Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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October 23, 2006 Issue
Copyright © 2006 The American ConservativeGeorge Winston Bush?Invocations of Munich and a parade of new Hitlers won’t be
enough to convince Americans that this is a good war.by Leon Hadar SIR–Please do not ever mention George Bush. And Winston
Churchill in the same sentence again, even if you must break
all the rules of grammar to do so. Steve Pettit, California
(Letter to the editor, The Economist, May 25, 2006) Basil Fawlty is not a political consultant, nor does he play one
on television. But I wish George W. Bush and his loyal band
would follow the advice dispensed by Basil, the owner of the
Fawlty Towers hotel, during episode six of one of the best-
known British television comedies of all time. “Don’t mention
the war!” Basil, the irascible Torquay hotel owner played by
John Cleese, warns his crew after learning that a group of
German tourists are staying there.Unfortunately, after receiving a knock to the head rendering
him even less sensitive than before, Basil cannot stop
mentioning the war at every opportunity, upsetting the
German guests more and more. In one memorable scene he is
goose-stepping around the dining room and rapidly
descending into a fit of xenophobic ranting about everything
and everyone that most Germans would rather forget. When
an angry German asks Basil to stop going on about the war,
he reminds him that they started it. “We did not start it,”
protests the German. “Yes you did, you invaded Poland,”
replies Basil.Like Basil who can’t stop mentioning the war, the Bushies
haven’t been able to stop exploiting the same war and its
“lessons” since the World Trade Center collapsed. In fact,
during one of his many press conferences held just one day
after the attack, New York City mayor and Bush ally Rudolph
Giuliani told the crowd that he had been reading historian
John Lukacs’s book Five Days in London, which delves into
Winston Churchill’s decisions during what the author
considers a critical moment in the history of World War II.At first it sounded to me like Mayor Giuliani, inspired by how
Churchill and the people of London reacted during the war,
was trying to lift the morale his fellow New Yorkers. Nothing
wrong with that. But then the cynic in me was reminded that
Giuliani was considering running for the White House and his
heroic Churchill-like pose would clearly be more stirring in a
campaign television commercial than comparing himself to
this or that Lord Mayor of London responding to the
devastation of his city by an IRA terrorist bomb.But then I didn’t know Winnie. Winnie wasn’t a good friend of
mine. Perhaps there was something very Churchillian in
Hizzonor?John Lukacs, whose book Giuliani was reading around 9/11—
the mayor actually carried the book with him, at least when
television cameras were around—knows quite a lot about
Churchill and in an interview with Newsweek, ten days after
the 9/11 attack, made it clear that no, Mr. Mayor, you’re not
Churchill, Osama bin Laden is not Adolf Hitler, and the war on
terrorism is not World War II. “I’m very pleased that Mayor
Giuliani held up my book. That was very pleasant,” Lukacs, an
old-world-style gentleman, told Newsweek. “But I don’t think
there are any parallels. This crisis we now face, no matter
what the president says, is not a war. It’s not the first war of
the 21st century. A war is something between nations or
states or sometimes even tribes. Who are we going to declare
war on?” Declaring “war on terrorism” was “just rhetoric,”
Lukacs explained. “But aren’t there parallels between what
Churchill was facing as a leader and what George W. Bush was
now facing?” the magazine interviewer insisted. And how
about the way George W. Bush was carrying himself? Doesn’t
he have the stature of a Churchill? Bush and Churchill “are
very different personalities,” the Hungarian-born historian,
who lived in Europe during World War II, patiently noted. “And
this is really not the time to criticize a president, but neither
his capacity nor his character is comparable. And character is
what counts. Intellect without character is not worth
anything.” Ouch.Sounding a cautionary note, Lukacs went on to tell Newsweek
that Bush and his aides “should use more sober language
instead of talking about crusades. The trouble with people
who use this kind of rhetoric is that they don’t even know that
it’s rhetoric.”But since 9/11, through the hunt for Osama bin Laden
(“Wanted: Dead or Alive!”), the search for Iraq’s WMD
(“mushroom cloud”), the anticipation of the welcoming of the
American “liberators,” and the counterinsurgency in Iraq
(“Bring ‘em on”), much of what the Bushies and their
neoconservative cheerleaders have been pursuing has given
rhetoric a bad name, including the celebration of the many
“tipping points” in post-Saddam Mesopotamia, the efforts to
help Iraqis “build a democracy,” and the alleged success in
“making progress in the march of freedom” in the Greater
Middle East and entire universe. As Churchill expert Lukacs
pointed out, the kind of empty rhetoric that disguises a
disastrous policy, that involves speaking “grandiloquently”
and talking “in general terms,” is certainly not a Churchillian
trait.But in the neocon fantasyland that has substituted for real
foreign policy since 9/11, why shouldn’t the White House
spinners try to liken Bush to Churchill, confident that a
submissive press corps would embrace the perverted but
powerful historical analogy? After all, Bush once admitted to
TV host Oprah Winfrey, “I love Churchill.”And here was Bush seeking “regime change” in Iraq, despite
criticism that he should give negotiations with Saddam
Hussein another try. Wasn’t he emulating Churchill, who was
also derided in the 1930s for opposing the appeasement of
Hitler? Or in the words of Rumsfeld, the primo WWII-buff in
the Bush administration: “It wasn’t until each country got
attacked that they said: ‘Maybe Winston Churchill was right.’”
