Sunday, September 30, 2007

Where's The Religion In Religious Wars?

The "Global War on Terrorism" is a religious war, right?

Islamists and their armed force, the jihadists, are fighting for religious reasons, right?

Must be.

All sorts of bloviators, politicians, journalists, academics say so. We are warned against the dangers of something called Islamophobia by defenders of sensitivity and multiculturalism. We are cautioned against the dangers of discriminating against religious beliefs and believers. We are urged to recognise the great contributions to human civilization made by members of all religious faiths.

The Geek has to blow the whistle. It's time to get a grip on a few historical realities.

Religion has often been used as a motivator for war. It has been used to rile up societies, gin up the troops, and head a country into war.

Now comes the big "but."

But, the wars fought under the banner of religion when examined with the cynical eye of history show themselves to have been fought for the usual reason. Politics.

First, a rule of the thumb, historically justified definition of the word "politics." Politics means quite simply the acquisition, expansion, or defense of authority over the population of a defined territory. To make it simpler: politics describes the struggle for power.

Take as an example the war(s) so often invoked rhetorically by Islamists--the Crusades. When Urban II preached the First Crusade, he used "liberation" of the Christian holy sites in and around Jerusalem as the hot button to motivate the population of Europe to go to war.

While that might have been one reason, it was not the primary one either for the papacy or the secular rulers who organised the armies, waged the war, and waded through the bloody streets of Jerusalem. The primary reason was the expansion of power. The papacy sought to extend its power over the several secular rulers of Europe. These secular princes and kings sought to expand the extent of territory under their sway.

How about the grunts of the day, the knights and men-at-arms? Their goal wasn't necessarily power per se. They were men with a firm, hard eye fixed on the main chance. The chance for land, wealth, status, glory--and power.

The same may be fairly argued about the Islamic figures who waged the Counter-crusade. Salah al Din may have been a good Muslim, the Geek is not in a position to evaluate that. He can say that Sala al Din was a man ambitious for both military glory and political power.

The ebb and sway of Crusaders and Counter-crusaders over the years following the final ejection of the Christians from the lands conquered during the First Crusade show (as does the original Muslim expansion across the Mideast, the southern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, and the Iberian peninsula) the same political goal under religious garb.

Politics, the struggle for power over the people of a given piece of real estate, was the reality. Not the greater glory of any given religion. Religion was simply the cosmetics on the face of war.

Flash forward to the bloody century (more or less) between Martin Luther's nailing of his theses on the cathedral door in Wittenberg to the end of the Thirty Years War. This was the period of the Reformation and Counter-reformation. It's often called the the time of the Wars of Religion.

Get a grip!

The wars were political. They were waged for power. Protestantism and Catholicism were cosmetics. Even a man such as Philip II of Spain, who was at least as devout a Catholic as the Pope, was more concerned about maintaining and expanding the political power of the Spanish Empire than about the destination post mortem of his immortal soul.

(And, there is no doubt but this king was quite worried about getting his ticket punched for heaven.)

When Phillip took on Queen Elizabeth and England, it was against the background of the long-standing, bloody insurgency waged by the Dutch against Spain. Sure, Henry VIII had broken with the Catholic Church. Sure, Bloody Mary hadn't lived long enough to reclaim the apostate English for the Holy Mother Church. True, Elizabeth had declined marriage (and subsequent conversion to Catholicism) with Phillip.

The reason for the Armada was quite simply to take out England as the "over-the-horizon" external sponsoring power of the Dutch insurgents. The Spanish equation was simple. Dutch rebels minus English support equalled Spanish victory. Holland would be maintained in the Spanish Empire--and England gained.

Doesn't that hit you as a purely political calculation?

The same sort of calculus can be seen at work under the cloak of religion in the Thirty Years War. Sweden didn't head south into the cockpit of the German States out of a sense of Protestant solidarity. No. The move was defensive of Swedish royal authority at home. At the same time it was offensive--a seeking to expand the scope of Swedish power.

