Among the
neoconservatives’ kept pontificators on modern history, Victor
Davis Hanson may well be the most ridiculous. A respectable scholar
when writing about Greek hoplites and other aspects of ancient
military history, Hanson becomes a raving maniac as soon as he
puts on his neocon spectacles. His latest syndicated column, "World
War II: Unfashionable Truths" illustrates this process of
transformation.
On the seventieth
anniversary of the outbreak of World War Two, Hanson is in a tizzy
about "revisionist histories," for example, those that
"blame Germany’s aggressions on the supposedly harsh terms
of the Treaty of Versailles." Does Hanson believe that a
treaty that stripped Germany of a third of its territories and
placed millions of its citizens under hostile foreign regimes,
such as Polish rule in West Prussia and Danzig, was only "supposedly
harsh?" Was the reduction of Austria from a great empire
to a shrunken ward of Europe at the hands of the Allies or the
attempted reduction of Turkey in the Treaty of Sèvres to
a principality around Ankara, a fate that, by the way, only the
military brilliance of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk kept from happening,
look anything like just peace terms? According to Hanson, "Versailles
was more lenient than what Germany had planned for Britain and
France should they have won in 1918." Moreover, "the
terms imposed on a defeated Russia by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
in early 1918" was far harsher than the comeuppance the Germans
got at Versailles in 1919.
These generalizations
are so breathtakingly one-sided that one wonders what research
Hanson has done to reach his flawed opinions. The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk,
which the German Empire, then at war in the West, concluded with
Lenin’s regime in March 1918, was intended to release both food
and war matériel to a blockaded country. The Germans took what
they could, which was the Western part of European Russia, to
carry on a grim military struggle they would soon lose. As historian
Egmont Zechlin has observed, the German gains at Brest-Litovsk
should be viewed as Kriegsmittel (means of continuing a fight)
rather than as Kriegsziele (war aims). They represented the same
kind of military-diplomatic measure as the Treaty of London, signed
in April 1915, the bait by which the British tempted Italy into
joining the bloodbath. The effect of that treaty, only parts of
which were (fortunately) ever implemented, would have dragged
millions of unwilling subjects, mostly South Slavs and Austrians,
into an expanded Italian empire. Needless to say, the victorious
Allies did nothing to return territory to Lenin’s government that
had been taken by the Germans. They divided this land among their
client states, which were either brought into existence or expanded
as a counterweight to Germany. The Allies also used these states
to contain a crippled Austria and an amputated Hungary. As for
the "harsher" treaties that Hanson claims the Germans
had in store for the Brits and the French had they won, since
he doesn’t elaborate, we’ll treat this comment as mere space-filler.
Note all of
this is lead-up to going after the name that dare not be mentioned,
that of Pat B, who has treated the Second World War as a confrontation
that could have been limited to Germany and Russia. Although I for
one have expressed some disagreement with Pat’s argument about the
likelihood of Hitler’s going directly for Russia after occupying
Western Poland, I would like to make one point crystal (pardon the
pun!) clear. Buchanan has every right to argue what he does without
being called a Nazi or Nazi-sympathizer. Further, everything he
has written about World War One is entirely correct, although Pat
may understate the role of the British government (and particularly
of Churchill) in greasing the skids for the Great War.
Pat’s assignment
of at least some responsibility to what Hanson calls "neutral
Poland" in fanning hostilities with Germany seems indisputable.
The Polish government in the mid- and late 1930s went on the rampage
inciting violence against Germans and periodically closing off
Danzig and the "Polish Corridor," a strip of land through
which Germans by agreement with the victorious Allies were allowed
free access between East Prussia and Central Germany. As former
German major general and military historian Gerd-Schultze Rhonhof
demonstrates exhaustively (although not to the satisfaction of
the obsessively antinational German press) in 1939: Der Krieg,
der viele Väter hat (1939: The War that Had Many Fathers),
Hitler’s bargaining position in dealing with Poland’s military
dictatorship up until September 3, 1939, was actually quite reasonable.
The most
Hitler demanded from the other side was joint German-Polish control
over Danzig and assurances that Germans would be permitted to
move through the Corridor without Polish military harassment.
It should be possible (although perhaps it is not) to document
Polish abuses of German minorities, without being accused of being
in love with Hitler. In the same way it would be reasonable (and
perhaps even helpful to an ambitious journalist in his leftist
profession) to point out that what Stalin devoured after the Second
World War was what Churchill and FDR had helped put on his plate.
Needless
to say, I could make this observation, unlike discussing Polish
provocation in September 1939, without running the risk of being
called a Nazi-sympathizer.
Rhonhof and
the Russian (Jewish) historian Dmitrij Chmelnizki, both of whom
deal with the outbreak of the war in the East, do not deny the
brutality of Hitler’s regime. Their conclusion, however, is that
other belligerents had something to do with inciting the war.
And the unwillingness of the Allies to address the wretched treatment
of German minorities in the successor states they supported after
World War One added to the tensions contributing to the next European
war. Had the German head of state in 1939 not been Hitler but
any patriotic German, he too in all likelihood would have pressed
the Polish government on the same grievances Hitler raised.