Here was the Pentagon chief drawing a parallel between
Churchill and Bush, the same Bush who had been warned that
the U.S. was under threat from al-Qaeda by both the
departing Clinton administration and his own security
briefings and yet failed to act, which seems to be a very un-
Churchillian characteristic. Sure, but as Rumsfeld knows, a
robust historical analogy, not unlike potent intelligence
findings, shouldn’t be damaged by facts.“And so, before you knew it, the seeming bozo was our
savior,” as Mark Crispin Miller of New York University
described Bush’s evolution from an inconsequential and
inarticulate Texas governor with no knowledge or experience
in foreign policy and national security into a brilliant and
towering Churchill. “And he will not waver!” Andrew Card,
former White House chief of staff, said at the end of an
interview on CNN in October 2001.“We Will Not Fail,” echoed a Time cover story published at the
same time, which compared Bush to the British war leader.
“[O]ne big thing Bush and Churchill may share,” Michael Elliot
gushed in his Time profile, “At the times when he was most
challenged, and whether he was justified in his sense of self
or not (and often he was not), Churchill never knew self-
doubt. It seems to rarely stalk Bush. For a man leading the
kit-bag-packing troops and a great wide world into a war the
like of which it has never known before, that confidence is a
useful attribute to have.”As he attempted to grade Bush’s war oratory, Chris Matthews
suggested “When he said ‘Let’s roll’ at the end, I think there is
a bit of Churchill in that, in the sense that he was saying, ‘This
is not the beginning of the end, it is perhaps the end of the
beginning.’”Well, it was certainly the beginning of a misinformation
campaign that would have put Willi Münzenberg into shame.
After all, Münzenberg marketed successfully the Soviet Union
and Stalin to Western fellow travelers most of whom had never
visited the proletariat paradise or met the Soviet dictator.
Pundits like Matthews and Elliott live in Washington and
schmooze with Bush and his aides on a regular basis.Yet Bush suddenly turned into Churchill. Osama, Saddam, and
any other leader that Bush didn’t like was exposed as a Hitler.
