Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Rumsfeld Accuses Critics of Appeasement of Fascists

The LA Times reports that


' Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Tuesday compared critics of the Bush administration to those who sought to appease the Nazis before World War II, warning that the nation is confronting "a new type of fascism." '



(Click here for explanation of photo.)

The LA Times continued:

' He continued, "Can we truly afford to believe that, somehow or someway, vicious extremists could be appeased?" '




For an alternative view, see The Crock of Appeasement, an IC golden oldie:

'The Crock of Appeasement

The warmongers, imperialists, and just plain greedy who wish to use up US troops to gain their ill-gotten goods love to use the word "appeasement." Anyone who stands against their expansionist ambitions will be tagged with this term. In the lexicology of the Rabid Right, it evokes British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's attempt to negotiate with German Chancellor Adolph Hitler. It is certainly the case that Hitler was a genocidal maniac and not the sort of man with whom one could usefully negotiate. But not all negotiation is equally fruitless. Before that incident, by the way, "appeasement" had a positive connotation, of "seeking peace."

The rightwing use of the term appeasement, however, turns it on its head. Taken seriously, the doctrine of "no appeasement" on the right would mean we are stuck in perpectual war, always doomed to be on the offensive, always dedicated to gobbling up more of other people's territory and wealth even at the expense of living in constant dread of being blown up and being forced to give up the civil liberties which had made American civilization great.

It would never be possible to negotiate a truce with any enemy. That would be appeasement. It would never be possible to compromise. That would be appeasement. It would never be prudent to withdraw troops from a failed war. That would be appeasement. In other words, the rightwing doctrine of "no appeasement, ever" actually turns you into Hitler rather than into Churchill.

But we are anyway not stuck perpetually in the late 1930s, and it is not the only exemplary period in history to which we can resort for our metaphors and our courses of action.

The Iraq crisis, for instance, is clearly an odd sort of neocolonialism, which can only ultimately be resolved by decolonization. Decolonization in the 1950s and 1960s was also denounced as "appeasement," but it was the only right course.

The similarities between British decolonization in Kenya and the Bush administration "war on terror" were pointed out in The Nation last winter.

Britain gave up India (and Pakistan) in 1947. Was that "appeasement?" You may be assured that the British Right saw it that way.

Without this sort of realism, Britain would have tried to keep India and there would have been a bloodbath. Likewise, any attempt by Britain to hold on to Kenya past the early 1960s would have led to even more violence than the Mau Mau and British reprisals (20,000 imprisoned, many tortured) had. And with decolonization, the Mau Mau and violence subsided. Problems do have solutions, and war is not always the best solution. Sometimes the withdrawal of the imperial power itself solves the problem.

You will note that you never hear that Britain "appeased" the Stern Gang, Irgun, Haganah and other Zionist forces that sometimes engaged in terrorism in Palestine, when it departed that territory in 1948.

France "appeased" Lebanon and Syria by granting them independence in 1943. It "appeased" Morocco by giving it up in 1956. It "appeased" Algeria in 1962. Britain likewise "appeased" all of its former colonies. The political Right in each of these imperial countries fought decolonization tooth and nail (I do not admire Albert Camus as much as many Americans of my generation, because of his reactionary stance on Algeria).

Or let us take Cory Aquino's people power movement that challenged-US backed dictator Ferdinand Marcos in the 1980s. The first instinct of Reagan and the rightwingers around him was to help Marcos crush Cory and her movement. Anything else would have been "appeasement." But Senator Dick Lugar went to the Philippines, looked around, and wisely decided that the only feasible course of action for the US was to acquiesce in people power. Lugar managed to persuade Reagan, thus averting disaster. Were Lugar and Reagan guilty of "appeasement"?

All counter-insurgency struggles have to be waged at both the military and the political levels. The political side of the struggle requires that we attempt to understand what is driving the insurgents, that we negotiate with them and attempt to bring them into the system. That is not appeasement. It is counter-insurgency. Counter-insurgency by simple brute military force has never worked, except where its wielder has been willing to commit genocide or soemthing close to it.

Is negotiating with the leadership of the Baath guerrilla movement in Iraq appeasement? I favor it if it would save the lives of US troops. Would declaring an amnesty for Baath Party members who cannot be proved to have committed a crime be appeasement? I favor it. Would internationalizing Iraq and drawing down US troops be appeasement? I favor it.

