By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, February 19, 2015
World War II was the most destructive war in history.
What caused it?
The panic from the ongoing and worldwide Depression in
the 1930s had empowered extremist movements the world over. Like-minded,
violent dictators of otherwise quite different Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy,
Imperial Japan, and the Communist Soviet Union all wanted to attack their
neighbors.
Yet World War II could have been prevented had Western
Europe united to deter Germany. Instead, France, Britain, and the smaller
European democracies appeased Hitler.
The United States turned isolationist. The Soviet Union
collaborated with the Third Reich. And Italy and Japan eventually joined it.
The 1930s saw rampant anti-Semitism. Jews were blamed in
fascist countries for the economic downturn. They were scapegoated in
democracies for stirring up the fascists. The only safe havens for Jews from
Europe were Jewish-settled Palestine and the United States.
Does all this sound depressingly familiar?
The aftershocks of the global financial meltdown of 2008
still paralyze the European Union while prompting all sorts of popular
extremist movements and opportunistic terrorists.
After the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, America has turned
inward. The Depression and the lingering unhappiness over World War I did the
same to Americans in the 1930s.
Premodern monsters are on the move. The Islamic State is
carving up Syria and Iraq to fashion a fascist caliphate.
Vladimir Putin gobbles up his neighbors in Ossetia,
Crimea, and eastern Ukraine, in crude imitation of the way Germany once
swallowed Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Poland.
Theocratic Iran is turning Yemen, Iraq, and Lebanon into
a new Iranian version of Japan’s old Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
The Western response to all this? Likewise, similar to
the 1930s.
The NATO allies are terrified that Putin will next attack
the NATO-member Baltic states — and that their own paralysis will mean the
embarrassing end of the once-noble alliance.
The United States has now fled from four Middle Eastern
countries. It forfeited its post-surge victory in Iraq. It was chased out of
Libya after the killings of Americans in Benghazi. American red lines quickly
turned pink in Syria. U.S. Marines just laid down their weapons and flew out of
the closed American embassy in Yemen.
America has convinced its European partners to drop tough
sanctions against Iran. In the manner of the Allies in 1938 at Munich, they
prefer instead to charm Iran, in hopes it will stop making a nuclear bomb.
The Islamic State has used almost a year of unchallenged
aggression to remake the map of the Middle East. President Obama had variously
dismissed it as a jayvee team or merely akin to the problems that big-city
mayors face.
Europeans pay out millions to ransom their citizens from
radical Islamic hostage-beheaders. Americans handed over terrorist kingpins to
get back a likely Army deserter.
Then we come to the return of the Jewish question.
Seventy years after the end of the Holocaust, Jews are once again leaving
France. They have learned that weak governments either will not or cannot
protect them from Islamic terrorists.
In France, radical Islamists recently targeted a kosher
market. In Denmark, they went after a synagogue. In South Africa, students
demanded the expulsion of Jewish students from a university. A Jewish
prosecutor who was investigating the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center
in Argentina was found mysteriously murdered.
Meanwhile, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is
being blamed for stoking Middle Eastern tensions. Who cares that he resides
over the region’s only true democracy, one that is stable and protects human
rights? Obama-administration aides have called him a coward and worse.
President Obama has dismissed the radical Islamists’ targeting of Jews in
France merely as “randomly shoot[ing] a bunch of folks in a deli.”
Putin, the Islamic State, and Iran at first glance have
as little in common as did Germany, Italy, and Japan. But like the old Axis,
they are all authoritarians that share a desire to attack their neighbors. And
they all hate the West.
The grandchildren of those who appeased the dictators of
the 1930s once again prefer in the short term to turn a blind eye to the
current fascists. And the grandchildren of the survivors of the Holocaust once
again get blamed.
The 1930s should have taught us that aggressive autocrats
do not have to like each other to share hatred of the West.
The 1930s should have demonstrated to us that old-time
American isolationism and the same old European appeasement will not prevent
but only guarantee a war.
And the 1930s should have reminded us that Jews are
usually among the first — but not the last — to be targeted by terrorists,
thugs, and autocrats.
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