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TERRORISM: Urgency on the Battlefield
By Clark S. Judge
Islamism, fascism, and communism are historical
bedfellows—co-combatants against democracy in a Hundred Years War
that continues today. The place of Iraq and the war on terror in a century
of conflict. By Clark S. Judge.
Last summer, the president and his senior advisers
tried to define the adversary in the wider war on terror when they spoke,
for a brief time, of “Islamo-fascists.”
After the predictable catcalls from the predictable circles, the
administration backed off. But it may have been onto something. For if
there is not necessarily a tight ideological fit between Al-Qaeda and like
groups and fascism, there is, nevertheless, a tight historical
fit—and between Islamicism and communism, too. All the ideologies
arise from a common historical upheaval. All have common pathologies. All
three represent what might be called a dissent from the democratic
consensus that individual happiness is the measure of social good, that
popular sovereignty is the foundation of political legitimacy, and that
protection of life, liberty, and property is the end of just government.
Like Shakespeare’s witches in Macbeth, they are weird
sisters—the weird sisters of modern history. From where do they come?
Today we see global strife in the last hundred years
as four episodes: World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and the current
conflict. Each involved distinct adversaries with distinct ideologies in
distinct periods. But viewed through a broader lens, these wars all look to
be part of a single global upheaval, a single cycle of conflict, what might
be called a new Hundred Years War, which tells us a lot about the war in
Iraq and the broader war on terror.
Global politics in the late nineteenth century was a
story of six empires: German, Austrian, Russian, Ottoman, French, and
British. America was rising across the Atlantic but largely indifferent to
balances of power and global contests. And while this world spawned the
Crimean War and the Franco-Prussian War, it was by and large peaceful and
the players were stable. No player tried to deliver a death blow to
another.
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Many of the regimes and groups we now see as adversaries in the Middle East were
once Nazi and Soviet allies. Their hatred of the United States is far from new.
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All that ended with World War I. The ambition of a
foolish kaiser, and the Prussian military elite with which he was aligned,
to achieve lasting dominance over the decades-old “struggle for the
mastery of Europe” (in historian A. J. P. Taylor’s words) led
to the collapse of four of the six nineteenth-century players. By the
mid-1920s, the empires of Germany, Austro-Hungary, Russia, and the Ottomans
were no more. In each, the old monarchy had been abolished. Germany had
lost the provinces (seized from France after the Franco-Prussian War) of
Alsace and Lorraine, the industrial Ruhr Valley, and its overseas
possessions, while Austro-Hungary had lost everything outside of Austria.
The Russian Empire had collapsed into revolution and civil war. The Ottoman
Empire was permanently off the global scene; in its place were seven
countries and a League of Nations mandate.
Global and European history since then has been
largely the record of democratic countries coping with pathological
successors to these collapsed regimes, and with the countries of the
“Great Game” region between the Russian and Ottoman
territories. For from the upheavals that followed imperial implosion, in
each case emerged autocratic or totalitarian and expansionist governments:
nazism in Germany and Austria, communism in Russia and, after a period of
monarchies, in the Middle East Nasser’s and now Mubarak’s
Egypt, the House of Saud’s Saudi Arabia, Baathist Syria and Iraq, and
Khomeini’s Iran. In the old Ottoman domain, only the core country,
Turkey, and the post-World War II state of Israel established anything
approaching popular sovereignty and, with it, a claim among their own
people to governmental legitimacy. To this day, only Israel’s claim
is entirely secure.
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Germany, Russia, and the various despotisms of the
Middle East produced thuglike ruling parties, distinct in ideologies but
common in attitudes, methods, and goals.
In each regime terror quickly became a prime
instrument of power, as, sooner or later, did anti-Semitism. All the
imperial remnants used hatred of minorities, particularly Jews, to prop
themselves up with the majority groups on which they had such an uncertain
hold.
In each region, cults of death became a grim norm. The
Soviets and the Nazis had their concentration camps, purges, and
holocausts, killing orgies mirrored in different forms in the Middle East
from the 1970s to today. There also emerged a celebration of death similar
to the “you love life, we love death” rantings of current
terrorists. A particularly famous moment came in 1936, at a meeting at the
University of Salamanca in Spain. In response to a speech by an adversary,
Francoist General José Millán-Astray, a Nazi ally, shouted
“Viva la Muerte!”—Long Live Death. The poet Miguel de
Unamuno, the university’s rector, was presiding. His rebuke:
“This is the temple of intelligence and I am its high priest. You are
profaning its sacred domain. You will succeed, because you have enough
brute force. But you will not convince. To convince it is necessary to
persuade, and to persuade you will need something you lack: reason and
right in the struggle.”
