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A European Awakening Against Islamic Fascism? (Victor Davis Hanson alert)
RealClearPolitics.com (Commentary) ^ | 2/6/2006 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 02/06/2006 5:09:31 AM PST by Dark Skies

Over the last four years Americans have played a sort of parlor game wondering when—or if—the Europeans might awake to the danger of Islamic fascism and choose a more muscular role in the war on terrorism.

But after the acrimony over the invasion of Iraq, Abu Ghraib, and Guantanamo, pessimists scoffed that the Atlantic alliance was essentially over. Only the postmortem was in dispute: did the bad chemistry between the Texan George Bush and the Green European leadership who came of age in the street theater of 1968 explain the falling out?

Or was the return of the old anti-Americanism natural after the end of the Cold War—once American forces were no longer needed for the security of Europe?

Or again, was Europe’s third way a realistic consideration of its own unassimilated and growing Muslim population, at a time of creeping pacifism, and radically scaled down defense budgets after the fall of the Berlin Wall?

Yet suddenly in 2006, the Europeans seem to have collectively resuscitated. The Madrid bombings, the murder of Theo van Gogh, the London subway attacks, and the French rioting in October and November seem to have prompted at least some Europeans at last to question their once hallowed sense of multiculturalism in which Muslim minorities were not asked to assimilate at home and Islamic terrorists abroad were seen as mere militants or extremists rather than enemies bent on destroying the West.

On January 19, Jacques Chirac warned that his military would use its nuclear forces to target states that sponsored terrorism against France—El Cid braggadocio that made George Bush’s past Wild West lingo like ‘smoke ‘em out’ and ‘dead or alive’ seem Pollyannaish by comparison. Not long after, it was disclosed that the French and the Americans have coordinated their efforts to keep Syria out of Lebanon and to isolate Bashar Assad’s shaky Syrian regime. And in a recent news conference Donald Rumsfeld and the new German defense minister Franz Josef Jung sounded as if they were once more the old allies of the past, fighting shoulder to shoulder against terrorists who would like to do to Berlin what they did to New York.

The once plodding and ineffectual British-French-German diplomatic effort to circumvent Iran’s nuclear program finally reached its predictable dead-end. But instead of the usual backtracking appeasement dressed up in diplomatic doublespeak about “multilateralism” and “dialogue”, the Europeans pointedly warned the Iranians that further enrichment was unacceptable and that the use of force to prevent acquisition of an Iranian bomb could not be ruled out. A Europe that once dismissed as retrograde America’s anti-ballistic missile system may well soon be in range of Iran’s envisioned nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles.

The Dutch suddenly agreed to deploy up to 1,400 troops in the more dangerous regions of southern Afghanistan. That show of fortitude prompted NATO to boast that its European and American forces may soon go on the offensive against many of the most recalcitrant Taliban strongholds.

When a Danish paper was threatened for printing cartoon caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad, neither the government of Demark nor the usually politically-correct European Union tried to impose censorship in the face of Arab boycotts, rioting, and not-so-veiled threats to make life difficult for Scandinavians. Instead, newspapers all over Europe reprinted the cartoons, ignored Arab threats—only to witness the United States State Department of all governments offer limp-wristed palliatives about cultural sensitivity rather than principled support of the surprising European defense of free expression and speech.

Have the Europeans flipped out?

Hardly. Recent polls show a majority of Europeans are becoming increasingly tired of current liberal immigration policies and foreign aid programs that have given billions of dollars to the Palestine Authority that they now learn in the aftermath of Yasser Arafat’s death resulted in both rampant corruption and the Hamas backlash. It is one thing to subsidize a double-talking Arafat, quite another to keep giving money to terrorists who openly promise to finish the European holocaust.

More importantly, despite distancing themselves from the United States, and spreading cash liberally around, the Europeans are beginning to fathom that the radical Islamists still hate them even more than they do the Americans—as if the fundamentalists add disdain for perceived European weakness in addition to the usual generic hatred of all things Western.

