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Victor Davis Hanson: Critical Mass, We are reaching a showdown in this global war.
NRO ^ | December 12, 2003 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 12/12/2003 6:20:14 AM PST by Tolik

We will ensure the peace in Iraq because of our support for consensual government, our massive infusion of material aid, and our respect for Iraqi sovereignty and culture. But none of this is possible without security, which is the dividend solely of military success.

Americans are still killed by terrorists in Iraq, but the frequency of such attacks is diminishing. Indigenous Iraqi defense forces are not yet formidable, but their ranks are growing. Syria's Bashar al-Assad is giving prevaricating interviews to the New York Times (as did a shaken Abu Abbas from Baghdad on the eve of American invasion). Turks, Russians, and French are not screaming about the United States's attacking dictatorships, but scrambling to hunt down Islamic terrorists in their own midst. The military forces of the United States are stretched thin and costs are escalating, but in the postwar killing ground of Iraq they are still more deadly than last summer. Al Gore is employing hysterical language like "horrible" and "quagmire" right out of the lexicon of George McClellan, but the Baathists are not the Viet Cong, and our present military is not the conscription force of 1968. We are not worried about a nuclear China or Russia intervening — both have no affinity with Islamic fascists.

In all major wars there reaches a critical tipping point when the ultimate outcome of the conflict begins to become clear. Then the pulse of war really quickens, as allies, neutrals, and observers all scramble to adjust their allegiances to match the inevitable verdict to come on the battlefield. For all the scary ante bellum rhetoric about thousand-year Reichs and the defiant slogans of "We will bury you," no one wishes to lose, or even be associated with defeat.

Athens in the Peloponnesian War, for example, fought Sparta for 20 years to a virtual stalemate. During those two decades of quagmire, Persia looked on, while the Aegean tributary states of Athens remained mostly loyal to the empire. But after the Athenian catastrophe at Sicily, the entire strategic landscape changed almost overnight.

It wasn't that Athens's subjects in Samos, Chios, or along the seaboard of Asia Minor suddenly found good reason to object to imperial democracy. Nor did Persia magically find hoards of money that could subsidize the construction of a Spartan fleet. Surely the Peloponnesian League itself did not abruptly in 411 B.C. think that building a fort a mere 16 miles outside of Athens was a necessary and heroic enterprise.

No, the war entered its final phases not out of ideology or even because of strategic breakthroughs — but rather due to perceived impetus and the probable verdict to come. After 40,000 Athenian imperial combatants were lost in Sicily, Persia thought that Sparta could at last destroy Athens — if given enough naval subsidies. Neutral Greek states began to fathom that they soon might be dealing with Spartan rather than Athenian hegemonists. And rebellious allies figured that Athenian green triremes with green crews would not be quite as prompt at putting down their rebellions.

Thucydides matter-of-factly described the realpolitik when he noted that "all of Greece was stirred under the influence of the great Athenian disaster in Sicily" — adding that other states came to believe "that the war would now be short, and that it would be credible for them to take part in."

So it was in the Civil War in July 1863 once the tide of battle turned after Gettysburg and Vicksburg. As if by a miracle, border states began to talk of their strong Unionist, rather than Confederate, sympathies, while Great Britain concluded it was wise not to have entered the war. And the Emancipation Proclamation was seen as almost overdue rather than as incendiary.

Reflect on June 1941, when from the British Channel to the suburbs of Moscow, and from the Arctic Circle to the Sahara, Nazi armies ran rampant. Spain, Turkey, and the Arab world openly bandied about their fascist sympathies, while South America and much of Asia likewise dismissed democracy as an historical artifact better left to musty histories of ancient Greece. After all, decadent Frenchmen of a failed republic had been steamrolled by the rise of new invincible ideologues who believed in blood and iron.

Yet by spring 1943 — less than three years later — fascism was seen not only as horrific, but, far worse, as increasingly impotent. It was not that the world suddenly discovered the horror of the death camps or came to its senses about Mein Kampf, but rather after North Africa, Sicily, Italy, Stalingrad, the radical turnabout in the Atlantic, and the onset of huge formations of fighter-led bombers, millions began to think Hitler in fact was going to lose badly — and might take everyone who professed allegiance down with him.

I don't know at what point Eastern Europe grasped that the Soviet Union was tottering and its planned uprisings were not going to follow the failures of past slaughters in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. But after the rise of Solidarity, the deployment of Pershing missiles, the threat of Star Wars, and Ronald Reagan's massive military buildup, the floodgates were unleashed and there was a mad rush not to be the last Soviet Communist in Europe.