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Like racism and terror, expansionism with global
ambitions became the challenge in each region to the United States and its
allies. The Germanic successor regimes brought us World War II. The Russian
successor brought us the Cold War. And now the successors to the Ottomans
and the rulers of the Great Game region have given us the war on terror.
Iran’s pretensions are overt, as were Saddam
Hussein’s—ambitions that gave them a unifying cry to marshal
their peoples. In most countries of the region, promises to destroy Israel
likewise offer ballast to unstable governments. And although not a state,
Al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups are part of this community of conquest.
In part they serve as surrogates for states afraid to take on the United
States too directly. But they are also state pretenders, like the Nazis or
Soviets before their respective seizures of power, making the prospect of
expansion and with it expiation of past humiliations part of their appeal.
But the links among the Nazis and Fascists, the
Soviets, the Islamicists, and others in the Middle East go beyond shared
pathologies. Hitler’s admiration for Stalin and the alliance of the
two before Hitler decided to invade Russia are part of high school history
texts. Less well-understood are the links of today’s Middle Eastern
regimes and movements to the Nazis and Soviets.
For example, as detailed on the widely referenced
website Palestine Facts, Haj Amin al-Husseini, the infamous mufti of Jerusalem during
much of the British mandate, allied himself with Nazi Germany in the 1930s
and received financing from the SS from 1936 through 1939. In 1937, after
exposure of his role in terrorism within Palestine, he fled to Syria and
from there to Iraq. In 1941, he helped organize a pro-Nazi revolt in
Baghdad, after which he fled to Berlin. There he became an advocate of and
cheerleader for the Holocaust. After the war, he sought exile in Egypt,
where he was received and celebrated as a hero of Arab nationalism. Fear of
Arab world backlash kept the Allies from prosecuting him for war crimes. On
his death, his leadership in the radical nationalist Palestinian Arab
community passed to his nephew and protégé, Yasser Arafat.
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Elsewhere in the formerly Ottoman world, Hitler was
also having an influence. In his recently published volume, The Foreigner’s Gift,
Lebanese-born scholar Fouad Ajami writes of the 1930s and 1940s:
“There was a Berlin-Baghdad corridor. It brought to Iraq the ways and
culture and hysteria of the Third Reich and inspired, if that is the word,
a generation or two of political men to ideologies of absolutism and
violence.” As a young man, the founding ideologist of the Syrian and
Iraqi Baath parties, Michel Aflaq, was caught up in this stream of
intellectual poison. The results can be seen to this day. The Baath Party,
according to columnist David Brooks, writing in the Weekly Standard in November 2002,
while inspired at its origins by Leninism, “is not quite like the
communist parties.” Instead, he says, “It bears stronger
resemblance to the Nazi Party,” based as it is on a Nazi-like
doctrine of racial superiority.
Meanwhile in Egypt, a schoolteacher named Hassan
al-Banna was founding the Society of Muslim Brothers, the radical group
behind so much Islamicist terrorism in recent years. Banna created a
paramilitary arm to the brotherhood, modeling it after the Nazi SS. As
University of London professor Efraim Karsh writes in his 2006 volume Islamic Imperialism, “Banna
was an unabashed admirer of Hitler and Mussolini, who ‘guided their
peoples to unity, order, regeneration, power, and glory.’”
Following the examples of the Nazis and fascists, he was perhaps the Middle
East’s first modern synthesizer of the tactic of terror, the cult of
death, and the lust for conquest. Banna wished, Karsh notes, to inculcate
Egypt’s young people “with the virtues of death and martyrdom
in the quest of Allah’s universal empire. ‘Death is an
art,’ he famously wrote, ‘and the most exquisite of arts when
practiced by the skillful artist.’”
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The history of the past 100 years is largely the record of democratic countries
coping with pathological successors to the regimes that collapsed in the early twentieth century.
