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Monday, September 03, 2007
George Will :: Townhall.com Columnist
When War Was The Answer
by George Will
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OMAHA BEACH, Normandy -- On a bluff above the sand and a half a mile from the ocean's edge at low tide, which was the condition when the first allied soldiers left their landing craft, a round circle of concrete five feet in diameter provides a collar for a hole in the ground. On the morning of June 6, 1944, the hole was Widerstandsnest (nest of resistance) 62, a German machine gun emplacement.

Hein Severloh had been in it since shortly after midnight, by which time U.S. aircraft were droning overhead, having dropped young American paratroopers Severloh's age behind the beaches in order to disrupt German attempts to rush in reinforcements. Severloh had been billeted near Bayeux, home of the 11th-century tapestry depicting a cross-channel invasion that went the other way, taking William, Duke of Normandy, to become William the Conqueror, England's sovereign.

Severloh believed he killed hundreds of GIs, so long and slow was their walk to the safety, such as it was, of the five-foot embankment where the beach meets the bluff. Severloh returned here in sorrow and was consoled by survivors of the forces that waded ashore.

Today, in an America understandably weary of a war of choice that has been defined by execrable choices, a frequently seen bumper sticker proclaims: "War is not the answer." But here, especially, it is well to remember that whether war is the answer depends on the question.

War was the answer to what ailed Europe in 1944. "In 1942," writes Timothy Garton Ash of Oxford and Stanford's Hoover Institution, "there were only four perilously free countries in Europe: Britain, Switzerland, Sweden and Ireland." Twenty years -- a historical blink -- later, almost all of Western Europe was free. Twenty years after that, Spain, Portugal and Greece had joined the liberal democracies. Today, for the first time in 2,500 years, most Europeans live under such governments.

Ash argues that Europe cannot define itself negatively -- as not America or not Islam. "Europe's only defining 'other' is its own previous self" -- its self-destructive, sometimes barbaric past. "This is," Ash says, "still a very recent past."

In 1951, just seven years after Severloh and some other Germans surrendered on June 7 to Americans at the village of St. Laurent, Europe began building the institutions that, it hoped, would keep such young men out of machine gun emplacements. It created the European Coal and Steel Community, precursor of the Common Market (1958), which led to the single market in 1993 and the common currency in 2002. Continued...

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About The Author
George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide.
 
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Out of Iraq, but ‘in the neighborhood’?

Most experts, the military and CIA all agree our military presents in Middle East are increasing terrorism. So why is the plan to have our military in the Middle East long term?

MSNBC- Senate GOP leader Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky signaled Tuesday that he is looking for “a bipartisan agreement that we need a long-term deployment somewhere in the Middle East in the future” — but he pointedly did not say that accord had to entail maintaining the U.S. deployment in Iraq itself.

He said he hoped the politically charged debate in Congress over Iraq would not lead to an outcome in which “we just bring all the troops back home and thereby expose us once again to the kind of attacks we’ve had here” in the United States or attacks such as the one on the Navy ship USS Cole in 2000.

McConnell said if he and Democrats were able to reach an accord, the American troops would be “in that area of the world… It would be up to the generals to recommend where the troops ought to be. I think we need to be in the neighborhood of where the biggest problem is.”

READ MORE

http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/out-of-iraq-but-%e2%80%98in-the-neighborhood


Neither Am.s nor Reps.
made the Middle East what it is today.

The current structure of countries is the direct result of French and British agreements after WW I. See Lawrence of Arabia, if you can only learn history from movies.

Saddam overthrew the constitutional monarchy in Iraq in 1980. Because Iran invaded our embassy and held its personnel hostage for nearly a year in 1979, under Jimmy Carter's last days as pres., when Iraq and Iran fought each other in the '80s, we "tilted" in favor of Iraq, as the lesser of evils. We were never allied to Saddam nor had any treaty or pact with him.

In Afghanistan in the '80s, we allied with the Afghanis who fought the USSR's communist invasion, again starting in 1979, under the very ineffective Mr. Carter who went on national tv to admit he had no idea anything was going to happen.

One of our freedom-fighting cohorts in Afghan. was a Saudi-Arab. multi-millionaire named Osama Ben Laden. When the USSR disintegrated in 1989 and the war in Afghan. was over, Ben Laden with a veteran of the Isr.-Palestinian conflict formed al Quaida to overthrow the West, annihilate Israel, and establish a worldwide caliphate that would put all women in burqas, end West. techno. and med., and dedicate everyone to radical Islam of the Wahabbi sect.

When Iraq invaded Kuw. in 1991, under the auspices of the US, Am.s and an internat. coalition defended Kuwait. For the next 12 years, Saddam defied 17 UN res.'s, refused access to the UN WMD inspectors, and even sent his own troops into battle in 2003 wearing hazmat suits, just as the entire globe thought he had WMDs he could easily use.

Evidently the "surge" is going to work in Iraq, & so these posts will become unnecessary by next year.
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