Hanson makes
other statements that recall Allied propaganda during or right
after World War Two. He goes on about how England, standing alone,
"saved Western civilization between September 1939 and June
1941." Indeed as late as "December 1941 the odds were
all in favor of the Axis powers." Moreover, the only reason
that "Germany, Italy and Japan were transformed from monstrous
regimes into liberal states whose democracies have done much for
humanity" is that unlike our overly lenient treatment of
the Central Powers after World War One, we took time to "monitor"
our justly crushed enemies.
A few rectifications
would be in order. The RAF was more than a match for the Luftwaffe
during the Battle of Britain; and after March 11, 1941, the US
was extending material support to the British side in the form
of Lend Lease and manning British bases in the Atlantic. One might
also note that the British were far from consistent in defending
Western civilization, even in the form of the allies they supposedly
went to war over. When Stalin’s erstwhile Nazi ally attacked Soviet
Russia, Churchill and Anthony Eden ran to betray the Poles, by
yielding to the Soviet tyrant the Eastern part of Poland, which
he had acquired during his alliance with Hitler. Nor is it possible
to give the odds for winning the war to the Axis, particularly
when the world’s most powerful country, the US, was moving to
enter the conflict, as quickly as FDR could have his way. None
of this is to take credit away from the British for resisting
the true Axis of Evil, the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact, in
1940 after the fall of France. But there is no reason to overstate
the advantage enjoyed by Hitler in a war in which he overextended
himself, with extremely limited energy resources. His attack on
Russia may well have been necessary to gain oil supplies, without
which his side was doomed.
Hanson’s
attempt to ascribe the recent nice behavior of the Germans to
the "monitoring" we did after World War Two, an activity
that we apparently failed to perform after the Treaty of Versailles,
is inexpressibly naïve. In the last eight months of World War
Two, the British and Americans incinerated over 700,000 German
civilians and obliterated about forty percent of German cities,
and particularly the historic areas of German cities, including
such "military" targets as cathedrals, universities,
and palaces. This, plus the need to resettle about 15 million
Germans, who were driven out of Eastern Europe, and the anti-national
effects of forced American "re-education" upon the defeated
German population, created a pacifistic and indeed demoralized
nation. Perhaps if we had blessed our enemies with more phosphate
and atomic bombs, the "democracy" we then bestowed on
them would have been an even greater boon for "humanity."
Alas my memory
may be failing. But I can’t recall that "monstrous regime,"
as opposed to an incompetent, authoritarian one, that Mussolini
established in Italy. And I’m also unable to discover the "liberal"
regime toward which we have helped the Germans ascend. The state
of civil liberties in that country is today more precarious than
I could ever imagine it becoming in Obama’s America. Organized
"antifascists" vandalize the premises of "reactionary"
publications and attack their critics on the street, while the
police ignore these assaults. Meanwhile immigration-critics and
those suspected of Holocaust-denial (whatever that expanding term
may mean by now) are threatened with fines and jail sentences.
Antinationalism practiced with a jackboot has become the state-creed
of the only German state that Hanson would approve of, but neither
tolerance nor freedom seems to have benefited from our terror-bombing
and subsequent re-educational efforts in that part of the world.
As someone
who has closely studied the German Second Empire, I’m also unaware
of how it lagged behind present-day Germany in its protection
of constitutional rights and academic freedom, in the limits placed
on the taxing power of the state or in the advancement of the
sciences and humanities. Historians such as Niall Ferguson and
Eberhard Straub have dwelled on the many political, economic,
and intellectual accomplishments of the German Second Empire,
and Straub, a biographer of the last Kaiser, contrasts the civil
liberties of Germany in the early twentieth century to the antifascist
snooping regime under which his country now lives. Ferguson makes
the point in The
House of Rothschild that Germany in the late nineteenth
century treated Jews as fairly as any other European country.
Educated German Jews were among the Empire’s economic and professional
leaders, and the Jewish ship magnate Albert Ballin was one of
the Kaiser’s closest personal friends and, not surprisingly, a
fervent German nationalist. Germans back then could also boast
of the best-educated and most prosperous working class in the
world, and their universities and educational and scientific foundations
had achieved international renown.
Today
in what Hanson imagines is the only good state the Germans have
ever enjoyed, roving gangs, with the implicit support of the powers
that be, burn down "fascist" newspaper buildings. Those
who formed Red Brigades in the 1970s have been able to occupy
the corridors of power, and public moneys and government coercion
are used to carry on a "struggle against (a largely marginalized)
right." German inner cities are full of Muslim, which often
means Islamicist, underclass populations, and the demoralized
"reeducated" native Germans have the lowest birth rate
in Europe. Perhaps once the European German population disappears
entirely, after the country has surrendered its sovereignty, without
a popular vote, to the EU, Hanson and other neocons will have
what they want, a Germany that has blessed humanity by vanishing
forever.
September
8, 2009