But notwithstanding the evidence of the terrorists' unlimited objectives, the verisimilitude of logic that appeasement offers the fearful remains comforting -- if falsely so. Appeasement has an awful, seeming logic to it because we all practice appeasement every day -- with our spouses, our children, our bosses, etc. Interlocutors with limited goals are often usefully appeased if the cost of conflict is more than the cost of appeasement ("Yes, dear, I'll be glad to clean up the garage").
And when the cost of non-appeasement (i.e., the decision to fight) is very high, we are strongly motivated to assume our opponent has limited demands -- in order for the cost-benefit calculus to continue to lead us to the comforting appeasement option. I have little doubt but that, since the Spanish election returns, politicians across the globe have become tempted to harvest such votes of fear, because the politicians themselves are suffering under the same false calculus of cost/benefit.
Now we must wait and see which other Western electorates might succumb to the Spanish disease. It would be easy, and comforting, to assume that Americans will be resistant. After all, we are renowned for our unflinching instinct to rally round the flag when American blood has been spilled. But the Spaniard, too, is renowned for his courage -- at least as an individual.
It is only by the vigor and pride of a nation's collective body politic that it may be immune to the disease of appeasement. In the coming months and years, America, Britain, Poland Australia and other countries will all be tested.
Already, millions of Americans have put the war on terrorism out of mind -- content to express support for politicians whose terrorism policy is largely to turn it over to the United Nations and the Interpol. President Bush is mocked by comedians and Washington journalists alike for the assertion that he is a wartime president. Anyone who thinks that is funny doesn't think there is a war. For a threat so minimized, we need not pay the high price of eternal vigilance. There is probably about a four in 10 chance that the American electorate will come down with the Spanish disease this November.
Eventually, of course, as the genocidal nature of the Islamist fury becomes manifest even to the most obtuse, all will rally to the resistance -- as eventually they did in occupied Europe against Hitler. The question that remains is how many more must die before the maximum war-fighting effort is mounted by the united civilized nations.
Tony Blankley
Tony Blankley, a conservative author and commentator who served as press secretary to Newt Gingrich during the 1990s, when Republicans took control of Congress, died Sunday January 8, 2012. He was 63.
Blankley, who had been suffering from stomach cancer, died Saturday night at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, his wife, Lynda Davis, said Sunday.
In his long career as a political operative and pundit, his most visible role was as a spokesman for and adviser to Gingrich from 1990 to 1997. Gingrich became House Speaker when Republicans took control of the U.S. House of Representatives following the 1994 midterm elections.
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