Why Europe Won't Fight

By Pat Buchanan 

April 10, 2009 "CS" --  "No one will say this publicly, but the true fact is we 
are all talking about our exit strategy from Afghanistan. We are getting out. 
It may take a couple of years, but we are all looking to get out." 
Thus did a "senior European diplomat" confide to The New York Times during 
Obama's trip to Strasbourg.
Europe is bailing out on us. Afghanistan is to be America's war.
During what the Times called a "fractious meeting," NATO agreed to send 3,000 
troops to provide security during the elections and 2,000 to train Afghan 
police. Thin gruel beside Obama's commitment to double U.S. troop levels to 
68,000.
Why won't Europe fight?
 
Because Europe sees no threat from Afghanistan and no vital interest in a 
faraway country where NATO Europeans have not fought since the British Empire 
folded its tent long ago.
Al-Qaida did not attack Europe out of Afghanistan. America was attacked. 
Because, said Osama bin Laden in his "declaration of war," America was 
occupying the sacred soil of Saudi Arabia, choking Muslim Iraq to death and 
providing Israel with the weapons to repress the Palestinians.
As Europe has no troops in Saudi Arabia, is exiting Iraq and backs a 
Palestinian state, Europeans figure, they are less likely to be attacked than 
if they are fighting and killing Muslims in Afghanistan.
Madrid and London were targeted for terror attacks, they believe, because Spain 
and Britain were George W. Bush's strongest allies in Iraq. Britain, with a 
large Pakistani population, must be especially sensitive to U.S. Predator 
strikes in Pakistan.
 
Moreover, Europeans have had their fill of war.
In World War I alone, France, Germany and Russia each lost far more men killed 
than we have lost in all our wars put together. British losses in World War I 
were greater than America's losses, North and South, in the Civil War. Her 
losses in World War II, from a nation with but a third of our population, were 
equal to ours. Where America ended that war as a superpower and leader of the 
Free World, Britain ended it bankrupt, broken, bereft of empire, sinking into 
socialism.
 
All of Europe's empires are gone. All her great navies are gone. All her 
million-man armies are history. Her populations are all aging, shrinking and 
dying, as millions pour in from former colonies in the Third World to 
repopulate and Islamize the mother countries.
Because of Europe's new "diversity," any war fought in a Muslim land will 
inflame a large segment of Europe's urban population.
 
Finally, NATO Europe knows there is no price to pay for malingering in NATO's 
war in Afghanistan.
Europeans know America will take up the slack and do nothing about their 
refusal to send combat brigades.
For Europeans had us figured out a long time ago.
They sense that we need them more than they need us.
While NATO provides Europe with a security blanket, it provides America with 
what she cannot live without: a mission, a cause, a meaning to life.
Were the United States, in exasperation, to tell Europe, "We are pulling out of 
NATO, shutting down our bases and bringing our troops home because we are weary 
of doing all the heavy lifting, all the fighting and dying for freedom," what 
would we do after we had departed and come home?
What would our foreign policy be?
What would be the need for our vaunted military-industrial complex, all those 
carriers, subs, tanks, and thousands of fighter planes and scores of bombers? 
What would happen to all the transatlantic conferences on NATO, all the think 
tanks here and in Europe devoted to allied security issues?
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the withdrawal of the Red Army from Eastern 
Europe and the breakup of the Soviet Union, NATO's mission was accomplished. As 
Sen. Richard Lugar said, NATO must "go out of area or out of business."
NATO desperately did not want to go out of business. So, NATO went out of area, 
into Afghanistan. Now, with victory nowhere in sight, NATO is heading home. 
Will it go out of business?
Not likely. Too many rice bowls depend on keeping NATO alive.
You don't give up the March of Dimes headquarters and fund-raising machinery 
just because Drs. Salk and Sabin found a cure for polio.
Again, one recalls, in those old World War II movies, the invariable scene 
where two G.I.s are smoking and talking.
 
"What are you gonna do, Joe, when this is all over?" one would ask.
Years ago, we had the answer.
Joe stayed in the Army. He couldn't give it up. Soldiering is all he knew. Just 
like Uncle Sam. We can't give up NATO because, if we do, we would no longer be 
the "indispensable nation," the leader of the Free World.
 
And, if we're not that, then who are we? And what would we do?
Patrick Buchanan is the author of the new book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The 
Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by 
other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate 
web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
 
 
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Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
News Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
Jl. Kapten P. Tendean Kav. 12 - 14 A, Jakarta 12790 
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Verba volant scripta manent...
(yang terucap akan lenyap, yang tertulis akan abadi...)


      

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