Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Monday, December 20, 2021

What was written as current affairs is now popular history and military sociology.


In March 1995, at what we now know to be the midpoint between the Cold War and the so-called Global War on Terror, military journalist Tom Ricks embedded himself in a platoon of recruits going through Marine Corps boot camp at the famed Parris Island. Making the Corps, Ricks' account of that experience, was published in the late summer of 1997, just as I enrolled – as a Foreign Service Officer – in the Marine Corps' Command and Staff College in Quantico. Like Ricks, in my ten years in the State Department (to that point), I had had frequent contact with Marines – the detachments that secured our embassies, and my Ambassador in Jamaica, who had been the first African-American to lead a Marine infantry unit in combat (in Vietnam), and was at that time a Reserve USMC Major General (two-star).

The bulk of the book is, properly enough, taken up with the literal trials and tribulations of the 63 men who seek to gain the title and dignity of being called “U.S. Marine,” which will only come after they complete the eleven week course. Ricks, much like the drill sergeants, focuses his attention on the stand-outs and wash-outs among the recruits. For the D.I.s, those in the middle will do ok without their attention. For Ricks, the ends of the bell curve provide better stories: “reformed” white supremacists and nominally criminal gang members from SE Washington DC are more interesting than fast food employees or even a washed up accountant. And it is interesting – but is it an authentic picture of the Marine recruit in the mid-1990s? Probably not.

Where the book really disappoints though is the penultimate chapter, Ricks' attempt to predict the coming role of the Marines and the US military. Having belabored the idea that there exists a deep and widening gap between the military generally and the Marines specifically and civilian culture at large, Ricks doubles down. Earlier, he noted that the skinhead and the gangbanger agreed that a “race war” was coming to America (and that Jews were at fault). In this latter chapter, he turns to experts with better credentials but the same bigotry to argue that as the military experiences the then-expected downsizing, and American culture is ravaged by the supposed acolytes of cultural Marxism, the Marines will be called on to maintain peace and order at home. Ricks is blind to oncoming rush of terrorism, even though al Qaeda had already bombed the World Trade Center in 1993 and the USAF barracks in Khobar, Saudi Arabia in 1996 (initially atributed to Hezbollah and its backer Iran), neither of which he mentions, and the Marines suffered 220 deaths in the 1983 Beirut terror bombing (which Ricks does mention).

In that chapter, Ricks worries about the increasing politicization of individual Marine and military officers, taking as his benchmark a mythical past in which US military officers were strictly apolitical, not even voting. The benchmark, the myth, studiously ignores the real history, which saw the former Commanding General of the U.S. Army George McClellan candidacy against his former Commander-in-Chief Lincoln in 1864, General Douglas MacArthur flirt with a run for President in 1952; the cigar-chomping, fire-bombing, warmongering General Curtis Lemay's run for Vice-President in 1968; and the similar role of Admiral James Stockdale in 1992.

Making the Corps is well-written, and Ricks had almost astonishing access to the boot camp experience. A very good effort for his first book-length essay. But in the end, this is descriptive, not analytical or incisive, and it remains a curio for the curious, easily laid aside and forgotten.

Sunday, May 9, 2021

The Big Lie


Jefferson Davis was captured this day, May 10, in 1865, a day after President Johnson declared an end to combat (and the confederacy). While already in 1866 the US House had voted overwhelmingly to indict Davis for treason, he was not so indicted until March 1868: after Davis had already bailed out and moved to Canada. Davis' lawyers argued the 14th Amendment, barring him from office for "insurrection or rebellion," meant that a new trial for treason was double jeopardy (!). Davis was included in the general pardon of December 1868. [The Federal prosecutor who wrote Davis' indictment merely substituted Davis' name for Burr's on Burr's 1807 treason indictment.]

A fervent racist, by 1873 Davis was a leading proponent of "The Lost Cause" and proclaimed that southerners were "cheated not conquered."

Friday, April 23, 2021

 !!!

“Along these lines, here is a nice breakfast story: Earlier in the fall, the journalist Kingsley Martin visited the massive Tilbury shelter in the East End, a margarine warehouse that nightly drew up to fourteen thousand people … [who] paid little attention to sanitation []. 'They urinate and defecate in every part of the building. The process is helped by the convenience of the margarine in cardboard cases which can be piled up into useful mounds behind which people can dig themselves in and sleep and defecate and urinate in comfort.' He did not know whether this margarine had then been distributed to food markets in the city [].” The Splendid and The Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz, Erik Larson, p. 533.

Sunday, April 18, 2021

 2024 / 1933 / 1865 / 1389

There is a lot of talk (already!) about the Presidential election in 2024. One argument is that The Former Guy can't be successful in running for the GOP nomination because he is just all about 2020. Well, yeah. Dwelling on past "injustices" is always a losing strategy. See Germany in 1933, the American South since 1865, and Serbia ever since 1389. 

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

 On This Day in History - April 14

On April 14, 1912, the RMS Titanic hit an iceberg at nearly full speed, despite being warned SIX times that there was sea ice. Flaws in the ship's design meant it sank in less than three hours. The chairman of the company that built Titanic had fifty years experience, and had been chairman for 17 years. The chief naval architect (who drowned on the Titanic) was a “genius” with 23 years experience, five years heading the drafting department. The designer of the Titanic's safety systems, which proved wholly inadequate, had forty years experience. The Titanic's captain had 45 years experience, 25 in command of ships, eight years as captain of the world's largest passenger liners.

On April 14, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln was shot while attending a play at Ford's Theater in Washington D.C. While Lincoln was usually attended and guarded by three men, none were present to bar entrance to the President's box to assassin John Wilkes Booth; the policeman who was supposed to be on duty was drinking in a tavern. A US Army surgeon immediately rushed to Lincoln's side; neither he nor an additional six medical doctors (including the US Surgeon General) were able to save Lincoln.



