST by FreedomPoster (this space intentionally blank)
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To: Renfield
Same here. I find it next to impossible to highlight the best parts (as it is my old habit) because all parts are the best.
6 posted on 01/16/2004 6:11:28 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
The realization that we have not yet evolved past these baser impulses is critical in this war, since victory entails not merely the military defeat of our often tribal adversaries, but a careful combination of humiliating enemies while allowing credit to go to envious allies and the once defeated.

Humiliation. The sight of the dissheveled Saddam perhaps? The humiliation factor could not have been achieved without the toppling of the region's biggest bully, IMHO.

In his books, VDH often points out that capitulation of allied enemies often takes the form of realignment of power. What we are witnessing in Lybia, Syria, Iran, etc. is just that, and it always FOLLOWS the humiliation.

7 posted on 01/16/2004 6:16:28 AM PST by wayoverontheright
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To: Tolik
I assume you've seen this work?
8 posted on 01/16/2004 6:20:52 AM PST by ArneFufkin
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More quotes:

Reasonable people might suggest that Europeans and Russians would welcome these events, as no sane person could be fond of today's megalomaniacs, or even the legacy of monsters like Napoleon, Hitler, or Stalin. But then Dominique de Villepin wrote a hagiography of the little emperor, and Russians talk grandly of the old days when Soviets were feared and respected, not denizens of a motley conglomeration of squabbling, corrupt republics from Chechnya to Georgia.

Revelations of recent German and French arms sales, French unilateral intervention in the Ivory Coast, the thousands who perished in the August heat wave in Paris, the spooky election-rhetoric in Germany, the holocaust in the Balkans, the oil deals with Saddam Hussein, the wave of anti-Semitism across Europe, or the callous policy toward Israel — all manifestly reveal Old Europe to be hardly a moral place, but in fact one that narrowly protects its own interests, falls back on bias and hate, and indulges in petty nationalism.

Thus we can dispense with the canard that European hostility toward us is enlightened and has much to do with a genuine feeling that a retrograde United States alone endangers the health and safety of the planet. Instead that deductive hostility has everything to do with the sense of European hurt over how successful our boorish nation should not be.

What are we to do? In fact, very little can be done. Perhaps all we can hope for is to understand rather than ameliorate these pathologies, and whenever possible combine tough love with magnanimity.

 

9 posted on 01/16/2004 6:22:20 AM PST by Tolik
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To: ArneFufkin
Yes, thank you. It was discussed here as well, twice:

Victor Davis Hanson: Iraq's Future – and Ours
Posted by quidnunc
On 01/02/2004 4:05:00 PM EST with 31 comments


Commentary Magazine ^ | January 2004 | Victor Davis Hanson
On November 21, 2003, some minor rocket attacks on the Iraqi oil ministry and on two hotels in Baghdad elicited an exceptional amount of attention in the global media. What drew the interest of journalists were the terrorists' mobile launchers: they were crude donkey carts. This peculiar juxtaposition of 8th- and 21st-century technology was taken as emblematic of the entire American experience in Iraq — an increasingly hopeless clash between our overwhelming conventional strength and stealthy terrorists able to turn our own lethal means against us with cheap and ubiquitous native materials. How could we possibly win this contest, when...
 

Iraq's Future—and Ours (note: long piece)
Posted by Valin
On 01/01/2004 10:09:01 AM EST with 13 comments


Commentary Magazine ^ | Jan. 04 | Victor Davis Hanson
ON NOVEMBER 21, 2003, some minor rocket attacks on the Iraqi oil ministry and on two hotels in Baghdad elicited an exceptional amount of attention in the global media. What drew the interest of journalists were the terrorists' mobile launchers: they were crude donkey carts. This peculiar juxtaposition of 8th- and 21st-century technology was taken as emblematic of the entire American experience in Iraq—an increasingly hopeless clash between our overwhelming conventional strength and stealthy terrorists able to turn our own lethal means against us with cheap and ubiquitous native materials. How could we possibly win this contest, when an illiterate...


10 posted on 01/16/2004 6:26:24 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
Professor Hanson hits some good points and, as always, with interesting turns of phrase. His theme about pride, though, is one of special interest to me.

It is seemingly impossible for an Arab in the media to discuss a point of policy- America's, Israel's, Arafat's, Osama's, whatever- without mentioning the words "pride,", "humiliation", or "dignity", and the perceived wounding or restoration of them.

I am very interested to learn more about this phenomenon, where the perception of humiliation or emasculation drives Arabic speakers to do such despicable things. Especially because perception is all in your head. What is the source of this feeling? Why is it so prevalent? Why do people believe it and perpetuate it?

Similarly, why can't they open a business, or send their children to a respectable school, or work hard and have a good family, or otherwise better their own lives, and draw pride from those things, instead of their entire self image based around the perception of the Arab nation's lack of military or cultural power?

If anyone could direct me to any works (English only please- maybe auf Deutsch if not too dense) on the topic of Arab pride, and its relationship to policy and international relations, I would be thankful.

11 posted on 01/16/2004 6:36:53 AM PST by Gefreiter
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To: Tolik
bump.
12 posted on 01/16/2004 6:51:38 AM PST by headsonpikes (Spirit of '76 bttt!)
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To: LibertyThug
VDH bump
13 posted on 01/16/2004 6:59:24 AM PST by Akira (The people have spoken.....the bastards.)
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To: Tolik
Great article.

This reminds me of something I read about the Iraq war that really made me laugh. It seems that our psych ops troops understood something about Arab pride, so they'd drive Humvees with loudspeakers praising Iraqi males, asking them to stay at home during the invasion, and saying they will be important to building a free Iraq in the future. They also had a message for the irregular militia men -- saying they were impotent. The report I read said this enraged the militia fighters so much they'd come out shooting from behind their cover, where our combat forces could quickly send them on to the next world.

Does anyone else remember reading a news report like this?

14 posted on 01/16/2004 7:18:30 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: Tolik
VDH bump.
15 posted on 01/16/2004 7:19:05 AM PST by metesky (My investment program is holding steady @ $.05 a can.)
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To: FreedomPoster
I thought the metaphor about Iranians "hogging" the television is just great -- I like the way he associates Muslim trouble-makers with swine.
16 posted on 01/16/2004 7:22:51 AM PST by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
Yes, I read that as well. If you were looking for the article, I believe it was in the mainstream press. If I'm misremembering, maybe it was military.com? Stars 'n Stripes?
17 posted on 01/16/2004 7:23:12 AM PST by Gefreiter
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To: 68skylark
I did not see this report. If true, it's a great news. It means that somebody really did his homework well.
18 posted on 01/16/2004 7:23:23 AM PST by Tolik
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To: 68skylark
No, but it sounds like something that would work, and that we would do.
19 posted on 01/16/2004 7:35:50 AM PST by FreedomPoster (this space intentionally blank)
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To: Gefreiter
There is a book called The Arab Mind... (I don't remember the author, sorry) that might be helpful.

Plus, Bernard Lewis has several books out that you might find useful... What Went Wrong, Crisis in Islam are two that come to mind.

20 posted on 01/16/2004 7:36:17 AM PST by carton253 (It's time to draw your sword and throw away the scabbard... General TJ Jackson)
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