What About Hitler?
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
DIGG THIS
I think that
we desire war. We want war to be permissible without sacrificing
all the values we hold most dear. As a result, we endeavor to
manipulate and twist those values and moral principles to accommodate
that desire rather than recognize war as the moral offense it
is. ~ Robert Brimlow
Adolf Hitler
is alive and well, and especially among neocon warmongers, conservative
interventionists, Christian armageddonists, and other advocates
of perpetual war for perpetual peace.
The original
President Bush and the current incarnation have both all but compared
Saddam Hussein to Hitler. Now it is the president of Iran who bears
the Hitler label. Indeed, as Glenn
Greenwald has well said: "Whoever is next on the War List
is always The New Hitler and the country they lead is always The
New Nazi Germany." But it is not incarnate in these mischaracterizations
that Hitler lives today.
When all else
fails, proponents of the war in Iraq inevitably retreat to the Hitler
question. Okay, maybe life in Iraq under Saddam Hussein was better
than the situation in Iraq now, but what about Hitler? Perhaps the
United States shouldn’t have invaded Iraq, but what about Hitler?
Yes, it is tragic that almost 4,000 U.S. soldiers have died in Iraq,
but what about Hitler? Perhaps the troop surge was a bad idea, but
what about Hitler?
But
it’s not just those who champion the war in Iraq that invoke the
Hitler question. The same thing is done by those who are adamantly
opposed to this U.S. military adventure, but not some previous
one. Failure to receive a satisfactory answer to the Hitler question
is certainly one of the main reasons why many who recognize the
folly of war hesitate to label themselves as anti-war.
The Hitler
question is something that Robert Brimlow, a philosophy professor
at St. John Fisher College in New York, has pondered for many years.
After a series of outlines, drafts, and proposals (which, it should
be noted, began before 9/11), he has collected his thoughts in What
about Hitler? Wrestling with Jesus’s Call to Nonviolence in an Evil
World (Brazos Press, 2006). The book is part of the publisher’s
series on The Christian Practice of Everyday Life, a series which
"seeks to present specifically Christian perspectives on some
of the most prevalent contemporary practices of everyday life."
This work came
about in part due to the persistent asking of the Hitler question
whenever the author made "an argument for pacifism in his philosophy
classes." Brimlow believes that Christians "are not called
to be pacifists; we are called to be Christians, and part of what
it means to be Christian is to be peacemakers." But Hitler
or no Hitler, the author doesn’t believe that so-called just war
theory is the answer to limiting war. The book, in fact, stands
just war theory on its head, arguing that it is used to justify
war. It also contains some painful rebukes to Christian defenders
of war that I wish I had uttered myself.
But first,
the negative. Each chapter of the book is prefaced by a Scripture
passage and the author’s meditation upon it followed in most cases
by a prologue. But since the meditations are not directly related
to the subject of the chapters, and the prologues, which are basically
personal experiences, are generally irrelevant as well, they can
all be safely passed over. The last three chapters (7, 8, &
9), which present the Christian response to the Hitler question,
an elaboration, and an elaboration on the elaboration, should really
be combined, especially since chapter 7 contains only a one-page
response after a four-page meditation. Along with the lack of an
index, these are minor quibbles we can live with in a book that
so boldly and powerfully tackles just war theory and the Hitler
question.
Brimlow doesn’t
waste any time, striking at the root of just war theory with an
assault on Augustine in the first chapter: "Augustine is a
saint, a father of the church, a good theologian, and a wonderful
philosopher. He is also wrong." And not only is it the church
father Tertullian that we should look to: "The basis of Tertullian’s
objection to Christian involvement with the military should be obvious
to anyone with even a cursory knowledge of the gospel."
Brimlow then
demolishes the finer points of just war theory itself, even taking
on the theologian Thomas Aquinas. The author considers just war
theory, "as developed and defended both by church theologians
and secular philosophers," untenable, and for three reasons:
- Just war
theory is untenable because it is difficult to know with sufficient
confidence whether all of its conditions have been met.
- Just war
theory is untenable because some of its tenets are impossible
to realize.
- Just war
theory is untenable because it used to justify rather than to
prevent war.
First there
is the knowledge problem:
It is not
often easy to determine when a just cause for war exists or what
criteria a state may use in reaching the determination that a
just cause is operative.
One of the
primary difficulties with the just war requirements should be
apparent: it is not very clear when the conditions of just cause
and last resort have been satisfied.
