World War II Memorial |
Just this
week we celebrated Veteran’s Day, a very special one since it has been 100
years since the hostilities of World War I ended. The Armistice, a truce between Germany and the Allies, went into effect on the "eleventh
hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month" of 1918.
Also this
week we mourned the 80th anniversary of Kristallnacht, the night of
9-10 November in 1938 when the Nazi persecution of Jews became violently physical.
These two events, separated by a mere twenty years, are not unrelated.
The causes
of World War I were many. The simplest, and best known, was the assassination of
Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary at the hands of a Serbian assassin.
This was a tribal act driven by the desire of Serbia to take Bosnia and
Herzogovina from Austria-Hungary as their native populations were all Slavic. This
caused Austria-Hungary to attack Serbia, who had a mutual defense pact with Russia,
the subsequent attack by which pulled Germany, who had their own pact with
Austria-Hungary, into the conflict. But France had a defense pact with Russia,
thus entering the fray. Germany attacked Belgium on the way to getting at France
which caused Britain (who had a pact with both France and Belgium), and later
the United States, to pile on. Japan opportunistically entered on the side of
the Allies in order to claim German possessions in Asia. Italy, promised
territory in secret negotiations, later entered on the side of the Allies.
To say it
was complex is a vast understatement. WWI was to be the war to end all wars but
we know how that worked out. Let’s take an abbreviated tour of the major chain
of events since.
First, when
WWI ended, Germany was permitted to accept a truce rather than surrender. This
allowed her to retain a small standing army. More importantly, harsh reparation
(repayment) terms were imposed, causing great hardship to the German peoples as
the worldwide Great Depression unfolded. Conditions were ripe for a savior, and
indeed, Adolph Hitler rose to power promising to return Germany to her former
glory. Hitler’s Nazi party was racist and believed that their Aryan race was
superior. To them, Jews, Romans, and Slavs were inferior and undesirable. This led,
inevitably, to the Kristallnacht in 1938, the Holocaust that followed, and the
state of Israel today.
World War II
was predictable due to German and Japanese expansionism. The communist state of
the Soviet Union (which formed during the interwar period – you were warned
that this is abbreviated), first entered the conflict on the side of Germany but
then was figuratively stabbed in the back by Hitler and switched alliance to
the Allies. Our relationship with the Soviets was one of convenience, not
shared values.
Then WWII
was won, but this time Germany (and Japan) were required to surrender. Their leaders
were deposed, governments disassembled, and they were occupied by Allied forces
with the goal of building democratic institutions. That Japan and Germany are
today peaceful, democratic, and rank as the world’s 3rd and 4th
largest economies speaks to the grand success of this approach (in stark
contrast to Iraq).
In the
post-war years began the great struggle against communism, the Cold War.
In addition
to the Soviet Union, Mao Zedong’s communist party revolted in 1947 and came
into control of that country. (A vestige of free China exists in Taiwan. While China
has risen to be the number two world economy, it has done so at the expense of
repressive policies over its peoples in the most highly surveilled nation on
earth.)
The Korean
War was a dispute between the south (democratic) and the north (communist).
China (openly) and the Soviet Union (covertly) lined up to support the north
while the United Nations (mainly staffed by US forces), fought for the south.
This conflict was the opening salvo in the Cold War and has not to this day been
resolved.
The Vietnam
War, which many misunderstand, was another major “hot” struggle of the Cold War,
with China and the Soviet Union supporting the communist north and the United
States the democratic south. Vietnam was an example of a political war with strategies
and limitations set in Washington. The generals were not allowed to win the war
and, even when we did win an enormous battle (such as the Tet Offensive and the
Battle for Hue City), our domestic media presented it as a loss. When Americans
were captured by the enemy, they were cursed and spat upon. When our military
returned home, they were likewise cursed and spat upon. Those that did so had
no grasp of history.
If there is
one lesson, it is that the peace and prosperity of the world is largely due to
America’s place in it. When we step back, the world becomes more dangerous.
When we step forward, it becomes more safe. That is what you should really be
thanking our veterans for.
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