And the war on terrorism, intertwined with the war in Iraq
(and Iran?), became World War III against the “Islamo-
Fascists.” Indeed, just recently Rumsfeld compared Iraq War
critics to the appeasers of Nazism in Europe in the mid-
1930s: “It was a time when a certain amount of cynicism and
moral confusion set in among Western democracies” and
“When those who warned about a coming crisis, the rise of
fascism and Nazism, they were ridiculed or ignored,”
Rumsfeld told the convention of the American Legion in Salt
Lake City. “Indeed, in the decades before World War II, a great
many argued that the fascist threat was exaggerated or that it
was someone else’s problem” and “Some nations tried to
negotiate a separate peace, even as the enemy made its
deadly ambitions crystal clear,” Rumsfeld recalled. “It was,
Winston Churchill observed, a bit like feeding a crocodile,
hoping it would eat you last.” The defense secretary then
explained to the audience, which included some WWII
veterans, that he was recounting “that history” because “once
again we face similar challenges in efforts to confront the
rising threat of a new type of fascism.” Today another enemy
“has made clear its intentions. … But some seem not to have
learned history’s lessons,” Rumsfeld complained.And there are some who seem not to have learned the facts of
history. They include Rumsfeld, who with his colleague
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, shocked many historians
when they compared the anti-American insurgency in Iraq to
what they alleged were Nazi guerrillas fighting U.S. troops in
occupied Germany. “There is an understandable tendency to
look back on America’s experience in postwar Germany and
see only the successes,” Rice told the Veterans of Foreign
Wars in San Antonio, Texas, in August 2003. “But as some of
you here today surely remember, the road we traveled was
very difficult. 1945 through 1947 was an especially
challenging period. Germany was not immediately stable or
prosperous. SS officers—called ‘werewolves’—engaged in
sabotage and attacked both coalition forces and those locals
cooperating with them—much like today’s Baathist and
Fedayeen remnants.” Speaking to the same group on the same
day, Rumsfeld noted the following “facts”: One group of those dead-enders was known as
‘werewolves.’ They and other Nazi regime remnants targeted
Allied soldiers, and they targeted Germans who cooperated
with the Allied forces. Mayors were assassinated including the
American-appointed mayor of Aachen, the first major German
city to be liberated. Children as young as 10 were used as
snipers, radio broadcasts, and leaflets warned Germans not to
collaborate with the Allies. They plotted sabotage of factories,
power plants, rail lines. They blew up police stations and
government buildings, and they destroyed stocks of art and
antiques that were stored by the Berlin Museum. Does this
sound familiar? If it doesn’t, don’t worry. You’re not experiencing the first
signs of senility. As Daniel Benjamin, a leading terrorism
expert, commented, “The Rice-Rumsfeld depiction of the
Allied occupation of Germany is a farrago of fiction and a few
meager facts." Werewolf tales have been a favorite of schlock
novels, but the reality bore no resemblance to Iraq today.” In
reality, Benjamin wrote, werewolf activity amounted to next to
nothing—the mayor of Aachen was assassinated before the
Nazi surrender. Indeed, as Benjamin pointed out, the
organization merited but two passing mentions in the U.S.
Army’s official history, “which dwells far more on how docile
the Germans were once the Americans rolled in—and
fraternization between former enemies was a bigger problem
for the military than confrontation.” Moreover, “there was
certainly no major campaign of sabotage and no destruction
of water mains or energy plants worth noting,” either. “So,
how did this fanciful version of the American experience in
postwar Germany get into the remarks of a Princeton graduate
and former trustee of Stanford’s Hoover Institute (Rumsfeld)
and the former provost of Stanford and co-author of an
acclaimed book on German unification (Rice)?” asked
Benjamin.I suppose that these two Bush cabinet officials could blame
their speechwriters in the same way that they shifted the
responsibility for the fake WMD intelligence onto the CIA. But
like the rest of the members of the Bush administration, they
are continuing to bombard the American public with World
War II analogies and “lessons” as part of the campaign to
market the disastrous policies in the Middle East—which will
not stop historians from agreeing that the comparison
between the role of Bush in combating terrorism with that of
Churchill combating Nazi Germany is absurd.Germany under Hitler had one of the largest and most
advanced militaries in the world—to which one could add the
military force of Imperial Japan—which by the end of the
Second World War was able to bombard London with long-
range missiles. Germany was then a great global power with
an economic and technological base superior to that of most
of its competitors, including Britain. Moreover, “Churchill’s
enemy was a powerful, determined dictator; President Bush’s
conflict is with a shadowy nemesis and his small band of
idolaters,” as one reader argued in a letter to the editor in the
London Times. Another wrote, “The tragedy of 9/11 was the
result of a ‘sucker punch’ landed by a weak enemy on the
world’s superpower. A parallel might be the IRA’s Brighton
bombing, which almost destroyed a British Government.”
