"As two ... sitting Senators who served in World War II, we see
the next Hitler in Saddam Hussein." So write Ted Stevens and John Warner in
a Washington Times column titled, "Hitler's Disciple in Baghdad." And they
recall for us the history of the run-up to that war:
"Hitler ignored the surrender agreements after World War I. He
flaunted (sic) the Versailles Peace Treaty and the League of Nations, which
was formed to maintain world peace."
A modest dissent: Germany did not surrender in World War I. She
agreed to an armistice on Wilson's 14 Points, laid down her arms and sent
her High Seas Fleet to the British base at Scapa Flow.
And Versailles was no "agreement." It was a Carthaginian peace,
a dictat, imposed on a disarmed Germany at the point of a million bayonets,
during a starvation blockade. Germany was told if she did not sign the
treaty that stripped her of a tenth of her land and 8 million people,
Marshal Foch would march on Berlin.
Any law student will tell you a contract signed at the point of
a gun is invalid. Indeed, Hitler first won power democratically on a pledge
to overthrow the Versailles regime, which as America and Britain had come to
recognize by 1933, had been as unwise as it was unjust.
Hitler did walk out of the League of Nations. But leaving was no
more a crime than America's refusal to join in 1919. Not a few Senate
Republicans in 1919 believed the League had been set up to preserve not
world peace, but a British Empire that had gobbled up the lion's share of
Germany's colonies after a war America had fought to "make the world safe
for democracy."
Hitler's decision to rearm Germany was a breach of Versailles,
but his decision to build a navy one-third the size of the Royal Navy was
happily assented to by the British Government in negotiations.
"(Hitler) occupied the Rhineland and invaded Austria. No one
tried to stop him," write Stevens and Warner.
True, Hitler's remilitarization of the Rhineland was a breach of
Versailles and the Locarno Pact he had agreed to honor. But if France did
not think German soldiers on German soil west of the Rhine was worth a war,
why should America, which had rejected Versailles and was never a party to
Locarno?
As for the anschluss with Austria, no one tried to stop Hitler
in 1938. But in 1934, when Nazi thugs murdered Chancellor Dollfuss and
attempted a coup, someone did. Mussolini sent troops to the Brenner Pass,
flew to Vienna in a show of solidarity with Austria, and invited the British
and French to Stresa, Italy, to join in a united front to force Hitler to
abide by Versailles and Locarno.
Mussolini, however, thought he had gotten Allied approval to
avenge Italy's 1896 defeat at Adowa in Abyssinia. But when he invaded Haile
Selassie's slave empire, London and Paris put League of Nations morality and
moral clarity ahead of vital interests and led the League in imposing
sanctions on their Stresa partner.
Thus, when Hitler sent troops into the Rhineland in 1936, and
Paris and London sought Italy's support, Mussolini, sanctioned and insulted
by his old friends, had found a new one -- in Berlin.
"In September of 1939, the world watched him invade Poland," the
senators write. Not so. Stalin joined Hitler in the invasion. Britain and
France declared war. Why? Because they had rashly and insanely given war
guarantees to the Warsaw regime of the dissolute Col. Beck, who had
collaborated with Hitler in the rape of Czechoslovakia.
The forgotten truths of 1919-1939? Munich was neither the only,
nor even the worst, blunder. Versailles had made another war inevitable.
Britain should have put moral clarity on the shelf and looked out for her
vital interests first. Her war guarantee to Poland did not save Poland, it
only turned Hitler to the west. Thus, Western Europe was overrun, 50 million
people perished, and Stalin emerged triumphant with 10 more Christian
countries enslaved.
"We see the next Hitler in Saddam," write Stevens and Warner.
Well, let's see. Hitler conquered all of Europe from the Arctic to the
Aegean and from the Atlantic to Stalingrad. And Saddam?
He invaded Kuwait, a sandbox half the size of Denmark, and got
tossed out after a 100-hour ground war. His country has been overflown
40,000 times by U.S. and British planes, and he has not been able to shoot a
single plane down. He has no navy, a fourth-rate air force, and a shrunken,
demoralized army. His economy is not 1 percent of ours.
No, Senators, this is not the Fuehrer and the Republican Guard
is not the Wehrmacht. As Marx said, history repeats itself -- first as
tragedy, then as farce.