Friday, April 9, 2021

What We Have Here is a Failure to … Negotiate

My feeds are full of items from activists advocating for various goals, from electoral reform, vaccine “equity,” legal marijuana, police reform, environmental protection, and so on. Most all of them are variations on the line of “This is THE RIGHT THING TO DO” and pretty much stop there. Since most of them are just asking for money from people who already side with them, that's ok. As far as it goes. But then they take that same stance into enunciating the policy into real-world results... and wonder why they stall out miserably.

Let's back up and look at their pitch: equity, justice, reform … THE RIGHT THING TO DO. But no one – NO ONE – thinks they're the bad guys. If you don't think you're the bad guy, you probably think you are already doing the right thing. If the “other side” really wants you to change your position, they have to do (at least) one of two things: convince you are in the wrong, or make it worth your while to accept their proposal.

Can the other side be convinced they're wrong? Maybe. But there is a reason why this is also know as the “Road to Damascus” moment, a miraculous occurrence: it's awfully rare, and takes the equivalent of divine intervention. I exaggerate, somewhat, for effect. You have countervailing examples: Secretary of Defense Perry, formerly in charge of the US nuclear weapons arsenal, who ten years after he left office joined with former Secretaries of State Shultz (RIP) and Kissinger, and former Senator Nunn to call for the US to take the lead in reducing and abolishing those weapons.* The four became convinced that under the changed circumstances of the end of the Cold War, only a radical change in the US stance could enhance American and global safety and security. But many Americans and much of the US Senate is stuck in the past.

Some (many?) will object to the other route - make it worth while to accept the proposal. That's … “compromise.”
Even dictionary.com defines that as “to jeopardize,” and “to make a dishonorable or shameful concession.” The urban dictionary has in second place In marriage – an amiable arrangment between husband and wife whereby they agree to let her have her own way.” In fourth: “compromise is when nobody gets what they wanted.” Sixth: An agreement between two or more political parties in which one attempts to be reasonable and the other agrees to whine until they get everything they want under the pretense that the other party or parties are not, in fact compromising.”

Let's skip over those to the top-rated entry at urbandictionary.com: “A beautiful way to solve the issues and problems through straight-forward conversation.”

How can we use that definition to reach sufficient consensus to adopt policy recommendations so as to change the real world around us? Oddly enough, the answer is in the self-same social media channels. But not the messages from advocates; rather, let's look at the ones trying to literally sell us something, asking us to exchange our cash for what they have on offer. They are trying to make it worth our while - to send in our money – for what they want to sell. There's no good guys, no bad guys – just: we each have something the other wants.

Compromise can be tricky; largely if the compromise is seen as the final say in a matter, or is overbroad and unbalanced. Cf. Misssouri Compromise of 1820, or the 1876 Rutherford-Tilden Presidential election and the Compromise of 1877. Or, for you nuclear disarmament fans, the Partial (or Limited) Test Ban Treaty of 1963, whose follow-up, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (adopted 1996) has never come into force.

All of this is complicated right now in American politics by idiotic no compromise stances taken by both parties, but particularly that initiated by Mitch McConnell after the 2008 election. It is not helped by the likes of Senator Gillibrand, who voted against almost every nominee in the prior Administration – apparently just to have a talking point in her (brutally) unsuccessful 2020 Presidential campaign.

To end on a high note: Two examples of succesful compromise in action. In 1990, coal was used to generate 307 million kilowatts of electricity in the US, 42% of total production. In 2020, coal was down 30% to 218 million kilowatts, less than 20% of total production. In 1990, renewables (mainly hydro- ) generated 106 million kilowatts, more than doubling in 2020 to 284 million kilowatts, with almost all the increase in solar and wind. Where's the compromise? Solar and wind greatly benefited from federal (and state) tax incentives, incentives renewed by bipartisan compromise in the December 2020 COVID relief bill. And one I had a hand in: In 2006, the Government of Montenegro called for a referendum on independence from Serbia. Initially, the conditions for the referendum to be valid were unclear, as to the question to be asked, the margin of victory needed to seceed, and other related issues. Indepedence supporters wanted a threshold of 40%; State Unionists advocated 66.67%. A compromise threshold of 55% “Yes” to seceed was proposed by interested members of the International Community, a position accepted unanimously by Montenegro's Parliament – even though many MPs and their parties opposed dissolution of the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. The 55.5% “Yes” vote was accepted by ALL concerned. A successful compromise.

https://www.hoover.org/research/world-free-nuclear-weapons-0


Tuesday, April 6, 2021

 On this day in history, April 6, 1945, my father's ship, the SS Pierre Victory, arrived at Kerama Retto, an anchorage of small islets some 15 miles (25 kilometers) west of Okinawa. The ship carried some 7000 tons of ammunition for the US forces that had just invaded Okinawa. Almost immediately, Japanese kamikaze planes attacked, sinking two other Victory ships and a smaller LST.

The Pierre Victory survived weeks of attacks as she was gradually unloaded - running out of ammo for her own guns before emptying her holds of ammuntion for the guns ashore.
Dad returned to the States, marrying his high school sweetheart - my mom - in June 1945.
Below: LST-447 explodes after being hit by a kamikaze, April 6, 1945.

http://www.armed-guard.com/item06.html

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Explaining Police Killings The Twin Cities (Minneapolis- St Paul) and Jamaica have almost the same population (2.9 million to 2.7 million). Jamaica saw 83 killings by security forces (mainly cops) in 2020. That's down from 135 annually, ever year in the 1990s. Jamaica, including its security forces, is 92% "Afro-Jamaican", less than 0.4% white. The current Prime Minister's party has its roots in Fabianism - democratic socialism. The previous PM's party is social democratic, and had close ties to Fidel's Cuba. No other party than these two has held power since independence in 1962. Take from this what you will.

