By Douglas V. Mastriano
Monday, November 12, 2018
Displaying a dazzling lack of connection with reality and
utter contempt for the United States, last week French President Emmanuel
Macron called for creating an independent European army.
“We have to protect ourselves with respect to China,
Russia, and even the United States of America,” he said. Such a thought is not
new in France. However, the idea that Europe needs an army to defend itself
against the United States demonstrates a hitherto unknown level of hostility by
an “allied” leader.
The timing of Macron’s remarks is also baffling. He said
this just days before the centennial commemoration of the end of the First
World War. One hundred years ago, the United States of America deployed 2.1
million men to Europe to expel the German Imperial Army from France, Belgium,
and Luxembourg. The war was nearly lost to the Germans in 1917 after the French
army mutinied and Czarist Russia quit the war as a result of the Bolshevik
(Communist) Revolution.
Thousands of
Americans Died to Save France
After the bloody losses of Verdun and the blunders at the
Somme in 1916, there was no way the Allies could win the war without the might
and power of the United States. One of America’s largest and bloodiest
campaigns in its history was the Meuse Argonne Offensive, which began on
September 26, 1918 and lasted until the Germans signed an armistice to end the
war on November 11, 1918.
The American Expeditionary Forces, under the command of
Gen. John “Blackjack” Pershing, were asked to attack the most heavily fortified
and thickly defended part of the Western Front between the Meuse River and the
ancient Argonne Forest. This would threaten German supply lines and thereby
draw off their strategic reserve divisions.
The Americans attacked and paid dearly in blood,
suffering 20,000 casualties a week so that the British and French armies
further to the north could break through. What Macron conveniently forgets is
that without the United States giving so generously of its sons and treasure,
Paris would have been captured by Imperial Germany and the war lost. Today,
more than 30,000 American men rest in six military cemeteries as silent
witnesses to the sacrifice the United States paid to deliver France from
Germany in 1918.
We Did It Again in
World War II
If that was not enough to convince the forgetful French
president of America’s goodwill, then surely he could remember the Second World
War. After France ingloriously capitulated to the Nazis after just six weeks of
fighting in 1940, Paris found itself under the iron fist of Nazi Germany. No
nation on the face of the earth could rescue France except the United States of
America, which once again rose to the occasion.
At incredible loss of life, the United States began the
liberation of France at Normandy on June 6, 1944, and utterly vanquished the
Nazis less than a year later. Tangible evidence of this American sacrifice to
liberate France includes 30,400 American service men buried across that nation
in five military cemeteries.
The silent witness of more than 60,000 Americans buried
in France only captures a fraction of the immense sacrifice that was paid
delivering France twice over the last century. There are the thousands of
missing in action, whose bodies were never recovered, and the tens of thousands
killed in action returned to the United States for burial near their homes.
Then the United
States Rebuilt France from the Ground Up
In the aftermath of WWII’s devastation, the United States
committed its men and women to defend Western Europe from World War III by
physically deploying troops across the continent. Without this commitment, the
Soviet Union would have attacked, wiped out another generation of Europeans,
and imposed its totalitarian, atheistic ideology on them.
This commitment was bolstered by a generous offer to use
American money to rebuild Europe’s war-torn nations. Called the Marshall Plan,
the United States poured money into the devastated continent. This unleashed
unparalleled peace and prosperity across Europe.
Never before has Europe experienced such enduring peace.
Their booming economies, generous benefits for their citizens, and gleeful
experiment with a European Union was only possible thanks to the generosity and
sacrifice of the United States, which provided the security umbrella they
required to deter a Soviet attack during the Cold War.
During the Cold War, I was one of the young soldiers
serving along the contentious West German border with East Germany and
Czechoslovakia. Without the United States physically deployed in Western
Europe, history would have turned out differently. The allies’ paltry armies
would have been easily swept away by the Soviet juggernaut.
How Germany views and treats Cold War veterans today
demonstrates Western Europe’s lack of appreciation towards America for its
sacrifice. I recently traveled to Germany, where I served as a soldier for ten
years of my 30-year military career. Under the dictates of the German
government, U.S. veterans are prohibited from using nearly all aspects of the
U.S. military installations in Germany. The German government refuses this
access to the very people who defended them, simply because Berlin would not be
able to tax us if we shopped on the American military installations in Europe.
Biting the Hand
that Defends Them from Death
When was the last time any leader in Western Europe
uttered even an unfelt thank you to the American people for all we have done to
preserve peace? It would be one thing if the Europeans simply were ungrateful.
However, this thanklessness has morphed into a disdain against the very people
and nation who delivered them from two militaristic German regimes and defended
them from the Soviet Union during the entire 46 years of the Cold War.
As the great U.S. President John Adams once said, “Facts
are stubborn things.” Macron would do well to review European history, which
demonstrates that his continent has been rife with war and conflict. Without
the United States physically present in Europe, that continent would have
reverted to its 1,000-year history of petty wars and regional powers gobbling
up weaker nations.
Europe is prosperous and free today thanks to the
sacrifice and commitment of the United States of America. There was a time
European leaders understood this. In the ashes of the Second World War, the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was founded, with the United States
invited to play the lead and central role in 1949. NATO’s first secretary
general, Lord Ismay, grasped the importance of this when he said that NATO’s
purpose was “to get the United States in, keep the Soviets out, and keep the
Germans down.”
Ungrateful for
American Blood and Treasure
NATO has come a long way from its foundation in 1949,
with ten European nations, the USA, and Canada. The nations once under Soviet
occupation and domination have rushed for NATO membership to keep from
suffering again under the merciless iron hand of Moscow.
Russian President Vladimir Putin would have already
occupied the Baltic nations of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania without the
security assurances the United States provides the world via NATO. This is why
President Andrzej Duda of Poland has offered to pay $2 billion a year to
establish a permanent American presence in his nation. With the atrocities and
depravations of the Soviet occupation fresh in his mind, President Duda is
willing to admit what most of Western Europe refuses to: that they owe their
peace and prosperity to the generosity and sacrifice of the United States.
There are now 29 members of NATO. Only eight spend their
bare-minimum pledged 2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) on defense. Two
of the greatest offenders are France and Germany. Paris and Berlin are
exploiting American generosity and security promises in spending barely 1
percent of their GDP on defense.
Fine, Learn the
Hard Way If You Must
If Macron wants to go it alone, let him. Let’s see if the
French government and French businesses can afford their short work weeks and
generous welfare states with the added burden of maintaining a large and viable
military force. They will watch their prosperity drain away and have to contend
with a rising threat from Russia, which has ambitions across Europe.
Even during the ceremony to commemorate the end of World
War I, Macron refused to walk back his statement. If such lack of appreciation
and disdain continues to grow against the United States, Europe may just wake
up one day and find that America has decided to part ways with them.
Should this happen, a generation of rich, spoiled, and
prosperous Europeans like Macron will have to learn the hard way what their
grandparents endured but a generation ago. Freedom is not free, and the United
States of America is the sole reason for the enduring peace the French have
enjoyed.
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