This originally appeared at Alan's Site - Warning Signs.
By Alan Caruba
We begin with the
reality that the United States and many other nations are at war with militant
Islamists. They are a growing army of religious zealots murdering Christians,
Jews, others who are not Muslim, and even other Muslims.
In my youth America
knew how to win wars. In Europe it bombed Germany into submission, leading its
allies in an invasion that left Germany divided for decades until the Soviet
Union collapsed. In Asia Truman dropped two atomic bombs on Japan because they
didn’t get the message when Hiroshima was destroyed on August 6, 1945. It took
a second bomb on Nagasaki on August 9 to bring about Japan’s surrender.
Millions died in
World War II but the alternative would have been the loss of freedom for
millions worldwide.
If one spends any
time learning history, the primary lesson is that war has been a constant
factor from the beginning of what we call civilization about five thousand
years ago.
The Bronze Age
introduced new weapons that gave the residents of the Fertile Crescent in the
Middle East a distinct advantage over invading nomadic people, but the invaders
introduced chariots and it took the Egyptians and Babylonians a while to catch
up. War has always been about new, more lethal weaponry.
Why would we be
surprised to learn that the Assyrians who originated in what is now northern
Iraq or the Islamic State (ISIS) were the most violent and bloodthirsty of the
ancient world’s peoples? Known to all their neighbors by 1300 B.C.E., their
army become a source of terror for the Middle East during the ninth century.
They destroyed the Kingdom of Israel around 732 B.C.E., but the southern part
of the Kingdom of Judah survived. In time the Babylonians would defeat the
Assyrians.
Not all wars
involved religion. The Greeks fought each other and then fought the Persians.
Alexander the Great, a Macedonian, loved waging war and was very successful.
The constant factor, however, was war and, of course, Rome would become the
greatest empire of its time, beginning around 509 B.C.E., fighting three Punic
wars with Carthage, but losing an estimated 400,000 in the first war and
150,000 in the second.
Eventually, Rome
was so powerful it imposed a “Pax Romana” on the entire Mediterranean area it
controlled. In time, Rome would be destroyed by the “barbarians”, Visigoths,
Vandals, Ostrogoth’s, and Burgundians. By 476 C.E., the Roman Empire was
history.
After establishing
a group of followers in the Arabian Peninsula as the “last prophet”,
proclaiming Islam as the one, true faith, Muhammad died in 632 C.E. Within ten
years, the Arabs had conquered Jerusalem and were taking aim at Damascus and
Cairo. Baghdad and the Libyan Desert were the next to be conquered. They moved
on to Spain and Central Asia.
During his
lifetime, Ali, Mohammad’s son-in-law, was the leader of the Arab forces. As
noted in Samuel Willard Crompton’s ‘The Handy Military History Answer Book’, by
the time the Arabs fought the Byzantines and the Persians they had also
initiated the great split that remains today between the Sunnis and the
Shiites.” Shiite means “follower of Ali.” The Sunnis wanted to elect their own
caliph.
After taking the
southern half of Spain, the Muslim army was poised to take all of Europe, but
their 732 C.E. defeat in the Battle of Tours put an end to further expansion.
Their momentum in Asia was stopped in 751 C.E. with a defeat in the Battle of
Talas. As Crompton notes, “in the century that followed the Prophet’s death,
the Arabs took over ninety percent of all the urban centers in the Western
world, and their conquests equaled those of ancient Rome.
The Crusades
Which brings us to
the first Crusade; it began when Pope Urban II in 1095 told a gathering of
10,000, mostly French and German knights, that a “new accursed group”, the
Muslims, had taken control of the holy land were preventing pilgrims from
visiting holy sites. The knights responded to his call to liberate Jerusalem by
chanting “Deus Volt! Deus Volt!”—God wills it.
They were joined by
a “Peasants Crusade” between 1095 and 1096. By June 1099 the knights arrived
outside Jerusalem and what followed was a wholesale murder of everyone there.
In 1185, Saladin, the emir of Cairo and Lord of Damascus, proclaimed a jihad—a
holy war—against the Christians in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The knights
defending it were defeated.
A Second Crusade
followed in 1147 C.E. but accomplished little and the Third Crusade had the
same result. A Fourth Crusade resulted in the Europeans taking control of
Constantinople in August 1204 C.E. They would rule it for the next fifty years.
Years later, in 1489, a war drove the Muslims from Spain.
The spokeswoman
from our Department of State who said that the present generation of Muslim
holy warriors can’t all be killed doesn’t know that this is the way wars are
won. You kill the enemy until the enemy decides that dying for their cause is
not worth it.
If ISIS is insane
enough to bring the war to our homeland (and even if it doesn’t), a war of
total destruction will be the only way to end the present conflict. Currently,
the Jordanians and the Egyptians are doing what they can to resist ISIS, but
recent polls confirm that Americans are beginning to conclude that our active
boots-on-the-ground participation is the only way this will end.
Obama is merely
going through the motions of conducting a war against ISIS, but retired
generals and diplomats have told Congress that only full-scale war will end the
threat they represent.
Meanwhile, ISIS is
committing genocide against the Christians of the Middle East while Boko Haram
is doing the same in Africa. Hezbollah would do the same against Israel if it
could. Given nuclear arms, Iran will assert control over all of the Muslim
warriors, threatening both Israel and the U.S.
Our next President
will have to commit to destroying ISIS. There is no alternative. That is history’s
primary lesson.
Editor’s
Note:The Handy Military History Answer Book is published by Visible Ink,
$21.95, softcover.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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