April 03, 2008
Was World War II 'The Good War'?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
"Yes, it was a good war,"
writes Richard Cohen in his
column challenging the thesis of pacifist Nicholson
Baker in his new book, Human Smoke,
that
World War II produced more evil than good.
Baker's compelling work, which uses
press clips and quotes of Axis and Allied leaders as
they plunged into the great cataclysm, is a virtual
diary of the days leading up to World War II.
Riveting to this writer was that Baker
uses some of the same episodes, sources and quotes as
this author in my own book out in May, Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War.
On some points, Cohen is on sold ground.
There are things worth fighting for: God and country,
family and freedom. Martyrs have ever inspired men. And
to some evils pacifism is no answer. Resistance, even
unto death, may be required of a man.
But when one declares a war that
produced
Hiroshima and the Holocaust a "Good War," it
raises a question: good for whom?
Britain declared war on Sept. 3, 1939,
to preserve Poland. For six years, Poland was occupied
by Nazi and Soviet armies and SS and NKVD killers. At
war's end, the Polish dead were estimated at 6 million.
A third of Poland had been torn away by Stalin, and
Nazis had used the country for the infamous camps of
Treblinka and Auschwitz.
Fifteen thousand Polish officers had
been massacred at
places like Katyn. The Home Army that rose in Warsaw
at the urging of the Red Army in 1944 had been
annihilated, as the Red Army watched from the other side
of the Vistula. When the British celebrated V-E day in
May 1945, Poland began 44 years of tyranny under the
satraps of Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev.
Was World War II "a good war" for
the Poles?
Was it a good war for Lithuania, Latvia
and Estonia, overrun by Stalin's army in June 1940,
whose people saw their leaders murdered or deported to
the
Gulag never to return? Was it a good war for the
Finns who lost
Karelia and thousands of
brave men dead in the
Winter War?
Was it a good war for Hungarians,
Czechs, Yugoslavs, Rumanians and Albanians who ended up
behind the
Iron Curtain? In Hungary, it was hard to find a
women or girl over 10 who had not been raped by the
"liberators" of the
Red Army. Was it a good war for the 13 million
German civilians ethnically cleansed from Central Europe
and the 2 million who died in the exodus?
Was it a good war for the French, who
surrendered after six weeks of fighting in 1940 and had
to be liberated by the Americans and British after four
years of Vichy collaboration?
And how good a war was it for the
British?
They went to war for Poland, but Winston
Churchill abandoned Poland to Stalin. Defeated in
Norway, France, Greece, Crete and the western desert,
they endured until America came in and joined in the
liberation of Western Europe.
Yet, at war's end in 1945, Britain was
bled and bankrupt, and the great cause of Churchill's
life, preserving his beloved empire, was lost. Because
of the "Good War" Britain would never be great
again.
And were the means used by the Allies,
the terror bombing of Japanese and German cities,
killing hundreds of thousands of women and children,
perhaps millions, the marks of a "good war"?
Cohen contends that the evil of the
Holocaust makes it a "good war." But the
destruction of the Jews of Europe was a consequence of
this war, not a cause.
As for the
Japanese atrocities like the
Rape of Nanking, they were indeed horrific. But
America's smashing of
Japan led not to freedom for
China, but four years of civil war followed by 30
years of
Maoist madness in which 30 million Chinese perished.
For America, the war was
Pearl Harbor and Midway, Anzio and
Iwo Jima, Normandy and Bastogne, days of glory
leading to triumph and the American Century.
But for Joseph Stalin, it was also a
good war. From his pact with Adolf Hitler he annexed
parts of Finland and Rumania, and three
Baltic republics. His armies stood in Berlin, Prague
and Vienna; his agents were vying for power in Rome and
Paris; his ally was installed in North Korea; his
protégé, Mao, was about to bring China into his empire.
But it was
not so good a war for the inmates of Kolyma or the
Russian POWs returned to Stalin in Truman's
Operation Keelhaul.
Is a war that replaces Hitler's
domination of Europe with Stalin's and Japan's rule in
China with Mao's a "good war"? We had to stop the
killers, says Cohen. But who were the greater killers:
Hitler or Stalin, Tojo or Mao Zedong?
Can a war in which 50 million perished
and the Christian continent was destroyed, half of it
enslaved, a war that has advanced the death of Western
civilization, be truly celebrated as a "good war"?
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction
to VDARE.COM readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from Amazon.com. His new book
is
Day of Reckoning: How
Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart.