By Frank J Gaffney Jr.
The Washington Times | July 13, 2007
Future historians will doubtless dissect with care the mindset of the
current generation of American policymakers and legislators, and the
public whose fate they help determine. Votes in coming days in the
Senate will be among the evidence examined in the hopes of answering a
question that will, with hindsight, be asked by many: What on earth
were they thinking?
That question, of course, is often posed on what the West's leaders and
their peoples could possibly have had in mind as first they ignored,
then tried to appease, the rising power and growing malevolence of
Adolf Hitler and his fellow totalitarians. Couldn't they see what is so
clear to us now: Such behavior on the part of freedom-loving nations
would only put them at greater risk?
The answer, of course, is that the broad nature of the peril, if not
all its particulars, could be foreseen — and was, at the time, by some
like Winston Churchill. But the vast majority of his countrymen and
others who would soon find themselves at war, enslaved or dead,
preferred to listen to those who promised conflict could be avoided:
negotiated agreements with the totalitarians would assure "peace in our
time"; the latters' demands could be accommodated at someone else's
expense. The problem was, in any event, a distant one.
History does not do us the favor of repeating itself precisely. If
anything, the danger we face today from a new totalitarian ideology,
Islamofascism, is even more grave than that posed by the ideologies
that brought an earlier generation World War II. After all, the
Islamists have spent decades cultivating adherents and developing
infrastructure not just elsewhere (in this case, the strategic Middle
East), but throughout the Free World.
This reality will cause our children and grandchildren to be all the
more incredulous about our failure to understand the threat thus posed
to our societies, freedoms and even our very existence. They will
surely be reduced to asking specifically what on earth were we thinking
as the following sort of behavior shaped the escalating, global
conflict:
--Congressional debates about various proposals to force the withdrawal
of U.S. forces from Iraq, in which the majority appears indifferent to
the possibility such a U.S. defeat will inflame the ambitions of our
Islamofascist enemies. The attitude seems reminiscent of British Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain's famous comment as he wrote off
Czechoslovakia, calling it a "faraway country of which we know
nothing." Today's Chamberlains are convinced that what they call the
"war in Iraq" — a country even farther away, of which we know even less
— can simply be ended by our fiat, without consequences for us. How
could we be so naive, so irresponsible?
--Those who call themselves "realists" implicitly accept that there may
be adverse effects from abandoning Iraq. They insist such risks can be
mitigated, however, by negotiating with the very parties that have done
the most to exacerbate the Iraqis' difficulties — Iran and Syria. How
can we possibly be so deluded as to think such negotiations this time
will not produce results akin to those of previous efforts to parlay
with other totalitarians: confirming their contempt for Western
interlocutors, reinforcing the despots' sense of inevitable victory and
encouraging more aggressive behavior by the latter to achieve that
outcome on an accelerated basis?
--With or without the political cover of the sort of negotiations
proposed by former Secretary of State James Baker's Iraq Study Group
(the ridiculousness of which is brilliantly captured by a popular video
by Hollywood director David Zucker posted on YouTube. Proponents of
precipitous withdrawals of U.S. forces from Iraq are evidently
untroubled by a key fact: Such an extrication will almost certainly be
conducted under fire, via a kind of "Dunkirk in the Desert" — a
pell-mell rush for the exits that would make the allied forces' retreat
from France in 1940 look like, well, a day at the beach. How, future
generations will wonder, could anyone believe that will be good for
America and its vital interests?
--Even President Bush, who understands that we are confronting a new
and toxic ideology that extends far beyond Iraq, nonetheless
systematically fails to practice the first principle of
counter-ideological struggles: delegitimate your enemies. Instead, the
president and his minions persist in holding meetings with, hiring,
being influenced by and otherwise embracing Islamists in America. The
effect is palpable. Those aligned with, if not actually working for,
our foes are empowered at the expense of anti-Islamist Muslims,
advancing the formers' bid to dominate their community — a crucial
first step toward their stated goal of world domination. Our successors
will find such wholly counterproductive behavior to be inexplicable, as
indeed it is.
There is one small consolation for those whose conduct will be seen by
coming generations to have contributed in these ways to the mortal
imperiling of the Free World: History is written by the victors. Unless
we awaken to the true nature and magnitude of our peril, stop pandering
to a democratic people's reflexive desire to recoil from deadly
conflict if at all possible and adopt the sort of comprehensive war
footing that has long been in order, the victors may be appreciative of
those who played a part — however small or unintended — in enabling
totalitarianism at last to vanquish freedom.
Original
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