to the Nation on the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan” (The American Presidency Project, January 4, 1980), http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=33079. http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=32911.
What Would Winston Churchill Do?
Obama’s Folly: The Iran Deal Disaster
Ukraine Votes for a Future in Europe
Obama’s Falklands Failure
Welcome to the UNGA
What Would Winston Churchill Do?
Russia’s naked grab of Crimea, its continuing intimidation of Kiev, and Putin’s proffered justification—that he is merely protecting ethnic Russians—parallel a much darker time in European history. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made this point: “Now if this sounds familiar, it’s what Hitler did back in the ’30s. All the Germans that were . . . the ethnic Germans, the Germans by ancestry who were in places like Czechoslovakia and Romania and other places, Hitler kept saying, ‘they’re not being treated right. I must go and protect my people,’ and that’s what’s gotten everybody so nervous.”
In the Pacific, China has not undertaken military action as dramatic as the Russian invasion of Crimea but it has staked a claim to almost the entirety of the South China Sea with its “nine-dash line.” In the process, China’s Navy and Coast Guard have expelled the Philippines from the Scarborough Shoal, a reef just under 150 miles from the Philippines but almost 550 miles from Hainan Island, the nearest Chinese port. Responding to American and regional concerns raised about China’s position on the South China Sea, Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi proclaimed in July 2010, “China is a big country and other countries are small countries, and that’s just a fact.”
This article was originally published in the National Interest, April 11, 2014.
China is also actively contesting long-time Japanese administration of the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea, and it unilaterally imposed an Air Defense Identification Zone covering waters and islands administered by both Japan and South Korea. It is widely reported that the West’s lack of response to Russia’s Crimean adventure has spooked America’s Pacific allies, particularly Japan. These allies believe the lesson China has drawn from the situation is that the West would likewise countenance a military resolution of its territorial claims.
While regional powers have unsuccessfully sought to conquer their neighbors in recent decades—most notably Argentina’s invasion and occupation of the Falklands in 1982 and Iraq’s invasion and occupation of Kuwait in 1991—the major powers have eschewed such conduct since China’s 1951 annexation of Tibet. Given events in Ukraine and the Pacific, that long period of relative stability appears to be at an end, notwithstanding President Obama’s comment following Russia’s invasion of Crimea, “because you’re bigger and stronger taking a piece of the country—that is not how international law and international norms are observed in the twenty-first century.”
To the contrary, Putin’s and China’s actions declare, the new “international norms” look alarmingly like those of eight decades ago.
The authoritarian powers, Russia and China, have the initiative and are on the move. They are, in turn, watched by a regional provocateur, Iran, which has its own visions of Middle Eastern hegemony. The Western European democracies and Japan, after years of slashing defense budgets, are ill prepared to face these challenges. Under the Obama administration, America joined the disarmament club through sequestration. Even in the face of the Russia’s invasion of Crimea, the administration plans to mothball half of the Navy’s robust cruiser fleet. Secretary Hagel talked of doing something similar to the carrier fleet, while at the same time cutting many thousands of troops from the Army and Marines, respectively. Pollsters claim American voters are exhausted by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and show little interest in foreign conflicts. Following public opinion, rather than leading it, Western leaders are wary of intervening in any substantial manner on behalf of small, faraway nations such as Ukraine or the Philippines.
Given the echoes of the 1930s we hear today, it is useful to review the events of 1938. Austria was annexed into the German Third Reich on March 12, 1938. The annexation took place the day after agitation by the Austrian Nazi Party and German demands—swiftly followed by German invasion—ousted the legitimate government in Vienna. A referendum on the union between Austria and Germany—scheduled for the next day—was cancelled. A month later, the Germans held their own referendum; under the watchful eyes of the Wehrmacht and without ballot secrecy, Austrians voted for union. The Anschluss took place a few months before the twentieth anniversary of the German surrender in World War I and violated Germany’s post-war treaty obligations. Interestingly, Russia’s annexation of Crimea took place just twenty-three years after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, an event Putin has labeled the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.”
Two weeks following the Anschluss, Winston Churchill strode into the British House of Commons and stated: “[A] country like ours, possessed of immense territory and wealth, whose defenses have been neglected, cannot avoid war by dilating upon its horrors, or even by a continuous display of pacific qualities, or by ignoring the fate of the victims of aggression elsewhere. War will be avoided, in present circumstances, only by the accumulation of deterrents against the aggressor.” He continued:
I have watched this famous island descending incontinently, fecklessly the stairway which leads to a dark gulf . . . If mortal catastrophe should overtake the British nation and the British Empire, historians a thousand years hence will still be baffled by the mystery of our affairs. They will never understand how it was that a victorious nation, with everything in hand, suffered themselves to be brought low and to cast away all that they had gained by measureless sacrifice and absolute victory—gone with the wind!
A quarter-century after the end of the Cold War, similar words could certainly be used to describe America’s present circumstances—but there is no Commons debating such matters and no Churchill thundering warnings of what may lie ahead. Back in 1938, the pace of events quickened, and by the end of September the great powers were agreeing to strip Czechoslovakia’s strategic industrial and banking regions from the country without its consent, awarding the so-called Sudetenland to the Third Reich in a further effort to slake Hitler’s thirst for conquest and avoid a Europe-wide war.
While the majority of Britons supported Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement of Hitler as an act of statesmanship in the pursuit of peace, Churchill, back in the Commons on October 5, laid out the truth of the matter: “All is over. Silent, mournful, abandoned, broken, Czechoslovakia recedes into the darkness. She has suffered in every respect by her association with the Western democracies and with the League of Nations, of which she has always been an obedient servant.”
Churchill acknowledged the popularity of Chamberlain’s appeasement but correctly labeled it a defeat:
I do not grudge our loyal, brave people, who were ready to do their duty no matter what the cost, who never flinched under the strain of last week—I do not grudge them the natural, spontaneous outburst of joy and relief when they learned