Hence, “compare, if you must, Bush’s reaction to 9/11 to
Thatcher’s reaction to the Brighton bomb. It is not by any
stroke of imagination comparable to Churchill’s defiance of
Nazi Germany.”Nor does the term “War on Islamo-Fascism” make much
historical sense in the context of the war of terrorism and U.S.
policy in the Middle East. First, the term seems to jumble
together secular nationalist regimes and movements, like the
Ba’ath in Iraq and Syria, with religious fundamentalist
governments and groups—the radical anti-American (Sunni)
al-Qaeda and the Lebanese-based (Shi’ite) Hezbollah; the
fundamentalist Sunni Wahabbi movement that is
headquartered in pro-American Saudi Arabia and the Shi’ite
clerics that rule in Tehran; the anti-Western Muslim
Brotherhood movement (including Hamas in Palestine) and the
Shi’ite clerics in power in (pro-American?) Baghdad. The
Islamo-Fascism label seems to be applied to movements and
governments that have nothing in common with each other—
much less European fascism.Unlike al-Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood, or Hezbollah, the
fascist movements in Europe in the 1930s were rooted in
modern and secular Western ideologies, and their economic
nationalist agendas had won many followers in the democratic
nations, including the U.S., then beset by the Great
Depression. While fascism had strong atavistic roots, not all
the political parties associated with it were anti-Semitic. Italy’s
Fascist intellectual and political leadership included quite a
few Jews, and Mussolini didn’t adopt anti-Jewish policies until
he decided to form a military alliance with Hitler when he was
under pressure from the Nazi leader. Moreover, Western
leaders, including Churchill, regarded Mussolini for a long
time as a potential ally against Nazi Germany. Here is what
Churchill said about Il Duce in 1938: “It would be a dangerous
folly for the British people to underrate the enduring position
in world history which Mussolini will hold; or the amazing
qualities of courage, comprehension, self-control, and
perseverance which he exemplifies.”In fact, Churchill and his other World War II allies maintained
close links to the pro-Fascist regimes in Spain and Portugal
and succeeded in persuading them not to enter the war on the
side of Hitler. (Spain and Portugal also helped save thousands
of European Jewish refugees fleeing the advancing German
armies; the two governments also joined the pro-American
NATO alliance after the war.) Americans may also forget that
the pro-Hitler collaborationist Vichy regime was
acknowledged as the official government of France by the
United States and other countries, including Canada, even
when they were at war with Germany. And can anyone imagine
a contemporary Western musician idolizing our latest “Islamo-
Fascist” enemy, Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the
way Cole Porter lyrics, adapted by P.G. Wodehouse for the
1935 London production of “Anything Goes,” did: “You’re the
top! You’re the Great Houdini! You’re the top! You are
Mussolini!”But then we shouldn’t forget that Saddam Hussein, the ex-
president of Iraq and the leader of its Ba’ath Party—whose
political platform mishmashes Arab nationalist, Communist,
and Fascist ideological orientations—was for most of the
1980s a strategic ally of the United States in the Middle East.
Hence Ronald Reagan ended up providing the man who would
become Hitler with economic and military assistance to help
him fight Iran’s mullahs and in the process encouraged
Saddam to launch what would become the bloodiest war in
the modern history of the Middle East. And guess who was
dispatched then by Washington to make those deals with
Saddam? A hint: it’s a current U.S. defense secretary who has
been comparing critics to those who appeased Hitler.If the Bushies insist on continuing to mention the war, we can
urge them to imagine the following scenario that includes all
the historical analogies that neoconservative ideologues like
to apply—World War II, Hitler, appeasement. As American and
Allied forces invade Nazi Germany in 1945, Adolf Hitler,
Heinrich Himmler, and several SS troops flee to Fascist Spain,
where they hide in the Pyrenees Mountains and mount
guerrilla attacks against the free French government. The
American response? To ask Generalissimo Francisco Franco if
he would be kind enough to send some of his forces to catch
those Nazis. Does this sort of alternate history remind you of
a certain U.S. administration that allowed Osama bin Laden
and his al-Qaeda associates to flee to Pakistan, where they are
now hiding as Washington continues to plead with the military
dictator who rules Pakistan to try to capture the evil ones who
were actually responsible for the 9/11 terror acts?Where is your umbrella, George Chamberlain?
________________________________________________Leon Hadar is a Cato Institute research fellow in foreign-
policy studies and author, most recently, of Sandstorm: Policy
Failure in the Middle East.
