Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Are You Ready For WWIV? Author Says Fight Is Now
TheBulletin ^ | October 11, 2007 | By: Herb Denenberg, The Bulletin

Posted on 10/14/2007 9:12:34 PM PDT by PRePublic

Inside Today's Bulletin Are You Ready For WWIV?

Author Says Fight Is Now By: Herb Denenberg, The Bulletin 10/11/2007

This is a look at one of the most important books of our time, which raises perhaps the most important question of our time: "The question of whether the Americans of this generation will turn out to be as willing and as able to bear the burden of World War IV as their forebears were in World War II and again in World War III."

World War IV refers to the ongoing war against Islamofascism, a war we cannot avoid by ignoring it and a war we cannot afford not to fight and win if we want to survive. World War III refers to the Cold War. The book is by Norman Podhoretz, one of the clearest and most powerful thinkers of our time. It is entitled World War IV: The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism. Mr. Podhoretz puts that war into context, demonstrates why it must be fought and won and catalogs what we have to do to survive and prevail.

He notes the difference between World War IV and some of our other wars. Now we have no draft, no shortages or rationing, and even taxes have not been raised. But there is a difference on the other side of the ledger - "we have more cause to be anxious over the safety and security of our continental homeland, which none of our enemies in those earlier wars ever managed to strike, let alone with the weapons of mass destruction that the Islamofascist terrorists may well get their hands on before this war is over."

There is another striking difference between this war and the first two World Wars: This war will certainly go on for three or four decades, and is thus comparable to World War III (the Cold War) which lasted 42 years. There is another striking difference in the area of morale. Before our entry into World War II there was plenty of anti-war sentiment among pacifists and isolationists, but that sentiment virtually disappeared after Pearl Harbor. We fought the war at full bore and did not even express defeatism in the face of staggering defeats. For example, Mr. Podhoretz points out there were "incredible intelligence and command blunders leading up to the Battle of the Bulge" that in a short 44 days cost us more than 19,000 American lives, more than 47,000 wounded, another 23,000 captured or missing and an untold "number left with gangrenous feet because they had not been properly equipped for the brutal winter weather."

In sharp contrast, during World War III, we saw great rounds of defeatism from the left, thinking we were too aggressive, and from the right, thinking we were not aggressive enough. There were major disputes over how the war should be fought, questioning not only the military issues but also the political and ideological issues. Some of the same defeatism pervades World War IV, but it is more powerful than at anytime in the past. The force of this defeatism is incredible in view of our challenge and peril. Mr. Podhoretz quotes Amir Taheri, an Iranian journalist who was once editor of Iran's major daily newspaper. Mr. Taheri describes the nature of the defeatism we now face: "The United States today has become home to a veritable industry of defeat - producing books, TV documentaries, research papers, intelligence analyses and feature movies destined for a growing market. Almost every day, some article appears assuming that the United States has already been defeated in Iraq and recommending measures to deal with the consequences of defeat. And when the United States does something, it does it big. The defeat industry is assuming a bewildering scale." Podhoretz asks what would have happened in World War II if this defeatist industry were going full blast from 1941 to 1944. He uses a fascinating fictional scenario, fashioned by James Q. Wilson, a distinguished scholar and presidential advisor. Wilson asks what that defeatist industry would have done then. Here are just a few of the choice examples: A big city paper would probably have revealed the existence of the Manhattan Project to build atomic weapons. The head of the project would have been hauled before Congress to be lambasted for wasting money, imperiling the environment and the like. Although Mr. Podhoretz doesn't say so, this sounds like the New York Times (which has already revealed national security secrets on its front page) and the Democrat Congress (which thinks you can fight a war by politicizing, criticizing and crippling all efforts to win it).

When Truman authorized dropping atomic bombs on Japan, there would have been calls from Congress and from major newspapers for his impeachment. Mr. Podhoretz notes that, whether we like it or not, World War IV will have to be fought and won despite the powerful industry of retreat and defeat. The battle would be incredibly difficult under ideal conditions, but it is clearly made more difficult by the industry of defeat working so hard in our mainstream media, in our leading colleges and universities and even among our political class. In fact, I would argue that the war would have been much shorter and more successful if so many of our allies and our own people did not act as if they are unwilling to fight it and, what's worse, sometimes act as if they are on the other side.