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

IMHO, I think the adoption of the Second Amendment has to be read in the context of a) no standing Federal army; b) Shay's Rebellion (1786); c) slave revolts such as the 1739 Stono Rebellion; and d) the 1772 Gaspee Affair together with 1775 Lexington and Concord. And all the surrounding myths then, later, and now.

Whether any of that history and myth should be controlling today is another matter.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Book Review: The Longest Winter: The Battle of the Bulge and the Epic Story of World War II's Most Decorated Platoon (Hardcover) by Alex Kershaw

When Kershaw is relating the stories of the members of the I&R platoon (Intelligence and Recon (scout) 394th Infantry regiment, 99th Division, US Army) , drawing on his personal interviews with the veterans, the book is pretty good. At that point, it is a compelling story of men under fire and duress. When he is setting the larger context, drawing on secondary sources, the story is trite and filled with niggling errors.
I also disliked the amount of attention given to Skorzeny and SS Col. Peiper. In particular, Kershaw imples that Peiper was unfairly targeted by "Communists" after the war. Here's the thing: a commanding officer is responsible for the behavior of ALL the troops under his command. It does not matter if Peiper was not personally present at the Malmedy Massacre, or that he did not order the killings of POWs. When atrocities occured, it was Peiper's responsibility to punish those of his subordinates who transgressed. Op. cit. Jadranko Prlić, Rasim Delić, Atif Dudaković, Sakib Mahmuljin - all convicted of war crimes during the Bosnian War (1992-5) for their failure to adequately supervise troops under their command. And Prlić was a politician, not an army commander in the field. (I also met all four after the war.) [N.b.: Dudaković has been charged; he has not been tried as of this writing.]

Thursday, March 18, 2021

 

Book Review: Behold, America: The Entangled History of “America First” and “The American Dream” by Sarah Churchwell

An Etymological Essay at Book Length


Churchwell's 2018 book looks at these two tropes, from their origins around 1900, the peak of “America First” in the speeches of isolationist Charles Lindbergh in 1941, to the proclaimed “death” of the American Dream and renewed promotion of “America First” in 2015 by the loser of the 2020 Presidential election. Churchwell examines these two terms through their use in public discourse throughout the 20
th century, focusing on their definition over time. She argues that “The American Dream” is the social contract, a moral economy, that balances liberty and freedom, equality and justice, but that its meaning has been diverted and perverted, especially since the Second World War, to mean the possibility of becoming exceedingly, excessively rich. That America and Americans have redefined Calvinism as “If you are rich, it is God rewarding you for your virtues” and making “The American Dream” synonymous with that redefined doctrine. On the other hand, “America First” and its close relative “100% American” = “100% white” – and Nordic or “Aryan”* white at that. (Lindbergh's public leadership of the “America First” campaign collapsed a few months before the attack on Pearl Harbor after he delivered an anti-Semitic speech in Des Moines.)

I rather liked the opening of Chapter 6, “America First 1920-1923: The Simplicity of Government” which opens with the tale of President Harding, who in “his 1920 'America first' campaign,[] notoriously announced that 'government is a very simple thing,'” further “promising to run the American government like a business.” Now, where have we heard
that lately?

Churchwell reminds us of the lasting value of the works of Sinclair Lewis, Walter Lippman, and Dorothy Thompson. All were pronounced anti-Fascists, and their observations hold true today as applied to the heirs of the reactionary “100% American” & “America First” legacies.



* “Aryan” was a term applied to themselves by ancient Indo-Iranian peoples. Somehow I am not surprised that its misapplication as a synonym for “Nordic” was popularized by a graduate of the University of Geneva (who was born in England, raised in France, and settled in Germany), whose B.Sc. thesis was shown to be mystical nonsense.


Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Book Review:  Imperialism: A Study ... is the iconoclastic 1902 work from British economist J.A. Hobson. Today it is more generally known for having inspired Vladimir Lenin to write his 1916 treatise, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism. Secondarily, Hobson advanced his theory that the British investor class had "oversaved," with domestic production outstripping domestic consumption, in consequence thereof leading the investors to seek investment opportunities overseas: first in Europe and from 1870 onward in Africa and Asia - the "tropics". A Socialist, Hobson argued that the funds should have been directed homeward by increasing the income placed at the disposition and advantage of the working classes, thereby increasing domestic consumption to match production.