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
October 23, 2006 Issue
Copyright © 2006 The American ConservativeGeorge Winston Bush?Invocations of Munich and a parade of new Hitlers won’t be
enough to convince Americans that this is a good war.by Leon Hadar SIR–Please do not ever mention George Bush. And Winston
Churchill in the same sentence again, even if you must break
all the rules of grammar to do so. Steve Pettit, California
(Letter to the editor, The Economist, May 25, 2006) Basil Fawlty is not a political consultant, nor does he play one
on television. But I wish George W. Bush and his loyal band
would follow the advice dispensed by Basil, the owner of the
Fawlty Towers hotel, during episode six of one of the best-
known British television comedies of all time. “Don’t mention
the war!” Basil, the irascible Torquay hotel owner played by
John Cleese, warns his crew after learning that a group of
German tourists are staying there.Unfortunately, after receiving a knock to the head rendering
him even less sensitive than before, Basil cannot stop
mentioning the war at every opportunity, upsetting the
German guests more and more. In one memorable scene he is
goose-stepping around the dining room and rapidly
descending into a fit of xenophobic ranting about everything
and everyone that most Germans would rather forget. When
an angry German asks Basil to stop going on about the war,
he reminds him that they started it. “We did not start it,”
protests the German. “Yes you did, you invaded Poland,”
replies Basil.Like Basil who can’t stop mentioning the war, the Bushies
haven’t been able to stop exploiting the same war and its
“lessons” since the World Trade Center collapsed. In fact,
during one of his many press conferences held just one day
after the attack, New York City mayor and Bush ally Rudolph
Giuliani told the crowd that he had been reading historian
John Lukacs’s book Five Days in London, which delves into
Winston Churchill’s decisions during what the author
considers a critical moment in the history of World War II.At first it sounded to me like Mayor Giuliani, inspired by how
Churchill and the people of London reacted during the war,
was trying to lift the morale his fellow New Yorkers. Nothing
wrong with that. But then the cynic in me was reminded that
Giuliani was considering running for the White House and his
heroic Churchill-like pose would clearly be more stirring in a
campaign television commercial than comparing himself to
this or that Lord Mayor of London responding to the
devastation of his city by an IRA terrorist bomb.But then I didn’t know Winnie. Winnie wasn’t a good friend of
mine. Perhaps there was something very Churchillian in
Hizzonor?John Lukacs, whose book Giuliani was reading around 9/11—
the mayor actually carried the book with him, at least when
television cameras were around—knows quite a lot about
Churchill and in an interview with Newsweek, ten days after
the 9/11 attack, made it clear that no, Mr. Mayor, you’re not
Churchill, Osama bin Laden is not Adolf Hitler, and the war on
terrorism is not World War II. “I’m very pleased that Mayor
Giuliani held up my book. That was very pleasant,” Lukacs, an
old-world-style gentleman, told Newsweek. “But I don’t think
there are any parallels. This crisis we now face, no matter
what the president says, is not a war. It’s not the first war of
the 21st century. A war is something between nations or
states or sometimes even tribes. Who are we going to declare
war on?” Declaring “war on terrorism” was “just rhetoric,”
Lukacs explained. “But aren’t there parallels between what
Churchill was facing as a leader and what George W. Bush was
now facing?” the magazine interviewer insisted. And how
about the way George W. Bush was carrying himself? Doesn’t
he have the stature of a Churchill? Bush and Churchill “are
very different personalities,” the Hungarian-born historian,
who lived in Europe during World War II, patiently noted. “And
this is really not the time to criticize a president, but neither
his capacity nor his character is comparable. And character is
what counts. Intellect without character is not worth
anything.” Ouch.Sounding a cautionary note, Lukacs went on to tell Newsweek
that Bush and his aides “should use more sober language
instead of talking about crusades. The trouble with people
who use this kind of rhetoric is that they don’t even know that
it’s rhetoric.”But since 9/11, through the hunt for Osama bin Laden
(“Wanted: Dead or Alive!”), the search for Iraq’s WMD
(“mushroom cloud”), the anticipation of the welcoming of the
American “liberators,” and the counterinsurgency in Iraq
(“Bring ‘em on”), much of what the Bushies and their
neoconservative cheerleaders have been pursuing has given
rhetoric a bad name, including the celebration of the many
“tipping points” in post-Saddam Mesopotamia, the efforts to
help Iraqis “build a democracy,” and the alleged success in
“making progress in the march of freedom” in the Greater
Middle East and entire universe. As Churchill expert Lukacs
pointed out, the kind of empty rhetoric that disguises a
disastrous policy, that involves speaking “grandiloquently”
and talking “in general terms,” is certainly not a Churchillian
trait.But in the neocon fantasyland that has substituted for real
foreign policy since 9/11, why shouldn’t the White House
spinners try to liken Bush to Churchill, confident that a
submissive press corps would embrace the perverted but
powerful historical analogy? After all, Bush once admitted to
TV host Oprah Winfrey, “I love Churchill.”And here was Bush seeking “regime change” in Iraq, despite
criticism that he should give negotiations with Saddam
Hussein another try. Wasn’t he emulating Churchill, who was
also derided in the 1930s for opposing the appeasement of
Hitler? Or in the words of Rumsfeld, the primo WWII-buff in
the Bush administration: “It wasn’t until each country got
attacked that they said: ‘Maybe Winston Churchill was right.’”
