How
Killing Libyans Became a Moral Imperative
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: A
Foolish and Unconstitutional War
"Who would
be free themselves must strike the blow."
So wrote the
poet Byron, who would himself die just days after landing in Greece
to join the war for independence from the Turks.
But in that
time, Americans followed the dictum of Washington, Adams and Jefferson:
Stay out of foreign wars.
America "goes
not abroad in search of monsters to destroy. She is the well-wisher
to the freedom and independence of all. She is the champion and
vindicator only of her own," said John Quincy Adams in his oration
of July 4, 1821.
When Greek
patriots sought America's assistance, Daniel Webster took up their
cause but was admonished by John Randolph. Intervention would breach
every "bulwark and barrier of the Constitution."
"Let us say
to those 7 million of Greeks: We defended ourselves when we were
but 3 million, against a power in comparison to which the Turk is
but as a lamb. Go and do thou likewise."
When Hungarian
hero Louis Kossuth came to request a U.S. fleet in the Mediterranean
to keep the czar's warships at bay, when Hungary sought to break
free of the Habsburg Empire, Webster backed him.
But Henry Clay
and John Calhoun stood against it.
"Far better
is it for ourselves," said Clay, "for Hungary and for the cause
of liberty that, adhering to our wise, pacific system and avoiding
the distant wars of Europe, we should keep our lamp burning brightly
on this western shore as a light to all nations than to hazard its
utter extinction amid the ruins of fallen or falling republics in
Europe."
When Hungarian
patriots rose up against the Soviet occupation in 1956, Khrushchev
sent in hundreds of tanks to drown the revolution in blood.
Hungary was
behind the Iron Curtain, the Yalta-Potsdam line to which FDR and
Truman had agreed. There were no U.S. troops on any Hungarian border.
So Eisenhower did – nothing.
Indeed, that
same month, Ike ordered British, French and Israelis to end their
intervention in Sinai and Suez and get their troops out or face
sanctions, including the U.S. sinking of the British pound.
Was Ike an
isolationist?
Until the modern
era, the idea of sending armed forces across oceans to kill and
die for moral or humanitarian causes would have been seen as an
insult to the Founding Fathers, an abandonment of a vital American
tradition, and ruinous to the national interest.
Why are we
in Libya? Why are U.S. pilots bombing and killing Libyan soldiers
who have done nothing to us?
These soldiers
are simply doing their sworn duty to protect their country from
attack and defend the only government they have known from what
they are told is an insurgency backed by al-Qaida and supported
by Western powers after their country's oil.
Why did Obama
launch this unconstitutional war?
Moral, humanitarian
and ideological reasons. Though Robert Gates and the Pentagon had
thrown ice water on the idea of intervening in a third war in the
Islamic world – in a sandbox on the northern coast of Africa – Obama
somersaulted and ordered the attack, for three reasons.
The Arab League
gave him permission to impose a no-fly zone. He feared that Moammar
Gadhafi would do to Benghazi what Scipio Africanus did to Carthage.
And Susan Rice, Hillary Clinton and Samantha Power conveyed to Obama
their terrible guilt feelings about America's failure to stop what
happened in Rwanda and Darfur.
This is the
three sisters' war.
But why was
it America's moral duty to stop the Tutsi slaughter of Hutus in
Burundi in 1972 or the Hutu counter-slaughter of Tutsis in Rwanda
in 1994? Why was that not the duty of their closest African neighbors,
Zaire (Congo), Uganda and Tanzania?
These African
countries have been independent for a half-century. When are they
going to man up?
The slaughter
in Darfur is the work of an Arab League member, Sudan. Egypt, the
largest and most powerful Arab nation, is just down the Nile. Why
didn't the Egyptian army march to Khartoum, a la Kitchener, throw
that miserable regime out, and stop the genocide?
Why doesn't
Egypt, whose 450,000-man army has gotten billions from us, roll
into Tobruk and Benghazi and protect those Arabs from being killed
by fellow Arabs? Why is this America's responsibility?
When
Spain had its civil war in the 1930s, in which hundreds of thousands
perished, FDR declared neutrality. A million Ibos died in Nigeria's
civil war from 1967-70. No one raised a finger to help them or the
million Cambodians who perished in Pol Pot's killing fields.
Since Bush
I, we have intervened in Panama, Kuwait, Iraq, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia,
Serbia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Libya. Had Sens. John
McCain and Joe Lieberman gotten their way, we would have been fighting
Russians in Georgia and bombing Iran.
Add up all
those we have killed, wounded, widowed, orphaned or uprooted, and
the number runs into the millions. All these wars have helped mightily
to bankrupt us.
Have they made
us more secure?
March
25, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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