An exhaustive (and exhausting) reading of the text reveals a persistent shadowed motivation: British investment overseas will empower the "black" and "yellow" races, literally imperilling "white civilization." While Hobson is rightfully criticized for anti-Semitism in his earlier book on the Boer War (UK vs ethnic Dutch settlers in South Africa, 1899-1901), blaming the war on "Jewish financiers," such blatant anti-Semitism is missing from "Imperialism." It is beyond curious that modern reviewers of Imperialism so blithely skate past the racism that persists throughout the text.
Hobson supports "colonisation" as opposed to imperialism, which he sees as white families settling in temperate climes - without regard for extant aborginal society and culture.
Hobson's analysis of British imperialism - that is to say, abusive exploitation - of Africa is extensive, cogent and well-supported by citations. (Part II, Chapter IV - "Imperialism and the Lower Races.") Not so the following Chapter on "Imperialism in Asia," which is painted on a phantasmagorical background of an innately corrupt India and a peaceful, wise and complacent China robbed of its innocence and riches by European buccaneers.
Hobson has both an eye and a pen for a good turn of phrase.
Pithy metaphor:
"A coma accompanied by fits." Miss Mary Kingsley on British policy in the West African colonies. p. 128
Insouciant nationalism:
"Probably every one would agree that an Englishman would be right in considering his way of looking at the world and at life better than that of the Maori or Hottentot, and no one will object in the abstract to England doing her best to impose her better and higher view on those savages." (Goes on to accord Belgians, Germans, Nordics the same lack of disrespect, if at a higher step.) Earl Grey on Hubert Harvey of the British South African Chartered Company, p. 167
Outrageous sanctimony:
"Our only programme is that of the moral and material regeneration of the country." King Leopold II of Belgium, referencing the Congo. p. 209
{I cannot praise too highly King Leopold's Ghost by Adam Hochschild in refutation of this hypocrisy.}
Damnation of Populism:
They are no longer seriously frightened by the power of the people as implied by a popular franchise, nor are they prepared to conciliate it by further taxes on property; .... 'Panem et circenses' interpreted into English means cheap booze and Mafficking (Mafeking, Siege of: ed.). Popular education, instead of serving as a defence, is an incitement towards Imperialism; it has opened up a panorama of vulgar pride and crude sensationalism to a great inert mass who see current history and the tangled maze of world movements with dim, bewildered eyes, and are the inevitable dupes of the able organised interests who can lure, or scare, or drive them into any convenient course. p. 107
Fake News:
Imperialism is based upon a persistent misrepresentation of facts and forces chiefly through a most refined process of selection, exaggeration, and attenuation, directed by interested cliques and persons so as to distort the face of history. The gravest peril of Imperialism lies in the state of mind of a nation which has become habituated to this deception and which has rendered itself incapable of self-criticism. p. 223
Prophesy:
"[China] may turn upon her civiliser [.] .... [T]here is no consideration, theoretic or practical, to prevent British capital from transferring itself to China, provided it can find there a cheaper or more efficient supply of labour, or even to prevent Chinese capital with Chinese labour from ousting Britsh produce [.] ....
China might so turn the tables upon the Western industrial nations, and, either by adopting their capital and organisers or, as is more probable, by substituting her own, might flood their markets with her cheaper manufacturers, and refusing their imports in exchange might take her payments in liens upon their capital, reversing the earlier process of investment until she gradually obtained financial control over her quondam patrons and civilisers. This is no idle speculation." pp 329-330
And Condemnation of the "Upper" Class:
" ... vulgar ostentation, domineering demeanour and corrupting largesse to dazzle and degrade the life of our people." p. 158

 Book Review All Against All: The Long Winter of 1933 and the Origins of the Second World War by Paul Jankowski

I'll agree that this is "A narrative [ ], cinematic in scope, of a process." But a history it is not. A proper history is analytical - why and not just what happened. "Delusions of nationalism" is an assertion, not analysis. Overall, the text is merely descriptive, no more so than when he devotes a paragraph to actress Jeanette MacDonald's impression of the appearance of German delegate (and rabid nationalist) Alfred Hugenberg at the 1933 London World Economic Conference.
The narrative itself is crippled by the author's style, which employs a muddled grammar (notably far too many indefinite referents) and odd metaphors that leaves a turgid account, one that had me reading the same sentence or paragraph over and over again until I finally fished out his meaning - or, too often, gave up and moved on.
His discussions of diplomacy are ill-founded. He asserts that the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty, a backdrop to the disarmament discussions a decade later in Geneva, resulted from an aspirational verging on delusional attachment to disarmament, and necessitated the concurrent agreement guaranteeing security in China. At no point does the author note that no naval power of the time could afford the fleets they had in being and far less the extravagant armadas being built, that naval disarmament was an economic imperative.
As with understanding of diplomatic motivations, his discussion of diplomatic process is lacking. On the World Economic Conference of 1933, Jankowski states that FDR “never sought authority” from Congress to discuss war debts and tariffs. That's not how it works: the US Executive does not need “Congressional Authority” to discuss an issue, or even enter into negotiations. Congress is involved if the resulting agreement requires legislation to implement, or takes the form of a treaty require Senate consent. Even here, the author later restates the obstacle as instructions to the US delegation to not “sign” agreements without "congressional scrutiny.” And indeed, the author turns to discussions led by the UK and US central banks, in which participated seven other countries, which did reach an agreement including from the US delegation for referral to capitals.
Not worthless, but not worth the time it took to read. It's certainly not The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 by Christopher Clark.

 

Forlorn Hopes, Lost Causes, Bitter Enders, and Gotterdammerung: The Romance of Pointless Defiance

Throughout history – or at least in the tales white European men tell themselves (which until recently was the same thing), there reoccurs stories of defiance, to be lauded and held up as an example of how to act. Often, a dispassionate review shows what happened (or was attempted) to be pointless: nothing was gained, much was lost to no advantage to anyone.

Forlorn Hope

Technically, a Forlorn Hope is a near-suicidal attack, ordered when more conventional approaches have failed, in the hope that the Forlorn Hope will make an overall victory possible, From the Dutch “Verloren Hoop” or Lost Troop. Colloquially, it is used in American English as a synonym for Last Stand. Compare with the word “Awful”, which
should be the superlative for awesome, but has come to mean its opposite.

In 1861, France, the UK, and Spain decided that Mexico's unilateral two-year moratorium on paying interest on the state debt could and should be lifted – at the point of a bayonet or two. The UK and Spain left with their money, the French decided to expand the empire (thus,
“Amerique latine or Latin America” a term devised in Colombia in 1856 but popularised by Napoleon III). This ultimately did not turn out so well for Emperor Napoleon III of France – and quite badly for erstwhile Archduke Maximilian of Austria: shot for his troubles (and posing as Emperor of Mexico) when the French were forced out in 1867. But I am getting ahead of my story. So, May 5, 1862 – nope, too far back. Keep this up, and I may sink my readers' interest.