There were doubts about whether we had the character and will to stand up to the fascists of World War II and the communists of World War III. And now, there are questions about whether "we have all grown too soft, too self-indulgent and too self-absorbed to meet an even more daunting challenge from an enemy who is so much readier to die for his beliefs than most of us are."

Podhoretz argues that President Bush has been on the right track, and that much of the criticism from the left and right is invalid. The right, for example, says he has not made the case for the war. But Podhoretz says he has not only made the case but also done so brilliantly. The Clinton people said Saddam Hussein was contained within his "box," a formula for disaster and inaction in the face of existential threats. Bush in 2002 disposed of this Bill Clinton position in a talk at West Point, in which he remarked, "Containment is not possible when unbalanced dictators with weapons of mass destruction can deliver these weapons or missiles or secretly provide them to terrorist allies." Those who can't understand that argument are hopeless.

Mr. Bush and others have made the case that our best hope is to bring democracy to the Middle East and elsewhere. That's part of the Bush Doctrine. Despite the naysayers, we have made progress in doing just that. As one of the master specialists of the Middle East, Fouad Ajami of Johns Hopkins, put it, "while the ballot is not infallible," it has "broken the pact with Arab tyranny." And Victor Davis Hanson, a distinguished scholar and journalist, made the case in this paragraph: "We long tried almost everything else. Accepting dictators on their own terms did not bring stability but constant war, oil embargoes and terrorism from the 1960s onward. Replying to two decades of terrorists' attacks, from the Iranian hostage taking in 1979 to the attack on the USS Cole in 2000, with indictments and a few cruise missiles only emboldened the jihadists. And staging coups or propping up authoritarians in Iran ... simply radicalized the Middle East. ... In truth, fostering democracy in Afghanistan and Iraq was not our first but our last choice. It was a good option, only a bad one when the other alternatives had proven far worse." Mr. Podhoretz makes the case for the Bush Doctrine in the war against terror and then wonders what might happen after the election. If Rudy Giuliani or John McCain win, they will continue with the Bush policy. But what if a Democrat wins? Mr. Podhoretz hopes the Democrat would come to his or her senses when facing the responsibility of governing: "Would he or she realize that no matter how such a shift might be dressed up and spun [to surrender in Iraq], it would - and rightly - be interpreted by our enemies as a cowardly retreat? Will he or she understand that the despotisms of the Middle East would once again feel free to offer sanctuary and launching pads to Islamofascist terrorists? Will he or she realize that these terrorists would be emboldened to attack us again - and on an infinitely greater scale than before? And on the home front, will he or she cease and desist from raising false alarms about the threat to civil liberties posed by programs essential to protecting us from just such terrorist attacks - programs like the surveillance of certain international phone calls or the tracking of bank deposits? Will he or she stop defining 'torture' down to the point where it becomes impossible to conduct any interrogation at all of captured terrorists, thereby depriving us of the intelligence that is also necessary if further attacks are to be prevented?" Podhoretz notes that during the presidential election of 1952, the Truman doctrine of containment was under furious attacks from the likes of Richard Nixon, the candidate for vice president, and John Foster Dulles, a future secretary of state. But when Eisenhower was elected he stayed with the Truman doctrine despite all the politics to the contrary. Mr. Podhoretz hopes if a Democrat is elected, that new president would follow the Bush Doctrine as the only viable and responsible alternative, despite the critics. But I'm afraid Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards do not hold the same promise of responsible action as Dwight David Eisenhower did in the 1950s.

