Posted by
Matt Rooney on Thursday, November 23, 2006 9:24:13 PM
When the United States of America was mired in the nightmarish throws
of the American Civil War, the horrible realities of warfare became
brutally apparent for a weary President Abraham Lincoln. Previously
favoring a "soft war," concentrating on destroying armies and
minimizing civilian strife, the events of 1862 proved cathartic for the
embattled war time president. He realized that the disastrous Union
defeats at Bull Run, Chancellorsville and Fredericksburg foreshadowed
the possibility of a bloody and endless generation, precluding
expeditious American reconciliation. Worse still, the Union was losing
its will to fight under the weight of mounting setbacks and casualties.
Lincoln fully expected to lose the 1864 election, and America was on
tract to surrendering the South to history. A losing war was ripping
the United States asunder.
Considering his options under the dim
candlelit glow of White House nights, Lincoln resolved that his only
remaining solution was to wage an all-out"total war" against not only
the armies of the Confederacy, but to take that war to Southern towns,
farms, cities and plantations. The Civil War ceased to be exclusively
about reunion, as battle alone seemed unlikely to accomplish the task.
This was to be a war to remake the South, shattering the southern
slavocracy perpetuated by a backwards social and economic system. It
was to become a war to set men free, and create a new union that would
fulfill the lofty promises of the Declaration of Independence yet
unfulfilled. The proud South would not yield to arguements for
brotherhood and peace; the sword alone would rescue America from
Europe's fractious fate.
As contemporary Americans cram turkey
and stuffing down their gullets, they seem to have decidedly less for
which to be happy than this time last year. America looks dangerously
weak in the world, and superpowers cannot afford to appear weak. Our
leaders and generals are fighting a losing strategy, our enemies around
the globe are emboldened, and morale on the home front is more frigid
than the holiday cranberry mold. What would the great leaders of the
Civil War, which killed nearly 1,000,000 American civilians and
soldiers, impart to us in these uncertain hours of self-doubt, concern,
and indigestion? The Thanksgiving commemoration began at Lincoln's
initiative, declared as a national day of prayer in 1863 in the
interest of restoring national unity, morale and purpose in the middle
of the bloodiest and most devastating conflict in our entire national
history. Today, this beloved feast renews its original meaning as a
moment of clarifying grace for a wounded country. Lincoln reaches
across the fabric of time to remind Americans of all the blessings,
advantages and opportunities the nation he saved continues to offer its
citizens and the world. Yet these benefits are not idle treasurers to
be squirreled away and squandered within the safety of our walls.
Engaged
in a modern war against the tyranny of bellicose Islamicism, America's
only option, as Lincoln determined over 143 years ago, is to recognize
and boldly pursue the necessary course to save American civilization.
Sherman was relieved of duty early in the Civil War, believed to be
crazy for suggesting the measures and cost in lives and fortune
required to preserve the union. Now, those that suggest the War on
Terrorism is a global struggle that must cripple radical Islamicism are
castigated as the sanguine stalwarts of a discredited conflict. Yet not
one critic of this war has been able to intelligently challenge that we
are in real danger. Forward thinking Americans are coming to realize
nothing short of resolute commitment to a total war in Iraq and
Afghanistan will win a war for which there is no turning back. As
Sherman stormed to the Sea to break the spirit of as Grant described it
"the worst cause for which men have ever fought," western armies must
breathe fear into the hearts of terrorist organizers and radical
theocrats that will respond only to bullets and bombs shredding their
empire of death and lies. "Enshrined" in the hearts of his countrymen,
Lincoln's Thanksgiving prayer cries out for his nation to collect the
resolve to do what it must to deliver his cherished Union from new
threats.
To make good on Father Abraham's historical call to
arms is to start fighting for our values like we mean it, with fully
engaged measures and full-throated words of defiance to retain the
reigns of our American destiny. Sherman observed that "War is Hell,"
and so it must be for those who challenge our liberties and values
until their end.