It
was either an embarrassing slip, or a frightening revelation of the
president’s true worldview. Either way, the words “peace in our time,”
made infamous by British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain as he
promised an illusory peace with Adolf Hitler in 1938, should never have
been in President Barack Obama’s second inaugural address.
The
phrase appeared in a passage on foreign policy, in which the president
pledged to defend the nation while resolving differences peacefully
[emphasis added]:
And
we must be a source of hope to the poor, the sick, the marginalized,
the victims of prejudice--not out of mere charity, but because peace in our time
requires the constant advance of those principles that our common creed
describes: tolerance and opportunity; human dignity and justice.
The
sentence is rather tortured, but the idea seems to be that promoting
socioeconomic equality around the world can help prevent conflict. It
echoes the “root causes” theory of terrorism, which is that poverty
produces extremism or at least provides it fertile ground There is some
truth to that, although many terrorists come from middle class origins,
and target America precisely because it symbolizes the values the
president described.
Regardless, the reason Chamberlain’s “peace
in our time” is remembered is not that his theory of international
relations was wrong but because he was hopelessly, dangerously naïve
about Hitler’s intentions. A year after Chamberlain waved the paper on
which he had signed the Munich Agreement, ceding the sovereignty of
Czechosolvakia in return for Hitler’s promises of peace, Germany had
invaded Poland and Britain was at war.
President Obama shows
similar naïveté, or hubris, about the war against international
terrorism. “A decade of war is now ending,” he declared, even as a new
front has opened in the war against Al Qaeda in Africa.
He--ironically--failed to mention Afghanistan, where soldiers still
fight and die in a cause President Obama has all but abandoned, and
where America has already once suffered the brutal consequences of
neglect.
Like Chamberlain, the president seems to believe in
negotiation as an end in itself. He spent his first term seeking an
elusive nuclear agreement with the Iranian regime, even permitting it to
recover from a near-revolution in 2009, convinced that its assurances
of peaceful intentions would be enough. He backed away from promises of
missile defense to Poland and the Czech Republic--receiving nothing from
Russia in return.
When Republicans called President Obama’s approach “appeasement,” he
responded angrily:
“Ask Osama bin Laden...whether I engage in appeasement.” Yet Obama has
been trying to negotiate with the Taliban who once sheltered bin Laden
and Al Qaeda, in an attempt to put a brave face on withdrawal. And Al
Qaeda’s attacks on U.S. diplomatic missions in the Middle East on Sep.
11, 2012 suggest that it has not been deterred.
The president
intends to continue pulling back. His nominees to foreign policy
posts--John Kerry (State), Chuck Hagel (Defense), and John Brennan
(CIA)--each share his vision of a humbler America. He pretends the
alternative to his approach is “perpetual war.” But Ronald Reagan showed
the merit of “peace through strength,” challenging Soviet aggression,
standing up to terror and letting dissidents know they were not alone.
President Obama has shown a very selective interest in history, narrowly focused on the sites of civil rights struggles--
Osawatomie,
for example, and the three sites mentioned in his address. Beyond that
familiar subject, he shows little sensitivity or expertise: he once
flubbed
the date of the Constitutional Convention, for example, and pulled out
of the missile defense deal on the 60th anniversary of the Russian
invasion of Poland.
History remembers Chamberlain’s “peace in our
time” as the definitive statement of appeasement, which is precisely
why its use in the president’s inaugural address is so odd, and ominous.
It is possible that it was simply the error of a young speechwriter.
But the White House
boasted
that the president had written early drafts of his address. And his
policies suggest that “peace in our time” is indeed, despite history,
close to his heart.
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2013%20...%20n-Our-Time
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