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder is out—and, in humiliating fashion for a supposedly principled socialist, now grubbing for petrodollars for the Russian state-run conglomerate Gazprom. Despite his eleventh hour saber rattling, Jacques Chirac is emasculated. Conservatives are now firmly in power in Australia, Canada, Germany, and the United States. Immigration legislation under consideration from Scandinavia to France makes the American Patriot Act seem tame. Italian wiretaps led to arrests of Muslim terrorists who were plotting another 9/11 at the very time Democratic Senators in confirmation hearings tore into Justice Alito for supposedly condoning police-state tactics.

Liberals here at home attribute the change of European hearts and minds to the abandonment of our own neocon unilateralism, and Mr. Bush’s long overdue return to multilateral bridge building. But that is a superficial exegesis, given that America still supplies the bulk of the coalition troops in both Afghanistan and Iraq—and receives daily European goading about electronic surveillance abroad and detention centers in Eastern Europe.

Two other developments better explain the warming in Atlantic relations and the Europeans’ sudden muscularity. First, the Bush administration wisely adopted a Zen-like strategy of keeping low and letting the ankle-biting Europeans take the lead in dealing with radical Islamists like the Iranian theocracy and Hamas. As we stayed silent and played the sullen bad cop, the good guys were sorely disappointed at learning that, yes, the Iranians want both the bomb and Israel destroyed, and that, yes, Hamas, is still intent on annihilating the Jewish state and expecting subsidies to realize that aim. Second guessing and cheap anti-Americanism are easy without responsibility, but the Europeans found very quickly that for all their subtlety and exalted rhetoric they did no better than George Bush in dealing with these anti-Western fanatics.

Second, the two most difficult hurdles are now past—the removal of the odious Taliban and Saddam Hussein. And thus the overblown caricature of Americans as war-mongering bombers has run out of gas. Europeans, of course, always wished both autocracies gone, but quickly learned they could admit that desire only in the first case.

But now that the Americans are doing the fighting and dying, the Europeans can still be against the war, but “for the peace” with the utopian rationale that “whether the war was right or wrong, Iraq must not become a failed state.” Even the most diehard leftists are beginning to see that the fascists who once threatened Salman Rushdie and now bully the Danish cartoonists are the same as those who blow up female school teachers and reformers in Baghdad.

So is Europe now finally at the front or will they retreat Madrid-like in the face of the inevitable second round of terrorist bombings and threats to come?

Americans are not confident, but we should remember at least one simple fact: Europe is the embryo of the entire Western military tradition. The new European Union encompasses a population greater than the United States and spans a continent larger than our own territory. It has a greater gross domestic product than that of America and could, in theory, field military forces as disciplined and as well equipped as our own.

It is not the capability but the will power of the Europeans that has been missing in this war so far. But while pundits argue over whether the European demographic crisis, lack of faith, stalled economy, or multiculturalism are at the root of the continent’s impotence, we should never forget that if aroused and pushed, a rearmed and powerful Europe could still be at the side of the United States in joint efforts against the jihadists. And should we ever see a true alliance of such Western powers, the war against the fascists of the Middle East would be simply over in short order.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: cartoons; denmark; europe; germany; islam; islamofascism; israel; vdh; victordavishanson; wot
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To: Dark Skies
VDH is saying that having Iranian nuclear missiles poised for launching in a fortnight is concentrating European minds wonderfully.
41 posted on 02/06/2006 11:18:56 AM PST by Plutarch
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To: JamesP81

Are there sufficient numbers of Orthodox Russian youth to pick up the Crusade?


42 posted on 02/06/2006 12:13:14 PM PST by sodpoodle (I have no idea how I got here - but I like it and I plan to stay.)
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To: Dark Skies

My wife is 100% Italian - a real Italian, not someone whose great-grandfather came from Naples and moved to America. My inlaws live in London and Milan. My wife had a very interesting observation. She said that there will be a point when the whole European world will tip and change completely. Hey, her dad was fighting with the fascists during WWII (yes, her dad and my dad could have faced off on different sides), so I think she knows about European extremism. She sees the real possibility of mass deportations, camps, "ethnic cleansing," loyalty oaths - the whole nine yards. Her comment was that no one is more vicious about these sorts of things than the French. In comparison, she's fascinated about the way Americans dither constantly about this or that instead of just going in and pounding the crap out of the enemy.


