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<br>
<span class=3Dsubtitle1><span style=3D'font-size:15.0pt'>French Lessons</sp=
an></span><br>
November 8th, 2005<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>France invaded Algeria in May 1830, captured Algiers in only three weeks,
and issued the following proclamation:<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The exercise of the <span class=3DSpellE>Mahometan</span> religion shall
remain free. The liberty of the inhabitants of all classes, their religion,
their property, their commerce, their industry, shall be inviolate; their w=
omen
shall be respected: the General-in-chief promises this upon his <span
class=3DSpellE>honour</span>.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Seventeen more years would be required for French victory over Algeria,
which had provoked war by harboring the terrorists of the day, pirates and
slave-traders preying upon European lands and shipping. The &#8220;anti-war
party,&#8221; which &#8220;hoped to shorten the war,&#8221; actually
&#8220;prolonged&#8221; it, according to Geoffrey <span class=3DSpellE>Blai=
ney</span>
in <span class=3DGramE>The</span><em> Causes of War</em>. <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>&#8220;France&#8217;s relative tolerance toward Algerian civilians who a=
ided
[resistance leader] <span class=3DSpellE>Abd-el-Kader</span> or who engaged=
 in
terrorist activities in French-occupied towns enabled the enemy to resist m=
ore
effectively.&#8221; <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Can France really have given the world the wise and witty saying that the
more things change, the more they stay the same? Everywhere France goes,
stirring words and music are in the air and death and destruction on the
ground. If insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, always
expecting a different result, France is certainly insane. We, of course, are
not insane: we merely watch others do the same thing over and over again and
always expect them to do something different.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The third edition of <em>The Causes of War</em> was published in 1988, t=
oo
long ago to comment on the current phase of our war. The analysis focuses,
moreover, on wars among European states in the last three hundred years.
Nevertheless, the principles <span class=3DSpellE>Blainey</span> derives fr=
om his
examination of these wars are so reasonable and so grounded in actual evide=
nce,
unlike the <span class=3DSpellE>cliches</span> of the <span class=3DSpellE>=
clicheing</span>
class, that they provide indispensable lessons for us today. <span
class=3DSpellE>Blainey</span> watches people do the same thing over and over
again and expects them to keep on doing it.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>War is not caused by enmity or conflicting interests, which are quite
compatible with peace. For a war to take place, both sides must expect vict=
ory.
If one side expects to lose, it will capitulate. War is almost always prece=
ded
by &#8220;sheer fantasy&#8221; on one side or the other or both.<o:p></o:p>=
</p>

<p><span class=3DGramE>The &#8220;prelude to a war&#8221; is characterized =
by
&#8220;conflicting estimates of which nation or alliance is most
powerful.&#8221;</span> The uncertainty of the likely outcome allows both s=
ides
to expect victory and enter into war. Only at the end of the war can &#8220=
;the
distribution of military power between warring nations&#8230;be accurately
measured.&#8221; <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>At the beginning of a war both sides believe they will win; the end comes
when the expectations of one side have been proven false. War results from
contradictory expectations of the likely outcome; peace comes from agreemen=
t on
the outcome.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>At the beginning of a war the outcome is not known, and the combatants c=
an
enjoy illusions as to its likely outcome; at the end they cannot. If they e=
nd
the war without a clear victor, they will probably soon fight again: the war
has not yet completed its task of destroying their illusions.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>We get into wars, then, when we think that we will win and our enemies t=
hink
that they will. We are at war today because the terrorists think that they =
will
win. To end the war, we must convince them that they will lose. We will end=
 it,
not by making them hate us less, but by making them fear us more.<o:p></o:p=
></p>

