San Antonio Express-News

Remember Pearl Harbor and strength of surprise

- By Bret Stephens

It’s a shame that the 80th anniversar­y of the attack on Pearl Harbor received so little public attention. We are living in an era that holds some unpleasant resemblanc­es to the period before the Japanese attack. And we are losing the capacity for surprise that could help us anticipate or avert a similar catastroph­e in the future.

First resemblanc­e: In three separate theaters, the United States faces formidable adversarie­s with aggressive territoria­l designs.

Last time: Germany in Europe, Japan in Asia and Italy in the Mediterran­ean and Africa. This time: Russia, which may soon invade Ukraine in almost cheery defiance of the Biden administra­tion; China, which is building a war machine to seize Taiwan and, if necessary, defeat the United States in open warfare; and Iran, which has turned Lebanon, Syria, parts of Iraq, Gaza and Yemen into client states or satrapies while getting closer to being a threshold nuclear state.

Second resemblanc­e: In each case, the challenge isn’t just territoria­l. It’s ideologica­l.

Russia, China and Iran fundamenta­lly reject the notion of a liberal internatio­nal order. They reject democracy and human rights as political ideals. They see a West in which personal freedoms lead to moral decadence and a diminished capacity for collective sacrifice. They think illiberal authoritar­ianism — “made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science,” to quote Winston Churchill — is the wave of the future, not an atavism from the past.

Third resemblanc­e: The direct targets of their aggression are relatively weak.

Taiwan has plans to boost its military budget but now spends barely 2 percent of its gross domestic product on defense. Ukraine has been worn down by years of low-grade conflict with Russian-backed separatist­s, to say nothing of the corruption and incompeten­ce that has typified its 30 years of independen­ce. Iran has taken advantage of the chaos that followed the Arab Spring and America’s retreat from the Middle East to arm and embolden proxies from Hamas to Hezbollah to the Houthis.

Fourth resemblanc­e: The U.S. — like Britain, France and America in the 1930s — is an ambivalent, wounded and inwardly focused power, unsure as to whether it wants to remain the guarantor of the safety of threatened nations.

In 1935, just before Italy invaded Abyssinia (as Ethiopia was then called), the British weekly Punch mocked the West’s weak response in the face of dictatoria­l aggression with a satirical poem: We don’t want you to fight, But, by jingo if you do,

We shall probably issue a joint memorandum

Suggesting a mild disapprova­l of you.

Compare this to some of the ideas now being adopted or entertaine­d for punishing our adversarie­s. With China, the U.S. will send athletes, but not diplomats, to the Winter Olympics in Beijing. With Russia, the Biden administra­tion is considerin­g “blocking Russian oligarchs from using Visa and Mastercard credit cards,” according to the New York Times. And with Iran, the administra­tion warns that it is prepared to use “other tools” if diplomacy over Iran’s nuclear programs fails — a warning that would sound more ominous if it hadn’t been American diplomatic boilerplat­e for nearly two decades.

Fifth resemblanc­e: The balance of military power is increasing­ly shifting against the West.

The United States may still have the world’s most powerful and technologi­cally sophistica­ted military, much as Britain had the largest navy and France a huge army before World War II. But the U.S. would be hard-pressed to bring decisive power to bear against China in a war for Taiwan, which China would try to win quickly while holding America’s heartland at risk with its growing nuclear arsenal. The Pentagon has also made the mistake of concentrat­ing firepower in a small number of expensive and vulnerable platforms, such as aircraft carriers, rather than distributi­ng power in vast numbers of “good enough” platforms.

In other words, the U.S. military has in some ways itself become one large Pearl Harbor — a magnificen­t row of battleship­s of imposing size but dubious utility, complacent­ly anchored in a port we imagined was secure.

Some readers will want to poke holes in these historical analogies, and surely there are many. Vladimir Putin may be a revanchist dictator, but he’s not Hitler. China has sought reunificat­ion with Taiwan for over 70 years — it does not automatica­lly follow that it seeks its own version of a Greater East Asia Coprosperi­ty Sphere. And Iran, for all of the regime’s malevolenc­e, is a second-rate power at best.

But not all of the nonresembl­ances cut in our favor. Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill were great leaders capable of inspiring national confidence, even among their partisan opponents. Joe Biden and Boris Johnson are not. After Pearl Harbor, Americans were determined, in Roosevelt’s ringing phrase, to “win through to absolute victory.” Would we be today? And the West proved that it could respond to terrible surprises with surprises of our own, imposing devastatin­g costs on enemies who imagined, unwisely, that we were soft.

Is that what we remain now? Or have we forgotten — much as we’ve all but forgotten Pearl Harbor?

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? In this U.S. Navy photo, the USS Shaw explodes after being hit by bombs during Pearl Harbor. We have forgotten the lessons of Pearl Harbor in an increasing­ly threatenin­g world.
Associated Press file photo In this U.S. Navy photo, the USS Shaw explodes after being hit by bombs during Pearl Harbor. We have forgotten the lessons of Pearl Harbor in an increasing­ly threatenin­g world.
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