The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Let’s not confuse the Cold War of 1950s with today

- Jonah Goldberg is editor-inchief of The Dispatch and the host of The Remnant podcast. His Twitter handle is @ JonahDispa­tch.

It’s hard to pick up a foreign policy journal or even turn on the TV without encounteri­ng someone predicting, recommendi­ng or lamenting a “new

Cold War” with Russia, China or both.

This is entirely understand­able and even justifiabl­e, if you mean a new period of strategic competitio­n, pressure and geopolitic­al tension that falls short of all-out war. Such a lower-case “cold war” is already on display.

The U.S. and our allies are doing nearly everything short of declaring a “hot war” on Russia for its immoral aggression against Ukraine. Things are not so tense with China, but there’s a broad consensus, particular­ly among Republican­s, that “containing” China — to use a Cold War term — should become central to American foreign policy. And even many who disagree believe we are entering a new “Cold War” with China whether we want one or not. After all, sometimes wars, cold or hot, are not wars of choice.

I agree that new cold wars with Russia and China are simultaneo­usly necessary and not necessaril­y desirable. But I worry that the semantic confusion of the historic Cold War and this new cold war could get us into trouble. George Orwell observed in “Politics and the English Language” that “if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought. A bad usage can spread by tradition and imitation, even among people who should and do know better.”

The Cold War was wholly a creature of its time. Indeed, as Orwell himself observed in his 1945 essay “You and the Atom Bomb,” our conflict with the Soviet Union was a product of the nuclear age, and he predicted that nuclear weapons would make the kind of war that had just concluded a few months earlier unlikely.

The fear of nuclear war still constrains our actions — and I hope our adversarie­s’ — but the difference­s between the Cold War era and today are profound.

To start, the Cold War was not a time of sustained peace. The Korean and Vietnam wars were part of the Cold War, as were the Soviet invasions of Hungary, Czechoslov­akia and Afghanista­n.

It was very easy to cut off economic relations with the Soviet Union, because we had so few to begin with. The same holds to a large extent with contempora­ry Russia, which may be a nuclear superpower but is an economic piker. Its GDP is less than half of California’s (Russia’s per capita GDP is an eighth of California’s).

Meanwhile, China is the world’s second largest economy and a global manufactur­ing powerhouse. Any expectatio­n that the U.S. and the internatio­nal community would sever ties with China over a Taiwan invasion the way they have over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine seems overly optimistic. China crushed democracy in Hong Kong and is putting Uyghurs in concentrat­ion camps, and the internatio­nal business community has for the most part shrugged.

The Soviets vowed to “liberate” the world from capitalism, “bourgeois” democracy and religion. That kind of ideology made it comparativ­ely easy to garner political support for containmen­t — yet even then, there was ample domestic and internatio­nal opposition to America’s anticommun­ist policies.

Indeed, “under God” was officially inserted into the Pledge of Allegiance to differenti­ate America from the “godless Communists.” When Sen. Homer Ferguson, RMich., introduced the legislatio­n, he said, “I believe this modificati­on of the pledge is important because it highlights one of the real fundamenta­l difference­s between the free world and the Communist world, namely belief in God.”

No one in the House or Senate spoke in opposition to the change.

For good or ill, it seems implausibl­e anything like that would be possible today. Religion no longer binds the nation the same way and our domestic culture wars — whether over COVID-19 pandemic response or school curricula or Vladimir Putin as anti-woke hero — do not seem very compatible with a new cold war. And freedom itself is no longer the rallying cry it once was on either the left or the right.

Orwell argued that some phrases come to us like parts of a “prefabrica­ted hen-house” and end up doing our thinking for us. We may indeed face a new cold war, but we need fresh thinking that doesn’t necessaril­y flow from old phrases like “Cold War.”

The fear of nuclear war still constrains our actions — and I hope our adversarie­s’ — but the difference­s between the Cold War era and today are profound.

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