October 07, 2004, 8:47 a.m., National
Review Online
The Torch of Freedom
Roosevelt lit the path Kerry’s afraid
to follow.
Thanks to Senator John Kerry, there has been
a lot of talk recently about the proper response to Pearl Harbor. He
claims that "invading Iraq in response to 9/11 would be like
Franklin Roosevelt invading Mexico in response to Pearl Harbor." The
senator should check his history.
After Pearl Harbor, the United States did not just fight a defensive
war against the Japanese, who had attacked us, and against whom we
initially could do little except try to slow down our losses. And we
did not just fight Germany and Italy, who declared war against us.
And we certainly did not attack Mexico, a friendly nation that had
resisted German blandishments in the First World War and had little
sympathy for the Axis in its sequel.
So what was the first major American offensive of the Second World
War? The invasion of a neutral country.
Operation Torch was the November 8, 1942, Anglo-American invasion of
Morocco and Algeria, both colonies of Vichy France — a neutral in
the war since June 1940. The Vichyites had engaged in no hostile
actions against the United States, and obviously played no role in
the Pearl Harbor attack. Vichy France and its colonies posed no
threat to the United States. But President Roosevelt had a strategic
vision. He recognized that attacking an innocent nation formally at
peace with the United States was necessary to winning the broader
war against Fascism.
Franklin Roosevelt and John Kerry have a lot in common:
opportunistic, duplicitious, big-government Northeasterners naively
supportive of the United Nations. The crucial difference is that
President Roosevelt understood that defeating our totalitarian foes
required fighting anywhere and everywhere we chose, on our own
terms, regardless of international law.
Operation Torch was an unprovoked attack against a neutral, and
against a country which was (compared to Saddam's Iraq) a
human-rights paradise. Like George Bush, Roosevelt miscalculated the
extent of the resistance. Some of the Vichy forces fought against
the American invasion, and the Germans quickly moved into North
Africa (just as Syrian and Iranian surrogates have begun fighting in
Iraq). Whereas North Africa had previously been free of the
Wehrmacht, the area quickly became a German base, as Iraq is now
an al Qaeda base. The invasion of North Africa was hindered by
Roosevelt's mistaken reliance on a local leader (French Admiral
Darlan), who was a treacherous rogue intent only on advancing his
own power — a mistake also repeated by the Americans in Iraq.
Operation Torch was contrary to international law and to the wishes
of the French government; yet in the long run, it advanced the
interests of international law and of France. Attacking a country
that bore no responsibility for Pearl Harbor was key to preventing
future Pearl Harbors. Likewise, the destruction of the Saddam regime
and the construction of Iraqi democracy arse inflicting a terrible
blow against the Islamofascists who preach that the only political
choice for Arabs is totalitarianism.
Today, despite its tactical errors, Operation Torch is recognized as
a strategic success. Like Operation Iraqi Freedom, Torch opened a
new front in the war against international fascism. In a global war
for the survival of freedom, people who want America to fight only a
single foe in a single place show that they lack the strategic
vision of President Roosevelt and President Bush.