--by
Robert Arvay
Why do
nations go to war? Some of the answers
seem obvious, but others are mystifying.
On the one
hand, nations go to war for what they deem practical reasons. They compete for scarce resources, they vie
for territory, and sometimes, they suspect that if they do not strike first,
their enemies will.
On the other
hand, sometimes they go to war for ideological reasons, or over religious
differences, or other causes that are not directly connected to their practical
interests. Unlike territorial wars,
ideological wars seem never to end. Even
if a warring party’s military force is destroyed, its territory seized, and its
leaders killed, somehow, the ideology continues to be a motivating dynamic. The worldwide terrorist cells have
demonstrated that.
World War
Two seems to be the clearest example of many aspects of warfare, and is
illustrative of war in general, not only because of its enormous scope and
magnitude, but the historical factors that led up to it and caused it.
Although
historians pin down the date of the beginning of that war to 1939, actual
fighting had begun well before that. The
Spanish Civil War began (historically) in 1936, a war in which the Nazi
Luftwaffe modernized its combat capabilities.
The Japanese
invaded Manchuria even earlier than that, in 1931, making clear its
expansionist intentions and its cruel methods of conquest. A further irony is that Japan invaded Korea in
1910, well before the onset of World War One, a war in which Japan sided with
Britain and the United States against Germany.
To
understand how these and other nations came to participate in World War Two, we
must look first at the leaders of the aggressor nations, and later, at their
followers. After all, wars are not
fought by territories or ideologies, but by actual people.
Three of the
most infamous leaders were: the Japanese
Emperor, Hirohito, the German Chancellor, Hitler, and the Russian dictator,
Stalin. (Notably, we have skipped past
Italian dictator Mussolini, and Chinese warlord Chiang-Kai-Shek. Please be patient.)
All three of
these men were sociopaths, utterly indifferent to the suffering of others, and
interested only in their own perceived wellbeing. They surrounded themselves with equally
brutal and uncaring acolytes who did their bidding. (Hirohito’s situation was a bit more
complicated, but he nevertheless made no effort to moderate the butchery which
was carried out in his name.)
Stalin is
listed as an aggressor, even though he eventually joined the Alliance with
Britain, France and the United States (among others) against Germany and its
allies, including Japan. Stalin
initially sided with Hitler, agreeing to divide the invaded nation of Poland
between them, the invasion which officially launched World War Two.
Hitler is
possibly the best-known arch-villain of the era, and certainly was not exceeded
in his psychopathic crimes, but Hirohito and Stalin were equally culpable.
As for
Chiang and Mussolini, they are less remembered, perhaps somewhat less evil, but
nevertheless brutal conquerors.
Mussolini
had invaded Ethiopia, in hopes of establishing a new Roman Empire. His ability to organize and control a
functioning dictatorship was admired by Hitler, who considered him a role
model. In the long run, however, Mussolini’s
Italian military machine never became as powerful, nor as brutal, nor as
effective, as the German and Japanese armed forces did. Italian partisans killed him.
Chiang-Kai-Shek,
the Chinese nationalist leader, was already at war with Japan before the United
States declared war, so he was happy to join with the Allies. Chiang was, however, more similar to Stalin
than to Churchill. Chiang was a warlord,
a would-be dictator, and as much an enemy of Chinese communist tyrant Mao as he
was of Hirohito. Japan was, however, the
immediate threat, and therefore Chiang invited American and British forces into
his borders, promising to send his Nationalist Army into the fray, a promise
which was often broken whenever Chiang had other self-interests at the moment.
The
Americans, British and other Allied nations (notably France and the
Netherlands) had already established economic interests in China, long before
the war began. The Americans and
British, much to their national shame as we look back on it, had used force to
impose the opium trade in China, a trade which inflicted immense suffering and
death on the Chinese people. The
Japanese, in part, were able to use such colonialist abuses as a convenient
pretext, an excuse, for attacking American and British (and other) forces in
Asia.
While there
can be no excuse for enforcing an opium market, this crime, as serious as it
was, pales by contrast, to the vicious mass murders, of millions, committed by
the Japanese and Germans from beginning to end.
Had the leaders of those two nations ordered the forces under their
command to be more merciful, many unimaginable atrocities could have been
avoided.
There is
little point in listing the gruesome details of those atrocities, but by no
means should those atrocities be overlooked, not only as a factor during the
conduct of the war, but in its origins.
No less
important is the fact that literally millions of underlings were willing to
personally carry out those atrocities.
It is highly doubtable that American, British and Dutch soldiers could
have been persuaded to murder innocent men, women and children up close and
personally, without fomenting disorder in the ranks. Even German soldiers sometimes objected to
their orders, and the German commanders found it necessary to minimize the
involvement of the ordinary German soldier, selecting instead a cadre of
sociopaths. The American and British
soldiers were inculcated in a culture that would have prevented nearly all of
them from gratuitous acts of needless cruelty.
It is a sad
commentary on human nature that the Nazis found little difficulty in getting
cooperation from large numbers of private citizens, not only German, but even
French, Ukrainians and others, with the major notable exception being their
ally, the Italians, who declined to round up Jews. Hitler did not cause the Holocaust by himself;
he was abetted by large numbers of willing killers.
