By Alan Caruba
Younger generations can be forgiven if
all they know of war is what they have learned in school or seen dramatized on
film and television. For most Americans, the Civil War, the two World Wars, and
the conflicts in Korea and Vietnam are events that occurred “a long time ago.”
For my generation, born just prior to or during World War Two, wars have been a
constant element of our lives.
Anyone with an interest in U.S.
history knows that America was born out of a long war (1775-1783) with Great
Britain which eventually led to the writing of the Constitution in 1787 whose
ratification became official in June 1788. A year later George Washington, the
wartime general, became the first President and, thereafter, nearly every
President has had to dispatch U.S. naval, land and air forces in combat. This is
why the Founders concluded that the President also had to be Commander-in-Chief
in order to respond to threats to the nation whether near or
far.
Not all Americans were eager to engage
in various conflicts and most of the larger ones have had to address a fair
measure of opposition. Even the Revolution was resisted by those who felt being
a colony was a wiser choice than being independent.
In the greater world, wars have been
constant somewhere, a shaper of history, and, according to Benjamin Ginsberg, a
prolific historian and director of the Center for Advanced Governmental Studies
at Johns Hopkins University, it has some beneficial aspects. His latest book,
“The Worth of War”, explores this aspect of history.
“Organized warfare is among the most
common and persistent of human activities,” says Prof. Ginsberg. “As terrible as
it is, war and the possibility of war exert considerable pressure upon societies
to think and plan logistically in order to protect their security interests and,
sometimes, their very existence.”
“In the decades since World War II, of
course, the United States has been at war on a continual basis. The nation has
fought large engagements in Korea, Indo-China, and the Middle East, as well as
numerous smaller conflicts throughout the world.” Americans are now debating
having to return to the Middle East a third time since the Persian Gulf War
1990-1991 to undertake the vital mission of destroying the newly declared
Islamic State that threatens the region and, should it grow more powerful, the
West.
It may strike the reader as odd to
think of war as a good thing, but Prof. Ginsberg points out that “Bureaucracies
developed from war. Once built, they expanded the scope of their operations to
handle purely civilian tasks as well. War also required societies to learn the
rudiments of fiscal policy” because “armies and war are
expensive.”
Much of the technology we take for
granted emerged from the need to succeed in warfare. “Europe’s lead in military
technology widened sharply with the European industrial revolution of the
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries (and) with their weapons, their ships,
and their tactics, European armies conquered the Americans, Africa, portions of
Asia, and the Indian subcontinent.” In the process, the Europeans exported their
technological advances to those they conquered, spreading knowledge.
The concept of being a “citizen
soldier” developed out of war. “During the medieval and early modern eras, wars
were fought by small feudal levies and professional or mercenary armies” but
“beginning with the French revolution and Napoleonic eras, the size of national
military forces began to increase substantially.” Not only did war become very
expensive, a nation’s people had to be given a reason to feel they were
defending or expanding the interests of the nation, having loyalty to the state.
They had to be paid; funding had to be raised via taxes and bonds and, beyond
conscription, others had to feel inspired to participate in making the
instruments of war.
“In the modern world, military success
requires a strong economic base to support the armies, weapons, training, and
logistics need to prevail in serious or protracted combat.” Indeed, “the level
of economic development is the single most important variable explaining
military outcomes over the past century or so.”
The United States has enjoyed the
greatest, thriving economy since the end of World War II, but public opinion has
played a significant role, via Congress, elections, and public displays of
support or resistance to whether the U.S. has entered a war or relinquished
combat. The role of the President to encourage participation or resist combat is
the other significant factor.
President Obama, who was elected twice
on the promise to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, now faces the
decision whether to employ military power to attack the Islamic State. Failing
to retain our troops in Iraq or to engage jihadists in Syria is credited with
its emergence and its threat.
The images of Islamic State barbarity,
as well as its deliberate slaughter of Christians in the Middle East, is tending
public opinion to the need to destroy it before it exports its violence to the
U.S.
As Prof. Ginsberg points out,
“Tolerant, politically liberal individuals shrink from using violence under
almost any circumstance” but “in the international realm, by opposing war and
violence they are effectively condemning many peoples to live under
tyranny.”
At home, “America is a country whose
citizens are connected to one another and to their government less by the blood
in their veins than the blood they have shed—their own and that of others.” We
honor our veterans. We have national holidays to celebrate our past victories.
We need a victory in the Middle East.
We had one in Iraq until President Obama militarily abandoned it. We have troops
in Afghanistan that are the only thing between its modernization or a return to
the oppression of the jihad.
One way or the other, whether we
respond to the current threat or not, wars will be fought, won or lost.
© Alan Caruba, 2014
2 comments:
Mr c. A lot of this post is entirely backwards. In lots of ways you have quoted Mein Kampf. This cannot be what you intended.
Nonsense. The book quoted is The Worth of War and it is historical in nature. The only thing backward is your misinterprettion of the commentary.
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