Pacifists versus peace
By Thomas Sowell
Friday, July 21, 2006
One of the many failings of our educational system is that it sends out
into the world people who cannot tell rhetoric from reality.
They have learned no systematic way to analyze ideas, derive
their implications and test those implications against hard
facts.
"Peace" movements are among those who take advantage of this
widespread inability to see beyond rhetoric to realities. Few
people even seem interested in the actual track record of
so-called "peace" movements -- that is, whether such movements
actually produce peace or war.
Take the Middle East. People are calling for a cease-fire in
the interests of peace. But there have been more cease-fires in
the Middle East than anywhere else. If cease-fires actually
promoted peace, the Middle East would be the most peaceful
region on the face of the earth instead of the most violent.
Was World War II ended by cease-fires or by annihilating much
of Germany and Japan? Make no mistake about it, innocent
civilians died in the process. Indeed, American prisoners of war
died when we bombed Germany.
There is a reason why General Sherman said "war is hell" more
than a century ago. But he helped end the Civil War with his
devastating march through Georgia -- not by cease fires or
bowing to "world opinion" and there were no corrupt busybodies
like the United Nations to demand replacing military force with
diplomacy.
There was a time when it would have been suicidal to
threaten, much less attack, a nation with much stronger military
power because one of the dangers to the attacker would be the
prospect of being annihilated.
"World opinion," the U.N. and "peace movements" have
eliminated that deterrent. An aggressor today knows that if his
aggression fails, he will still be protected from the full
retaliatory power and fury of those he attacked because there
will be hand-wringers demanding a cease fire, negotiations and
concessions.
That has been a formula for never-ending attacks on Israel in
the Middle East. The disastrous track record of that approach
extends to other times and places -- but who looks at track
records?
Remember the Falkland Islands war, when Argentina sent troops
into the Falklands to capture this little British colony in the
South Atlantic?
Argentina had been claiming to be the rightful owner of those
islands for more than a century. Why didn't it attack these
little islands before? At no time did the British have enough
troops there to defend them.
Before there were "peace" movements and the U.N., sending
troops into those islands could easily have meant finding
British troops or bombs in Buenos Aires. Now "world opinion"
condemned the British just for sending armed forces into the
South Atlantic to take back their islands.
Shamefully, our own government was one of those that opposed
the British use of force. But fortunately British prime minister
Margaret Thatcher ignored "world opinion" and took back the
Falklands.
The most catastrophic result of "peace" movements was World
War II. While Hitler was arming Germany to the teeth, "peace"
movements in Britain were advocating that their own country
disarm "as an example to others."
British Labor Party Members of Parliament voted consistently
against military spending and British college students publicly
pledged never to fight for their country. If "peace" movements
brought peace, there would never have been World War II.
Not only did that war lead to tens of millions of deaths, it
came dangerously close to a crushing victory for the Nazis in
Europe and the Japanese empire in Asia. And we now know that the
United States was on Hitler's timetable after that.
For the first two years of that war, the Western democracies
lost virtually every battle, all over the world, because pre-war
"peace" movements had left them with inadequate military
equipment and much of it obsolete. The Nazis and the Japanese
knew that. That is why they launched the war.
"Peace" movements don't bring peace but war. |