A
Ticking Bomb
by
William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
I returned
at the end of last week from the Imperial fall maneuvers, held this
year in Ostland. His Majesty's forces prevailed, for much
the same reasons that Blue usually wins in American war games. As
someone who has led Red to victory in several senior-level games
conducted in Washington, I can assure you that isn't supposed to
happen.
I don't think
it possible for any historian to visit the Baltic countries or the
rest of Central Europe and not reflect on the catastrophes World
War I brought for that part of the world. Communism, World War II,
National Socialism, the extinction of some communities and the expulsion
of others, wholesale alteration of national boundaries, all these
and more flowed from the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand
on June 28, 1914. One pebble touched off an avalanche.
It did so because
it occurred, not as an isolated incident, but as one more in a series
of crises that rocked Europe in its last ten years of peace, 19041914.
Each of those crises had the potential to touch off a general European
war, and each further de-stabilized the region, making the next
incident all the more dangerous. 190506 witnessed the First
Moroccan Crisis, when the German Foreign Office (whose motto, after
Bismarck, might well be, "Clowns unto ages of ages") compelled
a very reluctant Kaiser Wilhelm II to land at Tangier as a challenge
to France. 1908 brought the Bosnian Annexation Crisis, where Austria
humiliated Russia and left her anxious for revenge. Then came the
Second Moroccan Crisis of 1911, the Tripolitan War of 19111912
(a war Italy actually won, against the tottering Ottoman Empire)
and the Balkan Wars of 191213. By 1914, it had become a question
more of which crisis would finally set all Europe ablaze than of
whether peace would endure. This was true despite the fact that,
in the abstract, no major European state wanted war.
If this downward
spiral of events in Europe reminds us of the Middle East today,
it should. There too we see a series of crises, each holding the
potential of kicking off a much larger war. There are almost too
many to list: the war in Iraq, the U.S versus Iran, Israel vs. Syria,
the U.S. vs. Syria, Syria vs. Lebanon, Turkey vs. Kurdistan, the
war in Afghanistan, the de-stabilization of Pakistan, Hamas, Hezbollah,
al Qaeda, and the permanent crisis of Israel vs. the Palestinians.
Each is a tick of the bomb, bringing us closer and closer to the
explosion no one wants, no one outside the neo-con cabal and Likud,
anyway.
A basic rule
of history is that the inevitable eventually happens. If you keep
on smoking in the powder magazine, you will at some point blow it
up. No one can predict the specific event or its timing, but everyone
can see the trend and where it is leading.
In the Middle
East today, as in Europe in the decade before World War I, the desperate
need is for a country or a leader to reverse the trend. Then, the
two European leaders most opposed to war, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany
and Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, were able to do little more than
drag their feet, trying to slow the train of events down. That was
not enough, and it will not be enough today in the Middle East either.
Where
do we see a leader who can turn aside the march toward war? Not
in the Middle East itself, nor among American Presidential candidates,
only two of whom, Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich, represent a real
change of direction. Not in Europe, whose heads of government are
terrified of breaking with the Americans. Not in Moscow or Beijing,
both of which are happy to see America digging its own grave. No
matter where we look, the horizon is empty.
Where vision
is wanting, the people perish. As they did in Central Europe in
the 20th century, by the tens of millions.
September
29, 2007
William
Lind is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2007 William S. Lind
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