Friday, November 21, 2003

Attacking the Baggage Train

Nice post at the Belmont Club on how the two civil wars work together as the world war. First the simple remedial history lesson:
Al Qaeda did what desert raiders have always done when facing a militarily superior enemy. They attacked the baggage train.
Then the ending with a real wallop:
In Coppola's classic film, Apocalypse Now, the character Colonel Kurtz described how his A-Team had at first gone the rounds of mountain villages, inoculating the children against disease and providing medical treatment for the sick in an effort to win hearts and minds, only to find, upon their return that the Communists had lopped off the arms of each and every child who had received a vaccination. Kurtz was struck 'like a silver bullet' by the realization that the Communists weren't challenging his military capability to defeat them; they were challenging his will to win.

The will to resist evil is the most fragile commodity in the West. It is a flame burned so low that Al Qaeda thinks that one strong blast of wind will extinguish it forever. It flickers so feebly that one American Presidential election or a single battlefield catastrophe could set the stage for the embrace of a thousand years of darkness, the darkness that Europe has been longing for this past century. The 'peace demonstrators' in London last week suggested not so much Trafalgar Square in the heart of modern Europe as ancient Gadara.
When He came to the other side into the country of the Gadarenes, two men who were demon-possessed ... were so extremely violent that no one could pass by that way ... And He was asking him, "What is your name?" ... "My name is Legion; for we are many." And they cried out, saying, "What business do we have with each other...? Have You come here to torment us before the time?" Now there was a large herd of swine feeding nearby on the mountain. The demons implored Him, saying, "Send us into the swine so that we may enter them." And coming out, the unclean spirits entered the swine; and the herd rushed down the steep bank ... and they were drowned in the sea.
The precipice has beckoned to four successive generations in the West; and now yet another master calls them sweetly to the dark. [Emphasis added.]
This is some nice writing! His "calls them sweetly to the dark" really just slices through the fog.

And his "darkness that Europe has been longing for this past century" harkens me back to Pascal Bruckner's "Europe: Remorse and Exhaustion". WOW. READ THE WHOLE THING.