Mr. Podhoretz ends his book with the question of whether America is "ready to measure up to its own best traditions and prove itself worthy of preservation as a great nation." There he quotes George E. Kennan, father of the U.S. policy of containment used to defeat the Soviet Union, from his essay written at the start of World War III, asking what it would take for America to win the Cold War. Now the same question is on the table for World War IV. Mr. Podhoretz asks, "Do we, the American people of this generation, have it in us to beat back the implacable challenge of Islamofascism as the 'greatest generation' of World War II did in taking on the Nazis and their fascist allies, and as its children and grandchildren ultimately managed to do in confronting the Soviet Union and its Communist empire in World War III? In spite of how bleak the prospects look, as of Sept. 11, 2006 [when Mr. Podhoretz finished the book] I persist in thinking that we do and that we will, but the jury is still out, and it will not return a final verdict for some time to come." I would add one postscript to Mr. Podhoretz's hope for the right verdict and the victory of America. We not only have to fight the war against terror but we also have to fight those who undermine our efforts at home - the mainstream media (by fighting the anti-American mainstream media by boycotting their publications), the academic elite (by cutting off their public and private support) and by segments of the Democrat Party and the left (by supporting opposition candidates and assuring the defeat of the Democrat nominee for president). If we don't pick up our battle against these anti-American forces, there is no guarantee America will be able to beat back the uncivilized forces of Islamofascism. The picture Mr. Podhoretz paints is so heavily laden with pessimism that it affords no room for much optimism. We are fighting a battle in which powerful forces at home are more interested in protecting the legal rights of our enemies than in protecting the security of our own citizens. They are more interested in throwing up roadblocks to the successful prosecution of the war against terror than in winning the war. They are more interested in bootlicking their campaign contributors than in honoring the sacrifice and service of America's heroes (witness the "General Betray Us" incident). They attack conservative talk radio king Rush Limbaugh with more vigor than they want to attack our terrorist enemies. Unless we do more to counteract the anti-Americanism and defeatism of the mainstream media, the academic elites and the leftists that now control the Democrat Party, the outlook is grimmer than anyone wants to admit.

http://www.thebulletin.us/site/news.cfm?newsid=18906166&BRD=2737&PAG=461&dept_id=576361&rfi=6


TOPICS: Editorial; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: ahmadinejad; apesandpigs; book; crushislam; infidels; iran; islam; islamichitler; islamofascism; jihad; nukes; podoretz; rop; waronterror; wot; wwiv
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-77 next last
To: ClearBlueSky
If it comes to more violent means to protect our civilization, on a personal level I am ready for that too.

The Marines are always looking for a few good men.

41 posted on 10/15/2007 4:47:01 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur (Save Fredericksburg. Support CVBT.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Eyes Unclouded
What about 1993? I guess Pearl harbor wouldn’t have counted if Japan didn’t sink any ships?

1993 is disregarded because the leadership in this country, at the time, was too corrupt and inept to fight.

42 posted on 10/15/2007 5:02:40 AM PDT by Lion Den Dan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: PRePublic

Our republic is hopelessly saturated with the poison of liberalism and political correctness. The poison is in the universities, the grade schools, the media, the entertainment industry, the churches and synagogues, the courts, the Congress, and the White House.

Americans who recognize the threat from Islam as such, and are willing to fight against it, are in a miniscule minority. Openly saying so will soon be a hate crime for which you must forfeit your guns.

One day the Muslim world will openly and collectively acknowledge that it IS Islam as such, which is attacking the West. Most likely it won’t happen until at least one American city is destroyed by a nuclear weapon, and our leaders unanimously decide there is nowhere on earth we can deliver appropriate retaliation.

Despair, yes. That’s how I see it. If Flight 93 was heading for the Capitol, they were wasting their time going after a congress of dhimmis.


43 posted on 10/15/2007 5:05:50 AM PDT by 668 - Neighbor of the Beast (You can endorse the murder of 50 million unborn babies; but don't say "macaca.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: doc1019

It began when Sirhan Sirhan assasinated a US Senator in 1968. Then the airline hijackings began..


44 posted on 10/15/2007 6:47:17 AM PDT by sheik yerbouty ( Make America and the world a jihad free zone!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky
With all due respects, this sounds very similar to those Americans who demanded that ALL Japanese-Americans in the early WWII days should be all rounded up and thrown into a camp, just because they were of Japanese descent.