Here was the Pentagon chief drawing a parallel between
Churchill and Bush, the same Bush who had been warned that
the U.S. was under threat from al-Qaeda by both the
departing Clinton administration and his own security
briefings and yet failed to act, which seems to be a very un-
Churchillian characteristic. Sure, but as Rumsfeld knows, a
robust historical analogy, not unlike potent intelligence
findings, shouldn’t be damaged by facts.“And so, before you knew it, the seeming bozo was our
savior,” as Mark Crispin Miller of New York University
described Bush’s evolution from an inconsequential and
inarticulate Texas governor with no knowledge or experience
in foreign policy and national security into a brilliant and
towering Churchill. “And he will not waver!” Andrew Card,
former White House chief of staff, said at the end of an
interview on CNN in October 2001.“We Will Not Fail,” echoed a Time cover story published at the
same time, which compared Bush to the British war leader.
“[O]ne big thing Bush and Churchill may share,” Michael Elliot
gushed in his Time profile, “At the times when he was most
challenged, and whether he was justified in his sense of self
or not (and often he was not), Churchill never knew self-
doubt. It seems to rarely stalk Bush. For a man leading the
kit-bag-packing troops and a great wide world into a war the
like of which it has never known before, that confidence is a
useful attribute to have.”As he attempted to grade Bush’s war oratory, Chris Matthews
suggested “When he said ‘Let’s roll’ at the end, I think there is
a bit of Churchill in that, in the sense that he was saying, ‘This
is not the beginning of the end, it is perhaps the end of the
beginning.’”Well, it was certainly the beginning of a misinformation
campaign that would have put Willi Münzenberg into shame.
After all, Münzenberg marketed successfully the Soviet Union
and Stalin to Western fellow travelers most of whom had never
visited the proletariat paradise or met the Soviet dictator.
Pundits like Matthews and Elliott live in Washington and
schmooze with Bush and his aides on a regular basis.Yet Bush suddenly turned into Churchill. Osama, Saddam, and
any other leader that Bush didn’t like was exposed as a Hitler.
