Did 311 = 911?
Spain’s Surrender, and the Destiny of
Europe
March 21, 2004
by
Nicholas Stix
I am not a Spaniard.
Somewhere, on March 12, I saw the headline, “We are All Spaniards
Now.” It was an allusion to the Le Monde headline from
9/12, “We are All Americans Now.”
As we now know, that initial French (and German) sympathy for America
was short-lived. In no time flat, the Old Europe of France and Germany
sought to appease Islamism, and while claiming to be our allies, to
betray us at every step of the way.
Not so, the Spaniards. The 1,300 troops they sent to Iraq were largely
a symbolic matter, but the symbolism was powerful.
After 911, when so much of Europe was making mischief at our expense,
many Americans assumed that Europeans would react differently, if
they were hit. I was one of those Americans. But on the Sunday after
311, a majority of Spanish voters -- who pre-311 had supported the
ruling, America-friendly Popular Party -- voted it out, on behalf
of Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s Socialist Workers’ Party.
It was as if to say to the Islamists who had attacked them, “See,
we’re not your enemy.” It was the worst sort of collective
cowardice imaginable, because not only did it hurt America, but it
did nothing for the Spaniards. Do they think that Muslim suicide bombers
are now going to consider Spain their friend?
Zapatero says that he looks forward to enjoying a “magnificent”
relationship with France and Germany, which is a slap at the U.S.
In another slap at the U.S., he says that he will not bring Spanish
troops home, if George W. Bush surrenders control of American troops
to the U.N., which is less honest than his pre-election position that
he was going to bring home the troops, period.
Let’s see. The last time the U.N. pacified a war zone was
… never.
Zapatero claimed, "Fighting terrorism with bombs, with operations
of ‘shock and awe,’ with missiles, that does not combat
terrorism, it only generates more radicalism. The way to fight terrorism
is with the rule of law, with international legislation, with intelligence
services. This is what the international community should be talking
about."
Speaking to the New York Times, “David,”
the world’s most quoted window frame maker, translated Zapatero’s
true sentiments into clear Spanish, "Maybe the Socialists will
get our troops out of Iraq, and Al Qaeda will forget about Spain,
so we will be less frightened. A bit of us died in the train."
Zapatero’s decision to recognize gay marriage or civil unions,
will surely also warm the hearts of Muslim terrorists everywhere.
Those Spaniards who changed their votes, spat on the graves of the
now 202 dead.
But let us not forget the millions of Spaniards who stayed the course.
To them, I tip my hat.
(Sticking to the neocon party line, on March 16, David
Brooks wrote in the New York Times, that the Spaniards
had betrayed the Iraqi people. As if this were about the Iraqi people!
Claims by Brooks & Co. to be “for the Iraqi people”
ring as hollow as domestic advocates’ claims to be “for
the children.” In fairness to Brooks, however, much of his column
does stand up to scrutiny, and he was the first writer to observe
that the Spaniards who switched their votes, sought “a separate
peace” with al Qaeda.)
Even ordinary extortionists, when they get paid off, always want
more. But as some clear-eyed observers, such as Mark
Steyn have pointed out, Muslim terrorists are no ordinary extortionists.
Whereas the ordinary kind live to get paid, Muslim extortionists live
to kill and be killed. And al Qaeda didn’t just attack Spain
due to its alliance with America, but as Steyn also pointed out, due
to its expulsion of the Moors (Spanish Muslims) in 1492. (Since Spain
expelled the Jews the same year, do I get to declare war on Spain,
and demand it become a Jewish state? Just asking.)
I am also not a European.
Lee
Harris argued, “The world changed on Sunday” with
the Spanish elections, but the real problem is that Europe did not
change.
If Europe cannot rouse itself to fight back, after it has been attacked
on its own soil, we may conclude that the cowardice we saw after 911
was not merely the expression of anti-Americanism and opportunism,
but of a deeper paralysis, which is now in its terminal stage. And
so, I weep for Europe.
Europe’s paralysis is best expressed in the combination of
two seemingly contradictory statements, one by David Brooks and the
other by Edward
Luttwak:
“Now all European politicians will know that if they side with
America on controversial security threats, and terrorists strike their
nation, they might be blamed by their own voters.” (Brooks)
“Any [European] politician who invokes Madrid to demand a withdrawal
from Iraq will be inviting terrorist attacks to prove his point.”
(Luttwak)
Both statements may co-exist in the same universe of discourse, the
universe of weakness, the universe of defeat. The vicious circle of
weakness dominating European thought is countered by the virtuous
circle of strength that George W. Bush has expressed: America takes
the battle to al Qaeda & Co. We kill some of their members, and
capture others, from whom we get the intelligence necessary to kill
and capture other terrorists, and so on. That may seem simplistic,
but in fact, a nation will either gain the advantage or steadily decline,
in the war on terror; a stalemate is not an option. Strength will
compound strength, or weakness will compound weakness.
(The “circles” are metaphors, rather than discrete, logical
units. For we are talking about people and nations, not logic or geometry.
