EarthDogg All American 3989 Posts user info edit post |
Here is an interesting interview with military historian Victor Davis Hanson. Much meat in it for any SBer to chew over.
Quote : | " War Like No Other By Jamie Glazov, FrontPageMagazine.com November 8, 2005
Frontpage Interview’s guest today is Victor Davis Hanson, director emeritus of the classics program at California State University, Fresno, and currently a classicist and military historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He is the author of The Western Way of War, The Wars of the Ancient Greeks, The Soul of Battle, Carnage and Culture, and Ripples of Battle. His new book is A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War. FP: Victor Hanson, welcome back to Frontpage Interview.
Hanson: Thank you Jamie for having me back.
FP: In your new book, you draw some powerful and fascinating parallels between the Peloponnesian War and to our modern-day conflicts. Before we talk about that, can you first tell us a bit about the Peloponnesian War and its significance?
Hanson: It endures for roughly three reasons:
First: the war pitted two antithetical systems-cosmopolitan, democratic, Ionic and maritime Athens at its great age versus parochial, oligarchic, Dorian and landlocked Sparta-and thus became a sort of referendum on the contrasting two systems.
Second: the historian Thucydides who recorded the war was both a participant and contemporary witness and a brilliant philosopher who employed the war to illustrate his tragic view of human nature and how thin is the veneer of civilization when ripped off during plague, war, and civil discord; his descriptions of the plague, the stasis at Corycyra, the debate over Mytilene, and the Melian Dialogue then are riveting and almost literary in their power to evoke emotion.
Third: Athens lost and with its spiritual and psychological depression ended the city of Socrates, Pericles, Sophocles, Euripides, Pheidias and the dream of an enlightened democratic empire that employed its power and wealth in the service of high culture.
That has been troubling us supporters of democracies these past 2,400 years.
FP: How do you think this ancient conflict can serve as a metaphor to some of our modern conflicts, including the terror war today?
Hanson: Everything we have seen in the present global war-slaughtering schoolchildren in Beslan; murdering diplomats; taking hostages; lopping limbs; targeted assassinations; roadside killing; spreading democracy through arms-had identical counterparts in the Peloponnesian War. That is not surprising when Thucydides reminds us that the nature of man does not change, and thus war is eternal, its face merely evolving with new technology that masks, but does not alter its essence.
More importantly, Athens' tragedy reminds of us of our dilemma that often wealth, leisure, sophistication, and, yes, cynicism, are the wages of successful democracy and vibrant economies, breeding both a sort of smugness and an arrogance. And for all Thucydides' chronicle of Athenian lapses, in the last analysis, rightly or wrongly, he attributes much of Athens' defeat to infighting back at home, and a hypercritical populace, egged on by demagogues that time and again turned on their own.
So the war is also a timely reminder about the strengths-and lethal propensities-of democracies at war. And we should remember that when we hear some of the internecine hysteria voiced here at home-whether over a flushed Koran or George Bush's flight suit- when 160,000 Americans are risking their lives to ensure that 50 million can continue to vote.
FP: Your book is a first rate military account. You are clearly an expert in your understanding of strategic objectives in war. What strategic objectives and tactics would you recommend to America today in fighting the terror war in general and the Iraq war in particular?
Hanson: We need to know what our objectives are and where we wish to be when the fighting stops, and, as the failed peace during the Peloponnesian War reminds us, that it will stop only with the defeat of one side and the victory of another. After all, there is no living with a fascist jihad; in its own words, it promises to destroy all a liberal West holds dear.
Otherwise, we have a classic bellum interruptum of the Middle East or Cypriot kind, and should not ask our precious young people to die for a war we do not intend to win and perhaps should go back to the Clintonian strategy of appeasement with cruise missiles and tolerance for the occasional harvesting of diplomats and soldiers abroad. But if we wish to stop all that and to go to war, then we must be determined to win and know how to do so.