The grunts, the guys who did the fighting and dying, as well as most of the commanders were not after power in its own right as they were men with an eye on the main chance--the chance for loot, booty, land, status, glory--and the power those might bring in their wake.

In recent years, conflicts such as those in Northern Ireland used religion as a means of choosing sides and motivating combatants as well as those who supported them. Nonetheless, the reason for fighting was political.

Who would have the power over whom? That was the question over which bullets whined, bombs exploded, and people died. The same dynamic existed in Afghanistan after the Soviet invasion.

Regardless of what Osama bin Laden and his coterie might believe and say, the multi-party war during and after the Soviet invasion was all about politics. Taliban eventually triumphed over the others because religion is a very good way to assure both group coherence and sufficient combat effectiveness.

Right now and into the future there is no religious war being waged. It's the same old, same old. It is as Karl von Clausewitz correctly stated, "continuation of politics by violent means."

The enemies are not religious. They are ideological, that is to say of antipodal political views. On one side is the defining ideology of the West with its emphasis on the free individual: dynamic differences of political, social, economic and cultural views, electoral processes, and a functional separation between the institutions of religion and those of the state. On the other is Islamism with its emphasis upon the collective: subordination of the individual to authority, and a complete melding of religion and state.

The war can be (and should be) primarily of the "cold" variety. However, the initiative to make it "hot" lies with the Islamists, not the West, not the US.

If the jihadists, the men with an eye on the main chance--the chance for glory, family status enhancement, a perceived avenue out of a life of self-ascribed meaninglessness and impotence--and those who give the orders and make the plans, choose to make the war hot, we have no option except to defeat them. As we fight them in the field and take the war to their lairs, we also must wage the "cold" side of the conflict.

To do that it is necessary to remember that this struggle is not about religion. It is every bit as political as past wars--both hot and cold--which we Americans and our allies have fought and won.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dinesh D'Souza makes a similar point in this article.
--------------------------------------------------
Atheism, not religion, is the real force behind the mass murders of history


By Dinesh D'Souza

RANCHO SANTA FE, CALIF. - In recent months, a spate of atheist books have
argued that religion represents, as "End of Faith" author Sam Harris puts
it, "the most potent source of human conflict, past and present."

Columnist Robert Kuttner gives the familiar litany. "The Crusades
slaughtered millions in the name of Jesus. The Inquisition brought the
torture and murder of millions more. After Martin Luther, Christians did
bloody battle with other Christians for another three centuries."

In his bestseller "The God Delusion," Richard Dawkins contends that most of
the world's recent conflicts - in the Middle East, in the Balkans, in
Northern Ireland, in Kashmir, and in Sri Lanka - show the vitality
of religion's murderous impulse.

The problem with this critique is that it exaggerates the crimes attributed
to religion, while ignoring the greater crimes of secular fanaticism. The
best example of religious persecution in America is the Salem witch trials.
How many people were killed in those trials? Thousands? Hundreds? Actually,
fewer than 25. Yet the event still haunts the liberal imagination.

It is strange to witness the passion with which some secular figures rail
against the misdeeds of the Crusaders and Inquisitors more than 500 years
ago. The number sentenced to death by the Spanish Inquisition appears to be
about 10,000. Some historians contend that an additional 100,000 died in
jail due to malnutrition or illness.

These figures are tragic, and of course population levels were much lower
at the time. But even so, they are minuscule compared with the death tolls
produced by the atheist despotisms of the 20th century. In the name of
creating their version of a religion-free utopia, Adolf Hitler, Joseph
Stalin, and Mao Zedong produced the kind of mass slaughter that no
Inquisitor could possibly match. Collectively these atheist tyrants
murdered more than 100 million people.

Moreover, many of the conflicts that are counted as "religious wars" were
not fought over religion. They were mainly fought over rival claims to
territory and power. Can the wars between England and France be called
religious wars because the English were Protestants and the French were
Catholics? Hardly.