And the war on terrorism, intertwined with the war in Iraq
(and Iran?), became World War III against the “Islamo-
Fascists.” Indeed, just recently Rumsfeld compared Iraq War
critics to the appeasers of Nazism in Europe in the mid-
1930s: “It was a time when a certain amount of cynicism and
moral confusion set in among Western democracies” and
“When those who warned about a coming crisis, the rise of
fascism and Nazism, they were ridiculed or ignored,”
Rumsfeld told the convention of the American Legion in Salt
Lake City. “Indeed, in the decades before World War II, a great
many argued that the fascist threat was exaggerated or that it
was someone else’s problem” and “Some nations tried to
negotiate a separate peace, even as the enemy made its
deadly ambitions crystal clear,” Rumsfeld recalled. “It was,
Winston Churchill observed, a bit like feeding a crocodile,
hoping it would eat you last.” The defense secretary then
explained to the audience, which included some WWII
veterans, that he was recounting “that history” because “once
again we face similar challenges in efforts to confront the
rising threat of a new type of fascism.” Today another enemy
“has made clear its intentions. … But some seem not to have
learned history’s lessons,” Rumsfeld complained.And there are some who seem not to have learned the facts of
history. They include Rumsfeld, who with his colleague
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, shocked many historians
when they compared the anti-American insurgency in Iraq to
what they alleged were Nazi guerrillas fighting U.S. troops in
occupied Germany. “There is an understandable tendency to
look back on America’s experience in postwar Germany and
see only the successes,” Rice told the Veterans of Foreign
Wars in San Antonio, Texas, in August 2003. “But as some of
you here today surely remember, the road we traveled was
very difficult. 1945 through 1947 was an especially
challenging period. Germany was not immediately stable or
prosperous. SS officers—called ‘werewolves’—engaged in
sabotage and attacked both coalition forces and those locals
cooperating with them—much like today’s Baathist and
Fedayeen remnants.” Speaking to the same group on the same
day, Rumsfeld noted the following “facts”: One group of those dead-enders was known as
‘werewolves.’ They and other Nazi regime remnants targeted
Allied soldiers, and they targeted Germans who cooperated
with the Allied forces. Mayors were assassinated including the
American-appointed mayor of Aachen, the first major German
city to be liberated. Children as young as 10 were used as
snipers, radio broadcasts, and leaflets warned Germans not to
collaborate with the Allies. They plotted sabotage of factories,
power plants, rail lines. They blew up police stations and
government buildings, and they destroyed stocks of art and
antiques that were stored by the Berlin Museum. Does this
sound familiar? If it doesn’t, don’t worry. You’re not experiencing the first
signs of senility. As Daniel Benjamin, a leading terrorism
expert, commented, “The Rice-Rumsfeld depiction of the
Allied occupation of Germany is a farrago of fiction and a few
meager facts." Werewolf tales have been a favorite of schlock
novels, but the reality bore no resemblance to Iraq today.” In
reality, Benjamin wrote, werewolf activity amounted to next to
nothing—the mayor of Aachen was assassinated before the
Nazi surrender. Indeed, as Benjamin pointed out, the
organization merited but two passing mentions in the U.S.
Army’s official history, “which dwells far more on how docile
the Germans were once the Americans rolled in—and
fraternization between former enemies was a bigger problem
for the military than confrontation.” Moreover, “there was
certainly no major campaign of sabotage and no destruction
of water mains or energy plants worth noting,” either. “So,
how did this fanciful version of the American experience in
postwar Germany get into the remarks of a Princeton graduate
and former trustee of Stanford’s Hoover Institute (Rumsfeld)
and the former provost of Stanford and co-author of an
acclaimed book on German unification (Rice)?” asked
Benjamin.I suppose that these two Bush cabinet officials could blame
their speechwriters in the same way that they shifted the
responsibility for the fake WMD intelligence onto the CIA. But
like the rest of the members of the Bush administration, they
are continuing to bombard the American public with World
War II analogies and “lessons” as part of the campaign to
market the disastrous policies in the Middle East—which will
not stop historians from agreeing that the comparison
between the role of Bush in combating terrorism with that of
Churchill combating Nazi Germany is absurd.Germany under Hitler had one of the largest and most
advanced militaries in the world—to which one could add the
military force of Imperial Japan—which by the end of the
Second World War was able to bombard London with long-
range missiles. Germany was then a great global power with
an economic and technological base superior to that of most
of its competitors, including Britain. Moreover, “Churchill’s
enemy was a powerful, determined dictator; President Bush’s
conflict is with a shadowy nemesis and his small band of
idolaters,” as one reader argued in a letter to the editor in the
London Times. Another wrote, “The tragedy of 9/11 was the
result of a ‘sucker punch’ landed by a weak enemy on the
world’s superpower. A parallel might be the IRA’s Brighton
bombing, which almost destroyed a British Government.”
