Undoubtedly the gloom and doom prediction of an imminent explosion
of WWIII (or WWIV – depending on who you
read) is about to bust out. I came across a Victor Davis Hanson essay on the subject that the Jewish
World Review correctly calls thought provoking.
JRH 9/22/16
*******************
A hard rain is going to fall
By Victor Davis Hanson
Sept. 22, 2016
This summer,
President Obama was often golfing. Hillary Clinton and Donald
Trump were promising to let the world be. The end of summer seemed sleepy,
the world relatively calm.
The summer of 1914
in Europe also seemed quiet. But on July 28, Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated in Sarajevo by Gavrilo
Princip with help from his accomplices, fellow Serbian separatists. That
isolated act sparked World War I.
In the summer of
1939, most observers thought Adolf Hitler was finally through with
his serial bullying. Appeasement supposedly had satiated his once enormous
territorial appetites. But on Sept. 1, Nazi Germany unexpectedly
invaded Poland and touched off World War II, which consumed some 60
million lives.
Wars often seem to
come out of nowhere, as unlikely events ignite long-simmering disputes into
global conflagrations.
The instigators
often are weaker attackers who foolishly assume that more powerful nations wish
peace at any cost, and so will not react to opportunistic aggression.
Unfortunately, our
late-summer calm of 2016 has masked a lot of festering tensions that are now
coming to a head -- largely due to disengagement by a supposedly tired United
States.
In contrast, war,
unlike individual states, does not sleep.
Russia has
been massing troops on its border with Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir
Putin apparently believes that Europe is in utter disarray and
assumes that President Obama remains most interested in apologizing to
foreigners for the past evils of the United States. Putin is wagering that
no tired Western power could or would stop his reabsorption of Ukraine --
or the Baltic states next. Who in hip Amsterdam cares what happens to
faraway Kiev?
Iran swapped
American hostages for cash. An Iranian missile narrowly missed a U.S. aircraft
carrier not long ago. Iranians hijacked an American boat and buzzed our
warships in the Persian Gulf. There are frequent promises from Tehran to
destroy either Israel, America or both. So much for the peace dividend of
the "Iran deal."
North Korea is
more than just delusional. Recent nuclear tests and missile launches toward Japan suggest
that North Korean strongman Kim Jong-un actually believes that he could
win a war -- and thereby gain even larger concessions from the West and from
his Asian neighbors.
Radical Islamists
likewise seem emboldened to try more attacks on the premise that Western
nations will hardly respond with overwhelming power. The past weekend brought
pipe bombings in Manhattan and New Jersey as well as a mass
stabbing in a Minnesota mall -- and American frustration.
Europe and the
United States have been bewildered by huge numbers of largely young male
migrants from the war-torn Middle East. Political correctness has
paralyzed Western leaders from even articulating the threat, much less replying
to it.
Instead, the
American government appears more concerned with shutting down the detention
center at Guantanamo Bay, ensuring that no administration official utters
the words "Islamic terror," and issuing warnings to Americans not to
lash out due to their supposedly innate prejudices.
Aggressors are also
encouraged by vast cutbacks in the U.S. defense budget. The lame-duck Obama
presidency, lead-from-behind policies and a culturally and racially divided
America reflect voter weariness with overseas commitments.
It would be a
mistake to assume that war is impossible because it logically benefits no one,
or is outdated in our sophisticated 21st century, or would be insane in a world
of nuclear weapons.
Human nature is
unchanging and remains irrational. Evil is eternal. Unfortunately, appeasement
is often seen by thugs not as magnanimity to be reciprocated but as timidity to
be exploited.
Someone soon will
have to tell the North Koreans that a stable world order cannot endure its
frequent missile launches and nuclear detonations.
Someone could
remind Putin that the former Soviet republics have a right to
self-determination.
Someone might
inform the Chinese that no one can plop down artificial islands and military
bases to control commercial sea lanes.
Someone might make
it clear to radical Islamic terrorists that there is a limit to Western
patience with their chronic bombing, murdering and destruction.
The problem is that
there is no other "someone" (especially not the United Nations or
the European Union) with the requisite power and authority except the
United States. But for a long time America has done more than its fair share of
international policing -- and its people are tired of costly dragon-slaying
abroad.
The result is that
at this late date, the tough medicine of restoring long-term deterrence is as
almost as dangerous as the disease of continual short-term appeasement.
Obama apparently
assumes he can leave office as a peacemaker before his appeased chickens come
home to roost in violent fashion. He has assured us that the world has never
been calmer and quieter.
Others said the
same thing in the last calm summer weeks of 1914 and 1939.
War clouds are
gathering. A hard rain is soon going to fall.
___________________
Victor Davis Hanson, a
classicist and military historian, is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution
and a recipient of the 2007 National Humanities Medal.
© 2016 by the Board of
Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University
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