<p>The war did not begin with 9/11 or even with earlier terrorist attacks. =
It <a
href=3D"http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=3D4804">bega=
n</a>
1,383 <a href=3D"http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=3D4=
708">years
ago</a>.&nbsp; It only resumed in recent decades after an intermission of
obvious military superiority of the West over the Islamic world. It resumed
when enough fact and fantasy accumulated in the minds of the terrorists to =
lead
them to expect victory.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Notice that the anti-war movement, that creep of a thousand legs and one
tiny head, implicitly accepts <span class=3DSpellE>Blainey&#8217;s</span>
analysis by its incessant predictions of United States defeat. It tries to =
keep
us out of war by preventing us from thinking that we will win, and it tries=
 to get
us out of war by bringing us into agreement with the enemy on our eventual
defeat. It may say that we provoked war, as if the cause of war were anger
instead of false expectations of victory, but its main weapon is defeatism.=
<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The idea that wars can take place only when both sides expect victory so
conflicts with what passes for wisdom that the evidence <span class=3DSpell=
E>Blainey</span>
supplies is startling. It is also a testament to the human capacity for fol=
ly,
both on the part of the nations entering into wars that in retrospect they =
seem
obviously destined to lose and on the part of the advocates of peace, who r=
ely
on one foolish theory after another, all of them contrary to the repeated
experience of mankind.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Before World War I, Colonel-General von <span class=3DSpellE>Moltke</spa=
n>
predicted victory in France within six weeks. Count von <span class=3DSpell=
E>Lerchenfield</span>
thought a month would be sufficient for German victory. <span class=3DSpell=
E>Bethman</span>
<span class=3DSpellE>Hollweg</span> was less optimistic: he thought four mo=
nths
might be required. When Germany blockaded Great Britain, Admiral Bachman
predicted British capitulation in six weeks.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>On the third day of the war, Viscount <span class=3DSpellE>Esher</span> =
of
Britain&#8217;s Committee of Imperial <span class=3DSpellE>Defence</span> t=
hought
that Russia would advance into Germany within a month. On the tenth day,
General Sir Archibald Murray envisioned British victory in three months with
luck and eight months without it.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Six months before the war, France, which had lost to Germany in 1870,
planned an offensive into German territory at the outbreak of war. <span
class=3DGramE>A month later General <span class=3DSpellE>Soukhomlinov</span>
predicted a Russian offensive into Germany, and &#8220;most of the Russian
ministers agreed&#8221; that victory could be had within months.</span> Eve=
ry
side built a &#8220;complicated trellis of hope&#8212;a <span class=3DSpell=
E>criss</span>-cross
of military and financial fact and fantasy.&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Nor was such promiscuous optimism unusual. &#8220;An analysis of the hop=
es
and fears held on the eve of earlier wars reveals a similar optimism.&#8221;
British Major John Pitcairn said of the American colonists: &#8220;The delu=
ded
people are made to believe that they are invincible.&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p><span class=3DSpellE>Blainey&#8217;s</span> calm, understated style woul=
d make
for hilarious reading if the product of the misguided leaders of at least o=
ne
side of every war were not disaster:<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>One [colonial] journal even argued that the American armies on their own
soil could defeat all the armies of Europe. Major Pitcairn disagreed; he
thought the cheap rum which his battalion was drinking was a greater danger
than American firearms. &#8220;I am satisfied,&#8221; he wrote in March 177=
5,
&#8220;that one active campaign, a smart action, and burning two or three of
their towns, will set everything to rights.&#8221; Three months later his
letter was shown to King George III whose endorsement was emphatic. By then=
 the
major was dead, one of the tens of thousands of casualties of what proved t=
o be
another seven years&#8217; <span class=3DSpellE>war.French</span> expectati=
on of
victory in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 was so great that its officers w=
ere
issued maps of Germany, but not of France: &#8220;Alas, maps of the roads
leading to Paris would have been more useful, so fast was the enemy&#8217;s
advance.&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>&#8220;So irrational was&#8221; the &#8220;confidence&#8221; of India in=
 its
war with China in 1962 that its commanders <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>decided on the eve of war to evict the Chinese troops from a stretch of
border where the Indians were outnumbered by more than five to one, where t=
he
Indian guns were inferior, where the Indian supply route was a tortuous pack
trail, and where the height of the mountains made breathing difficult and t=
he
cold intense for the Indian reinforcements who marched in cotton uniforms. =
<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The lesson of <span class=3DSpellE>Blainey&#8217;s</span> book for us is=
 that
we should grind our boot into the neck of our prostrate enemy until every l=
ast
delusion flees his demented mind, whether that takes three centuries or thr=
ee
millennia. We are going to be hated; let us also be feared.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Not even the fool&#8217;s errands of Napoleon and Hitler in Russia could
match the futility of Israelis walking into negotiations with Palestinians =
or
of Europeans and Americans pressuring them. <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>One would like to believe that generous terms of peace yielded a dividen=
d of
international goodwill&#8230;.Nevertheless the weight of evidence suggests =
that
a severe treaty of peace was more likely to prolong the peace; and there is=
 a
powerful reason why that should appear to be so. A harsh treaty was mostly =
the
outcome of a war which ended in a decisive victory. And&#8230;a decisive vi=
ctory
tends to promote a more enduring peace.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p><span class=3DSpellE>Blainey</span> does not make the false assumption t=
hat
peace is the normal state of mankind and war an aberration. Thus, peace has=
 its
causes as much as war does: it comes from victory in war, the more decisive=
, <span
class=3DGramE>the</span> better. Here <span class=3DSpellE>Blainey</span> d=
evelops
the fragmentary thought of Carl von <span class=3DSpellE>Clausewitz</span>,=
 who
believed, as <span class=3DSpellE>Blainey</span> puts it, &#8220;that a cle=
ar
ladder of international power tended to promote peace.&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>No cocksure redcoat or impetuous Nazi tank commander felt as stupidly sa=
fe
as Democrats who think that this country can afford a major political
party&#8217;s hostility to its defenders.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The force of <span class=3DSpellE>Blainey&#8217;s</span> analysis is
multiplied by the nature of Islam, which holds that everything that happens=
 is
caused directly by Allah. There are no secondary causes in Islam. It stands
aside from the nearly three millennia of Western effort to reconcile divine
omnipotence and divine goodness, <span class=3DGramE>a reconciliation</span>
perhaps stated best and most succinctly by John Milton, whose Satan says:<o=
:p></o:p></p>

