Dress
Rehearsal for a Mideast War?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Will
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"History does
not repeat itself, but it often rhymes," said Mark Twain.
Observing the
uprising in Syria, the atrocities, the intervention by rival powers,
it all calls to mind the Great Rehearsal for World War II, the Spanish
Civil War.
The war began
in 1936 with an uprising in Morocco of Spanish Nationalists against
a Madrid regime seen as anti-Catholic, Marxist and Trotskyite. Vladimir
Lenin had predicted that Spain would be the second Soviet republic
in Europe.
The war would
last three years, with Joseph Stalin providing aid to the regime,
Benito Mussolini sending troops to fight on the side of Gen. Francisco
Franco and Adolf Hitler sending his Condor Legion. The bombing of
Guernica by the Legion, commemorated in the famous Picasso painting
of that name, would be regarded as the great war crime of the conflict.
Yet Guernica
was child's play compared with what was to come with the Blitz,
Berlin, Dresden, Tokyo, Nagasaki, Hiroshima. The Nuremberg Tribunal
would wisely rule out terror bombing of cities as a war crime for
which Nazis could be prosecuted and hanged.
As America
has declined to intervene in Syria, FDR declared neutrality early
in the Spanish Civil War, outlawing any sale of weapons to either
side.
In 1936, as
the Spanish war erupted, FDR spoke for his country:
"We shun commitments
which might entangle us in foreign wars; we avoid connections with
the political activities of the League of Nations. ... We are not
isolationists except insofar as we seek to isolate ourselves completely
from war."
America emphatically
agreed.
Today, it is
the bitter fruit of Iraq and Afghanistan that explains our reluctance.
Then, it was 116,000 American dead in places like the Argonne and
Belleau Wood – which had produced a Carthaginian peace at Versailles
and set the table for Hitler – that had left us with ashes in our
mouths.
Two battalions
of American volunteers did go to Spain to fight on the side of the
regime. In 1947, veterans of that "Abraham Lincoln Brigade" would
be put on the Attorney General's List of Subversive Organizations.
In Spain, the
struggle was ideological and religious – Nationalists and Catholics
against socialists, communists and anarchists.
In Syria, too,
it is religious – the Alawite Shia regime of Bashar Assad battling
an uprising centered in the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood.
As Europe in
1936 contained democracies, dictatorships of the fascist and authoritarian
right, and a Stalinist left, today's Middle East contains democracies,
monarchies and dictatorships.
As there were
Catalans and Basques fighting for their own causes in Spain, in
Syria today are Kurds, Druze and al-Qaida with their own rival agendas.
As America
and Britain stayed out of the Spanish Civil War, so today America
and Britain have stayed aloof from Syria's conflict.
As the Spanish
Civil War exposed the impotence of the League of Nations, Syria's
conflict is exposing the paralysis of the United Nations, when permanent
members of the Security Council like Russia refuse to authorize
the kind of intervention they did in Libya.
As the Spanish
republic received moral and material support from Moscow, today
Moscow sends attack helicopters to Damascus, while Turkey provides
sanctuary for the resistance, and Saudi Arabia and Qatar provide
weapons.
Russia and
Iran see Assad's Syria as their last strong, reliable ally in the
region. Syria's ports on the Mediterranean are open to Vladimir
Putin's navy. And Putin's military-industrial complex has long sold
the Assad family the weapons to fight its wars and crush rebellions.
If Assad's
regime were to collapse and the Muslim Brotherhood come to power,
Russia would be virtually out of the Middle East. Iran would be
almost isolated. Had we not overthrown the Sunni regime of Saddam
and brought the Shia majority to power in Baghdad, an Iran without
Syria would be an Iran without a major ally across the region.
The first peril
in the Syrian conflict is that it could become a civil war in which
not just 10,000 die, but scores of thousands perish.
A second danger
is that as Syria contains Sunni, Shia, Druze, Kurd, Arab, Christian
– indeed, mirrors the Middle East – a Syrian civil war could become
a proxy war for all in the region, beginning with Lebanon.
Third, as Syria
is aligned with Iran in the conflict with Israel and with Russia
on the world stage, greater powers may come to see themselves as
having a vital stake in how this war ends, and intervene, each in
its own way, to assure a favorable outcome.
The
Spanish Civil War ended in Franco's victory in 1939 and ended well
for the Western democracies that had not intervened.
When Hitler,
after occupying France in 1940, met with Franco to ask permission
for the Wehrmacht to cross Spain to attack Gibraltar, Franco said
no and put troops in the Pyrenees to enforce his decision.
Unlike Mussolini,
Franco remained a nonbelligerent in the world war, returned U.S.
pilots who came down in Spain and agreed to a postwar alliance with
the United States.
Non-intervention
in the Spanish Civil War worked out just fine.
June
15, 2012
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 Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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