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Brutal destruction of Iraq has historical precedents
Tuesday, 02 January 2007 13:47
Mark West
It was Tacitus, if I recall correctly, who said that the Roman legions made deserts and called it peace.

The Romans didnët do nation building, at least in the sense that we mean it. They annexed areas into the empire, on the assumption that the grandest thing in the world was the heritage of greater Greece that Rome brought. Civilization and freedom, as the Romans understood it, were the outcomes of their colonial efforts.

The Romans made colonies of foreign lands for the good of the people of those places, as do we; and if people resisted, the Romans had ways of dealing with that, too. As do we.

An example is given in Josephus, the Jewish historian, in his discussions of the last days before the Diaspora. The Romans had attempted to allow the people of Jerusalem and surrounding areas some degree of autonomy, with a local proxy king named Herod. The terms of Herodës position were simple; he kept the peace and prevented insurrection against Rome; if he did not do so, he would be eliminated and reprisals against the nation would immediately follow.

As Josephus records, Jerusalem was a hard place to keep pacified in the first century of the common era. Claimants to Messiahship showed up with some regularity and riots of various levels of intensity were frequent. Finally, when a large-scale insurrection began with the claim of Simon bar-Kochba to be the Messiah, the Romans had had enough and sent in the Legions.

The outcome was that the Jews were scattered to the four corners of the earth, Jerusalem was put to the torch and the remaining Jews who fled to Masada were put under siege. The final outcome, as Tacitus suggests, was that the Legions made of Jerusalem a desert and declared a peace.


One must wonder if they strung up a banner somewhere, saying "Mission Accomplished."


I say all this to make a point that has been troubling me recently. Clearly, the goal of establishing a Roman-style procuratorship in Iraq has failed; our proxies cannot maintain peace, or anything like it. And, as history amply proves, armies are good only at making deserts, not at making peace.


There is no honorable way out of Iraq. But, there is a way out that has ample precedent. We, the United States, could make of the nation a desert and call it peace. The leaders of our nation ÇƒÓ already roundly despised throughout the world, already as unpopular domestically as is conceivably possible ÇƒÓ could follow the model set by the emperor Vespasian.


They could give the old Crusader cry of "Deus vult!"  and settle all outstanding scores the hard way. And what would stop them?  World opinion?  Domestic public opinion?  The Democrats?


 The Bush administration could claim a victory in ëthe war against terrorë by sending in lots more troops, using nukes in Iran and generally blowing up everything that appears to resist in the least. The Democrats would be blamed as appeasers, as weak; the Republicans would be no more disliked than they already are; and Halliburton, presumably, would get some big new contracts and oil rights to both nations once the fires were put out. A win-win, at least to a mind like that of George W. Bush.


This horrifying scenario is both troubling and possible. And this possibility is the reason we should move to impeach George W. Bush as soon as possible. Impeachment might stop this administration from precipitate actions in Iraq and Iran. Thatës something the feckless Democratic leadership might consider ÇƒÓ unless they think "Deus vult" is an appropriate campaign slogan.


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Mark West is a professor of mass communications at UNC Asheville.

 



 


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