<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;=
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
...If then his <span class=3DSpellE>ProvidenceOut</span> of our evil seek to
bring forth <span class=3DSpellE>good,Our</span> labor must be to pervert t=
hat <span
class=3DSpellE>end,And</span> out of good still to find means of evil;<o:p>=
</o:p></p>

<p>Without some such reconciliation, in the Christian case attributing the =
evil
that takes place in the world to the corruption of human nature by the sin
freely committed in Eden, one must either deny the omnipotence of God, as s=
ome
liberal theologians in the West do, or deny the goodness of God, or at least
human ability to understand the goodness of God, the Islamic solution, and
accept thereby great evil.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The superficially reasonable idea that everything is directly determined=
 by
God&#8217;s arbitrary will has had its adherents in the West. There were
Calvinist manuals advising parents how to discover whether their children w=
ere
predestined for Hell. Fortunately, few Christians would subscribe to such a
cruel doctrine today.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Not so with our <span class=3DSpellE>Islamicists</span>. I have several =
times
seen television interviews with them proceed along the line taken by a Lond=
on
mullah who railed against Israeli and American perfidy and then when asked
about 9/11, smiled with self-satisfaction, as if he were about to make an
irrefutable argument, and said that if God did not want those attacks to oc=
cur,
they would not have occurred. I wanted to scream, &#8220;So if God did not =
want
Israelis and Americans to oppress Muslims, I guess they wouldn&#8217;t be a=
ble
to do it, would they?&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>One reason that its armies were able to conquer vast territories within a
few years of the founding of Islam is that early victories seemed to confirm
claims that Allah fought on the side of Islam. Victory encouraged Muslim
soldiers and discouraged their enemies, and victory fed upon victory. As the
London mullah might have said, &#8220;If God did not want Islam to prevail,=
 why
do its armies keep winning?&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The problem for the London mullah and for Islam in general is that selec=
tive
application of the idea that everything that happens <span class=3DSpellE>h=
appens</span>
because it is willed by God is untenable in the long run. If God wills mili=
tary
victory, then God must also will military <span class=3DGramE>defeat.</span=
> If
God wills the ascent of Islam, God must also will its descent. Muslims are
bound to wonder, &#8220;If God wants Islam to prevail, why do its armies ke=
ep
losing?&#8221;<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>And descend Islam did. Its lands became mere colonies of Europe, its arm=
ies
weak and demoralized, its economy backward, <span class=3DGramE>its</span> =
people
poor and uneducated.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Hence we have the rise of Islamofascism. Most Muslims reacted to the des=
cent
by withdrawing in one way or another, to one degree or another, from Islam;=
 the
<span class=3DSpellE>Islamofascists</span> blamed this withdrawal for the
descent. <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Nationalism is not Islamic, but there is nationalism in the Islamic worl=
d.
Socialism is not Islamic, but there is socialism in the Islamic world. The
legacy of Islam&#8217;s colonial period is, for good or ill, much that is n=
ot
Islamic, along with the <span class=3DSpellE>Islamofascist</span> reaction =
to
this apostasy.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Unlike Christianity, which has often gained strength from defeat, the
crucifixion of its founder and the martyrdom of its early leaders being
essential to its nature, Islam <span class=3DGramE>is</span> peculiarly
vulnerable to defeat since it must consider defeat to be evidence of its own
falsity.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Most Muslims are reacting the only way they could reasonably react to
centuries of evidence that God does not will their victory or reward their
worship; the <span class=3DSpellE>Islamofascists</span> want to kill them f=
or it.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>Contrary to what every dog and its fleas tell us, Islam is a religion in
decline. Islamofascism is an attempt to reverse the decline. Both the
withdrawal of a majority of Muslims from Islam into moderate Islam, which is
watered-down Islam, and the radical <span class=3DSpellE>Islamofascist</spa=
n>
reaction to that withdrawal are understandable, even predictable, responses=
 to
the decline. <o:p></o:p></p>