So it seems to me we must articulate our goals: the creation of a stable democratic Afghanistan and Iraq; a global coalition of Europe, India, Russia and China that establishes that Pakistan can no longer harbor terrorists, that Syria cannot promote terrorism, that Saudi Arabia cannot use its petrodollars to promote jihad; and that Iran cannot become nuclear in its pursuit of hyper-terror. We have had success and are really down to these four countries whose behavior must radically change.
We must establish a culture of ostracism for radical Islam. We are seeing that now inside Holland, Great Britain, and now apparently France as well. By that I mean we wish to create a landscape similar to what a Nazi felt in 1946 or a Stalinist saw in 1989: that the ideology is bankrupt and no one will tolerate it anymore, and praising suicide bombing in Haifa or celebrating IEDs in Iraq is the moral equivalent of calling for Waffen SS victories in WWII or praise for the Baatan Death March, which earns a person deportation from the West and social exile abroad. There is no reason, after Iran's boast to wipe out Israel, that such a country belongs in the UN, or that any civilized country would have diplomatic personnel in Teheran. It should be seen as Nazi Germany circa 1939.
We are not there yet in establishing such a moral reawakening, but these should be our ultimate military and political goals; defeat and kill terrorists in the field; pressure and isolate their national sponsors; and discredit their ideology. Do that and we win; fail and we endure the present sort of global Lebanization of seeing schoolgirls beheaded in Indonesia, or schoolchildren shot in Beslan, or schoolteachers assassinated in Iraq, beside the sick carnage from New York to New Dehli and the spectre of escalation to the nuclear level in Iran.
FP: What are your thoughts about the Left’s role in the terror war?
Hanson: I am baffled by it. After all, al Qaeda, Dr. Zawahiri, Zarqawi, and others are not 1960 communist icons like Fidel, Che, and Mao, mass murderers who deceived the gullible with their fashionable veneer of radical egalitarianism.
No, what we saw on September 11, Madrid, London, Washington, Kabul, and Baghdad is a horrific fascism-anti-woman, anti-gay, anti-modern-that is at war with all the Enlightenment had achieved. So I felt a Chomsky, Moore, and the European intellectuals would hate fascism more than they disliked the United States, and this was at last a war against real fascism that the Left could get behind.
In that, I was in error, and now grasp that whether we recall Michael Moore's comparison of the killers in Iraq to "Minutemen", or former Clinton advisor Nancy Soderberg musing about hoping we "lose" in Iraq, or recent accounts that French ministers thought a rapid US victory in Iraq would be disastrous, we can detect a broad desire on the part of the left that we should lose in Iraq. Some are candid about that, others more subtle, but it is clear that US defeat would be welcome to a variety for a variety of ways. Maybe if Al Qaeda were to go after Fidel or Hugo Chavez--in the way Hitler turned on Stalin-they would eagerly at last join the fray against the Islamic fascists.
This was not a war for Israel, not a war for oil, not a war for hegemony, but a costly dangerous, and yes, idealistic, gambit-and thus logically hated by both the palaeocons and the Scowcroft realists-for radical change in the Middle East, an end to the old pathology of backing dictators who allow terrorists to deflect popular angst against the United States. The only man of the Left who rightly fathomed that was Christopher Hitchens-a dream-come-true for proper leftists it should have been when the United States at last unleashed its formidable power to help the oppressed under the Taliban and perennially despised Kurds and Shiites. Like it or not, we are on the side on the underdogs; Sunni dictatorships, EU triangulators, and the global left, either by inaction or implicit sanction, are mostly on the side of fascists with a horrific past record.
FP: How do you interpret the riots in Paris?
