The
Necessary War
by
William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
Pat Buchanan’s
new book, Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War: How Britain Lost Its Empire and
the West Lost the World, is causing a stir, which is a good
thing. Buchanan argues that both World War I and World War II were
unnecessary wars; that Britain bears at least as much responsibility
for both as Germany; that Winston Churchill was "the indispensable
man" in reducing Britain from a world-encircling empire to
"a cottage by the sea – to live out her declining years;"
and that the consequence of the Western civil war that encompassed
both World Wars (I would add the Cold War as well) has been the
fall of the West.
Buchanan is
correct on all counts. His book represents a counterattack in the
necessary war, the war to introduce Americans to genuine history.
At present, most Americans know only a comic-book version of history,
one in which Germany deliberately started both World Wars as part
of a drive to conquer the world, a drive stopped when valiant American
armies defeated the German army. And, oh yes, some Brit named Churchill
beat the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain. Thanks to the victories
of the freedom-loving allies, we now live in the best of all possible
worlds, where everyone can be a "democracy."
Nothing of
the comic-book version of history is true, not even the Battle of
Britain bit. Curiously, the key British records from the Battle
of Britain remain classified "secret"; it seems the RAF
was on the ropes. Buchanan goes after the rest of it with spirit
and zest, demolishing it utterly. As Colonel House told Woodrow
Wilson after talking extensively with Kaiser Wilhelm in 1915, the
Kaiser neither wanted nor expected war. I have seen the last, desperate
telegram he sent the Tsar, trying to avoid a general European war.
He was mocked for years before the war by many Germans as the "Peace
Kaiser" because in crisis after crisis he backed down. Kaiser
Wilhelm knew, as did Theodore Roosevelt, that a World War would
cost the West its world dominance.
Because World
War I was unnecessary, so was World War II, which was really a resumption
of World War I. Buchanan goes further and argues that had Britain
and France not offered a wildly imprudent guarantee to Poland in
the spring of 1939, there would have been no war in the West. Hitler
wanted to fight Stalin, not the Western powers. That too is true,
but Buchanan makes one assumption I am not so sure of, namely that
Germany would have defeated the USSR. As it was, World War II was
fought mostly in the east, and it was the Red Army, not the comparatively
small British and American armies, that defeated the Wehrmacht.
Could Stalin have done it alone? Maybe.
In
both World Wars, the U.S. came out a winner because it left most
of the fighting to others. In World War I, Germany was defeated
by the (under international law, illegal) starvation blockade. The
French army bore the brunt of the war in the west. Buchanan’s debunking
of Churchill is thorough and valuable. Churchill was brilliant,
forceful, imprudent, and often wrong. A howler for war both in 1914
and 1939, he may not have sought to preside over the dissolution
of the British Empire, but it was his own fault he did so. Prudence,
which means evaluating prospective actions in terms of their probable
long-term effects, is conservatives’ first political principle,
and the debacles created by Churchill illustrate why. At heart,
he was far more Whig than Tory. Burke would have loathed him.
Buchanan’s
historical revisionism is welcome on several counts. The neo-cons
have elevated an unhistorical Churchill into the patron of interventionism,
selling him in Washington and elsewhere like saints’ bones. It is
a snare for the simple, with George W. Bush numbered among them.
Debunking comic-book
history and replacing it with the real thing is vital if America
is to avoid the dual trap of cultural Marxism and Brave New World.
As ideologues and totalitarians everywhere have long known, if you
can cut a people off from their past, you can do whatever you want
with them. We need a similar debunking of the comic book history
of the Civil War now fed to Americans, in which it was all about
slavery.
Buchanan’s
relevance comes from the sad fact that America is now duplicating
Churchill’s central error, imprudence. We have entered into two
wars with little thought for their long-term consequences. Washington
hands out guarantees, similar to Britain’s to Poland, all over the
world like penny candy, with no consideration of where they may
lead. We give less thought to the potential future consequences
of our actions than the average Mayfly. All that matters is receiving
the applause of dunces and pleasing the SMEC.
Britain did
the same thing twice, in 1914 and 1939. It is perhaps not too much
to infer that Little England will be followed by Little America.
July
3, 2008
William
Lind is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2008 William S. Lind
William
Lind Archives
|