"Islamic Brutality - We've Seen This Picture Before"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“Islamic Brutality –
We’ve Seen This Picture Before”
September 4, 2014
The
only difference between acts of barbarianism shown by Islamic extremists today
and those exhibited by German and Japanese soldiers seventy-five years ago is
that today we see them in real time. What the Germans did to the Jews in the
1930s and 1940s was every bit as barbaric as what ISIS
is doing to Jews, Muslims and Christians today. At Auschwitz, Buchenwald,
Dachau, Treblinka, and at least 65 other concentration camps in Germany,
Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Italy, France, Belgium, Netherlands,
Croatia and Ukraine Germans cold-bloodedly murdered between six million and
seven million Jews, Roma and the mentally and physically disabled. They gassed
them, shot them and dashed the brains out of small children. In the French town
of Oradur-sur-Glane ,
German soldiers locked all the women and children in a barn and then set it
afire.
While
the videos of the beheadings of American journalists James Foley and Steven
Sotloff incense us (as they should), Japanese soldiers regularly decapitated
prisoners. In February 1942, on the Indonesian
Island of Ambon ,
Japanese soldiers randomly selected Dutch and Australian prisoners and executed
them via beheadings and bayoneting. In December 1944, on Palawan
Island in the Philippines ,
Japanese guards, wrongly assuming the Allies had arrived, drove their American
prisoners into makeshift air raid shelters where they burned them alive. Examples
of such cruelties are legion. But reading about such atrocities is not the same
as watching them.
Yet
today, 69 years after surrendering unconditionally, Japan
and Germany
are among our strongest allies, with free, democratic governments. From the
ashes of that War, they have sprung, Phoenix -like,
to become the third and fourth largest economies in the world. But, would that
have happened if the United States had not militarily occupied their countries
for decades, providing protection and defense, allowing them to concentrate on
rebuilding? We still have 50,000 troops in Japan
and 40,000 in Germany .
Would those countries have achieved that success if the United States
had not been instrumental in helping them design new constitutions and
governments? Would that have happened had any country, other than the United States ,
been the conqueror? Has any other country in history been so generous to others
with its purse and with the blood of its youth? Can any German or Japanese living
today argue that the United
States is not a force for good? While no one
can hide from the horrors of World War II, no one can deny the success of the
peace that followed.
War
has always been personal for those who live in its midst, as those throughout
much of Europe and on islands in the Pacific and Japan know full well during
World War II, and as those throughout much of the Middle East, North Africa and
Ukraine know today. For Americans it became personal on 9/11, but most of our
fighting has been on others’ soil. Technology has changed the dynamics of war,
not only in the lethality of weapons, but in the bringing of its horrors into
our homes. As we sat entranced on our sofas and in our armchairs in the late
1960s and early 1970s, we watched on television American soldiers dying in the
rice paddies and jungles of Vietnam .
Social media today means we watch what is happening in the Middle
East , including suicide bombers, improvised exploding devices and the
decapitation of American journalists, in real time. If they had had today’s
audio and visual communications 70 years ago, would the American people have
put up with three and a half years of a war that caused the deaths of over
400,000 of its young sons and daughters – almost 400 people every day? I don’t
know, but had we not persevered would Germany
and Japan
be the success they are? Would we be as free as we are?
Writing
specifically about Ukraine ,
but with observations that apply to the Middle East, Professor John Mearsheimer
of the University of Chicago argued in the most recent issue of “Foreign
Affairs” that “realist” global politics require that the solution to the crisis
in Ukraine
be one that abandons any plan to westernize it. Instead he argues, we should
“aim to make it a neutral buffer between NATO and Russia .” While that may be the
sensible decision, it likely means giving up the citizens of that country to
perpetual poverty, political oppression and military subjection. Should we walk
away from those in the Middle East , effectively
delivering them to the savages who would brutally rule over them? Geopolitics
is a balancing act, but it is important we not cede those ideals and principles
that have driven our nation since its founding. On the other hand, Professor
Mearsheimer is correct of course when he writes that it would be “the height of
folly to create a new NATO member that the other members have no intention of
defending.”
The
lessons of the past as they apply to the present are multifold. The President
and Congress must clearly define the enemy we face and the consequences of
doing nothing. As retired four-star General Barry McCaffrey has said, once we
decide to enter a conflict, we must have public support with clear goals, and
we must enter into war with overwhelming force to win. Victory brings its own
challenges and we must not shy away from continued involvement. The history of
the post-War world says that those countries in which our troops stayed – Germany , Japan
and South Korea – have fared
far better than those where our troops were pulled out prematurely – Lebanon , Vietnam ,
Iraq and Afghanistan .
My
purpose is not to suggest that Americans are always in the right, or to make
light of today’s Islamic savagery. My purpose is to suggest that no one has a
monopoly on barbarity, that there will always be those who will try to destroy
our way of life for the liberty it brings, but also that today’s enemies may
become tomorrow’s allies. In 1943, if someone had suggested that we would be
buying millions of Toyotas and Hondas from Japan and that the Japanese would
be our most important ally in the Pacific two generations hence, that
individual would have been dismissed as crazy. My purpose is also to argue that
when we enter a conflict, it should be to win, and we should stay as long as is
necessary. We must understand the consequences of leaving the fields of battle
betimes. And, we should never be embarrassed by who we are and the freedoms we
represent.
Those
who condescendingly insist that the desire for freedom is a Western phenomenon
ignore the success of Japan
and South Korea .
They also forget that Eastern Europeans, who had been kept under the yoke of
Communist oppression for two generations, thrived when the Wall came down. It
is not as though they were returning to a democratic state, which had been lost
to the Nazis and then the Communists. They were descendants of a rigid class
system, with a small number of aristocrats and a multitude of peasants. Yet
they instinctively understood the benefits of a government that allowed them to
keep the bulk of their labor and that protected the private property they were
able to accumulate. Why mightn’t that be true in the Middle
East ?
It
may be impossible to ever again fight the kind of war we did seventy years ago,
when the Press was muzzled, either willingly or by decree, and atrocities
committed by us and our enemies remained out of sight. We live in a far more
open society. Will those who would destroy our way of life take advantage of
that knowledge, and press their advantage? Will our leaders no longer seek
absolute victory and instead allow relativism to replace moral principles?
These are questions we must ponder.
A
world without war is a worthy goal, but it is a dream, not a reality. Evil
exists, and the greatest obligation of any country is to protect its citizens.
“War,” as Clausewitz wrote, “is a mere continuation of politics by other
means.” Nevertheless, going to war has to be the toughest decision any
President or Congress makes, because it necessarily requires the ultimate
sacrifice of many of its youth. It involves weighing two unknowns: What would
the world look like if we did nothing?
What will the world look like if we do something? Seeking answers to
those questions is the job of leadership.
On
September 1, 1945 President Truman spoke about the surrender of Japan . In
acknowledging the immense loss of life and the terrible price paid by so many
individuals, he said the purpose in destroying the evil of Nazism, Fascism and
Japanese war lords was “to assure the survival of a civilized world.” Was the
cost worth it? The subsequent decline in world poverty, the growth in global
GDP and the proliferation in democracies suggest it was. Is not that the same
goal in eradicating today’s evil, manifested by radical Islamic extremism? We
are the only nation capable of responding effectively. To do so is our
obligation to mankind. To do nothing (or to simply “contain” and “manage” the
problem) assures that Islamic terrorism will persist and spread. But, if in
destroying that evil we can assure the continuation of a civilized world it
will be a cost worth bearing, not just for ourselves but for all people, and
for generations to come.
Labels: TOTD
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