Hanson: In two ways: the banal take that is on everyone's lips is that France fails to integrate and assimilate its "other" due to innate aristocracy, smugness, and racism so embedded in European postmodern society. So this Parisian intifada can be a good reminder of why would not wish to create such apartheid ethnic blocks inside the United States. Paris is a wake-up call for America to get serious about illegal immigration, and begin to dismantle the machinery of ethnic separatism-bilingual government documents, etc., ethnic chauvinism in our schools, tribal set-asides, romance, crack-pot history about a mythical Atzlan, etc-and work on improving the melting pot." |
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=2010111/15/2005 9:04:04 PM |
Mindstorm All American 15858 Posts user info edit post |
WORDS
Jeeze. So many words... 11/15/2005 9:07:19 PM |
Woodfoot All American 60354 Posts user info edit post |
SUM IT UP MOTHER FUCKER
PLEASE JUST FUCKING SUM IT UP 11/15/2005 10:42:11 PM |
boonedocks All American 5550 Posts user info edit post |
Executive Summary:
A classics professor is comparing something to ancient Greece!
[Edited on November 15, 2005 at 11:01 PM. Reason : siren] 11/15/2005 11:00:43 PM |
cyrion All American 27139 Posts user info edit post |
T
L
D
R 11/15/2005 11:04:22 PM |
Gamecat All American 17913 Posts user info edit post |
In short, no. Not at all. America does not afford nearly the amount of freedom that Athenians enjoyed (technological advances notwithstanding). 11/15/2005 11:06:50 PM |
EarthDogg All American 3989 Posts user info edit post |
Sad but true, G-Cat.
Have we become so smug as a nation to think we cannot be defeated by any force? Recent natural disasters have showed us how quickly the veneer of civilization can be ripped away.
Hanson makes a good point in creating a culture of ostracism for radical Islam. We should be developing and nurturing that rift between moderate and radical Muslims. Find the sane voices of Islam and promote them to the forefront. (which begs the question "Why aren't they coming forward voluntarily en mass?).
Paris is indeed a wake-up call for the U.S. to get serious about illegal immigration. Our strength as a nation comes more from being a melting pot of cultures, rather than from a divided collection of seperate cultures. 11/15/2005 11:31:53 PM |
Supplanter supple anteater 21831 Posts user info edit post |
I think all those concerns could have been expressed without reference to the Athenians. For many readers instead of being a useful metaphor for understanding, it was something that had to be explained to see any level of connection. And I believe the points that were made were not strengthened by the metaphor.
I think the points about needing clear goals, and needing violent ideologies to be shunned are good, yet obvious, ones. But despite my criticism I do not want to devalue this guy’s insights, because you can’t judge a book by its commentators.
[Edited on November 15, 2005 at 11:49 PM. Reason : .] 11/15/2005 11:47:33 PM |
Excoriator Suspended 10214 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "Recent natural disasters have showed us how quickly the veneer of civilization can be ripped away." |
hmm.. i wonder.
seems that civilization only took a matter of 4-5 days to reassert itself.11/15/2005 11:50:17 PM |
Gamecat All American 17913 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "(which begs the question "Why aren't they coming forward voluntarily en mass?)" |
And unnecessarily so.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1554177.stm http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F273E152-91F8-433C-8DCB-2353FE9D535F.htm http://www.ing.org/latestnews/default.asp?num=24 http://www.islam-online.net/English/News/2001-09/12/article14.shtml http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/11/10/jordan.blasts/index.html http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8740980/ http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/11/06/france.riots.fatwa.reut/index.html11/15/2005 11:53:44 PM |
tracer All American 13876 Posts user info edit post |
america hasnt been a melting pot for a long time. and its by choice. using the common metaphors, america is somewhere between a melting pot and a salad bowl. 11/16/2005 12:05:16 AM |
EarthDogg All American 3989 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "And unnecessarily so." |
True...Muslim Advocacy groups have been very vocal, but the throngs of everyday muslims pouring into the streets in protest have occurred only recently when Al-Qaeda bombed Jordanian hotels.11/16/2005 1:24:09 AM |
DirtyGreek All American 29309 Posts user info edit post |
yeah man we got the kiddie sex and everything
how long 'till i can pick up a little boy to fellate me while I'm at work? 11/16/2005 7:07:48 AM |
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