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September
18, 2003, 11:10 a.m.
Revisionist Truths
A phony phony
history.
By James Jay
Carafano
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hat
irony: In opposing President Bush's actions in postwar Iraq, some critics
who accuse the administration of engaging in "revisionist history"
are rewriting history themselves.
What sparked their charge was a pair of speeches given Aug. 25 to the
Veterans of Foreign War by National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. In discussing the problems facing
allied occupation forces in Iraq, Rice and Rumsfeld referred to problems
encountered by occupation forces in post-World War II Germany to show
that post-conflict operations are often fraught with danger and difficulties.
The comparisons
sent ex-NSC staffer Daniel Benjamin, a former Clinton National Security
Council aide, on the warpath. In an Aug. 29 article in Slate, scathingly
titled "Condi's
Phony History," Benjamin takes Rice and Rumsfeld to task for mentioning
the Werwolf, Nazi agents trained to carry out acts of sabotage against the
occupying forces.
Benjamin doesn't
deny the Werwolf existed, but he dismisses their significance. "In
practice," he sniffs, "Werwolf amounted to next to nothing."
The idea that Allied Forces encountered any meaningful confrontation after
Germany's surrender he rejects as merely "a greatest-generation pander."
This view of postwar Nazi resistance quickly gained currency in the mainstream
press. Articles in The Christian Science Monitor and the Washington
Post quoted Benjamin to suggest that the administration was guilty
of exaggerating conditions in postwar Europe.
But Rice and Rumsfeld had it about right. And their main message
that no one can reasonably expect any occupation to be bloodless, frictionless
and effortless should be above dispute.
In his Slate article, Benjamin tries to prove the administration guilty
of "sexing up" the German occupation by citing two history books
that have almost nothing to say on the subject. That's hardly what you'd
call evidence.
Further, he minimizes the significance of what those books report about
the Werwolf resistance. Sure, there was guerrilla warfare, but measured
by Benjamin's grand scale, "... little materialized." Additionally,
he assures us, there was "no major campaign of sabotage ... no destruction
of water mains or energy plants worth noting" (emphasis added). Benjamin
appears fully committed to "sexing down" the situation whenever
possible.
What he apparently didn't bother to do is read Perry Biddiscombe's Werwolf!
The History of the National Socialist Guerrilla Movement, 1944-1946,
which gives full chapter and verse on Nazi-postwar guerrilla operations.
It's true that the Werwolf was poorly organized, and the threat of attacks
greatly subsided after a few months of occupation. But they were very
real. A survey of records by the U.S.
Army Center of Military History shows that at least 39 combat deaths
occurred in the first few months of the occupation. If the Nazis had been
better organized, the Werwolf might well have given World War II GIs as
much trouble as the thugs in Iraq are generating now.
And Werwolves weren't the only problem. Violent crime, thievery and black-marketing
were rampant. Germans incessantly complained to U.S. military officials
about inadequate public safety. And these threats paled in comparison
to the physical privations. Many feared masses of Germans would freeze
or starve to death in the first winter after the war. To suggest that
the first year of occupation was anything less than a dreadful, harrowing
experience for many Germans is just bad history.
Making the postwar reconstruction of Europe appear like a walk in the
park suggests that somehow this administration must have screwed things
up terribly to face such a plethora of problems. In fact, history suggests
the opposite.
Occupations are rarely easy. And it's understandable that the Pentagon
couldn't completely and precisely predict the postwar conditions it would
face in Iraq. In time of conflict, it's impossible to fully anticipate
the end state¾what the country will look like after the war. There
is a "fog of peace" fully as dense as the "fog of war,"
the phrase Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz used to describe
why battles never go as planned.
Misusing the past offers little insight to understanding the scope of
the challenge the United States faces today. In truth, the key to success
in Iraq is to take a page from the occupations in postwar Europe: Stand-up
a legitimate government and domestic-police forces, and let the people
rebuild their own country.
It took four years to do that in post World War II Germany. Sometimes
it takes that much time and effort to be on the right side of history.
James Jay Carafano, author of Waltzing
into the Cold War: The Struggle for Occupied Austria," and
a former instructor at the U.S. Military Academy, is a senior research
fellow for defense and homeland security at the Heritage
Foundation.
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