Rightwingers who want to play Churchill and denounce "appeasement" should please go off to Iraq and put their own lives on the line instead of playing politics with the lives of our brave troops from the safety of Washington DC. What we want for those troops, as soon as humanly feasible, is to come out of Iraq and stay out.

And no, it is not so they can then be sent to die in the sands of Iran. '

18 Comments:

At 3:24 AM, Blogger Stephen said...

Two points.

Here in Canada, a couple of opposition Members of Parliament recently dared to suggest that we might need to find a legitmate way to talk to representatives of Hezbollah if there was ever to be a negotiated settlement to the current- and long-standing crisis in the Middle East.

For their trouble, they were accused of legitimizing a group no different from the Nazis by the current government.

A second point has to do with who really deserves to be compared to the fascist villains of the past.

After all, Nuremberg prosecutor Benjamin Ferencz has recently made this point:

A chief prosecutor of Nazi war crimes at Nuremberg has said George W. Bush should be tried for war crimes along with Saddam Hussein. Benjamin Ferencz, who secured convictions for 22 Nazi officers for their work in orchestrating the death squads that killed more than 1 million people, told OneWorld both Bush and Saddam should be tried for starting "aggressive" wars - Saddam for his 1990 attack on Kuwait and Bush for his 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Is he right?

 
At 7:07 AM, Blogger Alamaine said...

A "Peas Mint"

Years ago, I found that mixing some Creme de Menthe (1 tbsp) with peas added to the flavour of the dish, something that may have had something to do with green on green. While some may bristle at the thought of such a different taste, it goes without saying that sometimes a little something unusual is what the taste buds ordered.

As we've seen with the Buscists, every time there is a thought or concept that is directed toward them or obstructs their policies, the tactic is to deflect or reflect the accusations back and hopefully against those who might offer some criticism or disdain for their thoughtless processes. For years now, those who have been nearly or actually diametrically opposed to the Buscists have used the word "fascist" in conjunction with the regime, emphasising the merging of government and corporatism to underscore the point.

As we've seen with Rummy of late, his tactic is to now accuse those who have used the "fascist" epithet as being the very same ones who would somehow accommodate the fascists of olden times, the terrorists of today. While Rummy has reminded one and all that this is not the same old "war," he has little hesitation (once he gets his old bones up to speed) in banging the same old drums, referring to the English and the Germans with regard to, where, Czechoslovakia? Or a part of it? These are not those days nor that conflict. These are new times, requiring new solutions to current issues, many of which evolved out of the Middle Easterners former policies of appeasing the Europeans' penchant for colonisation and stripping their possessions of every resource at hand. The time for appeasement has come to an end.

If there has been any appeasement, it has been toward the Buscists and their bluff and bluster about everything that has gone on in and around Iraq, from "WMDs" to Saddam Hussein to pre-invasion terrorism to whathaveyou. Younger George's vendetta against Hussein for supposedly attacking his father (after his father really attacked Hussein) and the disregard for other precedents such as the UN weapons inspections were expected to be ignored, just like the failure of every claim to be justified and verified once the operations got under way was supposed to be excused. Americans were expected to focus on the pie-in-the-sky abstractions about Iraq while not paying any attention to the personal nature of the conflict.

"Originally, a vendetta was a blood feud between two families where kinsmen of the victim intended to avenge his or her death by killing either those responsible for the killing or some of their relatives. The responsibility to maintain the vendetta usually falls on the closest male relative to whoever has been killed or wronged, but other members of the family may take the mantle as well. If the culprit had disappeared or was already dead, the vengeance could extend to other relatives."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendetta

If there has been any appeasement, it has been the Buscists' flawed interpretation of the United States and its foreign policy. But. This has worked for the overall strategy, using their own faults and others' arguments in a roundabout, upside-down, and inside-out manner, employing the means of propaganda against the dissenters, using the power of the government to silence any critics through identical accusations and epithets as are directed at the Buscists. This is a simple device intended to trump the opposition by using similar methods, contributing to increased confusion and befuddlement of the issues, distancing any discussion from clarity and definition. Just as a chess player might try to mirror each of the other's moves with the intent on rattling the other, at some point the ploy will be ineffective if there is any thought toward winning, something the Buscists can only claim if instability is the only measure of victory.

