The Past Is All Coming Back
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
The
international goo-goos (Tammany Hall’s old name for the "good
government" types) need their humanitarian crise du jour,
and the Sudan currently fills the bill. The usual celebrities are
wringing their hands and we are all supposed to care, deeply. The
realist replies, "Yea, that’s life in the global village,"
but realism is out of fashion these days. Sense, it seems, has been
defeated by sensibility.
But
there is more to events in the Sudan than the usual starving children.
A recent article in the Cleveland Plain Dealer offered a
peek at Fourth Generation war at work in some ways both new and
very old. After noting that more than a million people have been
turned into refugees in just 16 months not a trivial military
result the paper wrote:
Over
and over, they (the refugees) tell the same story. First airplanes
and helicopters came and bombed their villages. Then gun-and-sword-wielding
militiamen came galloping in on horseback and camelback burning,
looting, raping and pillaging.
Tens
of thousands have made the journey, forced on a desperate flight
through the desert by Arab herders bent on chasing their African
farming neighbors from the vast western region (Darfur), the
size of Iraq.
In
these few sentences, we take a journey through war over the last
five thousand years. It begins with a modern overlay, in the form
of bombing by aircraft. Terrorizing tribesmen by bombing their villages
from the air was a technique pioneered by the British in their post-World
War I fight with insurgents in Iraq. It has the advantage that tribesmen
seldom have much in the way of air defenses, other than to get up
and move. In the Sudan, that seems to be just what their enemies
desire.
Of
course, the involvement of aircraft suggests the involvement of
the Sudanese government. But the rest of the Plain Dealer’s
brief account quickly moves us beyond, or more precisely, back from
the age of the state.
Those
gun (muzzleloaders? flintlocks?) and sword-wielding militiamen are
almost certainly tribesmen. Not only are their horse and camel-charges
something out of past centuries, so is their primary loyalty. It
is safe to say that their ties to the government of the Sudan are
tenuous. They are fighting for their tribes, against other tribes
they have fought for generations. As the state recedes, it reveals
once again the old human landscape, almost unaltered and ready,
like winter wheat under the snow, to spring to life again and flourish.
Another
ancient cause of war, race, also presents itself. The attackers
are Arabs, the refugees are Negroes. How long have those two been
going at it, with the blacks almost always getting the worst of
it? In the Sudan, even today, that "worst" includes black
slavery. Of course, as is also true throughout history, the alternative
to slavery is death. An old Russian proverb comes to mind: Life
is terrible, but death is not so great either.
Finally,
to complete a two-paragraph journey back to history’s dawn, the
mounted attackers are herdsmen while the victims are farmers. The
Navahos could tell us something about that one, as could the Mesopotamians,
the Egyptians and the Chinese. One cannot help but wonder if in
addition to their swords and guns those horsemen are good shots
with a bow?
We
see here in this remarkable vignette one of the most important,
most powerful and also most unremarked features of our age: the
past is all coming back. As modernity crumbles, all ancient ways
and causes of war return, defining a Fourth Generation that is also
a vast Minus One Generation. I have said from the outset that the
Fourth Generation marks the end of modern war and the modern age,
and nowhere do we see that more clearly than in places like the
Sudan (and there are more and more such places).
Those
who have eyes, let them see.
July
16, 2004
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2004 William S. Lind
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Lind Archives
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