On April 30, 1863, 65 Legionaires of the French Foreign Legion were sent to reinforce the escort of a convoy, itself in support of the French siege of the Mexican stronghold of Puebla, on the way to the capital of Mexico City. The Legionaires found themselves cut off by a stronger force – which kept getting bigger: 250, 600, 1400; by the end more than 3000. French Captain Danjou, surrounded, had his men swear – on Danjou's prosthetic hand! - to fight to the death rather than surrender, in (supposed) imitation of Napoleon's Guard at Waterloo. The Mexicans offered to let the French surrender. Non! Said Danjou, quickly meeting his own death. More Mexicans arrived; another offer to the hungry, thirsty Legionaires.
Merde! Exclaimed the remaining sergeant. Late in the afternoon, the Mexicans again offered surrender, now to the last 12 men on their feet. Again no. Out of ammo, the last five (or six) fixed bayonets and charged. Then the final three at last surrendered. The Legionaires had, truly, “fought like demons.” and Danjou's hand is a central relic for the Legion to this day.

Glory without end. But to what effect? The French had early on halted the convoy when they saw the large interposing Mexican force. And ran the convoy through to the siege in prompt order over the next few days. The Legionaires taken prisoner were treated well, and exchanged to the French on Bastille Day, 14 July 1863. Puebla, then Mexico City, fell to the French. But by the end of 1866, France had withdrawn most of its troops, pressured by the United States that had won its own Civil War. Mid-May 1867 Mexico City was retaken by Mexican forces, Maximilian captured, court-martialed and shot on 19 June, a few days short of his 35
th birthday; and thousands of miles from his birthplace in Schloss Schönbrunn in Vienna. The Legionaires's sacrifice was glorious – but operationally pointless. The Legionaires had fought – and died – for Glory and Honor. Nothing less. And nothing more.

Lost Causes

Ah, The Lost Cause! The South Will Rise Again! No, not The Lost Cause. A lost cause. Partly because The Lost Cause is too well known. But mainly because pursuit of The Lost Cause hasn't been anywhere near as futile as one could hope, and certainly doesn't rank as pointless defiance.

Real lost causes did arise in the decades after
Camarón. (I forgot to mention that, didn't I? The pointless encounter in 1863 is known as the Battle of Camarón, after the small town near Vera Cruz where it took place.) One such lost cause is The War of the Triple Alliance, or Paraguayan War, (1864-1870) begun by Paraguay against Brazil. Then Argentina and Uruguay weighed in – against Paraguay. While the weight of military force was slightly to Paraguay's advantage to start, in a long war, its isolated position and demographic inferiority led it to doom. Paraguay lost up to 1/3 of its territory, 1/2 or more of its population and nearly every adult male. Arguably, it has yet to recover.

Then there are Queen Victoria's Little Wars, in Africa, Asia, Canada (!), as small numbers of heavily armed soldiers wrack ruin and conquest in service of Her Majesty, glory, empire, and extension of Rudyard Kipling's “White Man's Burden” - that of “civilization” and “Christianity.” Result was – well, two good movies: “Zulu” (the 1964 one) and “The Man Who Would be King” (1975).

These are lost causes. However, pointless and defiant don't really describe these lost causes.


But the Fenian Raids? Defiant? Check. Pointless? Check.

From 1845 to 1849, the Great Famine ravaged Ireland. Greedy English landlords, backed by the heartless government in London, allowed 1 million to starve to death, while another million fled abroad: to Canada, Australia, Mexico (!). And the United States, on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line. After the Civil War, thousands of Irish men had military training, weapons, a bit of money, time, and national pride in their Irish homeland. Also a persistent grievance against the English.

Ireland remained an ocean away, strongly occupied by professional soldiers who were demonstrably capable of resisting uprising (1798), rebellion (1803, 1848) and planned insurrection (1865). But Canada? It – actually they (Canada was not a unified colony in 1865) – was near by; just across the border. And heck, the Americans almost took it. Twice (1775, 1812).

Not that the Irish in America
wanted Canada. Nah. They'd take it – or at least key points and infrastructure – and TRADE it back to the English for Ireland.

The Fenians began this well thought out campaign in April 1866 with an attack on Campo Bello (now Campobello) New Brunswick. First assembling their men across the narrow strait in Maine … well, that's where it stopped. The British could see what the Fenians were up to and preempted the attack by moving 700 regular soldiers and warships over from Halifax.

In June 1866, the Fenians launched two raids, and this time both successfully got across the border. With the warship USS Michigan disabled by Fenian sympathisizers, something over 1000 Fenians crossed the Niagara River west from Buffalo toward Fort Erie. The next moming, they ambushed a large force of Canadian militia, inflicting numerous casualties and taking prisoners. But with the Michigan back in operation, cutting the Fenains off from supply and reinforcement, and British regulars and more Canadian militia approaching, the Fenians crossed back into the U.S. where they surrendered. U.S. President Andrew Johnson called the Fenians “evil-disposed persons” and said their actions were illegal under American and international law.

Which didn't stop the next raid, the day after Johnson's proclamation. This time just under 1000 Fenians set from St Albans Vermont and briefly took four Canadian villages before being chased off by Canadian cavalry. (To be fair, in 1864 a raid the other direction by Confederates who had escaped from Union POW camps robbed three banks in the selfsame St Albans, making off with at least $88,000 (about $1.5 million today).)