The Japanese
also fielded forces which willingly carried out war crimes, against both
military captives and civilian populations.
While the European Holocaust gets the majority of the public attention,
and not undeservedly, the Asian Holocaust should not be considered less
tragic. While Hitler gave orders to
exterminate people whom he deemed as subhuman, Hirohito shielded himself behind
men whom he knew were committing unspeakable crimes against innocent people on
a massive scale—and he said nothing.
For the
Japanese leaders, the motives for war were economic and territorial, purely the
greed for power. For the ordinary
Japanese soldier, the motive was more religious in nature, the worship of
Hirohito, whom they were told was a god.
Whether they actually believed that or not, to deny it was to suffer death
for themselves, and unbearable humiliation for their families, if not their outright
murder. Indeed, to refuse to
intentionally commit suicide for the Emperor was considered not merely
cowardice, but treason. So instead of
surrender, Japanese lives were squandered by their own leaders, by the many hundreds
of thousands, in futile battles that were lost before they began.
Fast forward
to the present time. Millions of people
around the world are Moslems. The scriptural
teachings of Islam are harsh, allowing no freedom of expression, and demanding
total obedience not only in matters of formal worship, but in every aspect of
daily life. The West considers these
teachings to be misogynist and homophobic.
Ironically, Western Progressives advocate further Islamization of their
countries.
For most
Moslems, the teachings are little more than academic. Even so, most Moslems express agreement with
the Koran (their religion’s scripture), and a great many offer financial
support to terrorists, at least when pressed.
They do not, at present, rise up en masse and wage open war against the
so-called infidels. Indeed, most Moslems
killed in battle are killed by other Moslems.
The practice
of terrorism among Moslems is no small thing.
It is likely that a majority of Moslems prefer to live a life of
material prosperity rather than suffer violent jihad, but a significantly high
number of them do wage violent war against unbelievers. The atrocities they commit do not result in the
same level of public outcry by Moslems that one would expect from Christians if
Christians did comparable things.
The
terrorist leaders are all sociopaths.
All, or nearly all, of their active fighters are also willing murderers
and practitioners of torture.
Within
Moslem dominated countries, large swathes of the populations give active
support to their leaders. For whatever
reason, public murders, that is openly committed murders, can occur on a
moment’s notice against anyone who commits a violation that in the West would
result at worst in moderate punishments, or none at all. Moslem women and girls are often publicly murdered
by their own families if their behavior is deemed to have offended the family
honor, and again, such behaviors would normally be considered trivial in the
West.
Warfare in
Moslem areas is often caused by a mix of territorial interests and religious
ideology. Iran, for example, seeks not
only a worldwide caliphate of imams, but also, political, economic and military
dominance of the Persian Gulf region.
Iraq, under Saddam Hussein, used Islam as a pretext, while acting
otherwise according to his secular interests.
In China,
warfare has for millennia been studied and developed into an art form. The Art
of War, by Sun Tzu, remains a classic of military literature even after
about 2,400 years.
Today, the
world faces the prospect of war between the United States and China, a war that
might possibly engulf Western Europe, Russia, and Korea.
The factors
trending toward war in Asia are mostly economic, with ideology being important
but subordinate. At present, the United
States is the world’s preeminent economic powerhouse, due primarily to its
mostly free (by comparison) capitalist system.
China has long been increasing its economic power, and has ambitious plans
to supplant the US economy. To that end,
they have grudgingly permitted a degree of capitalist competition into their
economic structure, but Chinese capitalism is severely hampered by its total
subordination to its dictatorial system, which is often capricious and corrupt,
as well as being distrustful of yielding power to wealthy corporate executives.
The
competition between the US and China has recently become increasingly hard
fisted. The US is insisting that China
cease its long-term practice of defrauding American businesses, a practice
which previous US governments have protested but done nothing to stop. The Chinese, for their part, however
dishonest their business model is, may feel that to yield now to American
pressure will destabilize their power structure, which in China, could be fatal
to its leaders.
Moreover,
the Chinese have been consistently building up their military forces, even to
the extent of building islands in international waters, which thereafter they
claim as sovereign territory, demanding that foreign navies steer clear of
them. The US has repeatedly made
show-of-force incursions into those waters, demonstrating that the Chinese
claim of sovereignty in those areas will not be accepted as legitimate.
It should
not be forgotten that when in the 1940s the US stymied Japanese aggression in
the Pacific, the Japanese responded by bombing Pearl Harbor. There is a similar risk now, but this time,
for both potential adversaries. While we should be cautious of backing the
Chinese dictator into a corner from which he feels it necessary to attack
militarily, the Chinese also should fear provoking the US into a major
conflict.
Several
recent technological developments have likely changed the face of warfare. Methods of attack now include electro-magnetic-pulse
weapons, which can disable a nation’s entire system of communications,
transport, and banking, among others.
Another form of attack is known as cyber-warfare, the use of various
internet and computer hacking tools, to disable those same infrastructure
elements. Espionage can be conducted by
cyber or other secretive methods, including satellite or earthbound
instruments.
In the end,
wars are launched by leaders whose motives may be highly laudable, suspect, or
a mixture of both.
They are won
or lost by brave, determined warriors, who place their own lives on the line
for the rest of us.
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