As we're at the point of listening to at least 19 different rationales for going into Iraq; NOT one of them was providing a breeding ground for terrorists. In fact, one of the original hookah dreams was to thwart extremism. If there has been any appeasement, it has been the Buscists in favour of the outlaws, whether for the opium growers in Afghanistan or the fragmentation of the Middle Eastern societies resulting in prostitution, drug abuse, and gangsterism in and around Iraq with Iran serving once again as the trade route for smugglers and opportunistic adventurers.

Destruction of the societies from the museums to the religious facilities down to everyday normal functioning only creates nihilism and dispair, facilitating the seeking of extralegal means merely to survive. In this sense, Iraq is no different from Russia and the former Soviet republics, from Yugoslavia or other former Communist Bloc nations, or from anywhere where the "Western" "good-doers" have manifested themselves.

The device of raising havoc with language and ideas has been extended to societies all over the Middle East, stretching into Europe and Asia with bombings and other forms of criminal activity, whether on the part of the crooks or of the police forces tasked with law enforcement. Extraordinary times are upon us with normal people being caught up in other peoples' feuds that will not be abated for generations to come. The winds of change are swirling around, only waiting for the proper time to blow back on the United States and its "allies." Rather than using subtle means for making agreeable changes, heavy-handed cooks are liable to spoil not only one dish but the whole meal in the process.

 
At 7:17 AM, Blogger Alamaine said...

http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0828-23.htm

Published on Monday, August 28, 2006 by CommonDreams.org
Reclaiming The Issues: Islamic Or Republican Fascism?
by Thom Hartmann

 
At 9:04 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

What possibly can objective, non-partisan people do to stop the current mayhem? Saddam Hussein is being held accountable for War crimes - Good! Great! But what about dealing with the fact that his war crimes were enabled in part by the technology, materials and intelligence provided him by the Reagan administration?

Similarly, countless Ummrikkan hands are stained with the civilian blood drawn by Israeli actions in the Middle East... And what about the war crimes enabled by American policy in Africa and Latin America and East Asia? Will we ever hold to account those people who bankrolled and armed the war criminals in the name of the Cold War? How about the people doing the same in the name of this GWOT?

A couple of years ago I yelled at a friend who would not relent on his point that history was written by the victors, hence all pretenses to standards of historical morality are without foundation… As these years have passed I am, sadly, seeing more and more truth to his words in the spineless jingoism proliferating across the US commercial media.

Evil, and war crimes are undoubtedly evil, runs free when good people stand around doing nothing... What faith are people in the Middle East to draw from democracy when it fails to stop what clearly are illegal wars, and now are widely unpopular illegal wars? It seems sadistic to talk about winning hearts and minds when our governments are cutting people down at the knees.

 
At 9:58 AM, Blogger John Koch said...

Oil access and alliance against mutual enemies inspire all sorts of hugs and handshakes.

Consider:
http://www.homestead.com/prosites-kazakhembus/nazarbayev-cheney.jpg

Cheney and Rumsfeld might consider returning Saddam to power, if only he'd assure prime oil contracts to US bidders. Actually, isn't some sort of "strong man" rule a likely outcome of the present Hobbesian fracas?

 
At 9:59 AM, Blogger kelley b. said...

Rightwingers playing Churchill are indulging in simple delusions of grandeur.

These delusions mask and enable both their greed and fear.

The reality is there are forces arrayed against freedom and the Constitution, and there are people in our government quite involved in supporting the quest for power and money at the expense of liberty and national interest.

 
At 10:07 AM, Blogger Phryne said...

Dear professor Cole, could you please give us your views/opinion on the recent letter Ahmadinejad wrote to German Chancellor Angela Merkel:

http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8506060558

Thanks in advance,

Guy

 
At 10:13 AM, Blogger Mark Barry said...

Rightwingers who want to play Churchill and denounce "appeasement" should please go off to Iraq and put their own lives on the line---

Always thought that if Karl Rove were to spend one day going house to house with our troops, they would find a way to end this very quickly. Of course it would end before the chicken hawks even got on the plane.

 
At 10:48 AM, Blogger Barry said...

Great argument against the "appeasement rhetoric." My only gripe is the seemingly gratuitous swipe at Camus without any context.