Hence, “compare, if you must, Bush’s reaction to 9/11 to
Thatcher’s reaction to the Brighton bomb. It is not by any
stroke of imagination comparable to Churchill’s defiance of
Nazi Germany.”Nor does the term “War on Islamo-Fascism” make much
historical sense in the context of the war of terrorism and U.S.
policy in the Middle East. First, the term seems to jumble
together secular nationalist regimes and movements, like the
Ba’ath in Iraq and Syria, with religious fundamentalist
governments and groups—the radical anti-American (Sunni)
al-Qaeda and the Lebanese-based (Shi’ite) Hezbollah; the
fundamentalist Sunni Wahabbi movement that is
headquartered in pro-American Saudi Arabia and the Shi’ite
clerics that rule in Tehran; the anti-Western Muslim
Brotherhood movement (including Hamas in Palestine) and the
Shi’ite clerics in power in (pro-American?) Baghdad. The
Islamo-Fascism label seems to be applied to movements and
governments that have nothing in common with each other—
much less European fascism.Unlike al-Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood, or Hezbollah, the
fascist movements in Europe in the 1930s were rooted in
modern and secular Western ideologies, and their economic
nationalist agendas had won many followers in the democratic
nations, including the U.S., then beset by the Great
Depression. While fascism had strong atavistic roots, not all
the political parties associated with it were anti-Semitic. Italy’s
Fascist intellectual and political leadership included quite a
few Jews, and Mussolini didn’t adopt anti-Jewish policies until
he decided to form a military alliance with Hitler when he was
under pressure from the Nazi leader. Moreover, Western
leaders, including Churchill, regarded Mussolini for a long
time as a potential ally against Nazi Germany. Here is what
Churchill said about Il Duce in 1938: “It would be a dangerous
folly for the British people to underrate the enduring position
in world history which Mussolini will hold; or the amazing
qualities of courage, comprehension, self-control, and
perseverance which he exemplifies.”In fact, Churchill and his other World War II allies maintained
close links to the pro-Fascist regimes in Spain and Portugal
and succeeded in persuading them not to enter the war on the
side of Hitler. (Spain and Portugal also helped save thousands
of European Jewish refugees fleeing the advancing German
armies; the two governments also joined the pro-American
NATO alliance after the war.) Americans may also forget that
the pro-Hitler collaborationist Vichy regime was
acknowledged as the official government of France by the
United States and other countries, including Canada, even
when they were at war with Germany. And can anyone imagine
a contemporary Western musician idolizing our latest “Islamo-
Fascist” enemy, Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the
way Cole Porter lyrics, adapted by P.G. Wodehouse for the
1935 London production of “Anything Goes,” did: “You’re the
top! You’re the Great Houdini! You’re the top! You are
Mussolini!”But then we shouldn’t forget that Saddam Hussein, the ex-
president of Iraq and the leader of its Ba’ath Party—whose
political platform mishmashes Arab nationalist, Communist,
and Fascist ideological orientations—was for most of the
1980s a strategic ally of the United States in the Middle East.
Hence Ronald Reagan ended up providing the man who would
become Hitler with economic and military assistance to help
him fight Iran’s mullahs and in the process encouraged
Saddam to launch what would become the bloodiest war in
the modern history of the Middle East. And guess who was
dispatched then by Washington to make those deals with
Saddam? A hint: it’s a current U.S. defense secretary who has
been comparing critics to those who appeased Hitler.If the Bushies insist on continuing to mention the war, we can
urge them to imagine the following scenario that includes all
the historical analogies that neoconservative ideologues like
to apply—World War II, Hitler, appeasement. As American and
Allied forces invade Nazi Germany in 1945, Adolf Hitler,
Heinrich Himmler, and several SS troops flee to Fascist Spain,
where they hide in the Pyrenees Mountains and mount
guerrilla attacks against the free French government. The
American response? To ask Generalissimo Francisco Franco if
he would be kind enough to send some of his forces to catch
those Nazis. Does this sort of alternate history remind you of
a certain U.S. administration that allowed Osama bin Laden
and his al-Qaeda associates to flee to Pakistan, where they are
now hiding as Washington continues to plead with the military
dictator who rules Pakistan to try to capture the evil ones who
were actually responsible for the 9/11 terror acts?Where is your umbrella, George Chamberlain?
________________________________________________Leon Hadar is a Cato Institute research fellow in foreign-
policy studies and author, most recently, of Sandstorm: Policy
Failure in the Middle East.
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“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
