Sunday, November 18, 2007

German underbelly

Soft and Flabby


History
It just struck me that 21 years passed between WWI and WWII.  It's been 18 years - 18YEARS! since the Berlin wall fell.  Life is a travail, ain't it?  Here, in digestable snippets, is  today's fascinating - and gloomy - look at things German centric, and today's monster - Islamo fascism.


The Soft Underbelly of Europe
Germany presents a tempting target for the jihadists and others.

BY MARK HELPRIN

  • Whereas in 1989 we kept in Europe 325,000 troops, 5,000 tanks, 25 operating air bases, and 1,000 combat aircraft, we now keep approximately a fifth of that. Whereas the Germans in 1989 could field a half-million men and 5,000 tanks, they now can deploy less than half that number.
  • As the Soviet Union dissolved, much of its military capacity followed it into oblivion. But as Western Europe dismantles its militaries, Russia builds, encouraged as much by European pacifism as by the Russian view of America's struggle in Iraq as a parallel to the Soviet's fatal involvement in Afghanistan. Like Germany between the wars, Russia is now eager and determined to reconstitute its forces, and with its new-found oil wealth, it is doing so.
  • How fortuitous for it, then, that the United States is expending military capital without replenishment, and Europe has spiritually resigned from its own defense ...  Germany, the strategic gate to Western Europe and by its nature and position that which stabilizes or disrupts the continent, sleeps and dreams unaware.
  • Germany must fascinate the Jihadists, too--not for displacing America as the prime target, but as the richest target least defended. Though it will never happen, they believe that Islam will conquer the world, and so they try.
  • Germany [is] such an attractive target. Unlike the U.S., France, and Britain, Germany is a major country with no independent expeditionary capability and no nuclear weapons, making it ideal for a terrorist nuclear strike or Iranian extortion if Iran is able to continue a very transparent nuclear policy to its logical conclusion.
  • Though it is conceivable that after the shock of losing Washington or Chicago, the U.S.--or Britain after Birmingham, France after Lyon--would, even without an address certain, release a second strike, it is very unlikely that, even with an address certain, any nuclear power would launch in behalf of another nation, NATO ally or not, absent an explicit arrangement such as the dual-key structure during the Cold War.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

And it is in times of unpreparedness, that an ambitious country will rush to fill the vacuum of power.

War is upon us, and it will strike with the suddeness of a heart attack, without warning and without mercy.
--Jack

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