<p>We cannot arrest the decline, nor should we try, though it brings with i=
t a
dire threat to us and our way of life. Multiculturalism, political correctn=
ess,
and appeasement will neither resolve the crisis of Islam nor ensure the vic=
tory
of moderation. We should not promote moderate Islam or Islam of any kind, b=
ut
share American ideals, such as freedom, democracy, and peace through superi=
or
firepower.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The Islamic world is thus rent by ideological replacements for Islam, su=
ch
as freedom and democracy or Marxism, and reactionary Islamofascism. We can =
win
the war, it would seem: Islam is divided, and most Muslims are our potential
allies. Bin Laden and <span class=3DSpellE>Zarqawi</span> are the deluded l=
eaders
of a losing cause.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p><span class=3DGramE>Maybe, maybe not.</span> Do not forget the millipede.
Someone has illusions for war to destroy. Who that might be is not obvious.=
<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>I first began to doubt that we would win when <em>Newsweek</em> published
its false and defamatory story of Koran abuse, which, according to the
Secretary of State, did grave damage to the national security of the United
States. Since then Michael <span class=3DSpellE>Isikoff</span>, the <span
class=3DGramE>author,</span> has appeared on numerous cable news shows as if
nothing had happened, and when Patrick Fitzgerald held a press conference to
announce his indictment of Scooter Libby for not telling the truth, <span
class=3DSpellE>Isikoff</span> was on hand to ask questions. No one expressed
surprise that a man whose falsehoods precipitated the <a
href=3D"http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/28/politics/28text-fitz.html?pagewan=
ted=3Dall">deaths
of dozens of people</a> should take part. This is no way to fight a war.<o:=
p></o:p></p>

<p>After 9/11, Democrats made a vow never to repeat the mistake they had ma=
de
in the Cold War of appearing to side with the enemy. Seconds later they bro=
ke
it. As things stand now, a vast swathe of American society has a vested
interest in United States defeat. If we win, Bush wins&#8212;and Democrats
lose. The mainstream media has been maximizing bad news from Iraq and
minimizing good news. United States victory would harm its credibility and
terrorist <span class=3DGramE>victory enhance</span> it. The ignorant acade=
mic
world, the corrupt educational establishment, sick Hollywood liberals,
freedom-hating civil libertarians, inhuman human rights advocates, corporate
sellouts, <span class=3DGramE>State</span> Department bureaucrats, CIA shad=
ows:
all will lose power from United States victory and gain power from United
States defeat.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p>The millipede has no plan for victory and a thousand plans for defeat. We
cannot defeat Bin Laden without first defeating the millipede. Tiny as its =
head
is, it knows that victory in the war will come only with its demise; knows =
that
the war is defensive and thus impossible for us to end without an unnecessa=
ry
and horrific surrender; knows that we are as a result forced to make a choi=
ce
between stepping on the bug and accepting death and subjection; knows that =
we
can accept its continued existence only temporarily, until the next attack
reminds us of the mortal threat it poses to us; knows that it is doomed bec=
ause
if it loses the battle with us, it dies, and if it wins the battle with us,=
 it
dies with us.<o:p></o:p></p>

<p><span class=3DSpellE>Blainey</span> is wrong about one thing: there are
Americans, many Americans, who will fight the bug and its masters with or
without hope of victory, because life is a battlefield and we are alive.<o:=
p></o:p></p>

<p><em><b>Jonathan David Carson, Ph.D., may be reached at </b></em><a
href=3D"mailto:jdc@makehasteslowly.com"><em><b>jdc@makehasteslowly.com</b><=
/em></a><em><b>
<span class=3DGramE>For</span> more information, see his </b></em><a
href=3D"http://www.makehasteslowly.com"><em><b>website</b></em></a><em><b>.=
</b></em>&nbsp;
<o:p></o:p></p>

<p class=3DMsoNormal><br>
<br>
<span class=3Ditalic1><span style=3D'font-size:10.0pt'>Jonathan David Carso=
n</span></span></p>

</div>

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