There are plenty of third-world revolutionaries today, but very few who wave the hammer and sickle. Again, it is not that mankind ceased being naïve or duped, and woke up to the absurdities of Marxism and the mass murder that typically followed its implementation. Rather, very few wished to be associated with a losing ideology that offered no arms, patrons, or money — but a lot of misery, humiliation, and ridicule.

This war against the Islamofascists and autocrats of the Middle East is no different. Do not be cowered by their sick videos, the bombs with rat poison and screws, or the promise of a new Dark Age run by the likes of bin Laden. If we are now dismayed by Islamist terrorists from Turkey to Indonesia, and from the West Bank to the Sunni Triangle, it doesn't mean it will always — or even for long — be so, given our increasing success and the unchanging nature of mankind that values power over principles, often quite tragically so.

Such a cynical assessment need not mean that we must deprecate the power of ideas, or must subscribe to such an amoral creed ourselves; but rather that we must not be naïve when we discover new allies who admire us for our strength and military prowess rather than our ideals and values. The reason that states are not rushing to install imams as rulers or open their borders to al Qaeda training camps is not that they like democracy, but rather that they are just now beginning to fear the dire consequences of such action.

Our enemies instead are now reeling — if ever so insidiously. They have lost the free use of Afghanistan. Saddam's Baathists are little more than criminals and thugs in hideouts — soon to follow the fate of Saddam's progeny, statues, and "Hammurabi Division." Gone are Iraqi subsidies for suicide murderers, help for al Qaeda, and the stockpiling of huge caches of imported weaponry.

Indeed, Iraq has been trisected, with oil-rich Kurdistan and the Shiite south stabilizing, as the murderers operating in the Sunni Triangle are now isolated and in the cross-hairs of some pretty dangerous folk. Their desperate gambit to murder Italians, Spaniards, UN personnel, and other Iraqis has backfired — and has only solidified the world's consensus that such killers deserve and will receive no quarter. It will take years to assess properly all the positive benefits that have accrued from the demise of Saddam Hussein — precisely because the full extent of his evil will take just as long to explore fully.

Whatever the legitimate grievances of the Chechens, their resort to suicide murdering and Islamic fundamentalism was a terrible mistake, since they cannot defeat Russia once it is mobilized and given a pass from an exasperated West. Whatever the horror of Hamas and its associated barbaric cabals, neither can such killers overwhelm a democratic Israel — thanks to Mr. Sharon, who for all the slurs and invective against him has proven that the IDF is both the more competent and most humane security force. Indeed, the West Bank terrorist gangs are ever so slowly, in their cruelty and barbarism, losing even some support among the Europeans — a hard thing to do, given Europeans' historical anti-Semitism, concern for oil, fear of terror, and eagerness to triangulate against the United States.

From Paris to Rome, the Europeans, despite their fashionable anti-Americanism, continue to show fear, and with it, the beginning of sobriety. It is one thing to erode daily American public support for the trans-Atlantic relationship, a strong NATO, and the basing of our troops in Germany. But it is quite another to throw away the automatic willingness of the United States to come to Europe's aid at the very time unassimilated Islamic populations are on the rise in Europe's major cities, terrorist cells are spreading, and Berlin and Paris will soon be in range of an Iranian nuclear-tipped missile, its trajectory dependent on the wisdom and clear-headedness of a mullahcracy.

We are beginning the third year of this multi-theater conflict, and it resembles the Punic War after the Carthaginian defeat at the Metaurus in 207 B.C., the year of decision of 1863, or the autumn leading to Alamein and Stalingrad. Ever so slowly the momentum is building. If we stay resolute and tighten the noose around the Baathists, the days of the extremists in Iraq will be numbered even as the rest of the country begins to prosper. And the final victory will only embolden us and discourage our enemies. The war itself cannot be won in the Sunni Triangle, but it might well have been lost there.

The map doesn't look good for a Syria. Its Bekka Valley terrorist enclave seems more like an atoll than a tidal wave. If Mr. Assad thinks that allowing terrorists to leave his borders to kill in Turkey, Israel, or Iraq is a good idea, he is either a lunatic or he is bent on his own destruction. Indeed, Israeli planes have already bombed his soil; the question of hot pursuit from Turkey is once again entirely in the hands of Ankara, not Damascus; and American jets will soon be on the verge of forgetting where the border between Syria and Iraq begins and ends. And if there were another September 11, then all voluntary restrictions on the use of the full extent of American power will be off — and the response would be too terrible to contemplate.

