Let's face facts, Europe's being
run by cowards
Mathias Doepfner
August 01, 2005
THE writer Henryk Broder recently
issued a withering indictment: Europe, your family name is
appeasement. That phrase resonates because it is so terribly
true.
Appeasement cost millions of Jews and non-Jews their lives as
allies Britain and France negotiated and hesitated too long
before they realised that Adolf Hitler needed to be fought and
defeated, because he could not be bound by toothless agreements.
Later, appeasement legitimised and stabilised communism in
the Soviet Union, then in East Germany, then throughout the rest
of Eastern Europe, where for several decades inhuman, repressive
and murderous governments were glorified.
Appeasement similarly crippled Europe when genocide ran
rampant in Bosnia and Kosovo. Indeed, even though we had
absolute proof of continuing mass murder there, we Europeans
debated and debated, and then debated still more. We were still
debating when finally the Americans had to come from halfway
around the world, into Europe yet again, to do our work for us.
Europe still hasn't learned. Rather than protecting democracy
in the Middle East, European appeasement, camouflaged behind the
fuzzy word equidistance, often seems to countenance suicide
bombings in Israel by fundamentalist Palestinians.
Similarly, it generates a mentality that allows Europe to
ignore the almost 500,000 victims of Saddam Hussein's torture
and murder machinery and, motivated by the self-righteousness of
the peace movement, to harangue George W. Bush as a warmonger.
This hypocrisy continues even as it is discovered that some
of the loudest critics of US action in Iraq made illicit
billions - indeed, tens of billions - of dollars in the corrupt
UN oil-for-food program.
Today we are faced with a particularly grotesque form of
appeasement. How is Germany reacting to the escalating violence
by Islamic fundamentalists in The Netherlands, Britain and
elsewhere in Europe? By suggesting - wait for it - that the
proper response to such barbarism is to initiate a Muslim
holiday in Germany.
I wish I were joking, but I am not. A substantial fraction of
Germany's Government - and, if polls are to be believed, the
German people -- actually believe that creating an official
state Muslim holiday will somehow spare us from the wrath of
fanatical Islamists.
One cannot help but recall Britain's Neville Chamberlain on
his return from Munich, waving that laughable treaty signed by
Hitler, and declaring the advent of peace in our time.
What atrocity must occur before the European public and its
political leadership understands what is really happening in the
world? There is a sort of crusade under way; an especially
perfidious campaign consisting of systematic attacks by
Islamists, focused on civilians, that is directed against our
free, open Western societies, and that is intent on their utter
destruction.
We find ourselves faced with a conflict that will most likely
last longer than any of the great military clashes of the last
century, a conflict conducted by an enemy that cannot be tamed
by tolerance and accommodation because that enemy is actually
spurred on by such gestures. Such responses have proven to be
signs of weakness.
Only two recent US presidents have had the courage needed to
shun appeasement: Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. The US's
critics may quibble over the details, but in our hearts we
Europeans know the truth, because we saw it first hand.
Reagan ended the Cold War, freeing half of Europe from almost
50 years of terror and slavery. And Bush, acting out of moral
conviction and supported only by the social democrat Tony Blair,
recognised the danger in today's Islamist war against democracy.
In the meantime, Europe sits back in the multicultural corner
with its usual blithe self-confidence.
Instead of defending liberal values and acting as an
attractive centre of power on the same playing field as the true
great powers, the US and China, it does nothing. On the
contrary, we Europeans present ourselves, in contrast to the
supposedly arrogant Americans, as world champions of tolerance,
which even Germany Interior Minister Otto Schily justifiably
criticises.
Where does this self-satisfied reaction come from? Does it
arise because we are so moral? I fear that it stems from the
fact that we Europeans are so materialistic, so devoid of a
moral compass.
For his policy of confronting Islamic terrorism head-on, Bush
risks the fall of the dollar, huge amounts of additional
national debt, and a massive and persistent burden on the US
economy. But he does this because, unlike most of Europe, he
realises that what is at stake is literally everything that
really matters to free people.
While we criticise the capitalistic robber barons of the US
because they seem too sure of their priorities, we timidly
defend our welfare states. "Stay out of it. It could get
expensive," we cry.
So, instead of acting to defend our civilisation, we prefer
to discuss reducing our 35-hour work week or improving our
dental coverage, or extending our four weeks of annual paid
holiday. Or perhaps we listen to television pastors preach about
the need to reach out to terrorists, to understand and forgive.
These days, Europe reminds me of an old woman who, with
shaking hands, frantically hides her last pieces of jewellery
when she notices a robber breaking into a neighbour's house.
Appeasement? That is just the start of it. Europe, thy name is
Cowardice.
Mathias Doepfner is chief executive of German media group
Axel Springer |