As soon as
just war theory adapts to accommodate and allow preemptive attacks
by a threatened state, it is no longer clear either how much solid
evidence is required or how much discussion or negotiation would
be prudent.
Second, the
carrying out of the jus in bello principle of discrimination
between the civilian population and enemy combatants is impossible.
Says Brimlow: "It is obvious that a war, in order to be just,
must not inflict harm or death or injury on innocent persons, or
else it is no better (except, perhaps, quantitatively) than the
original aggression. The problem facing those who wish to justify
war is that it is impossible to conduct a war without harming some
innocents. It is in the very nature of war that innocents will die."
And third,
just war theory in practice is used for something entirely opposite
its stated purpose: "Another difficulty with the just war criteria,
at least to this point and taken as a whole, is that they seem able
to justify almost all wars rather than to provide a means to limit
the number of wars that would be considered just." Indeed,
under just war theory, "a state may initiate hostile military
action against another state that poses no direct threat to it.
Using just war theory, Brimlow even makes the case that "Nazi
Germany’s initiation of World War II in the European theater – as
well as the events that led up to it – satisfy the criteria for
just cause as well as any other."
I might also
add that it is the state that decides to go to war, not the people,
most of whom want nothing to do with war; that is, until the state
sufficiently propagandizes its citizens, as Hermann
Goering explained. The state always claims that it is acting
defensively, has the right intention, has the proper authority,
is undertaking war as a last resort, has a high probability of success,
and that a war will achieve good that is proportionally greater
than the damage to life, limb, and property that it will cause.
Brimlow concludes
about just war theory:
The criteria
set out and developed by just war theory are simply too flaccid
and flexible to yield an outlawing of some of the most immoral
and heinous activities of the last century.
Just war
theory is untenable. Among other things, just war theory contradicts
itself in that it sanctions the killing of innocents, which it
at the same time prohibits. In addition, just war theory can also
be used effectively to justify all wars.
It is no wonder
that "the Christian concerns about justifying warfare set the
tone for subsequent secular justifications." Indeed, just war
theory "has become fundamentally a secular doctrine."
Brimlow argues that "this must be so, because no Christian
could justify war without leaving Jesus and the gospel out of it."
But even if
Brimlow’s indictment of just war theory is correct, and even if
"almost all the wars that have been fought over the millennia
were wrong on both philosophical and theological grounds,"
and even if "pacifism might be what is called for in the vast
majority of cases," there is one thing that will abrogate every
vestige of morality and turn the ardent pacifist into a crazed warmonger:
the so-called supreme emergency.
The greatest
example of the supreme emergency is, of course, Hitler. The Nazi
regime "provides the paradigmatic example of a special case
that justifies using extraordinary means to defeat an enemy"
even if it means violating the rights of the innocent. Because Hitler
is "the embodiment of hatred, murder, death, and destruction,"
he has become "a symbol for all those threats to us that appear
immune to rational discourse, pragmatic calculation and bargaining,
and appeals to self-interest or moral goodness."
Brimlow doesn’t
buy the supreme emergency argument, and certainly not as articulated
by contemporary just war theorist Michael Walzer, author of Just
and Unjust Wars (Basic Books, 2000). Brimlow points out
that not only does Walzer assert that "even the lives of innocent
may be sacrificed, with justification, in the case of supreme emergencies,"
he maintains that when the rights of neutrals, innocents, and noncombatants
are overridden, they have not been "diminished, weakened, or
lost." Brimlow concludes that the supreme emergency argument
suffers from the same knowledge problem as just war theory: "It
is difficult to determine with any precision when a supreme emergency
begins or when it ends, even retrospectively."
Brimlow finds
it curious that "we take Hitler as the figure and symbol for
the embodiment of the utmost evil." It is Stalin, "at
least in terms of sheer numbers of innocents intentionally and directly
slaughtered," whose "record of murders supersedes Hitler’s."
It is Stalin – our
ally in World War II – who not only initiated pogroms, purges,
and persecutions (like Hitler), but used starvation and terror as
a weapons. Stalin "appears to be more bloodthirsty than Hitler."
He could even be "the greatest monster of the twentieth century."
In the end,
Brimlow maintains that the Hitler question is a dishonest one:
It assumes
that Christians and the church have no involvement and no responsibility
prior to some arbitrary date in the early 1940s. If the question
is asking how a pacifistic church should have responded to the
horrors of the Holocaust, the answer surely lies in being a peacemaking
church long before the Holocaust ever began. The church should
have preached and lived a love of the Jews for many centuries
before the twentieth; the church should have formed Christians
into the kind of people who do not kill Jews, or homosexuals,
or gypsies, or communists, or other Christians, or Nazis, or whoever
else was victimized by the war. The church should have lived and
taught in such a way that the First World War would have been
incomprehensible in a largely Christian Europe and, failing that,
should have railed against the Versailles Treaty and the vengeance
it embodied in favor of forgiveness and reconciliation. The failure
of the church and of Christians to be peacemakers in 1942 is horrible
precisely because it is a result and culmination of centuries
of failure. Anti-Semitism, violence, warfare, strife, hatred,
and intolerance have been and continue to be acceptable practices
for Christians – usually in the name of politics, nationalism,
or even religious truth.
Brimlow courageously
concludes: "Given the stature of a Stalin, why is it that Hitler
is the one who provides the standard by which we measure evil and
analogize the worst behavior of leaders and states?"
We can even
take this a step further. It was not Hitler who boycotted Jewish
businesses. It was not Hitler who enforced the Nuremberg laws. It
was not Hitler who participated in the Krystalnacht. It was not
Hitler who transported Jews to death camps. It was not Hitler who
killed American, British, Russian, and French soldiers during World
War II. And it was not Hitler who killed the millions of civilians
who died during the "Good War." And neither did Hitler
put a gun to anyone’s head and force them to do any of these things.
Was Hitler evil? Yes. Was Hitler a despicable human being? Certainly.
Would the world have been better off if someone had put a bullet
in his head? Of course. Nevertheless, Hitler is given too much credit
for what transpired during the Nazi regime (and yes, for those who
question my hatred of Nazism: it was an evil, brutal regime, and
so was Stalin’s).
The problem
with Hitler is that the great evil that he personifies has been
imputed to Osama bin Laden, Al Qaeda, "bad" Muslim leaders
(as opposed to the "good" Muslim leaders that are our
allies), and Islamic terrorists in general. Brimlow doesn’t buy
this argument either. He believes it "more appropriate to consider
the actions of Al Qaeda and other terrorists to be criminal rather
than aggressive in the traditional sense." Although certainly
not defending the actions of bin Laden and Al Qaeda, Brimlow recognizes
the part that an interventionist U.S. foreign policy has played
in stirring up anti-Americanism in the Muslim world. When the United
States responded to the 9/11 attacks, it was responding to "an
attack that was, in itself, a response to an attack." In analyzing
the complaints against America in the "Letter
to America" attributed to bin Laden, Brimlow remarks that
"our allies and many others in the international community
have leveled similar charges against us for decades, and even a
cursory examination of our history in many parts of the world, especially
Latin America, gives considerable credence to his views." This
is because "the American government and the American people
have been and continue to be curiously blind to the cumulative effect
our policy decisions have on other people around the world."
Brimlow argues
that "just war theory and supreme emergencies cut both ways."
If they are "sufficient to sanction the killing and destruction
inherent in conventional and total wars, then they are sufficient
to sanction terrorism as well." Indeed, to "accept one
as right and proper is to accept the other, and this means we have
no moral basis to object to what Al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations
are doing."
Brimlow’s solution
for the individual Christian to the Hitler problem will not be too
well-received in the Christian community, especially among warvangelicals:
We must live
faithfully; we must be humble in our faith and truthful in what
we say and do; we must repay evil with good; and we must be peacemakers.
This may also mean as a result that the evildoers will kill us.
Then, we shall die.
Our call
to follow Jesus and be peacemakers means that we will die. We
don’t like this message, so we recoil from it and consider it
incomprehensible; and we find ways to reinterpret the gospel or
to understand the "real" meaning of Jesus’s message
in order to obfuscate and avoid this conclusion. He could not
have meant what he said; "death" must be a metaphor
for something else.
The
author began his study of just war theory by wondering "how
the church arrived at the position that some wars can be considered
not only justifiable but also consistent with the demands of the
gospel." Because this position is so entrenched in certain
sectors of Christendom, we can only hope and pray that Brimlow’s
book causes some to rethink their position.
What about
Hitler? Yeah, what about him?
November
19, 2007
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from Pensacola, FL. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. His latest
publication is War,
Foreign Policy, and the Church. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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M. Vance Archives
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