What is striking about the European reaction to Iran's nuclear program is not its timidity, but rather its very existence — a slap on the wrist, true, but one impossible to imagine a mere three years ago. Elsewhere we were told daily that Pakistan was about to fall to the madrassas, exchange nukes with India, or rearm the Taliban. It may well do all that and more. But for now at least a few there are beginning to realize that the great experiment in Afghanistan and Iraq may work; that fundamentalism no longer scares the West, but is the surest way to get thousands of Pakistanis deported and the economy of Pakistan ruined.

One final observation: Very rarely in history do any of the belligerents quite realize what stage of the war they are actually in. The slugfest at Zama still followed Hannibal's escape to Carthage. After Gettysburg there was the terrible summer of 1864 to come. The Battle of the Bulge followed both Normandy Beach and Stalingrad. And for much of the 1980s the world was sure that Soviet divisions were going to crush Polish steelworkers as a crumbling empire went out with a bang rather than a whimper.

So too we should expect a wave of desperate Saddamite attacks once Iraqis take control in July. October will be difficult as Baathists and al Qaedists hope to demoralize our electorate and bring in a Howard Dean or his clone and with him a quick American exit from Baghdad. Let us pray that the Olympics go well — despite the fact that they take place in the eastern Mediterranean, among a populace that is both without formidable military power and has expressed in a recent poll (by nearly a 90-percent majority) the belief that the United States is the chief threat to world peace. If the recent evidence from North Korea or Saddam's nuclear progress before the first Gulf War is any indication, we should assume that Teheran is much closer to building a bomb than we think. And the billions we are spending and the lives we are losing in Iraq suggest to some that we have our hands full and should not pressure Iran, Syria, or other lunocracies — at precisely the time it is most critical that we do so.

But again the key is not to look at the present from the present but rather to imagine what it most likely will appear like ten years from now. From the rhetoric of the Democratic candidates, from the papers in Cairo, and from the videos of the fundamentalists, one would not believe the United States is turning the corner and on the road to a stunning victory, characterized by both competence and idealism. In the last two years our enemies have lacked not the will but the power to defeat us; we in contrast had more than enough power but not enough will. But all that is changing as we ever so slowly become angrier while they get weaker.

So we are witnessing right now the war's critical turning point in these the most historic of times. What has been amazing about the war so far is not that we have been winning, but that we have been doing so — quite unlike our increasingly exhausted enemies — without the full mobilization of our vast economic, political, material, and human resources.

Victor Davis Hanson is author, most recently, of Ripples of Battle and a fellow at the Hoover Institution.

 


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: history; iraq; security; vdh; victordavishanson; waronterror; wot
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1 posted on 12/12/2003 6:20:15 AM PST by Tolik
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To: xkaydet65; Fury; .cnI redruM; xsysmgr; yonif; SJackson; monkeyshine; Alouette; anniegetyourgun; ...
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 12/12/2003 6:21:22 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
A most excellent article.
3 posted on 12/12/2003 6:31:44 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons have pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: Tolik
"The reason that states are not rushing to install imams as rulers or open their borders to al Qaeda training camps is not that they like democracy, but rather that they are just now beginning to fear the dire consequences of such action."

Not quite ready to meet their 72 virgins I guess.

4 posted on 12/12/2003 6:39:43 AM PST by Enterprise
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To: Tolik
The war on terror is a war of wills, and Victor Davis Hanson makes great points.

However, we must stay the course and be very through in cleaning up every remnant of these terrorist cells and their feeder systems. It appears that it will be a never ending task.
5 posted on 12/12/2003 6:45:14 AM PST by RAY
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on or off this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.
6 posted on 12/12/2003 6:50:07 AM PST by SJackson (Terror-I know the sense of helplessness, the urge to arm yourself, that's what I did- Sen. Feinstein)
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To: Tolik
Excellent article, but Al Gore = George McClellan? Al Gore & Howard Dean = George McGovern. Wesley Clark = George McClellan. When Clark had the momentary lead, I was looking forward to a replay of the 1864 campaign.
7 posted on 12/12/2003 6:50:41 AM PST by Reo
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To: Tolik
Brilliant.
8 posted on 12/12/2003 6:55:14 AM PST by MattinNJ (If someone says happy holidays to me, I say Merry Christmas to them.)
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To: Tolik
Victor nails it again.
But before we start planning victory parades let's remember this war is going to be going on for a long while(decades?)
This is why the upcoming election ids so important. President Bush for all his faults, missteps MUST(imo) be reelected! The thought of Howrd the duck Dean(or any of the other moral midgets) moving into 1600 Pennsylvania ave. is enought to send me screaming into the night
9 posted on 12/12/2003 6:59:13 AM PST by Valin (We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.)
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To: Valin
This is why the upcoming election ids so important.