In the real world, a strong man or even a strong people can be brought
low through the collective cowardice or thuggery of others. And so
it is, that al Qaeda seeks to beat America through chasing off her
allies. And so, we can expect attacks on the United Kingdom, and more
attacks on the U.S. on or just before our own November 2 presidential
election.)
Western European nations increasingly embrace appeasement, while
permitting themselves to be overwhelmed by hordes of their Muslim
enemies, enemies who hold everything European in contempt, and who
increasingly include violent gangs, whose idea of fun is to brutalize
Jews and gang-rape Christian girls.
From 1945-1990, Western Europe lived under the shadow of the Soviet
“Empire of Evil” (Ronald Reagan), and yet it was safe
from being overrun, because we protected it. And so, while America
spent billions on Europe’s defense, Europe could spend billions
on decadent welfare programs which further sapped its moral strength.
The result was the same as it always is, with those who get used to
getting a free ride. Rather than gratitude, Europeans felt resentful
and superior towards us.
A classic case of a spoiled character feeling resentful and superior
towards his betters is the Tom Cruise character (Lt. Daniel Kaffee)
in the 1992 movie, <I>A Few Good Men</I>. Defense attorney
Kaffee cross examines his nemesis, Lt. Col. Nathan Jessep (Jack Nicholson).
Jessep: You want answers?!
Kaffee: I want the truth!
Jessep: You can't handle the truth! Son, we live in a world that
has walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with guns. Who's
gonna do it? You? [To Kaffee’s co-counsel.] You, Lieutenant
Weinberg? I have a greater responsibility than you can possibly fathom.
You weep for Santiago, and you curse the Marines. You have that luxury.
You have the luxury of not knowing what I know -- that Santiago's
death, while tragic, probably saved lives; and my existence, while
grotesque and incomprehensible to you, saves lives. You don't want
the truth because deep down in places you don't talk about at parties,
you want me on that wall -- you need me on that wall.
(Unfortunately, politically correct writer Aaron Sorkin and director
Rob Reiner presented Nicholson as the heavy and Cruise as the hero,
but it is a tribute to Sorkin’s writing skills, that his speech
became a credo for many members of the LAPD and the American military.)
The problem with most of Western Europe, is that it wants to be
safe, but still won’t guard itself, yet no longer wants America
on “that wall.” That means that Western Europe will be
defeated.
Most Americans under the age of 40 know little about Europe, and
have only the most tenuous relation to the Old World. What they do
know, however, is that we bailed the Western Europeans out of two
world wars, and then saved them from communism.
And yet, today our relationship to Europe, even the concept of “Europe,”
is typically exaggerated here at home. American socialist writers
speak still of our “European allies,” when referring to
countries (France and Germany) that can only honestly be referred
to as rivals or outright enemies. And multiculturalists, black racists,
and white nationalists alike refer to white Americans via the euphemism,
“European Americans.”
The socialist writers’ practice is not hard to understand.
They are writing not of America’s allies, but of their own.
They see themselves as domestic enemies of America, and consider America’s
foreign enemies their friends. (Hence, I disagree with Lee Harris’
thesis that American liberals have no concept of an “enemy.”
Sure they do – the term refers to their own country, and its
patriotic defenders.) You can find these traitors all over the world,
sucking up to America’s foreign enemies, the latter of whom
hold the traitors in contempt, but who find them useful idiots. Sound
familiar?
And so, when the Spaniards turned on us, the New York Times’
March
16 house editorial engaged in double-talk: “It is possible
to support the battle against terrorism wholeheartedly and still oppose
a political party that embraces the same cause.”
No, it isn’t.
In theory, one could “support the battle against terrorism
wholeheartedly” while voting against a political party embracing
the same cause, if say, that party had botched every other aspect
of statecraft, particularly the economy. But the vast majority of
Spaniards had never even halfheartedly supported the battle against
Islamic terrorism, and the Popular Party’s stewardship of the
economy had been excellent. But at the <I>Times</I>, anyone
who screws over America is their friend, and must be defended.
Such traitorous anti-Americanism is nothing new. In Oliver Stone’s
anti-American movie, Platoon (1986), set during the War in
Vietnam, the “good” American sergeant, “Elias”
(Willem Dafoe), says “We've been kicking other people’s
asses for so long, I figure it's time we got ours kicked.” The
character was a hero to anti-Americans across the land, who saw his
murder by the evil sergeant, “Barnes” (Tom Berenger),
in terms of the crucifixion of Jesus. That reaction was odd, coming
from a group of atheists.
The use of the term “European-American,” has had an
even odder trajectory. As far as I can determine, it comes from the
Nation of Islam, when it was known as the Black Muslims, under the
leadership of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad (aka convicted felon and
traitor, Elijah Poole; 1897-1975) and Elijah’s momentary favorite
son, Malcolm X (aka convicted felon, Malcolm Little; 1926-1965). The
Black Muslims identified the races with continents. Well, sort of.
