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An Iran armed with nuclear weapons and led by
the likes of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad could be the gravest danger ever to confront
Western Civilization. Iran’s President openly and brashly defies the United
Nations and the countries that have been pressuring him to cease enriching
uranium, a process essential for nuclear weapons. He declares that Israel must
be eliminated and, “If America and its allies do not abandon the path of
falsehood, their doomed destiny will be annihilation.”
It is easy to discount these threats as the
bluster of a tin-horn tyrant. However, his uranium enrichment is said to be
moving ahead unchecked, and past history indicates there is virtually no
likelihood that the influential countries of the UN will impose sanctions severe
enough to convince Iran of anything.
It needs to be remembered that Ahmadinejad is
not impelled by dreams of power or empire or personal glory. Rather, he is
driven by a burning compulsion to Islamify the world. Unlike civilized people,
he would not have the slightest hesitation to use his weapons of mass
destruction to slaughter millions of people. That action he would regard as a
triumphant step in ridding the world of Infidels. Such bloodthirstiness is so
appalling that the American mind is disinclined to consider it a real
possibility in evaluating the Iranian threat. Y et there are regular news
reports of the inhuman savagery of Muslim fanatics who torture their captives
before assassinating them.
Without a trace of compassion for infidels,
Ahmadinejad, made invincible by his new weapons, might well close the Strait of
Hormuz. It is the narrow waterway adjacent to Iran through which passes 40% of
the world’s oil. The sudden devastating consequences of that action for all
aspects of modern life are inconceivable.
How should America react to this nightmare?
One option is to do nothing and hope it goes away. Another is to launch a
preemptive assault on Iran. Both could result in such comprehensive disaster
that one gropes for something else. It would be well to seek guidance from the
recorded wisdom of minds that have analyzed the problem of world conquest by
terrorism and military might. Wisdom, which used to be highly esteemed in
America, denoted a knowledge of what is right and what is good, coupled with
sound judgment of what will achieve those goals. In this era, notions of good
and right have largely been supplanted by individual judgments. The American
culture has so denatured itself morally that a decision of what to do in an
unfathomable crisis will probably fall to the shifting sands of partisan
politics. Another potential disaster?
There is one extraordinary source of such
wisdom. For more than four decades he has studied the circumstances and causes
of internationally imposed tyranny and he has labored to share his knowledge
with unreceptive western nations. The accuracy of his predictions and analyses
commend him to a worried Western world.
Twenty-eight years ago in a notable speech he
said:
How short a time ago, relatively,
the small world of modern Europe was easily seizing colonies all over the globe…
usually with contempt for any possible values in the conquered peoples’ approach
to life.... We now see that the conquests proved to be short-lived and
precarious and this in turn, points to defects in the Western view of the world
which led to these conquests. Relations with the former colonial world have now
switched to the opposite extreme, and the Western world often exhibits an excess
of obsequiousness, but it is difficult yet to estimate the size of the bill
which the former colonial countries will present to the West, and it is
difficult to predict whether the surrender not only of its last colonies, but of
everything it owns will be sufficient to clear this account.
This remarkable discernment is an excerpt from
the Commencement Address Alexander Solzhenitsyn delivered at Harvard University
in 1978.The speech was widely reported in the news and in journals of
opinion. Many of the reactions, ranging from that of First Lady Rosalyn Carter
to Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.’s, complained about what they judged to be
Solzhenitsyn’s inability to understand the United States. A current reading of
his text suggests that what he did understand was human nature and human
institutions, the solid foundations of wisdom.
During the 1960’s Solzhenitsyn wrote a series
of novels powerfully attacking the Communist totalitarian system, with the title The Gulag Archipelago, published in the underground press. Solzhenitsyn
became widely known to the outer world in 1972 through his Nobel Prize speech.
It was entitled “A World Split Apart. ”In that text, he observed that down
through the ages, societies have developed their own views and scales of values
according to local circumstances and personal experience. Different values
prevailed in different places and that variance among scattered societies didn’t
pose a global problem. However, the advent of instant worldwide communications
swiftly destroyed the foundation of that placid coexistence.
A wave of events washes over
us and, in a moment, half the world hears that splash…In various parts of the
world, men apply to events a scale of values achieved by their own
long-suffering, and they uncompromisingly, self-reliantly judge only by their
own scale of values and no one else’s…[M]ankind is not at fault: that is how
he is made…Given six, four or only two scales of values, there cannot be one
world, one single humanity: the difference in rhythms, in oscillations will tear
mankind asunder. We will not survive together on one earth, just as a man with
two hearts is not meant for this world.
When Solzhenitsyn voiced those two
fateful facts about mankind- the
intolerable incompatibility of conflicting value systems, and the fact that such
incompatibility is an inherent feature of human nature – he was referring to the
seemingly irresistible spread of communism across the world. Those observations
apply just as directly to today’s powerful global aggression by Muslim
fanaticism.
Two centuries before Solzhenitsyn,
another of Western Civilization’s wisest analysts was France’s Charles de
Montesquieu. In his magnum opus, The Spirit of Laws, he analyzed
different forms of government. In the second chapter of Book IV, he wrote:
As honor has its laws and rules…
it can be found only in countries in which the constitution is fixed, and where
the nations are governed by settled laws…
Honor is a thing unknown in
arbitrary governments, some of which have not even a proper word to express it.
When a Western nation with its fixed
constitution signs a treaty or other formal agreement with a despotic
government, the Western nation expects to honor the agreement and observe any
compromises it entails. The despotism will only abide by the agreement as long
as it serves its own best interests. America never understood this awkward,
built-in pitfall in its relationships with Soviet Communism, and is equally
naïve in its efforts to arrive at peaceful negotiations with North Korea and
Iran.
What Solzhenitsyn has told us is not that the
conflict of value systems is a problem for which we must find a solution. It
is, instead, that the world’s value systems have been placed in a giant caldron
where they are stewing and jostling against one another until the seething
process boils down to a single regnant cultural ethic.
Terrorism and violence are the means Muslim
fanaticism has chosen to try to achieve its dominance in the world. The
campaign to kill Americans and their allies was formally declared a God-given
duty for Muslims in a communiqué issued by the World Islamic Front on February
23, 1998.It was made known to the West in the British newspaper, The
Guardian. Osama Bin Laden and high-ranking religious figures in Egypt,
Pakistan and Bangladesh signed the document.
Here is an excerpt:
[I]n compliance with God’s order,
we issue the following Fatwah to all Muslims: The ruling to kill Americans and
their allies – civilians and military – is an individual duty for every Muslim
who can do it in any country in which it is possible…
Shortly after 9/11, Newsweek
published a map identifying Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Libya, Syria and Afghanistan as
nations with state-sponsored terrorist activities. The article indicated a Bin
Laden presence in all those countries and 27 others. The system for producing
young fanatic militants is worldwide. A 12/15/03 U.S. News and World Report
article stated “the Saudi rulers decided to insure their pre-eminence in the
Arab world by a financial investment of $70 billion. With these funds they
created 1,500 mosques, 210 Islamic Centers, 202 colleges and 2,000 schools in
non-Islamic counties. These institutions spread the radical Wahhabi form of
Islam among the young people they serve. ”The article continued, “Saudi
Arabia’s quasi-official charities became the primary source of funds for the
fast-growing jihad movement. In some 20 countries, the money was used to run
para-military camps, purchase weapons and recruit new members.” These are the
fanatic suicide bombers surfacing in growing numbers around the globe.
Military action is the means by
which America and some other nations are trying to blunt and suppress the
violent Muslim jihad. If this effort fails, Muslim tyranny may well come to
dominate the world.
However, America’s fighting in the
Middle East is increasingly challenged by a sharp division of opinion about the
justification for carrying on the war.
Solzhenitsyn has much to say about
such challenges. In a 1976 interview[1]
he said that his outlook on life had largely been formed in concentration
camps.“ [T]hose people who have lived in the most terrible conditions, on the
frontier between life and death…they all understand that between good and evil
there is an irreconcilable contradiction…one cannot build one’s life without
regard to this distinction.” He regarded the tyranny of Soviet Communism as
extreme evil and a life of freedom as a good of the highest order. “[W]e can’t
comprehend how one can lose one’s spiritual strength, one’s will-power, and
possessing freedom, not to value it, not to be willing to make sacrifices for
it.”