American public opinion favored the Fenians, and they were released and got their weapons back under executive orders signed by Johnson ahead of the November Congressional elections.

Raids resumed in 1870, two in late May. At Eccles Hill, essentially ON the Vermont-Canada border, a brief skirmish quickly dispersed the Fenians. Two days later and some miles west, another force of Fenians is fired upon by Canadian troops and “redeploy” back into New York, where their leader John O'Neill is promptly arrested by the US Marshal.

And one more – my favorite! O'Neill, recently released from prison after a pardon from President Grant, travels to St. Paul Minnesota (!) to plan a raid on Winnipeg. On October 5, 1871 he and three dozen Fenians capture the Hudson's Bay Company post in Pembina. Those of you who know your North Dakota-Manitoba geography well, or have just travelled by car between Winnipeg and St Paul, may be scratching your heads. Yes, Pembina is and was in North Dakota. In the United States.

At this point the Fenians in the United States decided these raids were a little worse than pointless, and started sending money to the Irish in Ireland – and England. Which while no longer pointless did lead to much violence and bloodshed. Another unified and ultimately independent country can however trace its origins to the Fenians raids. The Dominion of Canada began the unification of Canada on 1 July 1867, at least in part in response to the 1866 raids.

Bitter Enders

So, the 19
th Century Pax Brittanica was a facade in Canada. But surely elsewhere it held? The flag never sets on the British Empire and all that? Even before the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, Britain had “gone abroad in search of monsters to destroy” in the words of US Secretary of State John Quincy Adams. From 1815 to 1902, Britain was almost constantly at war, but rarely against anyone of white European stock. To the dismay of its settlers, the British made an exception of the Cape Colony in South Africa. A brief Boer (Dutch: “farmer”) rebellion in 1815, described by a partisan observer as "the most insane attempt ever made by a set of men to wage war against their sovereign" was brutually crushed. What followed was almost ninety years of a lethal Mad Hatter's Party, as the British repression and dislike of the Boers resulted in them moving further and further inland. For the Boers, this was the Great Trek. (For English speakers, we picked up a new word.) A partial status vivendi was reached in 1881, when the British lost the three-month-long First Boer War. Then, most unfortunately for the Boers, they found .. GOLD! “Outlanders” - mainly Brits – flooded into Boer lands. In October 1899, the Boers demanded that the Brits leave them alone. British sentiment was led by the likes of Cecil Rhodes (he of Rhodesia and the Rhodes Scholarship), who called for armed defense of “outlander” rights and better treatment for Black Africans (no, really).

The first phase of the war went badly for the British. Famously, Lord Baden-Powell was besieged in Mafeking, with only Sunday cricket matches (and concerts) for light entertainment until relieved, with His Lordship going on to create the Boy Scouts. (Nevermind he had been ordered to NOT defend in Mafeking.) Nonetheless, less than a year after the conflict started, the Boer capitals of Bloemfontein and Pretoria had fallen. The regular, stand-up war was over.

But the Bittereinders among the Boers did not give up, their commandos (another new word for English!) turning to guerilla warfare. (Guerilla was not a new word, arising in 1809 from the [Iberian] Penisular War of Wellington against Napoleonic France.) About half of the orignal Boer force stayed in the field as combatants. Those 25 thousand or so commandos were opposed by up to 500,000 British, Canadians, Australians, and New Zealanders.Twenty-to-one odds did not suffice, so the British commander ordered a scorched earth policy, destroying Boer settlements and driving the old men, women and children – and Black “servants” – into concentration camps. (TWO new phrases: scorched earth and concentration camps.) 6,189 Boer commandoes died in the field, along with over 22,000 Brits. Over 25,000 Boer women and 22,000 children under age 16 (about 20% of those detained) died, along with uncounted thousands of Black Africans. (See British war aims, above.)

Also decimated was the British budget: “defence” spending skyrocketed from 35 million pounds annually to 120 million – over 6% of GDP. Cheap compared to World War One, but four times what the UK spends today.

Not so much pointless defiance as a bitter end.

Götterdämmerung

In April 1945, the Berlin Philharmonic played its last concerts in Nazi Germany. The musicians played the finale of Wagner's
Götterdämmerung , Brahms' German Requiem (requiem: to honor the dead), and Strauss' Death and Transfiguration. For any concert-goers who missed the point, Hitler Youth reportedly passed out cyanide pills.

Eight months earlier, another major European capital was about to fall to an approaching army: Paris. Or would it? In the 1960's there was published a book, followed by a movie, both with the title,
Is Paris Burning? - reportedly the words asked with no sense of ironic foreshadowing by Hitler on August 25, 1944 as French and American troops entered the City of Lights. We learned this first through the memoirs – indeed, apologia – of General Dietrich von Choltitz, the last German commander of Paris. There is solid documentary evidence that on the morning of August 23, Hitler had in fact ordered that “The Seine bridges will be prepared for demolition. Paris must not fall into the hands of the enemy except as a field of ruins.” Also known as the Trümmerfeld order. As recounted in the official US Army History Breakout and Pursuit, von Choltitz informed his superior headquarters later that same day:

that he had complied by placing three tons of explosive in the cathedral of Notre Dame, two tons in the Invalides, and one in the Palais Bourbon (the Chamber of Deputies), that he was ready to level the Arc de Triomphe to clear a field of fire, that he was prepared to destroy the Op
éra and the Madeleine, and that he was planning to dynamite the Tour Eiffel and use it as a wire entanglement to block the Seine. Incidentally, he advised Speidel, he found it impossible to destroy the seventy-odd bridges.