Early on, they referred to blacks as “Asiatics,” so their
geography was as nutty as everything else they said.
I think white multiculturalists are simply imitating black racists,
as they do whenever they talk about race relations.
The white nationalists are the oddest bunch. The typical white nationalist
knows as much about Europe as he does about Timbuktu, and the brilliant
ones, most notably Sam Francis, know better than to join the words
“European” and “American.” Perhaps this is
some sort of parody of the way blacks think they are turning a negative
into a positive, by obsessively using the “n”-word.
America does have a very close cultural and historical relationship
to England, but if there’s one thing I learned in over five
years of living in Europe, it is that England ain’t in Europe.
(I also learned that I am no “European.”)
I know the Brits are now members of the European Union, but when
I lived in the former West Germany, the Brits were part of the EU-forerunner,
the Common Market, yet I never heard any Continentals speak of the
British as “Europeans.” There was a palpable tension between
the Brits and the Europeans, and there still is.
We got our language, our Common Law traditions, our notions of representative
government, and our empiricist philosophical tradition from the Brits.
The European tradition, conversely, is one of centralized absolutism
and obscurantist, metaphysical speculation. Since FDR, unfortunately,
we have been moving toward the Old World, as the American people have
acquiesced to creeping socialism, centralization, absolutism and anti-scientific
thinking.
Europe is for us less an ideal, than a cautionary example.
And yet, I was once in love with Europe. The idea of Europe, at
any rate. I got over that love, by living there. And yet, I shall
never forget, and never regret, the five years I spent in West Germany,
reading old editions of old books; studying philosophy with the world’s
greatest living classicist, Hans Joachim Kraemer (not that I’m
a classicist!); working on the assembly-line, producing the world’s
greatest production car (at Daimler-Benz -- “Mercedes”
to you civilians); falling in love with the German language and one
of its speakers; and traveling on both sides of the Berlin Wall.
By the early 20th century, Europeans tended to speak synonymously
of “Europe,” “Christianity,” and “the
West.” But Christianity was born in the same place as Judaism
– the Middle East. Christianity may have achieved its greatest
political power in Europe, but its greatest religious passion had
peaked long before it arrived on the Continent. By the mid-19th century,
at the height of European power, Christianity was a decadent, empty
shell. And the ideas associated with “the West” were already
moving … west.
Until the past generation, the notion of being a “European,”
as opposed to the national of a particular country, was an oddity.
There were no “Europeans,” there were only Frenchmen,
Germans, etc. Today, since “Europeans” refuse to identify
themselves in opposition to Asia and Africa (and South America isn’t
a part of their consciousness), the only reason I can see for their
identification with the Continent, is in unified opposition to America.
(No, not “North America”; Europeans are indifferent to
Mexico and Canada. The term “North America” functions
merely as a petty insult to Americans.)
The official story today, is that nationalism destroyed Europe.
As is so often the case, the official story is nonsense. Nineteenth
century European history is largely split between wars pitting nation-states
and alliances against each other, and the rise of revolutionary, transnational
movements (communism, pan-Germanism). Those two trajectories converged
and exploded, in the first half of the 20th century. In each case,
a transnational movement (communism, national socialism) bonded with
a national base and nationalistic passion (Russia, Germany, Austria).
The irony, is that one of the reasons that Europe failed to stop Nazism,
was due to the interwar influence of a bureaucratic, pacifist humanitarianism.
After the war, that pacifist humanitarianism was left standing, unchallenged,
in Western Europe, where it still saps the Continent’s strength.
Today, corrupt, supranational bureaucracies (the UN, EU) are manipulated
by nationalist interests (France, Germany, Russia) in the name of
“internationalism.”
And as Europeans permit their nations to be swamped with their Muslim
enemies, one wonders if the nations of the Old World will go down
with a bang or a whimper. Thank goodness, no American president would
be so foolish, as to let the U.S. be overwhelmed by hostile foreigners!
Europe functions today as a grand museum. It is home to much of
the world’s great art, literature, philosophy, architecture,
libraries, churches, and museums in the traditional sense …
and oh, the food! Unfortunately, this treasure is largely lost on
the Europeans, who have been culturally bankrupt and politically socialist
since at least the end of The War. Given their embrace of the inferior
fare at McDonald’s, Europeans’ appreciation of even their
own food is suspect.
Rather than studying the masterpieces of the past, in order to create
new ones, Europeans today often are simply satisfied to know that
previous Europeans created great works, to patronize cultures that
have not, and to smugly believe that their neglect of one legacy,
and frivolous elevation of the other, makes them superior to the rest
of the world.
Thus should Americans study Europe’s triumphs … and
its decline. For if we are not careful, in the not-so-distant future,
Europe’s fate will be our own.
Nicholas Stix
New York-based freelancer Nicholas Stix has written
for Toogood Reports, Middle American News, the New York Post, Daily
News, American Enterprise, Insight, Chronicles, Newsday and many other
publications. His recent work is collected at
www.geocities.com/nstix and http://www.thecriticalcritic.blogspot.com.