In his Nobel speech, he said:
The spirit of Munich
has by no means retreated into the past. “It was not a brief episode. I even
venture to say that the spirit of Munich is dominant in the twentieth century.
The intimidated civilized world has found nothing to oppose the onslaught of a
suddenly resurgent fang-bearing barbarism except concessions and smiles. The
spirit of Munich is a disease of prosperous people; it is the daily state of
those who have given themselves over…to material well-being as the chief goal of
life on earth.”
On September 29, 1938, the
governments of Great Britain, France and Italy signed a pact with Hitler to cede
to Germany the Sudetenland, the Western part of Czechoslovakia. They had no
authority whatsoever to give part of one country to another, but what the Munich
Pact signified was that the three other countries would not go to war with Nazi
Germany if it seized only that one small piece of property. That act of
international cowardice at Munich opened the door for Hitler to seize Austria
the same year and begin his military conquest of other nations.
In his Harvard speech,
Solzhenitsyn stated, “The Western World has lost its civic courage, both as a
whole and separately, in each country, in each government, in each political
party, and, of course, in the United Nations. Such a decline in courage is
particularly noticeable among the ruling and intellectual elites, causing an
impression of a loss of courage by the entire society.”
It was, he said, the recognition
of the irreconcilable difference between good and evil that provided the
boldness and tenacity to stand firm against the evil of a tyrannical
government. In Russia, as in America the definitions of good and evil were
elements of the Christian faith.
In Solzhenitsyn’s response after
receiving The Templeton Prize, he said:
It was Dostoyevski
who drew from the French Revolution and its seething hatred of the Church the
lesson that ‘revolution must necessarily begin with atheism.' That is
absolutely true… Within the philosophical system of Marx and Lenin, and at the
heart of their psychology, hatred of God is the principle driving force, more
fundamental than all their political and economic pretensions.
In the western tradition, the
believer who has an absolute and ultimate allegiance to God does not readily
yield to the demands of a tyranny that conflict with religious requirements. A
nation of believers cannot be ruled by an authoritarian government. Religion
has to be stamped out. It was the deeply religious Polish people who held
freedom to be more important than life who stood up against Soviet Communism.
That was the beginning of the unraveling of the Soviet empire.
There is truth in the old axiom
that there are no atheists in a foxhole. When the Muslim terrorists attacked
America on 9/11, what had been a nation with religion largely excluded from
public life, suddenly found God. There was a spontaneous response throughout
the land of prayer and religious services in homes and hamlets towns and cities
by people of every religious affiliation, and earnest, forthright supplications
to God by our President, mayors, governors and other public officials. For a
moment Americans reasserted themselves as a people of faith. However, after the
shock and horror of 9/11 wore off, the event tended to settle into history as a
monstrous blitzkrieg which the nation survived. And then life resumed its
course with religion safely barred once again from public activities.
If this analysis of President
Ahmadinejad has substance, a nuclear-armed Iran could produce a long-term global
foxhole. Thinking parents will realize that the best protection they can
provide to their children for living under the perpetual threat of fanatical
terrorist regimes is to help them develop a solid religious mooring that will
shield them from a life of uncertainty and fear. As a nation, the United States
will have to decide whether it will continue to try to negotiate with regimes
that have no fixed constitution and no intention of abiding by any agreements
that don’t serve their interests or courageously standing firm against tyranny,
ready to make whatever sacrifices are required by that stand.
At the conclusion of his 1983
Templeton Prize Address, Solzhenitsyn said:
Let us ask
ourselves: Are not the ideals of our century false? And is not our glib and
fashionable terminology just as unsound, a terminology that offers superficial
remedies for every difficulty? Each of them, in whatever sphere, must be
subjected to a clear-eyed scrutiny while there is still time. The solution of
the crisis will not be found along the well-trodden paths of conventional
thinking… To the ill-considered hopes of the last two centuries which have
reduced us to insignificance, and have brought us to the brink of nuclear and
non-nuclear death, we can propose only a determined quest for the warm hand of
God…
Our five continents
are caught in a whirlwind. But it is during trials such as these that the
highest gifts of the human spirit are manifested. If we perish and lose this
world, the fault will be ours alone.
As before, we should listen to the
wise.
Endnotes:
[1] Interviewed by Michael
Charlton in London. Published in Chicago’s Elite, September/October,
1976.
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