Von Choltitz was likely being sarcastic, as he had begun the phone call “by thanking Speidel for the lovely order from Hitler.” Nevertheless, in the days and weeks after the surrender of Paris, many (still intact) bridges and monuments did have to be demined. Von Choltitz's motivations are unclear. Hitler's are not: he wanted vengeance. In the same order that he required the destruction of Paris, he stressed the need to hold onto Paris as long as possible, to defend the sites in the Pas de Calais, the base for the V-1
“Vengeance” weapons being launched almost haphazardly against London. When von Choltitz surrendered Paris to the Allies nearly intact on August 25, Hitler struck at Paris. Immediately, 120 Luftwaffe bombers dropped incendiary bombs, killing at least 50 people. The first lethal V-2 missiles are targeted, not on London, but Paris, with 22 rockets fired between September 7 and October 6, largely striking in the suburbs to no military effect whatsoever.

Intriguingly, General Eisenhower and the Allied high command had not wanted to take Paris. They realized – as any of their professional opponents could also see – that the need to control, feed, and otherwise supply a major city and its civilian population would place a major strain on their logistics, and impair the pursuit and destruction of German armed forces before they could reach relative safety back in Germany. A “field of ruins” would have been a warcrime of pointless defiance.

Why this essay? Why now?

As part of my interest in history is my focus on military history, which inevitably leads to accounts of military disasters. Within that are the “what the heck” moments? Just how did the instigators of this monumental FUBAR think it was going to turn out? The classic FUBAR occurred almost 100 years before the first use of the word, with The Charge of the Light Brigade in the Crimean War. (1854)

To which poesied Tennyson:

Someone had blundered.

Theirs not to make reply,

Theirs not to reason why,

Theirs but to do and die.

And then there was the poster, way back in Spencer's Gifts, under the black lights (ultraviolet). A mouse gives the finger to an eagle swooping down it. “Defiance” is defined in words next to the depiction. Pretty cool poster when you're 16. But over the years, I've spared a thought or two for the poster. And concluded the mouse is an idiot. Not brave. Not even foolhardy. Just stupid. Not only by getting himself into a situation he can't escape. But by just standing there, finger out, not running, he is making the eagle's job just that much easier. A pointless gesture. Heck, even in “Animal House” the Deltas' “futile and stupid gesture” is more productive than this. And there, of course, is the rub: our culture, and notably American culture, has enthroned and enobled the “futile and stupid gesture”, made pointless defiance a virtue. When faced with a host of options, many bad, some worse, why reject the one that gives the best possible outcome? Even if that best outcome sucks, why choose instead the worst result just for some non-tangible, transitory self-gratification? The answer is that culture has transformed pointless defiance, enshrouded it with the myth that, “Hey, maybe you'll win. In spite of everything, even though this act of defiance is misguided and stupid and almost 100% guaranteed not to succeed, you never know if you don't roll the dice.”

Of course we also have Samson: vain, vengeful, homicidal. His act of suicidal vengeance is praised, however, as the result of God hearing and answering Samson's prayers, incidentally beginning the deliverance of Samson's people from his enemies. A hero in spite of himself.

In these four vignettes, at least one actor decided for pointless defiance, for the futile and stupid gesture. In Mexico, the French Foreign Legionaires mimicked Napoleon's Guard -
"La Garde meurt mais ne se rend pas!" ("The Guard dies but does not surrender!") but in so doing had no effect whatsoever on the French siege then underway. Had they accepted the quarter that was offered to them not once, not twice, but three times they would have lived with no impairment of French Imperial designs. Their commander forfeited his life and that of his men for a legend.

To the north a few years later, the Irish Americans Fenian dreams are something out of Gilbert & Sullivan, a light opera with cannons and rifle fire for percussion and woodwinds. One can talk lightly of the raids, which led to less than five dozen dead (both killed in action and mortally wounded) of 40,000 men engaged in total, and the brief nature of the scattered engagements over five years. The concept of exchanging a kidnapped Canada for a free Ireland was rankest fantasy. But the issues were dead serious, and were not solved or extinguished by the defeat of the raids but returned to their home in Hibernia, with American support, money and latterly weapons.

The Second Boer War (or Boer War to the British, as who wished to forget that they lost the first so quickly and decisively) was fought for notions of liberty on the one side, and imperial domination and gold on the other. For the Boers, the guerilla war was in the near term more tragic than pointless after the British responded with uncommon brutality. When the Union of South Africa was formed in 1910, just eight years after the Boer war, Afrikaner/Boer generals from that war became Prime Minister and War Minister. For the British, the gold gained was oddly tarnished with not just excessive military deaths but civilian blood as well, and pale in comparision to the overshadowing financial cost of the war.

Paris did not burn, but Berlin, Hamburg, Dresden, Warsaw and so many other cities did, without even considering the devastation wrought elsewhere, notably in Europe and Asia. But Hitler's object in Paris late August 1944 was naked, unadulterated vengeance, unexcused and in fact contrary to any military objective. We have only General von Choltitz's own words for why he did not carry out his orders for pointless destruction and defiance, and his words are sometimes contradictory, often unclear, and always self-serving. We must remain content with the result without false heroism and unwarranted praise.

So, that's why this subject. Why now? The events of November 3, 2020, to January 20, 2021 are too fresh to be proper subjects for history. For now, we must be satisfied with journalism. But they will lend themselves to history, soon. And when that time comes, it will be good to reflect on past follies and the trusim that while history does not repeat itself, it does rhyme.




© 2021 Alan J. Carlson
Reproduction of this work for personal use permitted as long as the work is not modified and the source of the work is cited.