43 posted on 02/06/2006 3:06:55 PM PST by redpoll (redpoll)
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To: redpoll

Today's Senate hearing is a great example of our dithering. We the people of the US are dependent upon a bunch of "over protected wet their pants if the Capitol if threatened" Senators wanting another bureaucratic layer to intercept INTERNATIONAL Al Qaede calls to the US.


44 posted on 02/06/2006 4:31:57 PM PST by Chgogal (CNN, the network that enabled Saddam.)
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To: nutmeg

read later


45 posted on 02/06/2006 4:32:34 PM PST by nutmeg (NEVER trust democRATs with our national security)
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To: redpoll; Dark Skies

Your wife's observation is correct.

I do not for a minute reject the possibility of Heydrich methods being employed to solve the 'Muslim Problem'. All that political correctness is overcompensation.

The French thought they could bond with the Muslims in a shared anti-Americanism. The riots woke them up. Something about the smell of burning cars. Combine that with the rejection of the EU constitution and the collapse of the Gaullist dream of turning Europe into some kind of French Third Empire able to confront America as an equal. They see now that they had better patch up with an America that has learned that Europeans are useful on occasion but not necessary.

But this was all so inevitable. Once Europe felt threatened wouldn't it, as always, come crawling back to us ?


46 posted on 02/06/2006 4:46:44 PM PST by Sam the Sham (A conservative party tough on illegal immigration could carry California in 2008)
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To: Dark Skies; jan in Colorado; Proud Infidel; Fred Nerks
Great article by VDH. His comments about NATO and potential new alliances brushes along an idea I floated a while ago about a global anti-jihad alliance along the lines of the old NATO alliance which would enable us to put on a united front against the enemy.

Bring in as many nations on the receiving end of the global jihad as possible, from Europe and Israel to the Philippines and Australia. Of course, we're not going to call it an "anti-jihad alliance"... something innocuous would do and would indeed be preferable, as long as all the players understood what the objectives are and to support each other instead of interfering with the actions of members. One such example would be to create a new voting block at the UN to help counter the OIC's agenda.

The big step towards this of course, is waking up the Europeans and the left in general. The failures of their policies of appeasement and the clouds of smoke over a burning Europe today may just one day save them from becoming an extension of an islamic empire. The clash is an inevitable one, but its better done sooner than later before the demographics run their course and acquisition of nukes, bio and chems by more islamic states who try to fulfill their wet dreams of holocausts, madhis and caliphates.

47 posted on 02/06/2006 4:56:05 PM PST by USF (I see your Jihad and raise you a Crusade ™ © ®)
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To: Dark Skies
Europe and Canada are little women who cling to Big Daddy United States for protection. They've been fashionably feminized to the point of total helplessness. If they could recover their masculine powress needed to rescue Western Civilization, they'd again be welcome partners. I have my doubts whether they mean to assume the great task our times require of them.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

48 posted on 02/06/2006 5:54:34 PM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: Pessimist
Maybe this whole "Islam" thing is just eyewash. It is, as its probably always been - a matter of the have-nots against he haves.

"He haves" ? Who is that?

If you mean haves vs. have-nots, you must be referring to either brains or mercy.

The West has both. Islam has neither.

Cheers!

49 posted on 02/06/2006 6:02:40 PM PST by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: Dark Skies


50 posted on 02/07/2006 5:12:45 PM PST by prognostigaator
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To: prognostigaator

I looked to see if there was a hidden message...couldn't find one...send an updated decryption if one is needed. Use Freepmail if nec.


51 posted on 02/07/2006 5:21:24 PM PST by Dark Skies ("A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants." -- Churchill)
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