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When War Was The Answer
Townhall.com ^ | September 3, 2007 | George Will

Posted on 09/03/2007 2:07:24 AM PDT by Kaslin

OMAHA BEACH, Normandy -- On a bluff above the sand and a half a mile from the ocean's edge at low tide, which was the condition when the first allied soldiers left their landing craft, a round circle of concrete five feet in diameter provides a collar for a hole in the ground. On the morning of June 6, 1944, the hole was Widerstandsnest (nest of resistance) 62, a German machine gun emplacement.

Hein Severloh had been in it since shortly after midnight, by which time U.S. aircraft were droning overhead, having dropped young American paratroopers Severloh's age behind the beaches in order to disrupt German attempts to rush in reinforcements. Severloh had been billeted near Bayeux, home of the 11th-century tapestry depicting a cross-channel invasion that went the other way, taking William, Duke of Normandy, to become William the Conqueror, England's sovereign.

Severloh believed he killed hundreds of GIs, so long and slow was their walk to the safety, such as it was, of the five-foot embankment where the beach meets the bluff. Severloh returned here in sorrow and was consoled by survivors of the forces that waded ashore.

Today, in an America understandably weary of a war of choice that has been defined by execrable choices, a frequently seen bumper sticker proclaims: "War is not the answer." But here, especially, it is well to remember that whether war is the answer depends on the question.

War was the answer to what ailed Europe in 1944. "In 1942," writes Timothy Garton Ash of Oxford and Stanford's Hoover Institution, "there were only four perilously free countries in Europe: Britain, Switzerland, Sweden and Ireland." Twenty years -- a historical blink -- later, almost all of Western Europe was free. Twenty years after that, Spain, Portugal and Greece had joined the liberal democracies. Today, for the first time in 2,500 years, most Europeans live under such governments.

Ash argues that Europe cannot define itself negatively -- as not America or not Islam. "Europe's only defining 'other' is its own previous self" -- its self-destructive, sometimes barbaric past. "This is," Ash says, "still a very recent past."

In 1951, just seven years after Severloh and some other Germans surrendered on June 7 to Americans at the village of St. Laurent, Europe began building the institutions that, it hoped, would keep such young men out of machine gun emplacements. It created the European Coal and Steel Community, precursor of the Common Market (1958), which led to the single market in 1993 and the common currency in 2002

The implicit hope was that commerce could tame Europe's turbulent nations. The perennial problem of politics -- mankind's susceptibility to storms of passions -- could perhaps be solved, or at least substantially ameliorated, by getting Europe's peoples to sublimate their energies in economic activities. The quest for improved material well-being would drain away energies hitherto tapped and channeled by demagogues.

Reminders of Europe's problematic past were recently found a few miles from St. Laurent. Workers preparing a foundation for a new house overlooking Omaha Beach came upon parts of the bodies of two German soldiers. There was scant media attention to this because such discoveries have not been rare.

Also near here, 21,160 German soldiers are buried at the La Cambe Cemetery. Thirty percent -- more than 6,000 -- were never identified, so some German parents conducted "assumed burials." They placed metal markers bearing the names of their missing sons near the graves of unknown soldiers who were known to have died near where the parents' sons were last known to be fighting.

Such heartbreaking stories are written into Normandy's lovely landscape. At the American Cemetery overlooking this beach, amid the many rows of white marble gravestones, are two, side by side, marking the burial places of Ollie Reed and Ollie Reed Jr., a father and his son. The son, an Army first lieutenant, died in Italy on July 6. His father, an Army colonel, was killed July 30 in Normandy. Two telegrams notified the father's wife, the son's mother. The telegrams arrived in Manhattan, Kan., 45 minutes apart.

The 19th-century French scholar Ernest Renan, from a Brittany town on the English Channel, defined a nation as a community of shared memory -- and shared forgetting. Europe's emotional equipoise, and the transformation of "Europe" from a geographical to a political expression, has required both remembering and forgetting. Americans who make pilgrimages to this haunting place are reminded of their role, and their stake, in that transformation.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: georgewill; wwii

1 posted on 09/03/2007 2:07:26 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
"Europe began building the institutions that, it hoped, would keep such young men out of machine gun emplacements. "

Once in a while it slips out that economic integration theory was about preventing war. The US should not follow this path.

2 posted on 09/03/2007 2:15:34 AM PDT by endthematrix (He was shouting 'Allah!' but I didn't hear that. It just sounded like a lot of crap to me.)
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To: Kaslin
"The implicit hope was that commerce could tame Europe's turbulent nations. The perennial problem of politics -- mankind's susceptibility to storms of passions -- could perhaps be solved, or at least substantially ameliorated, by getting Europe's peoples to sublimate their energies in economic activities. The quest for improved material well-being would drain away energies hitherto tapped and channeled by demagogues."

It was about entwining so deep economically, financially and as with the vision of a united EU army, that nationalism and sovereignty would end.

3 posted on 09/03/2007 2:19:56 AM PDT by endthematrix (He was shouting 'Allah!' but I didn't hear that. It just sounded like a lot of crap to me.)
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To: Kaslin

.

Sgt. Major BASIL PLUMLEY, Veteran

Battle of Normandy-1944
Battle of Pork Chop Hill-1953
Battle of the IA DRANG Valley-1965

(See 1st Photo)
http://www.lzxray.com/guyer_set3.htm

Just for the LOVE of it.

.


4 posted on 09/03/2007 7:02:22 AM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: Kaslin
Today, in an America understandably weary of a war of choice that has been defined by execrable choices, a frequently seen bumper sticker proclaims: "War is not the answer." But here, especially, it is well to remember that whether war is the answer depends on the question.

Actually, this American is beyond weary observing the A.N.S.W.E.R crowd trying to repeat history painting this WAR as "oil for blood". These A.N.S.W.E.R warriors got to be invested someplace with deeeeeep pockets to continue to afford their WAR against US.

5 posted on 09/03/2007 7:07:59 AM PDT by Just mythoughts
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To: Kaslin
Two telegrams notified the father's wife, the son's mother. The telegrams arrived in Manhattan, Kan., 45 minutes apart.

That poor woman.

6 posted on 09/03/2007 9:56:46 AM PDT by sionnsar (trad-anglican.faithweb.com |Iran Azadi| 5yst3m 0wn3d - it's N0t Y0ur5 (SONY) | UN: Useless Nations)
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To: Kaslin

War was the answer in the American Revolution!
But war for us, was not the answer in the First World War:
We should have stayed out of that one.


7 posted on 09/03/2007 1:29:52 PM PDT by upcountryhorseman (An old fashioned conservative)
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To: sionnsar

How’d you like to be the guy who delivered the second telegram?


8 posted on 09/03/2007 2:34:59 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: DuncanWaring

I wouldn’t like delivering any of the telegrams....


9 posted on 09/03/2007 2:36:50 PM PDT by lookihaveaswordinmybelly
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To: lookihaveaswordinmybelly

It’s curious, though, that father and son were killed roughly a month apart, but the telegrams arrived essentially simultaneously.


10 posted on 09/03/2007 2:38:26 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: DuncanWaring

It looks like it was delayed....wonder why....


11 posted on 09/03/2007 2:40:07 PM PDT by lookihaveaswordinmybelly
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