Friday, November 3, 2017

Louis XIV, Louis XV, Donald I

"L'etat, c'est moi." Louis XIV.
"French King Louis XIV believed that he had the right to do whatever he desired as the ruler of France. When asked to explain how he thought the king should interact with the rest of the government and the people, his reply was, “L’etat, c’est moi”, or “I am the state”, meaning that he was bound by no rules and had no limits.
Over the years, the expression became a catch phrase for those government officials who overstepped their bounds."
“The one that matters is me. I’m the only one that matters.” Donald Trump
"Apres moi, le deluge." (After me, the flood.) Louis XV

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Book Review: Moral Combat: Good and Evil in World War II, by Michael Burleigh.

Synopsis: The Nazis were bad people who did bad things for bad reasons. The Soviets under Stalin were bad people who did bad things for one good reason. The Japanese did a lot of bad things, but since the legal definition of conspiracy is unfathomable, those things just happened – and some of them were good people who loved their families, so there's that. The Americans were good people who did good things but were too naive and unsophisticated to know why they did what they did. The British are good people who did good things for good reasons, except when they did bad things for good reasons, so those were good things too, really. The Italians changed sides so that 99% of the Fascists could escape punishment for the not so terribly bad things they did. The Croatian Ustashe are beneath notice, and while Polish and French resistance is remarkable, the Yugoslav Partisans turned out to be Commies, so there is no reason to acknowledge them.
Reinhold Neibuhr and Martin Niemöller can't hold a candle to CoE (Church of England) clergy when it comes to the theological implications of morality in wartime, so are justly ignored. Also, lawyers, and moral philosophers, the political “left,” the New York Times, and all other historians are ignorant. And you can tell whether someone is morally virtuous by their appearance and personal habits. Lastly, apparently there is no problem with using terms like “Apache-like” and Gypsy.
TL, DR: Hitler bad, Churchill good.

Monday, July 24, 2017

Overrated Classic: Fritz Fischer's Germany's Aims in the First World War

Fritz Fischer's Germany's Aims in the First World War is an acclaimed classic, usually cited for breaking with forty years of German accepted wisdom that, unlike in 1939, in 1914 Germany “slid” blamelessly into war (to quote UK PM Lloyd-George). That is to say, Fischer asserted iconoclastically that the German Reich bore "a substantial share of the historical responsibility for the outbreak of the general war." And this assertion, commonly accepted outside of Germany long before Fischer's 1961 pronouncement, is what gained Germany's Aims in the First World War such fame and notoriety – even though Fischer himself states in his book “It is not the purpose of this work (to debate) the question of war guilt.” p 87 And truly, what Fischer spends over 500 pages on is not war guilt, but an effort to show that the Second Reich sought to use the war to establish itself as a “world power,” through the political annexation of its nearest neighbors and the economic subordination of much of Europe into a Mitteleuropa.

Unfortunately for readability, Fischer pursues this goal by repetitive chronological rendering of state papers and the opinions of Germany's government officials and occasionally politicians and leading businessmen. Make no mistake, getting through this tome is a slog, one that is rarely rewarding.

Fischer's genuine thesis is buried halfway through the book:
“Leading circles in Germany were convinced that only a victorious war ending in substantial gains would enable them to maintain their political and social order;” p. 329 Such a stance certainly explains the stubbornness with which the Emperor, Army (and Navy), and Reich and Prussian governments held to to arrogant war aims – domination of Belgium and Poland, exploitation of Romania, seizure of the Baltic, Ukraine, even Caucasus, and commandeering the mine fields of northeast France.

But Fischer's emptying of the German archives into his expose leads him astray, by overvaluing any and all documents that support his thesis of an unchecked German will to power. For example, he cites the views of the head of the German Colonial Association and the head of the Reich Colonial Office as proof of German war aims in Africa. p. 587 Bureaucratically, an organization will always advocate for its own narrow goals, irrespective of whether those goals serve the greater good. Without clear evidence that the goal was accepted by the state, such views are interesting, but not dispositive. One might as well say a child's wish for a pony proves the existence of the stable.

And again, Fischer proffers arguments such as that on page 603:
“a long report (in June 1918) by the [Prussian] Ministry of State (was) one more testimony to Prussia's obstinate determination to expand....” It is more likely that the report is testimony to the inertia of bureaucracy, offering reports to the captain on how to arrange the deckchairs long after hitting the iceberg.

The past few years have seen numerous new books on the question of why the Great War broke out. Any of them, even the least of them, is a better contribution to the field than Fischer at this date.

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Neither Confirm Nor Deny

"The White House does not confirm or deny unsubstantiated claims based on illegal leaks from anonymous individuals," said a White House spokesperson who declined to be named.
1) So, the WH statement is, itself, anonymous - and not to be believed?

2) "Neither confirm nor deny" is known as the Glomar response (see Wikipedia) -- aka a non-denial denial -- - and it turned out that the denial was demonstratively false. Or, as the NZ Government concluded when the US Navy refused to "confirm or deny" whether nuclear weapons were on board ships planning to make port visits - yep, there's nukes.

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

The Anomaly of Employer-Paid Health Insurance

Ever wonder why health insurance in the US is provided through employers, which is NOT the norm in countries with health coverage? (pace Miss USA)
1939—Revenue Act of 1939 (Sec. 104), establishes employee tax exclusion for compensation for injuries, sickness, or both received under workers' compensation, accident, or health insurance.
"The link between employment and private health insurance was strengthened during World War II when in 1943 the War Labor Board ruled that controls over wages and prices imposed by the 1942 Stabilization Act did not apply to fringe benefits such as health insurance. In response to this ruling, many employers used insurance benefits to attract and retain scarce labor."

Two-term Presidents

To date, no incumbent President who has sought renomination to the office has been denied his party's endorsement. (Some, most recently Bush the elder, didn't get re-elected in November.)