"Past is Prologue"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“Past is Prologue”
October 9, 2014
Dwelling
too much on the past can make one myopic, but paying cursory attention is
instructional. The juxtaposition of two articles in Monday’s New York Times
gave pause. One dealt wth the past; the other a hint of the future. The first
was an article on page A4, “In Poland ,
Unearthing a Barbarous Past.” The second, an article on page A6, “Tensions
Surge in Estonia
amid a Russian Replay of Cold War Tactics.” Lessons to be drawn: technology may
change, but people do not, and bad leaders take advantage of weakness, real or
perceived.
The
human remains pulled from the muddy clay around an old prison near Bialystok , Poland
are anonymous victims of Nazis, Soviets and Soviet-directed Polish secret
police. They are reminders that, as much as we may wish it otherwise, man has
never lived peacefully. Whether the causes are economic, geographic or
cultural, war has been and always will be ever-present. Nothing has happened in
the past few decades to suggest that his behavior has changed. To assume that
the Twenty-first Century will be absent the curse of inevitable conflict indicates
a naïveté that is based more on hope than experience. That sense permeated Europe 100 years ago, in the early years of the Twentieth
Century preceding the First World War.
Today’s
complacency toward the ambitions of Vladimir Putin is based less on naïveté
than on war weariness. For almost a decade and a half we have been at war with
Islamic extremism. We are deluged with horrific images, often in real time. War
is no longer something that happens “over there;” it is on television, in our
kitchens and living rooms. We see the results of exploded IED devices and what
a suicide bomber can do to school children. Postings of beheadings are viewed
on YouTube. Images of water-boarding torture and the inhumane treatment of
prisoners at Abu Ghraib Prison caused some of us to look upon ourselves as
perpetrators of violence. The perfectly natural emotional reactions of people
to the horrific consequences of war make it difficult for democracies to make
the hard decisions necessary to defeat the evil we face.
Despite
our first-hand experience of Islamic terrorism on 9/11 and the fact we were
told that the ensuing war would be generational, we have difficulty staying the
course. We have been emotionally spent. We all wanted to believe Mr. Obama when
he told us that with Osama bin Laden dead the threat of al Qaeda and Islamic
terrorism were in retreat.
Vladimir
Putin, as a former KGB operative, is a student of human psychology; he saw an
opening. He knows that, in places where there is no censorship, images of war
can cause a strong country to respond weakly. He went unopposed into eastern Ukraine and is now testing the waters in Estonia , as the
article in the New York Times made clear.
In
1992, following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Francis Fukuyama wrote The
End of History and the Last Man. A year later, in Foreign Affairs, Samuel Huntington wrote
an article, “The Clash of Civilizations?” Both men assumed that the age of
ideology had ended (that Western democratic capitalism had won) and that wars
in the future would be between civilizations, much as what we are experiencing
today between Muslim extremists and the West.
The
cauldron that is the Middle East is indeed a clash of civilizations, but Russia ’s incursions into Ukraine suggest
that ideological differences remain very much alive. Russia ’s
threatening moves along their Estonia
border argue that the Baltic States (NATO
allies) should be as concerned about Russian aggression as the Ukrainians, Georgians
and Kazakhstanis.
In
August, 1980, Republican Presidential candidate Ronald Reagan spoke before the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Convention in Chicago :[1]
“Firmness based on a strong defense capability is not provocative. But weakness
can be provocative simply because it is tempting to a nation whose imperialist
ambitions are virtually unlimited.”
World
War II had many sires, not the least of which was World War I, which gave birth
to Communism in the Soviet Union and created the conditions that led to Nazism
and Fascism in Germany , Spain and Italy . France
and Great Britain ,
drained by the human costs of the First World War, were unprepared for a second.
It was a conscious (or unconscious) decision to ignore reality that allowed
Hitler to re-arm, take the Sudetenland and absorb Austria without any reaction. The
September 1939 invasion of Poland
became the catalyst that got the Allies to respond, but by then the die had
been cast. A question that has long troubled historians: If the Japanese had
not attacked Pearl Harbor and if the Germans had not subsequently declared war
on the United States , how
long would it have been before the U.S. entered the War? Would they
have done so? If they had not, it is plausible that Hitler would have dominated
Europe for the next few decades and the future
of that Continent would have unfolded in a very different way.
The
past is prologue. Time has provided us better and faster means of communicating.
The freer flow of goods, services and money has made us wealthier. But they
have not civilized us. Greed and ambition are as prevalent in political leaders
as they are in all other professions. Callousness of behavior and the disregard
for the rule of law are as common today as they have ever been. Settling
differences diplomatically is invariably preferable to war, but we must be
conscious that there will be those who will always take advantage of weakness,
real or perceived.
Civilizations
will clash and ideologies will be in opposition. World events are determined by
the behavior of people – how they act and react. Being unprepared, as Ronald
Reagan said, is to be provocative. The human remains dug up in Bialystok are a reminder that the more
quickly one confronts a bully the less will be the damage. Vladimir Putin is a
bully; he wants to reassert Russia ’s
domination. The free world cannot afford to let that happen. We must be
prepared.
Labels: TOTD
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