Posted: 21 Jan 2014 07:08 PM PST
It was the fall of ’38
and the motion was submitted to approve “the policy of His Majesty's
Government by which war was averted in the recent crisis and supports their
efforts to secure a lasting peace."
The
policy being referred to was the Munich Agreement which carved up
Czechoslovakia and the war being averted was World War II which would come
shortly anyway. Of the hope that war would be averted through appeasement,
Winston Churchill said, “Britain and France had to choose between war and
dishonour. They chose dishonour. They will have war.”
Echoing that old Munich motion, the pro-Iran left is calling the nuclear deal
that lets Iran keep its nukes and its targets their Geiger counters, Obama’s
“achievement”. Any Democrat who challenges it is accused of obstructing the
only foreign affairs achievement their figurehead can claim.
“Cory Booker wants to torpedo a major Obama achievement,” the New Republic
shrieked. On MSNBC, Chris Hayes accused sixteen Democratic senators who
wanted tougher measures on Iran of seeking a war to sabotage “Obama’s
greatest foreign policy achievement” out of “fear” of the Israeli lobby.
Hayes and MSNBC were only echoing another famous Democrat, Joseph P. Kennedy
who warned of opposition to Munich by “Jew media” making noises meant to “set
a match to the fuse of the world.”
Samuel Hoare, the Home Secretary, of whom King George V said, "No more
coals to Newcastle, no more Hoares to Paris", warned against those who
wanted a sterner tone to bring an end to Hitler’s program of conquest as
today’s Hoares warn against those who want to bring an end to Iran’s nuclear
program.
“It would have met certain failure if at the very time when we were
attempting to mediate and to obtain a peaceful settlement, we had accepted
the advice of those who said you must face Herr Hitler with a public
ultimatum,” Hoare warned. “I go further, and I say that if we had made an
ultimatum in the days immediately before the Nuremberg speech Europe would to-day
have been plunged into a world war.”
Today the Hoares warn that stiffening sanctions against Iran and demanding an
end to its nuclear program will lead to war. For years, the Hoares of the
Democratic Party insisted sanctions were the only way to prevent Iran from
going nuclear. Now the Hoares say sanctions will alienate Iran and lead to
war.
Obama spokesman Jay Carney said the alternative to the nuclear deal would be
war. Those who support sanctions will "close the door on
diplomacy," Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the National Security
Council, warned, saying that the failure of the deal will force Obama to,
“choose between military options or allowing Iran’s nuclear program to
continue.”
Since the deal allows Iran’s nuclear program to continue, it’s a buffet of
three choices, all three of which lead to conflict of some kind. The only
variations are in the date and in the capabilities of the enemy.
That was the problem with Munich.
Hitler had already been making plans for a war with Britain and France that
would commence three or four years after finishing off Czechoslovakia. The
only thing that the Munich Agreement accomplished was to speed up Hitler’s
timetable from three years to one by letting him finish his business with the
Czechs earlier than he had planned.
“The peoples of the British Empire were at one with those of Germany, of
France and of Italy, and their anxiety, their intense desire for peace,
pervaded the whole atmosphere of the conference,” Chamberlain said during the
House of Commons debate.
There’s “a new atmosphere” in the Iran talks, the Council on Foreign
Relations’ top Iran expert said. The State Department called the atmosphere
“constructive”. “Give peace a chance,” Obama urged.
"When the time comes for the verdict to be given upon the Prime
Minister's conduct... none of us here fears that verdict," Hoare
concluded. History would deliver its verdict on Chamberlain as it has on no
other British prime minister in history making his name synonymous with
craven appeasement.
And then Winston Churchill began to speak. "I will... begin by saying
the most unpopular and most unwelcome thing... we have sustained a total and
unmitigated defeat."
Lady Astor, whose Nazi sympathies were infamous, interrupted him
with a cry of “Nonsense”. The Member for Berlin had written to Joseph P.
Kennedy that Hitler would have to do more than “give a rough time” to “the
killers of Christ” before she would launch "Armageddon to save them.”
“The wheel of history swings round,” she wrote. “Who are we to stand in the
way of the future?”
Churchill, like William F. Buckley, believed however in standing athwart the
history of totalitarians, their Reichs, their People’s Republics and their
Caliphates and yelling stop.
“£1 was demanded at the pistol's point. When it was given, £2 were demanded
at the pistol's point,” Churchill retorted. “Finally, the dictator consented
to take £1 17s. 6d. and the rest in promises of good will for the future.”
That is the sum of all negotiations with totalitarians, whether it is with
Nazi Germany, Communist Russia or Islamist Iran. The totalitarians scale up
their demands and the peacemakers celebrate a victory for a compromise that
gives their tyrants what they want and makes war inevitable through its
appeasement.
“Iran’s leaders should understand that I do not have a policy of containment;
I have a policy to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Obama said
in 2012. Now there isn’t even a policy of containment.
Obama’s foreign policy achievement consists of letting Iran do nearly
everything nuclear it wants in the hopes that it won’t go all the way.
Containment has given way to appeasement. Iran gets nine tenths of its
nuclear ambitions at gunpoint in the deal and will take the rest when it
pleases at nukepoint.
“We have been reduced in those five years from a position of security so
overwhelming and so unchallengeable that we never cared to think about it,”
Churchill said, “reduced in five years from a position safe and unchallenged
to where we stand now.” In five years of Obama, the United States has been
similarly reduced from a power to a pawn. Its security has been stripped away
and sold to win the approval of its enemies. It is locked into the same
process of offering worthless security guarantees to its allies and then
selling those allies down the river to avoid the risk that those allies might
ever call on those guarantees and expose their worthlessness.
That was the Chamberlain policy that Churchill was denouncing on
Czechoslovakia. That is the Obama policy with his chalkboard of worthless red
lines whose bluffing powers he is determined to protect.
"Relieved from all anxiety in the East, and having secured resources
which will greatly diminish, if not entirely remove, the deterrent of a naval
blockade, the rulers of Nazi Germany will have a free choice open to them in
what direction they will turn their eyes," Churchill said.
Similarly the nuclear deal cuts off most options for America and its allies
and endows Iran with a great many options. And once it does have nuclear
weapons, its options will be nearly unlimited.
Chamberlain’s rejoinder to Churchill reduced a practical problem to a
philosophical one.
"It seems to me that there are really only two possible alternatives.
One of them is to base yourself upon the view that any sort of friendly
relation, or possible relations, shall I say, with totalitarian States are
impossible, that the assurances which have been given to me personally are
worthless, that they have sinister designs and that they are bent upon the
domination of Europe and the gradual destruction of democracies,” he said,
reciting true facts about Nazi Germany with the air of a conspiracy theory,
the way that the pro-Iran left treats statements about Iran’s murderous
policies and aims.
If that grim reality were indeed the case, Chamberlain argued, “There is no
future hope for civilisation or for any of the things that make life worth
living.”
Peace was no longer a rational program, but a philosophical one. A world
where dictators could not be successfully appeased, where war could not be
averted with negotiations, was not a world that he wanted to live in. The
appeasement of Iran and any other enemy follows the same self-pitying logic.
Either the world is an optimistic place where war can be averted with
meetings and negotiations or it is a doomed hopeless place in which no one
would want to live anyway.
For Churchill negotiations were a practical policy with a practical end, but
the supporters of appeasement had made negotiations into a good thing
entirely apart from any of the facts on the ground or their outcomes.
Negotiations were important because war had to be averted, regardless of
whether it could be averted, whether the agreement was moral and whether it
was worth anything.
By making peace negotiations themselves into a moral absolute, the practical
issues could be ignored and moral atrocities such as the dismantling of
Czechoslovakia could be rationalized as being for the greater good of peace.
Any contradictory information was drowned in enthusiasm, not for Hitler, but
for peace with Hitler, which inevitably became indistinguishable from enthusiasm
for Hitler.
If peace depended on Hitler and the entire hope of civilization rested on
Hitler’s willingness to live in peace, the Chamberlains and their Hoares had
to believe in Hitler to believe that civilization had value and life was
worth living. Their modern counterparts substitute the Supreme Leader of Iran
for the Fuehrer, or leader, of Germany, but otherwise they make the same
mistake all over again.
To
believe in world peace, they decide that they must believe in Hitler, in
Stalin, in Khamenei and all the other monsters of history. They must believe
that regimes which ceaselessly talk of war, build weapons of war and torture
and murder their own people on a whim somehow share their hopes for peace.
“It seems to me that the strongest argument against the inevitability of war
is to be found in something that everyone has recognized in every part of the
House. That is the universal aversion from war of the people, their hatred of
the notion of starting to kill one another again,” Chamberlain said.
But there is no such universal aversion. If there were, war would be the
exception, not the rule.
To believe in peace, Chamberlain had to lie to his conscience, to the men
surrounding him and to the entire country and the world. That much has not
changed, whether the subject is Nazi Germany or Iran.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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