A President’s Appeasement Politics (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Raymond Ibrahim 05/28/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/05/28/appeasement-politics/
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American intellectual Will Durant’s The Lessons of History—co-written
with wife Ariel and published in 1968, when the Soviet Union posed a
threat to the United States—still offers insightful lessons,
especially concerning American-Muslim relations.
In the chapter titled “History and War,” the Durants posit some
hypothetical speeches and approaches concerning war. First, an
imaginary U.S. president says before the leaders of communist Russia:
If we should follow the usual course of history, we should make war
upon you for fear of what you may do a generation hence…. But we are
willing to try a new approach. We respect your peoples and your
civilizations as among the most creative in history. We shall try
to understand your feelings, and your desire to develop your own
institutions without fear of attack. We must not allow our mutual
fears to lead us into war, for the unparalleled murderousness of our
weapons and yours brings into the situation an element unfamiliar in
history. We propose to send representatives to join with yours in a
persistent conference for the adjustment of our differences, the
cessation of hostilities and subversion, and the reduction of our
armaments…. Let us open our doors to each other, and organize
cultural exchanges that will promote mutual appreciation and
understanding…. We pledge our honor before all mankind to enter into
this venture in full sincerity and trust. If we lose in the historic
gamble, the results could not be worse than those that we may expect
from traditional policies. If you and we succeed, we shall merit a
place for centuries to come in the grateful memory of mankind.
Once the imaginary president concludes, “the general smiles,” write
the authors, and retorts:
You have forgotten all the lessons of history and all that nature of
man which you described. Some conflicts are too fundamental to be
resolved by negotiation; and during the prolonged negotitiations (if
history may be our guide) subversion would go on. A world order will
come not by a gentlemen’s agreement, but through so decisive a
victory by one of the great powers that it will be able to dictate
and enforce international law, as Rome did from Augustus to
Aurelius. Such interludes of widespread peace are unnatural and
exceptional; they will soon be ended by changes in the distribution
of military power.
Now, consider how well this hypothetical exchange, written in 1968,
applies to the current situation between the U.S. and the Muslim
world:
First, the “imaginary” president has become all too real, in the
person of Barack Obama. Above and beyond his so-called “historic
Cairo speech,” where he reached out to and cloyingly flattered the
Muslim world, everything this man has subsequently said and done—from
expunging all references to Islam in U.S. security documents, to
ordering NASA to make Muslims “feel good” about themselves—far
exceeds the expressed outreach of the imaginary president.
Next, the situation has changed in a way that makes it even more
naďve and irrational for the U.S. to be so appeasing of the Islamic
world. Whereas the U.S.S.R was a nuclear-armed superpower—making
dialogue and cooperation logical, practically risk-free options,
since, as the imaginary president concluded in his speech, the
alternative was war, anyway—that is not the case with the Islamic
world, which is currently militarily inferior, and thus need not be
appeased.
Quite the contrary, by giving one’s opponent time and
freedom, “subversion would go on,” as the imaginary general correctly
points out, whether Muslim nations like Iran grow to become nuclear
powers, or whether Muslims in the West work to subvert their host
nations. This threat of subversion is especially apt considering
that Islam’s own teachings promote subversion and deceitful tactics.
Likewise, the imaginary president’s idealistic approach was directed
at Russia, which, while communist for several decades, still shared
in the Western heritage and worldview, and so may have been better
expected to reciprocate and cooperate—certainly more so than the
Islamic world, the culture of which is fundamentally alien to such
utopian principles expressed by the imaginary president, the utopian
principles expressed by Obama. Accordingly, the general’s
observation, “Some conflicts are too fundamental to be resolved by
negotiation,” is especially applicable to today’s conflict with the
Islamic world—a conflict that stretches back some 1400 years.
Even so, as the Durants indicated, no matter how utopian an American
president might be, it was a safe assumption (in 1968) that at least
America’s generals would maintain sobriety. Yet today, that, too, no
longer appears to be the case, as naivety and censorship have so
thoroughly penetrated the war colleges and intelligence agencies—
evinced by a politically-correct Pentagon, an Assistant Defense
Secretary for Homeland Defense who absurdly refuses to
associate “violent Islamist extremism” as motivating al-Qaeda, and an
Intelligence Chief who thinks the Muslim Brotherhood is “largely
secular.”
What, then, are the “lessons of history”? This: Ideas that were once
recognized as overly naďve, put only in the mouths of imaginary
characters, have, in the course of half a century, become so
mainstream, despite the fact that the political circumstances that
may have warranted them then, vis-ŕ-vis the Soviet Union, have
changed to make their application now, with the Muslim world, wholly
irrational—a sort of slow-motion suicide. (Copyright © 2012
FrontPageMagazine.com 05/28/12)
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