Here is a paragraph by Colin Ward that puts some context to Camus' life during this period:

Now, all these years since Camus died in a road accident at the age of 46, there are anarchists whose first response to his name is that he was one of those pieds noirs opponents of Algerian independence. There are immense ironies about this. One is that Camus was reared in poverty. His father, who he never knew, was a farm labourer killed in the first months of the First World War. His mother was an illiterate and deaf Spanish immigrant who slaved as a cleaner to keep her precious son at school. Another is that Camus was a campaigner for the social and political equality of the Arab population in his journalism for Alger Republicain before his critics had discovered where Algeria was. (He had joined the French Communist Party in 1935 but was expelled as a ‘Trotskyite agitator’ in 1937 because of his support for the radical Muslim nationalist Messali Hadj.) By 1939 he was editing an Algerian newspaper which was first censored and then banned, and Camus, already plagued by tuberculosis, was obliged to leave for metropolitan France. Then, after the collapse of 1940, he went back to North Africa, returning in 1942 to participate in, and later edit, the clandestine paper Combat, which became an important left-wing journal after the war.

 
At 11:13 AM, Blogger Dancewater said...

Rumsfeld is right in that we are facing a new type of fascism.... it is American fascism.


I used to wonder how Hitler did it, now I see it in front of my eyes. I'll bet Hitler went on and on about not "appeasing" the Poles.....

 
At 2:07 PM, Blogger the path less traveled said...

I think your points well hit the mark.

I hope the Bush Administration, despite its rhetoric, understands we are not in WWII, because that falacy could harm us for many generations.

I would say the Bush Administration is good at playing to powerful minorities in the USA to garner elections. I believe that the misuse of the word "fascism", which started this election year, is to play to the 12.5 percent of the pop over 65% who have such vivid memories of the WWII time period. The hope being that they stop thinking when this term is used. It is well documented that this segment of the society is well motivated and active in American politics, and getting this vote will be important to the congressional elections.

In a democratic society where only 30-40% of the population actually excercises its right to vote, you dont need accuracy. You need to target those politically active elements and sway them to your side. It seems to me that this is just a ploy to get everyone motivated before elections so that the Rep. can keep their majority and not have to negotiate with the Dems.

 
At 2:50 PM, Blogger shaddapalready said...

It would be fitting poetic justice to see Rummy sent out to patrol the Bagdad streets with some of the soldiers he didn't equip correctly.
Of course, it would be more fulfilling from a vengeful standpoint to send an offspring of Rummy into a nasty part of Iraq with the same equipment every other soldier gets.
Then maybe that pig wouldn't fill his adult diaper in joy every time he watched some of his Abu Graib "torture porn".

did anyone happen to see or currently posses a copy of the PBS coverage of the 2003 SOTU address? It's fascinating, in that the moment Bush says the Big Lie about Iraq's imminent threat, their camera cuts away briefly to Rummy. In that 2 second shot, Rummy is visibly excited--he can hardly stay in his chair, there's *joy* on his face, and that bastard *licks his lips* before the camera cuts back to Bush.
One can only imagine what bloodlust was coursing thru his heart of darkness.
It would be comical if they weren't serious......

 
At 3:29 PM, Blogger MonsieurGonzo said...

Susan Sontag : "It has no commentary because it doesn't need one, for Triumph of the Will represents an already achieved and radical transformation of reality: history became theater...

...the document (the image) not only is the record of reality but is one reason for which the reality has been constructed, and must eventually supersede it."

_
You know personally i find the phrase "islamofascist" to be nothing more than a political epithet. While maddeningly vague, it sounds BAD, rhetorically base; its only purpose apparent to make some one feel MAD about some other.

Fascism is a kind of Corporate State ~ an authoritarian regime characterized by a socio-pathic culture. insofar as "The Enemy" goes, islamo-fascist doesn't make much sense, does it (but it does sound terrible, n'est-ce pas?)

The dynamic we're really experienceing certainly seems more like Humanism -vs- Fundamentalism and Theocracy -vs- Democracy.

You would think that anti-Human and anti-Democratic would be BAD enough, but apparently not.

Apparently the dilemma for the Bush Administration is that "fundamentalism" and "theocracy" describe the prop and agenda of one of their better organized voting BLOCs, as well as their coalition ally, ISRAEL...

...islamo-fascist them, not us, thus ;-)

 
At 4:40 PM, Blogger jmnlman said...

Not to completely change direction here but I always get a kick out of the idea that if Chamberlain had declared war right after Munich things would have turned out great. After all it let the British rearm for over a year.

Also interesting in Rumsfeld's rant was that the media is being manipulated by the terrorists. I guess this is better than during Vietnam when the line was that it was pinko media that was stabbing the heroic Hawks in the back.

 
At 5:42 PM, Blogger Da' Buffalo Amongst Wolves said...

Rumsfeld: "I have met the enemy and he is me"...

No, he didn't really say that, but William Arkin @ the WaPo (Early Warning) says:
.
If I were the conspiratorial type, I'd say Rumsfeld was a particular menace to America because in his view of a monolithic and totalitarian terrorist enemy, and in his analysis of the weakness of American society, he can only come to the messianic conclusion that he indeed needs to takeover the country in order to save it. And this might even be worth speculating about were it the case that Rumsfeld reflected the views of those in the military leadership, or were it the case that Rumsfeld could actually engineer such a coup.

But alas, the secretary would get the intelligence wrong, employ too few troops and send tank columns on thunder runs through Manhattan and Hollywood, prematurely declaring victory and then being befuddled about the American desire to recover and preserve its way of life, which is not the Rumsfeld way.


.
William M. Arkin on National and Homeland Security

Rumsfeld's Enemy: It's Us

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld delivered a fire-and-brimstone speech at the American Legion's annual convention yesterday -- after acknowledging young soldiers serving in Iraq and giving the boy scouts a shout-out, the secretary wove an elaborate picture of an enemy made up of terrorists, morally misguided Westerners, disagreeable military strategists, and a cynical news media.

Rumsfeld stated there could be no appeasing the enemy and any "any moral or intellectual confusion about who and what is right or wrong can weaken the ability of free societies to persevere."

The "who" Rumsfeld is talking about is himself.
[In Full]

 
At 8:54 PM, Blogger RLL said...

Last thing I read on Chamberlain and apppeasing Hitler was that at the time England was desparately arming, and in no way could afford for the war to start right away. Rob

 
At 10:41 PM, Blogger sherm said...

Why not give Condi some of the credit? From all the media reports she was Bush's most trusted advisor on national security when all the big mistakes were being made. She was one of the most vocal advocates and defenders of Bush's policies and she still is.

I would guess that Condi has more responsibility for where we are today than Rummy or Wolfie. It was Condi that told Bush it was ok to jump off the cliff. Rummy followed up by assuring Bush that once off the cliff, vigorous arm flapping and tongue wagging would assure a safe landing.

 
At 11:54 AM, Blogger VizierVic said...

Say what you will about Chamberlain, he did lead England to declare war on Germany when Germany invaded Poland. He might have been willing to negotiate with Hitler about the issues concerning Austria and Czechoslovakia but Chamberlain understood what a weasel Hitler was once he had broken his promise to limit his territorial demands to the Sudetenland, the German-populated region of Czechoslovakia. Chamberlain was caught between the promises made by the Allies at the end of WW1 to allow ethinic groups to establish their own nations or join like-minded nations and a realpolitik needed to rein in Hitler. Few could have foreseen with clarity that Hitler really was crazy, although his snatching of the remainder of Czechoslovakia finally proved it for Chamberlain. Don't ever forget that it was not Hitler who declared war on England. Chamberlain did step up to the bar when the time finally demanded it. We only remember that it was a disaster for England and France because the French operational plan in France and Belgium in the spring of 1940 proved woefully disastrous, even though that would not have been the case with just a few adjustments. Had Germany been stopped at the frontiers, as they should have been, and engaged in a long war, as the Allies foresaw, Chamberlain would have been hailed a hero for buying the time needed by the Allies to rearm adequately.

Lest anyone think I have a fondness for Chamberlain and the Munich agreement, I can tell you that my mother was visiting my grandmother's home village in the Pilsen area in the summer of 1938. I've seen the photographs and I know they were there. They left Czechoslovakia in the late summer just as the border crossings were coming down and the troops were being called to the colors. They were Czech nationals living in an area which was eventually turned over to the Germans, so I believe why other might find I have little partiallity for Chamberlain and the British government at the time. He gambled and he guessed wrong. He could have gambled on supporting the Czechoslovak government as he did Poland twelve months later but he was faced with that issue of ethinic nationals bedeviling him. It's too bad that Condi, Rummy, Dick and the Dummy didn't know as much about the situation in Iraq before they

 

Post a Comment

<< Home