This coming election is probably the most important election in the last 100 years. If one of the current crop of Democrats is elected we will begin to see the decline of the United States as a respected world power and possibly a decline into the mediocrity of Europe. It is imperative the George Bush be re-elected, there is no alternative.

10 posted on 12/12/2003 7:05:10 AM PST by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: Tolik
In the last two years our enemies have lacked not the will but the power to defeat us; we in contrast had more than enough power but not enough will.

Benjamin Netanyahu was asked to speak to a Congressional committee right after 9/11. He ended his speech by saying, The terrorists do not lack the will to destroy us. They lack the means. We have the means to destroy them, but we lack the will. Then Bibi went on to say that this war came down to a race to see if the terrorists got the means before we got the will.

11 posted on 12/12/2003 7:10:10 AM PST by carton253 (It's time to draw your sword and throw away the scabbard... General TJ Jackson)
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To: Tolik
One of the best articles I've read in a very long time concerning our current historical context...

Thank you, Tolik, for posting this....

12 posted on 12/12/2003 7:11:02 AM PST by arfan (Think Critically... Act Decisively... Reflect Constantly...)
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To: Tolik
First time read of Hanson and he lost me on his specialty, Greek military history; but that was then and this is now and his conclusions are encouraging.
13 posted on 12/12/2003 7:12:37 AM PST by larryjohnson (USAF(Ret))
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To: Valin
Oderint dum metuant.
14 posted on 12/12/2003 7:14:56 AM PST by Gargantua (Choose this day Whom you will serve.)
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To: Valin
That is one of the difficulties that face us: our society has no patience, we want all and now. Americans are willing to work hard, but want to see the rewards instantly. Islamists (and other potential enemies, Chinese) are willing to wait, bleed slowly, but wait for the right time to strike. As I like to quote somebody smart (I wish I remember who he was): it will take long time and lots of effort for us to win in the war on terror, but we can loose this war really-really fast.
15 posted on 12/12/2003 7:24:36 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
Brilliant.
16 posted on 12/12/2003 7:25:05 AM PST by Celtjew Libertarian (Shake Hands with the Serpent: Poetry by Charles Lipsig aka Celtjew http://books.lulu.com/lipsig)
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To: Tolik
Likewise, a struggle now exists for the heart and minds of Americans, to be liberal or conservative.
17 posted on 12/12/2003 7:25:45 AM PST by taxcontrol (People are entitled to their opinion - no matter how wrong it is.)
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To: Tolik
Excellent article.
18 posted on 12/12/2003 7:25:49 AM PST by Tuscaloosa Goldfinch
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To: Tolik
VDH once again hits the nail on the head: the chief factor that will determine the outcome of this war is the will of the US to fight, sometimes not by the Marquis de Queensbury rules, until our enemies are defeated. It is plain that Bush will continue to do so, but he can only do so if he is reelected. Despite all of the mistakes that he's made in other areas (Medicare expansion, signing the hideous CFR bill into law, his stance on the AWB, the assault on our civil rights under the Patriot Act), this area is the most critical. Unless we win this war, all the rest doesn't matter - because someday we'll wake up to one or more atomized US cities. If/when we win, all of the other mistakes can be fixed (and, if we are fortunate, they can be fixed while we are winning.

I point of curiosity: why is VDH writing columns and not advising the President on a daily basis?

19 posted on 12/12/2003 7:28:58 AM PST by Ancesthntr
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To: Tolik
This is utter nonsense. We are engaged in the beginning of a multiple-decade war against an unconventional opponent using asymmetrical means.

Indeed, the case can be made that we have already lost--I have made it repeatedly here. We invaded the wrong country, insisting on "nation building", while our covert enemies obtain aid and comfort in Syria, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, etc. We have failed to secure our borders, take out the terrorist leaders and their supporters, or even make serious attempts to eliminate sleeper cells and moles on our territory.

Our chief of "Homeland (In)security" advocates amnesty for illegal aliens. We continue to issue visas to citizens of known terrorist nations; continue to educate them in our colleges and universities.

We are in deep denial. Eventually the reality will confront us again--when the Sears Tower comes down, or the Golden Gate bridge is demolished.

--Boris

20 posted on 12/12/2003 7:30:05 AM PST by boris (The deadliest Weapon of Mass Destruction in History is a Leftist With a Word Processor)
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