Stephen Yulish
(31
Jan 2009)
"An Israeli Churchill"
An Israeli Churchill
By INVESTOR'S
BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Thursday, January 29, 2009 4:20 PM PT
War On Terror: The comparisons between Israeli electoral front-runner
Benjamin Netanyahu and Winston Churchill are all too obvious. Too bad statesmen
who have learned history's lessons are so rare.
As British
historian Graham Stewart notes in his 1999 book "Burying Caesar," chronicling
the 1930s political rivalry between Churchill and Neville Chamberlain,
Churchill, "in contrast to many of his colleagues, anticipated the problem of a
resurgent Germany even before Hitler's ambitions had become more fully evident."
Stewart points out that Churchill made his first House of Commons speech on
the subject no later than November 1932.
It was not the first
example of the Last Lion's remarkable prescience. As another acclaimed British
historian, Paul Johnson, observed in his sweeping history of the 20th century,
"Modern Times," regarding the rise of Lenin in Russia, all but one
Western politician failed "to grasp the enormous significance of the
establishment of this new type of totalitarian dictatorship, or the long-term
effect of its implantation."
Johnson said the exception was
Churchill, whose strong sense of history caused him to realize "a fatal
watershed was being reached." In 1918, he said Lenin and Trotsky should be
hanged and the next spring he argued that of all history's tyrannies, "the
Bolshevik tyranny is the worst, the most destructive, the most
degrading."
As former Israeli prime minister and current Likud Party head
Bibi Netanyahu enjoys a comfortable lead in the polls a week and a half before
election day, his words of warning regarding Iran should remind the free world
of how Churchill's advice went unheeded for so long — at the cost of millions
of innocent lives.
Speaking to the World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland, on Tuesday, Netanyahu cautioned that economic woes are
distracting the West from a far greater danger. The former finance minister
said that while global economic woes are
reversible, "the acquisition of nuclear weapons by a fanatic
radical regime" is not.
"We have never had, since the dawn of the
nuclear age, nuclear weapons in the hands of such a fanatical regime,"
Netanyahu added. Stopping Tehran "remains the greatest challenge facing the
leaders of the 21st century at the beginning of the 21st
century."
For years most of the world has dithered in
regard to Iran. Deluded governments still believe that an Islamofascist regime
awaiting the coming of the 12th imam and an apocalyptic holy war can respond to
diplomatic carrots and sticks with rationality.
Fortunately
Israel, the nation that has the most to lose from a nuclear Iran, may
soon be led by perhaps the sole 21st century statesman who possesses a strong,
Churchillian sense of history.
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArti...18124812294149
Winston
Churchill Speech on Islam
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZL3Xri16FE