Does
Bush Want War With Russia?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
A year after
taking power, in June 1934, Adolf Hitler made his first visit abroad
to his idol Benito Mussolini in Venice.
Babbling
on incessantly about Mein Kampf and the Negroid strain in
Mediterranean peoples, the Führer made a dismal impression.
"What a
clown this Hitler is," Mussolini told an aide.
Two weeks
later, Hitler executed the Roehm purge and murdered scores of old
Stormtrooper comrades. In late July, Austrian Nazis, attempting
a coup, assassinated Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss, a friend of
Mussolini whose wife and child were then his guests.
Il Duce
ordered four divisions to the Brenner Pass and flew to Vienna to
vent his rage and disgust with Hitler. He called a summit at Stresa
with Britain and France to agree on military action should Hitler
make any new move in violation of Versailles.
At the
time, however, Il Duce was also plotting revenge on Abyssinia for
a bloody border clash with Italian Somaliland.
Mussolini
thought his Allies would understand if he invaded the Ogaden to
add an African colony to his new Roman Empire, just as the British
and French had so often done in previous decades.
Mussolini
miscalculated. Morally outraged, Britain and France went before
the League of Nations and had sanctions imposed on Italy that were
too weak to defeat her but punitive enough to insult her.
Friendless,
isolated and condemned as an aggressor by Europe, Italy and Mussolini
had nowhere to turn now but Hitler's Germany.
Thus, over
the fate of an Abyssinian slave empire, Britain drove her faithful
World War I ally into the arms of a Nazi dictator Mussolini loathed
and had wished to confront beside Britain. And Abyssinia was overrun.
Are we
making the same mistake in the Caucasus?
Mikheil
Saakashvili started this war with his barrage attack and occupation
of South Ossetia. Russia's war of retribution was far less violent
or excessive than the U.S. bombing of Serbia for 78 days over Kosovo,
or our unprovoked war on Saddam Hussein's Iraq, which has brought
death to scores of thousands, or Israel's 35 days of bombing of
Lebanon for a border skirmish with Hezbollah.
Yet, declared
John McCain of Russia, "In the 21st century, nations don't invade
other nations." Even Dick Cheney must have guffawed.
Russia
must get out now, adds Bush, for South Ossetia and Abkhazia belong
to a sovereign Georgia. But when did Bush demand that Israel get
off the Golan Heights or withdraw from the birthplace of Jesus,
which Israelis have occupied for 41 years, as he demands that Russia
get out of the birthplace of Joseph Stalin, which Russia has occupied
for two weeks?
As Israel
was provoked in 1967, so, too, was Russia provoked.
Russians
died in Saakashvili's attack, as American died in Pancho Villa's
raid on New Mexico in 1916. We sent "Black Jack" Pershing, future
Gen. George Patton and a U.S. army 300 miles into Mexico to kill
Villa. Was this proportionate?
If we proceed
on a course of isolating Russia from the West, keeping her out of
the World Trade Organization, throwing her out of the G-8 and ending
cooperation with NATO, where do we think Russia will go? Where did
Il Duce go, when he was excommunicated from the West?
Condi Rice
compares Vladimir Putin's action in Georgia to Leonid Brezhnev's
crushing of the Prague Spring in 1968. She raced to Warsaw to ink
a deal to put 10 anti-missile missiles and U.S. Patriot missiles
manned by Americans into Poland.
Does the
Stanford provost have any idea where the end of this road lies,
upon which she and Bush have started the United States?
What do
we do if Russia responds to our Patriots in Poland with the Russian
S-300 anti-aircraft system in Iran and Syria?
If
the United States intends to bring Georgia and Ukraine into NATO
and arm them to fight Russia, why should Russia not dissolve the
Treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe and move her tank armies
into Belarus and up to the borders of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania?
Would we
send U.S. troops into the Baltic republics to signal that we will
fight Russia to honor our NATO war guarantees? Which NATO allies
would fight alongside us against a nuclear-armed Russia?
If
we bring Ukraine into NATO, what do we do if Russified east Ukraine
secedes and Russia sends troops to back the rebels? Do we send warships
into Russia's bathtub, the Black Sea, and commit to fight as long
as it takes to restore Ukraine's territorial integrity?
In March
1939, Britain pledged to declare war and fight Germany to the death
to guarantee the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Poland.
How did that one turn out for Britain and Poland?
Before
we start down the road of isolating and encircling Russia with weak
NATO allies, let us think through Gen. Petraeus' question in 2003
about Iraq, "Tell me, how does this thing end?"
But, then,
these folks never seem to think anything through.
August
26, 2008
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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