The same is true today. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not, at its
core, a religious one. It arises out of a dispute over self-determination
and land. Hamas and the extreme orthodox parties in Israel may
advance theological claims - "God gave us this land" and so forth - but the
conflict would remain essentially the same even without these religious
motives. Ethnic rivalry, not religion, is the source of the tension in
Northern Ireland and the Balkans.

Yet today's atheists insist on making religion the culprit. Consider Mr.
Harris's analysis of the conflict in Sri Lanka. "While the motivations of
the Tamil Tigers are not explicitly religious," he informs us, "they are
Hindus who undoubtedly believe many improbable things about the nature of
life and death." In other words, while the Tigers see themselves as
combatants in a secular political struggle, Harris detects a religious
motive because these people happen to be Hindu and surely there must be
some underlying religious craziness that explains their fanaticism.

Harris can go on forever in this vein. Seeking to exonerate secularism and
atheism from the horrors perpetrated in their name, he argues that
Stalinism and Maoism were in reality "little more than a political
religion." As for Nazism, "while the hatred of Jews in Germany expressed
itself in a predominantly secular way, it was a direct inheritance from
medieval Christianity." Indeed, "The holocaust marked the culmination of
... two thousand years of Christian fulminating against the Jews."

One finds the same inanities in Mr. Dawkins's work. Don't be fooled by this
rhetorical legerdemain. Dawkins and Harris cannot explain why, if Nazism
was directly descended from medieval Christianity, medieval Christianity
did not produce a Hitler. How can a self-proclaimed atheist ideology,
advanced by Hitler as a repudiation of Christianity, be a "culmination" of
2,000 years of Christianity? Dawkins and Harris are employing a transparent
sleight of hand that holds Christianity responsible for the crimes
committed in its name, while exonerating secularism and atheism for the
greater crimes committed in their name.

Religious fanatics have done things that are impossible to defend, and some
of them, mostly in the Muslim world, are still performing horrors in the
name of their creed. But if religion sometimes disposes people to
self-righteousness and absolutism, it also provides a moral code that
condemns the slaughter of innocents. In particular, the moral teachings of
Jesus provide no support for - indeed they stand as a stern rebuke to - the
historical injustices perpetrated in the name of Christianity.

Atheist hubris
The crimes of atheism have generally been perpetrated through a hubristic
ideology that sees man, not God, as the creator of values. Using the latest
techniques of science and technology, man seeks to displace God and create
a secular utopia here on earth. Of course if some people - the Jews, the
landowners, the unfit, or the handicapped - have to be eliminated in order
to achieve this utopia, this is a price the atheist tyrants and their
apologists have shown themselves quite willing to pay. Thus they confirm
the truth of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's dictum, "If God is not, everything is
permitted."

Whatever the motives for atheist bloodthirstiness, the indisputable fact is
that all the religions of the world put together have in 2,000 years not
managed to kill as many people as have been killed in the name of atheism
in the past few decades.

It's time to abandon the mindlessly repeated mantra that religious belief
has been the greatest source of human conflict and violence. Atheism, not
religion, is the real force behind the mass murders of history.

* Dinesh D'Souza is the Rishwain Fellow at the Hoover Institution

History Geek said...

The Geek agrees that this article runs in parallel with the main point of his post--that there is little "religion" in religious wars. Rather than using the perhaps pejorative term "atheism" the Geek prefers to use the word "politics" which has the advantage of being accurate.

Wars are about political power for those who call for them, plan them and direct their conduct. No matter what cover terms are used from "The Greater Glory of God" to "teach the Mexicans to elect good men" or "foster democracy," the fundamental reality is unchanged. The war is about power--it's enhancement, enlargement, defense or acquisition. That's the nature of politics.

Even for those who fight the wars, the grunts on the ground, war has been about acquiring or maintaining the components of power including status, glory or loot, not the protection of the individual's immortal soul.

Having noted that, the Geek isn't prepared to disagree in principle with the thrust of the article, even though he would in details.