Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Peace

Every sane human being in the world seeks peace. Do all understand what real peace is? The answer is a resounding no.

Peace is not simply the absence of war. One of America's greatest generals, William Tecumseh Sherman, despised war and the horror it created. He understood that achieving peace in his time did not simply mean halting the use of arms. Sherman endeavored to make war more horrible in the short term to ensure that people would shrink from it in the future. He also believed that real peace only came at the real settlement of an issue.

Vladimir Lenin in 1917 promised a crowd in Petrograd, Russia peace if he came to rule. Many people supported his rebellion against the emerging democracy because it continued to help Britain, France, and the United States fight the German Empire in World War I. Lenin delivered his land from that conflict, but Russia knew not peace. The cost of Lenin's "peace" lay in the complete abandonment of political rights and the people's ability to defend them. The way was cleared for Lenin to start a new war against the Russian people. His war, carried on more terrifyingly by Stalin, successfully stole from the Russians their religion, land, firearms, and personal security against a despotic system. The Soviet Union from the 1920s until 1939 very rarely sent its soldiers to war, but its people did not know peace.

Peace is also unknown when threats hang like a Sword of Damocles over the world. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain infamously tried to purchase peace from Adolf Hitler by giving away parts of another country. Shortly thereafter Britain fought a war that, even though it technically won, ended with the destruction of its own empire and economic power. Again, lack of conflict did not mean peace.

We did not know peace with Iraq from 1991 to 2003. Hussein worked hard to skirt United Nations edicts, shoot down US and British planes, and make war on the Iraqi people. His sons, raised to be psychopaths, would have completely destabilized the region when they took over. We did not know peace with Iraq as it was. We will not know peace if we pull out too soon.

Trying to buy a lack of war or ignoring problems and hoping they go away is not peace. It is only war deferred. Better to address issues while they are still manageable than wait until they become dire. In the 1930s we waited too long and gave evil a chance to triumph. We are lucky that George W. Bush makes decisions for the good of the country as opposed to the good of the party or himself. Our sacrifice for peace over the past few years has been high, but not nearly as high as it would have been had we simply ignored the problem.

Peace is not war deferred. Peace only comes with a real and lasting commitment between all parties concerned.

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