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 Joined: 26 Aug 2004
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 Location: Kansas (Transplanted Texan)
 
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				|  Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 10:56 pm    Post subject: Are we about to relearn the lessons of Munich? |   |  
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				| This was written in the Daily Record, Ellensburg, Washington on Wed. Oct. 6, 2004. It was written by Mathew Manweller who is a Central
 Washington University political science professor (a double rarity)
 
 The title of the article was "Election determines fate of nation."
 
 "In that this will be my last column before the presidential election
 there  will be no sarcasm, no attempts at witty repartee. The topic is too
 serious, and the stakes are too high. This November we will vote in the
 only election during our lifetime that will truly matter. Because America
 is at a once-in-a-generation crossroads, more than an election hangs
 in the balance. Down one path lies retreat, abdication and a reign of
 ambivalence. Down the other lies a nation that is aware of its past and
 accepts the daunting obligation its future demands. If we choose
 poorly, the consequences will echo through the next 50 years of history.
 If we, in a spasm of frustration, turn out the current occupant of the
 White House, the message to the world and ourselves will be twofold.
 First, we will reject the notion that America can do big things. Once a
 nation that tamed a frontier, stood down the Nazis and stood upon the
 moon, we will announce to the world that bringing democracy to the
 Middle East is too big of a task for us. But more significantly, we will
 signal to future presidents that as voters, we are unwilling to tackle
 difficult challenges, preferring caution to boldness, embracing the
 mediocrity that has characterized other civilizations.
 
 The defeat of President Bush will send a chilling message to future
 presidents who may need to make difficult, yet unpopular decisions.
 America has always been a nation that rises to the demands of history
 regardless of the costs or appeal. If we turn away from that legacy, we
 turn away from who we are.
 
 Second, we inform every terrorist organization on the globe that the
 lesson of Somalia was well learned. In Somalia we showed terrorists
 that you don't need to defeat America on the battlefield when you can
 defeat them in the newsroom. They learned that a wounded America
 can become a defeated America. Twenty-four-hour news stations and
 daily tracing polls will do the heavy lifting, turning a cut into a fatal
 blow.
 
 Except that Iraq is Somalia times 10. The election of John Kerry will
 serve notice to every terrorist in every cave that the soft underbelly of
 American power is the timidity of American voters.
 
 Terrorists will know that a steady stream of grizzly photos for CNN
 is all you need to break the will of the American people. Our own
 self-doubt will take it from there. Bin Laden will recognize that he can
 topple any American administration without setting foot on the
 homeland.
 
 It is said that America's W.W.II generation is its 'greatest
 generation.'
 
 But my greatest fear is that it will become known as America's 'last
 generation.' Born in the bleakness of the Great Depression and
 hardened in the fire of  WW II, they may be the last American generation
 that understands the meaning of duty, honor and sacrifice. It is difficult
 to admit, but I know these terms are spoken with only hollow
 detachment by many (but not all) in my generation. Too many citizens
 today mistake 'living in America' as 'being an American.'  But America
 has always been more of an idea than a place. When you sign on, you
 do more than buy real estate. You accept a set of values and
 responsibilities.
 
 This November, my generation, which has been absent too long,
 must grasp the obligation that comes with being an American, or fade
 into the oblivion they may deserve. I believe that 100 years from now
 historians will look back at the election of 2004 and see it as the
 decisive election of our century.  Depending on the outcome, they will
 describe it as the moment America joined the ranks of ordinary
 nations; or they will describe it as the moment the prodigal sons and
 daughters of the greatest generation accepted their burden as
 caretakers of the City on the Hill."
 
 Mathew Manweller
 
 A bit apocalyptic, perhaps?  Maybe . . . but let's review some history for
 a moment.  It's been many years since any Western leader cited "the
 lessons of Munich" to justify waging a preventive war against a growing
 threat.  At the time of "Munich" -- 1938 -- British Prime Minister Neville
 Chamberlain returned from a conference with German Chancellor
 Adolph Hitler waving a piece of paper that he claimed signified "Peace
 in our time, peace with honor!"  On it, Hitler had renounced any further
 territorial ambitions, so Czechoslovakia was now "safe" from
 Nazi-German expansion.
 
 The welcoming crowds roared their approval.  As Alastair Cooke said
 in a retrospective article written a few months before the U.S.-led
 Coalition's three-week takedown of Sadaam Hussein's Baathist
 régime in Iraq (and a few months before his own death):  The peoples
 of Europe were willing to do anything to stop Hitler . . . except make
 war on him.
 
 Of course, Hitler went on to dismember Czechoslovakia, and in
 September 1939 invaded Poland.  (Mr. Chamberlain was most
 chagrined:  "Mr. Hitler has broken his word!")  World War II ensued, with
 tens of millions of deaths before it ended.  In retrospect, it became
 clear that if Hitler had been firmly opposed by neighboring European
 forces during any of his early aggressions against his neighbors --
 before his forces had grown to their WW-II might -- the history of
 modern-day Europe might have been far different . . . and less costly.
 Hence, the "lessons of Munich."
 
 Well, history rarely repeats itself and analogies are inexact.
 Nevertheless, President Dubya Bush has, in effect, applied those
 lessons -- twice.  First in taking down the Taliban régime, which was
 tyrannizing Afghanistan and sponsoring global terrorism, and then in
 defeating Sadaam Hussein, whose designs upon the Middle East and
 Israel, and corruption of the UN and other national governments, have
 been revalidated in the recent CIA's Iraq Survey Group's report (aka
 "Duelfer Report"); the rest is tactical, the imperfect results of timely
 decisions made under conditions of uncertainty.
 
 Mr. Bush has also identified Iran and North Korea in his Reaganesque
 "axis of evil": the former has abjured nuclear weapons (though without
 much credibility) and the latter has achieved a nuclear weapon
 capability (after promises to the contrary to two of the U.S.'s own
 "Neville Chamberlains.")  Both entities are being vigorously engaged via
 "diplomacy," but the future remains in doubt
 
 So, what if diplomacy continues to fail, or to prove indecisive?  Will Mr.
 Bush remain able to pursue against the forces and supporters of
 global terrorism the "stitch in time" policy advocated during the 1930s
 by Winston Churchill -- then a political outcast, but whose vision proved
 so valid in the retrospective of victory?
 
 -- Not if he isn't reelected, he won't!  Nor will his temporizing and
 insincere political rival, who has forged his position and promises on
 the basis of wishful policies that have already failed.
 
 From a post to the FACNET Yahoo Group by
 Jonathan Myer
 ("Too soon old and too late smart":  Will that be the U.S.'s future?)
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		| Tacan70UDN PO2
 
 
 Joined: 05 Sep 2004
 Posts: 392
 
 
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				|  Posted: Sat Oct 16, 2004 11:09 pm    Post subject: |   |  
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				| "He who fails to study history is condemned to repeat it." |  |  
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		| Nathanyl PO3
 
 
 Joined: 24 Aug 2004
 Posts: 280
 
 
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				|  Posted: Sun Oct 17, 2004 5:05 am    Post subject: |   |  
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				| I agree with what he state would be the message sent to the terrorists if Kerry were to be elected.  What I'm not certain of is what the end result would be.  I'm certain that the attacks in Iraq would increase. but I'm not sure that Kerry would be able to cut and run like he would prefer.  With the promises he's made about staying tough and finishing the mission to cut and run would not only be a disaster short term for the country, it would gaurantee that he would be a 1 term president.  What I think would happen is he would end out doing exactly what he keeps hinting that Bush is going to do.  Bring back the draft, send more troops to what will be a very unstable Iraq and possibly get the country stuck in a real quagmire and not the evolving success Iraq is now.  Iran would feel comfortable with going ahead fullsteam with their nuclear weapons program knowing that all they'll need to worry about is a slap on the wrist.  They would also increase their sponsering of terrorists and probably get directly involved in Iraq once they had a bomb and we had been softened up for a couple of years.  I think I'll stop there, I'm getting depressed.  The only thing I'll add is if by some quirk of fate Kerry does get elected your all invited to my island somewhere in the middle of the pacific where I hopefully won't have to worry about learning to french or convert to Islam. _________________
 Bill Hershey
 www.worldwar4.net
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