Let's treat each individual-Muslim, Catholic, atheist, Baptist on their own merits or shortcomings, not as a group, OK? Just my opinion....

45 posted on 10/15/2007 7:34:46 AM PDT by China Clipper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: sheik yerbouty
It began when Sirhan Sirhan assasinated a US Senator in 1968. Then the airline hijackings began..

OK, I'm seeing a trend backwards in time here. If you take the long view, it began the day that mohamed first p!ssed on territory taken at the edge of a sword. This the 1,400 year war. (Or thereabouts)

46 posted on 10/15/2007 8:07:31 AM PDT by RobinOfKingston (Man, that's stupid...even by congressional standards.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: China Clipper

You know what? Putting yourself in the mindset of 1942-not 2007- Japanese internment made sense .It was a protective measure. Rights were TEMPORARILY abridged for the good of the nation. They didn’t know who could be trusted among the Japanese here, and we had been ATTACKED by Japan.
Bottom line- there were no Japanese ‘terrorist’ attacks on American soil during WW2. And don’t believe for a minute that there weren’t any Japanese here who would have acted against the US.
The internment worked, it protected us from internal attack. When Japan was defeated, those internment camps closed.

When the enemy is among you, and you can’t tell friend from foe, it is suicidal to trust blindly rather than ‘offend’.Would you rather offend several million Muslims in this country, or prevent more 9-11’s?
I will treat every Muslim according to their beliefs. And they- by identifying themselves as Muslim- tell me that they believe every word in the Koran INCLUDING THE WORDS THAT THREATEN MY LIFE AND MY CULTURE.
Theirs is an ENEMY IDEAOLGY. Identify with it and you are my enemy.
I believe a Marine walking down the street believes in the Marine Corp creed. I believe that a member of NAMBLA believes in sex with boys. I believe people who call themselves Klansmen hate blacks and Jews.I believe that every human can expect to be judged by the organizations and groups to which they belong. Why belong to them otherwise?
Islam is a world thug-gang that is earning it’s bloody reputation every day. I would no more consider treating a Muslim as a kindly individual than I would a member of the Bloods or the Crips.
To call oneself a Muslim is to say they believe in the Koran.
The Koran is the evil handbook of an evil belief system. You cannot believe in evil, hold it holy and defend it, and claim any sort of goodness.
Angels do not dance with Satan.


47 posted on 10/15/2007 9:48:13 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: Non-Sequitur

I am female, and past the age where the Marines would accept me. But thanks for the compliment!
This soldiers daughter would give our military free-reign in war. One directive only. Defeat the enemy, utterly and finally. No rules, no questions asked, and no apologies.


48 posted on 10/15/2007 9:53:02 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky
We need to eliminate the enemies at home first. If we don’t, our forces will be undercut at every turn. Step one is defining the line between “free speech” and treason. Step two is rigorously enforcing it.
49 posted on 10/15/2007 9:56:08 AM PDT by Little Ray (Rudy Guiliani: If his wives can't trust him, why should we?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Little Ray

There you go! Plain common sense!
You don’t spend a fortune, and years, eliminating rat-holes miles from your house, while ignoring the ones crawling under your bed.
There can be no internal terrorist attacks in this country if there are no terrorists here. The source of terrorism now is a rats nest called Islam. It IS PRODUCING the terror.
The source must be destroyed. First where we live, then on the planet.
Don’t trust what comes out of the hole.
Fire burns. Rain is wet. Islam kills.


50 posted on 10/15/2007 10:03:30 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 49 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky
Actually, I was thinking of starting with Nancy Pelosi, Turban Durbin, Dingy Harry, Fat Jack Murtha, Teddy the Swimmer,and the rest. IMHO, they long ago crossed the border from representing their constituencies into treason. When their pronouncements show up in Al Qaeda documents, as reasons for the terrorists to continue fighting, there can really be no doubt...
The lawyers of the ACLU (and a bunch from the Pentagon, too) can join them at Ft. Leavenworth, too.
51 posted on 10/15/2007 10:13:17 AM PDT by Little Ray (Rudy Guiliani: If his wives can't trust him, why should we?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky
Actually, I was thinking of starting with Nancy Pelosi, Turban Durbin, Dingy Harry, Fat Jack Murtha, Teddy the Swimmer,and the rest. IMHO, they long ago crossed the border from representing their constituencies into treason. When their pronouncements show up in Al Qaeda documents, as reasons for the terrorists to continue fighting, there can really be no doubt...
The lawyers of the ACLU (and a bunch from the Pentagon, too) can join them at Ft. Leavenworth, too.
52 posted on 10/15/2007 10:13:19 AM PDT by Little Ray (Rudy Guiliani: If his wives can't trust him, why should we?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: China Clipper

