Is Trump the Peace Candidate?
With Democrats howling
that Vladimir Putin hacked into and leaked those 19,000 DNC emails to help
Trump, the Donald had a brainstorm: Maybe the Russians can retrieve Hillary
Clinton’s lost emails.
Not funny, and close to
“treasonous,” came the shocked cry.
Trump then told The New
York Times that a Russian incursion into Estonia need not trigger a U.S. military response.
Even more shocking. By
suggesting the U.S. might not honor its
NATO commitment, under Article 5, to fight Russia for Estonia, our foreign policy
elites declaimed, Trump has undermined the security architecture that has kept
the peace for 65 years.
More interesting,
however, was the reaction of Middle America. Or, to be more exact,
the nonreaction. Americans seem neither shocked nor horrified. What does this
suggest?
Behind the war
guarantees America has issued to scores of
nations in Europe, the Mideast and Asia since 1949, the bedrock
of public support that existed during the Cold War has crumbled.
We got a hint of this in
2013. Barack Obama, claiming his “red line” against any use of poison gas in Syria had been crossed, found
he had no public backing for air and missile strikes on the Assad regime.
The country rose up as
one and told him to forget it. He did.
We have been at war
since 2001. And as one looks on the ruins of Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen, and adds up the
thousands dead and wounded and trillions sunk and lost, can anyone say our War
Party has served us well?
On bringing Estonia into NATO, no Cold War
president would have dreamed of issuing so insane a war guarantee.
Eisenhower refused to
intervene to save the Hungarian rebels. JFK refused to halt the building of the
Berlin Wall. LBJ did nothing to impede the Warsaw Pact’s crushing of the Prague
Spring. Reagan never considered moving militarily to halt the smashing of Solidarity.
Were all these
presidents cringing isolationists?
Rather, they were
realists who recognized that, though we prayed the captive nations would one
day be free, we were not going to risk a world war, or a nuclear war, to
achieve it. Period.
In 1991, President Bush
told Ukrainians that any declaration of independence from Moscow would be an act of
“suicidal nationalism.”
Today, Beltway hawks
want to bring Ukraine into NATO. This would
mean that America would go to war with Russia, if necessary, to
preserve an independence Bush I regarded as “suicidal.”
Have we lost our minds?
The first NATO supreme
commander, General Eisenhower, said that if U.S. troops were still in Europe in 10 years, NATO would
be a failure. In 1961, he urged JFK to start pulling U.S. troops out, lest
Europeans become military dependencies of the United States.
Was Ike not right? Even
Barack Obama today riffs about the “free riders” on America’s defense.
Is it really so
outrageous for Trump to ask how long the U.S. is to be responsible for
defending rich Europeans who refuse to conscript the soldiers or pay the cost
of their own defense, when Eisenhower was asking that same question 55 years
ago?
In 1997, geostrategist
George Kennan warned that moving NATO into Eastern Europe “would be the most
fateful error of American policy in the post-Cold War era.” He predicted a
fierce nationalistic Russian response.
Was Kennan not right?
NATO and Russia are today building up
forces in the eastern Baltic where no vital U.S. interests exist, and
where we have never fought before — for that very reason.
There is no evidence Russia intends to march into Estonia, and no reason for her
to do so. But if she did, how would NATO expel Russian troops without air and
missile strikes that would devastate that tiny country?
And if we killed
Russians inside Russia, are we confident Moscow would not resort to
tactical atomic weapons to prevail? After all, Russia cannot back up any
further. We are right in her face.
On this issue Trump
seems to be speaking for the silent majority and certainly raising issues that
need to be debated.
How long are we to be
committed to go to war to defend the tiny Baltic republics against a Russia that could overrun them
in 72 hours?
When, if ever, does our
obligation end? If it is eternal, is not a clash with a revanchist and
anti-American Russia inevitable?
Are U.S. war guarantees in the
Baltic republics even credible?
If the Cold War
generations of Americans were unwilling to go to war with a nuclear-armed
Soviet Union over Hungary and Czechoslovakia, are the millennials ready to
fight a war with Russia over Estonia?
Needed now is diplomacy.
The trade-off: Russia ensures the
independence of the Baltic republics that she let go. And NATO gets out of Russia’s face.
Should Russia dishonor its
commitment, economic sanctions are the answer, not another European war.
Here is another recent post
by Pat Buchanan which is closely related to this one: http://buchanan.org/blog/war-party-targets-putin-and-assad-124140
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