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After Hitler’s defeat, many of these erstwhile
Hitler allies and enthusiasts found a new supporter and model in the Soviet
Union. Despite Russia’s current dislike of Islamic terrorism,
particularly in Chechnya, the old Soviet state was a prime financial backer
and trainer of terrorists in the Middle East. By then in opposition to the
United States as well as Britain and Israel, these groups passed the Cold
War decades in alliance with the Soviets. Many of their leaders spent time
in Moscow, and all appear to have stayed in close touch with Soviet
operatives.
Thus, many of the regimes and groups we now see as
adversaries in the Middle East were once Nazi and Soviet allies. Their
hatred of the United States is not a new thing. Earlier generations of
leaders were equally intent on our humiliation and defeat.
So what does this history tell us about going forward
in Iraq?
First might be a lesson of skepticism about resolution
of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute as a key to stability in the region.
Israel is the product of populations fleeing early twentieth-century
Russian oppression and later German oppression, with no place willing to
receive them after the mid-1920s. They moved into a post-Ottoman political
vacuum under supervision of British caretakers who were incapable of
reconciling the rising Jewish nationalism of the refugee newcomers with the
rising Arab nationalism of many indigenous locals. Yet if this now
eight-decade-old conflict were to go away tomorrow, the region’s
regimes of inadequate legitimacy would have to find a substitute.
Opposition to Israel is useful, even necessary, for many of them—and
will be so long as they lack a stable footing in popular sovereignty.
Second, the conflict in Iraq is a life-and-death
challenge to other regimes in the region, particularly Iran and Syria. Our
success would be their catastrophic failure. They have responded
accordingly. Our strategic planning should recognize their roles and give
first priority to answering the question: How do we take them out of the
Iraqi game? Opening talks with them, as many have suggested, cannot in
itself be enough. An American labor leader once said that in high-stakes
negotiations, to make the other side see the light, it is sometimes
necessary to make them feel the heat. What is the heat here? What will burn
through generations of political pathologies? Would it be encouraging
opposition groups within Iran? Or military incursions into Syria? Or
working with the Saudis to drive down oil prices, as was done with the
Soviets, if, indeed, the Saudis want us to prevail in Iraq?
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“Death is an art,” wrote Hassan al-Banna, founder of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood,
“and the most exquisite of arts when practiced by the skillful artist.”
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Third, we should fix in our minds that the current
conflict is the latest and, if successfully resolved, the final stage in a
Hundred Years War, which, while often global, has focused on the fallen
empires of World War I. From the perspective of a century, the present
episode will be over soon if it ends a decade hence. But in the other
phases of this extended conflagration, victory came when our leaders
proceeded with a sense of urgency. That sense of urgency is needed now. On
the battlefield, Lincoln should be our example. When a general didn’t
deliver, he replaced him. We need results. We may not get a perfect
resolution to the war, but we must get an acceptable one. After a century
of struggle, the stakes are too high to give up trying.
Finally, while recognizing that we are in the last
stage of a hundred-year conflict, we should not beguile ourselves into
believing this is the war to end all major wars. Maybe it is, but maybe it
is not; there is North Korea, of course. But even more serious could be a
rising China. The China of today bears an unsettling resemblance to the
rising Germany of the late nineteenth century. In both, a limited opening
of the economic and political systems produced remarkable economic growth.
In both, the enormous growth enabled military buildups unimaginable in
prior decades. In both, the opening of the policy-making process that
developed in domestic affairs failed to develop in the process for making
foreign policy. So each military establishment retained or retains largely
unfettered sway. In Germany, the consequence was an assertiveness that blew
apart the nineteenth-century international norms and produced the First
World War. In China, who knows?
All of which underlines that a sense of urgency in
Iraq and throughout the Middle East should be the order of the day.
Challenges are following close behind Iraq and Iran. Among the many things
that have broken our way during this Hundred Years War is that we could
take on challenges one at a time. We should resolve to pass that gift to
the next generation.
A version of this article appeared in National Review Online on
December 6, 2006. © 2006 by National
Review Online. Reprinted by permission.
Available from the Hoover Press
is Israel’s
Unilateralism: Beyond Gaza, by Robert Zelnick. To order, call 800.935.2882
or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Clark S. Judge is the managing director of the White House Writer’s Group.
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