With all due respect- I am really trying to understand something here.
WHY the insistence that individual Muslims be separated from their ideology? Its pretty plain that Islam is anti every other religion. Why may we not assume that individual Muslims believe what their religion says?
We don’t challenge/disbelieve that an atheist does not believe in a deity. We don’t try to convince ourselves that Baptists, Catholics, Jews, etc do not believe what their religion preaches.
Why are Muslims exempt from being judged by what they believe, and what their religion admits to?
Is it the numbers? Is it that it is easier to imagine millions don’t believe the basic directives of Islam than it is to face it? Because facing it would mean we have millions of mortal enemies- and then the only decision left is what to do, fight or surrender?
Honestly- anyone- I am really trying to understand the reasoning that goes into the almost desperate insistence that we NOT judge Muslims according to Islam, when we judge every other being on the planet according to the belief system and groups to which they belong.


53 posted on 10/15/2007 10:20:27 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 45 | View Replies]

To: PRePublic
Podhoretz original column appearing in Commentary Magazine.
54 posted on 10/15/2007 10:22:28 AM PDT by HoosierHawk
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky

55 posted on 10/15/2007 10:26:04 AM PDT by RightWhale (50 years later we're still sitting on the ground)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: RightWhale

Nazism was a ‘religion’, for all intents and purposes.A cult of hate, death and domination- as is Islam.
Bullets did pretty good against Nazism.
It was resolve and GUTS and the determination that the Nazi ideolgy would NOT dominate the world that made the difference.
That’s what’s missing now.
We have more bullets, more weapons, and the ability to eradicate the new Nazism.
It’s the inability to face the us-vs-them scenario, and a lack of national guts that is the problem.


56 posted on 10/15/2007 10:32:17 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 55 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky

There is an analogy, but the islams think they have a religion and not only that but the only religion. Fascism was defeated, but guess what? it hasn’t gone away.


57 posted on 10/15/2007 10:37:18 AM PDT by RightWhale (50 years later we're still sitting on the ground)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies]

To: Little Ray

I’m not for financing internment camps to feed that bunch! Especially not the Swimmer- who could afford it?
Actually- since there is NO doubt as to their alliegances
(unlike the Japanese during WW2) I’d prefer a couple of C-130’s be used. Load’em up, and drop said individuals out over the ‘paradise’ that is the middle-east. A particularly nasty spot. Parachutes optional.


58 posted on 10/15/2007 10:37:49 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 52 | View Replies]

To: RightWhale

No- it has not. There are neo-Nazis everywhere, BUT, are the numbers there? And who among us is insisting that there are ‘good’ neo-Nazis and facists?
Who is doing mental contortions to fantasize that there are facists who don’t believe in facism? Can any sane being say the words ‘good’ and ‘Nazi’ in the same sentence? Would society allow such an assumption?

And you know as well as I that religions can be wiped out. How many ancient religions no longer exist? Seen any Mayans tossing human sacrifices down pyramids lately? How about old Ra? He was big at one time!
History is full of religions that do not exist now. Islam belongs with them.


59 posted on 10/15/2007 10:47:56 AM PDT by ClearBlueSky (Whenever someone says it's not about Islam-it's about Islam. Jesus loves you, Allah wants you dead!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 57 | View Replies]

To: ClearBlueSky

60 posted on 10/15/2007 10:52:45 AM PDT by RightWhale (50 years later we're still sitting on the ground)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-77 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson