Theodore Roosevelt
America and the World War
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Table of contents
PRAYER FOR PEACE
FOREWORD
CHAPTER I THE DUTY OF SELF-DEFENSE AND OF GOOD CONDUCT TOWARD OTHERS
CHAPTER II THE BELGIAN TRAGEDY
CHAPTER III UNWISE PEACE TREATIES A MENACE TO RIGHTEOUSNESS
CHAPTER IV THE CAUSES OF THE WAR
CHAPTER V HOW TO STRIVE FOR WORLD PEACE
CHAPTER VI THE PEACE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
CHAPTER VII AN INTERNATIONAL POSSE COMITATUS
CHAPTER VIII SELF-DEFENSE WITHOUT MILITARISM
CHAPTER IX OUR PEACEMAKER, THE NAVY
CHAPTER X PREPAREDNESS AGAINST WAR
CHAPTER XI UTOPIA OR HELL?
CHAPTER XII SUMMING UP
PRAYER FOR PEACE
Now
these were visions in the night of war:I
prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,Sent
down a grievous plague on humankind,A
black and tumorous plague that softly slewTill
nations and their armies were no more—And
there was perfect peace ...But
I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.I
prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,Decreed
the Truce of Life:—Wings in the skyFluttered
and fell; the quick, bright ocean thingsSank
to the ooze; the footprints in the woodsVanished;
the freed brute from the abattoirStarved
on green pastures; and within the bloodThe
death-work at the root of living ceased;And
men gnawed clods and stones, blasphemed and died—And
there was perfect peace ...But
I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.I
prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,Bowed
the free neck beneath a yoke of steel,Dumbed
the free voice that springs in lyric speech,Killed
the free art that glows on all mankind,And
made one iron nation lord of earth,Which
in the monstrous matrix of its willMoulded
a spawn of slaves. There was One Might—And
there was perfect peace ...But
I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.I
prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,Palsied
all flesh with bitter fear of death.The
shuddering slayers fled to town and fieldBeset
with carrion visions, foul decay.And
sickening taints of air that made the earthOne
charnel of the shrivelled lines of war.And
through all flesh that omnipresent fearBecame
the strangling fingers of a handThat
choked aspiring thought and brave beliefAnd
love of loveliness and selfless deedTill
flesh was all, flesh wallowing, styed in fear,In
festering fear that stank beyond the stars—And
there was perfect peace ...But
I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.I
prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,Spake
very softly of forgotten things,Spake
very softly old remembered wordsSweet
as young starlight. Rose to heaven againThe
mystic challenge of the Nazarene,That
deathless affirmation:—Man in GodAnd
God in man willing the God to be ...And
there was war and peace, and peace and war,Full
year and lean, joy, anguish, life and death,Doing
their work on the evolving soul,The
soul of man in God and God in man.For
death is nothing in the sum of things,And
life is nothing in the sum of things,And
flesh is nothing in the sum of things,But
man in God is all and God in man,Will
merged in will, love immanent in love,Moving
through visioned vistas to one goal—The
goal of man in God and God in man,And
of all life in God and God in life—The
far fruition of our earthly prayer,“Thy
will be done!” ... There is no other peace!William
Samuel Johnson.
FOREWORD
In
the New York Evening
Post for September
30, 1814, a correspondent writes from Washington that on the ruins of
the Capitol, which had just been burned by a small British army,
various disgusted patriots had written sentences which included the
following: “Fruits of war without preparation” and “Mirror of
democracy.” A century later, in December, 1914, the same paper,
ardently championing the policy of national unpreparedness and
claiming that democracy was incompatible with preparedness against
war, declared that it was moved to tears by its pleasure in the
similar championship of the same policy contained in President
Wilson’s just-published message to Congress. The message is for the
most part couched in terms of adroit and dexterous, and usually
indirect, suggestion, and carefully avoids downright, or indeed
straight-forward, statement of policy—the meaning being conveyed in
questions and hints, often so veiled and so obscure as to make it
possible to draw contradictory conclusions from the words used. There
are, however, fairly clear statements that we are “not to depend
upon a standing army nor yet upon a reserve army,” nor upon any
efficient system of universal training for our young men, but upon
vague and unformulated plans for encouraging volunteer aid for
militia service by making it “as attractive as possible”! The
message contains such sentences as that the President “hopes”
that “some of the finer passions” of the American people “are
in his own heart”; that “dread of the power of any other nation
we are incapable of”; such sentences as, shall we “be prepared to
defend ourselves against attack? We have always found means to do
that, and shall find them whenever it is necessary,” and “if
asked, are you ready to defend yourself? we reply, most assuredly, to
the utmost.” It is difficult for a serious and patriotic citizen to
understand how the President could have been willing to make such
statements as these. Every student even of elementary American
history knows that in our last foreign war with a formidable
opponent, that of 1812, reliance on the principles President Wilson
now advocates brought us to the verge of national ruin and of the
break-up of the Union. The President must know that at that time we
had not “found means” even to defend the capital city in which he
was writing his message. He ought to know that at the present time,
thanks largely to his own actions, we are not “ready to defend
ourselves” at all, not to speak of defending ourselves “to the
utmost.” In a state paper subtle prettiness of phrase does not
offset misteaching of the vital facts of national history.In
1814 this nation was paying for its folly in having for fourteen
years conducted its foreign policy, and refused to prepare for
defense against possible foreign foes, in accordance with the views
of the ultrapacificists of that day. It behooves us now, in the
presence of a world war even vaster and more terrible than the world
war of the early nineteenth century, to beware of taking the advice
of the equally foolish pacificists of our own day. To follow their
advice at the present time might expose our democracy to far greater
disaster than was brought upon it by its disregard of Washington’s
maxim, and its failure to secure peace by preparing against war, a
hundred years ago.In
his message President Wilson has expressed his laudable desire that
this country, naturally through its President, may act as mediator to
bring peace among the great European powers. With this end in view
he, in his message, deprecates our taking any efficient steps to
prepare means for our own defense, lest such action might give a
wrong impression to the great warring powers. Furthermore, in his
overanxiety not to offend the powerful who have done wrong, he
scrupulously refrains from saying one word on behalf of the weak who
have suffered wrong. He makes no allusion to the violation of the
Hague conventions at Belgium’s expense, although this nation had
solemnly undertaken to be a guarantor of those conventions. He makes
no protest against the cruel wrongs Belgium has suffered. He says not
one word about the need, in the interests of true peace, of the only
peace worth having, that steps should be taken to prevent the
repetition of such wrongs in the future.This
is not right. It is not just to the weaker nations of the earth. It
comes perilously near a betrayal of our own interests. In his
laudable anxiety to make himself acceptable as a mediator to England,
and especially to Germany, President Wilson loses sight of the fact
that his first duty is to the United States; and, moreover, desirable
though it is that his conduct should commend him to Germany, to
England, and to the other great contending powers, he should not for
this reason forget the interests of the small nations, and above all
of Belgium, whose gratitude can never mean anything tangible to him
or to us, but which has suffered a wrong that in any peace
negotiations it should be our first duty to see remedied.In
the following chapters, substantially reproduced from articles
contributed to the Wheeler Syndicate and also to
The Outlook,
The Independent,
and Everybody’s,
the attempt is made to draw from the present lamentable contest
certain lessons which it would be well for our people to learn. Among
them are the following:We,
a people akin to and yet different from all the peoples of Europe,
should be equally friendly to all these peoples while they behave
well, should be courteous to and considerate of the rights of each of
them, but should not hesitate to judge each and all of them by their
conduct.The
kind of “neutrality” which seeks to preserve “peace” by
timidly refusing to live up to our plighted word and to denounce and
take action against such wrong as that committed in the case of
Belgium, is unworthy of an honorable and powerful people. Dante
reserved a special place of infamy in the inferno for those base
angels who dared side neither with evil nor with good. Peace is
ardently to be desired, but only as the handmaid of righteousness.
The only peace of permanent value is the peace of righteousness.
There can be no such peace until well-behaved, highly civilized small
nations are protected from oppression and subjugation.National
promises, made in treaties, in Hague conventions, and the like are
like the promises of individuals. The sole value of the promise comes
in the performance. Recklessness in making promises is in practice
almost or quite as mischievous and dishonest as indifference to
keeping promises; and this as much in the case of nations as in the
case of individuals. Upright men make few promises, and keep those
they make.All
the actions of the ultrapacificists for a generation past, all their
peace congresses and peace conventions, have amounted to precisely
and exactly nothing in advancing the cause of peace. The peace
societies of the ordinary pacificist type have in the aggregate
failed to accomplish even the smallest amount of good, have done
nothing whatever for peace, and the very small effect they have had
on their own nations has been, on the whole, slightly detrimental.
Although usually they have been too futile to be even detrimental,
their unfortunate tendency has so far been to make good men weak and
to make virtue a matter of derision to strong men. All-inclusive
arbitration treaties of the kind hitherto proposed and enacted are
utterly worthless, are hostile to righteousness and detrimental to
peace. The Americans, within and without Congress, who have opposed
the fortifying of the Panama Canal and the upbuilding of the American
navy have been false to the honor and the interest of the nation and
should be condemned by every high-minded citizen.In
every serious crisis the present Hague conventions and the peace and
arbitration and neutrality treaties of the existing type have proved
not to be worth the paper on which they were written. This is because
no method was provided of securing their enforcement, of putting
force behind the pledge. Peace treaties and arbitration treaties
unbacked by force are not merely useless but mischievous in any
serious crisis.Treaties
must never be recklessly made; improper treaties should be repudiated
long before the need for action under them arises; and all treaties
not thus repudiated in advance should be scrupulously kept.From
the international standpoint the essential thing to do is effectively
to put the combined power of civilization back of the collective
purpose of civilization to secure justice. This can be achieved only
by a world league for the peace of righteousness, which would
guarantee to enforce by the combined strength of all the nations the
decrees of a competent and impartial court against any recalcitrant
and offending nation. Only in this way will treaties become serious
documents.Such
a world league for peace is not now in sight. Until it is created the
prime necessity for each free and liberty-loving nation is to keep
itself in such a state of efficient preparedness as to be able to
defend by its own strength both its honor and its vital interest. The
most important lesson for the United States to learn from the present
war is the vital need that it shall at once take steps thus to
prepare.Preparedness
against war does not always avert war or disaster in war any more
than the existence of a fire department, that is, of preparedness
against fire, always averts fire. But it is the only insurance
against war and the only insurance against overwhelming disgrace and
disaster in war. Preparedness usually averts war and usually prevents
disaster in war; and always prevents disgrace in war. Preparedness,
so far from encouraging nations to go to war, has a marked tendency
to diminish the chance of war occurring. Unpreparedness has not the
slightest effect in averting war. Its only effect is immensely to
increase the likelihood of disgrace and disaster in war. The United
States should immediately strengthen its navy and provide for its
steady training in purely military functions; it should similarly
strengthen the regular army and provide a reserve; and, furthermore,
it should provide for all the young men of the nation military
training of the kind practised by the free democracy of Switzerland.
Switzerland is the least “militaristic” and most democratic of
republics, and the best prepared against war. If we follow her
example we will be carrying out the precepts of Washington.We
feel no hostility toward any nation engaged in the present tremendous
struggle. We feel an infinite sadness because of the black abyss of
war into which all these nations have been plunged. We admire the
heroism they have shown. We act in a spirit of warm friendliness
toward all of them, even when obliged to protest against the
wrong-doing of any one of them.Our
country should not shirk its duty to mankind. It can perform this
duty only if it is true to itself. It can be true to itself only by
definitely resolving to take the position of the just man armed; for
a proud and self-respecting nation of freemen must scorn to do wrong
to others and must also scorn tamely to submit to wrong done by
others.Theodore
Roosevelt.
CHAPTER I THE DUTY OF SELF-DEFENSE AND OF GOOD CONDUCT TOWARD OTHERS
In
this country we are both shocked and stunned by the awful cataclysm
which has engulfed civilized Europe. By only a few men was the
possibility of such a wide-spread and hideous disaster even admitted.
Most persons, even after it occurred, felt as if it was unbelievable.
They felt that in what it pleased enthusiasts to speak of as “this
age of enlightenment” it was impossible that primal passion,
working hand in hand with the most modern scientific organization,
should loose upon the world these forces of dread destruction.In
the last week in July the men and women of the populous civilized
countries of Europe were leading their usual ordered lives, busy and
yet soft, lives carried on with comfort and luxury, with appliances
for ease and pleasure such as never before were known, lives led in a
routine which to most people seemed part of the natural order of
things, something which could not be disturbed by shocks such as the
world knew of old. A fortnight later hell yawned under the feet of
these hard-working or pleasure-seeking men and women, and woe smote
them as it smote the peoples we read of in the Old Testament or in
the histories of the Middle Ages. Through the rents in our smiling
surface of civilization the volcanic fires beneath gleamed red in the
gloom.What
occurred in Europe is on a giant scale like the disaster to the
Titanic. One moment
the great ship was speeding across the ocean, equipped with every
device for comfort, safety, and luxury. The men in her stoke-hold and
steerage were more comfortable than the most luxurious travellers of
a century ago. The people in her first-class cabins enjoyed every
luxury that a luxurious city life could demand and were screened not
only from danger but from the least discomfort or annoyance.
Suddenly, in one awful and shattering moment, death smote the
floating host, so busy with work and play. They were in that moment
shot back through immeasurable ages. At one stroke they were hurled
from a life of effortless ease back into elemental disaster; to
disaster in which baseness showed naked, and heroism burned like a
flame of light.In
the face of a calamity so world-wide as the present war, it behooves
us all to keep our heads clear and to read aright the lessons taught
us; for we ourselves may suffer dreadful penalties if we read these
lessons wrong. The temptation always is only to half-learn such a
lesson, for a half-truth is always simple, whereas the whole truth is
very, very difficult. Unfortunately, a half-truth, if applied, may
turn out to be the most dangerous type of falsehood.Now,
our business here in America in the face of this cataclysm is
twofold. In the first place it is imperative that we shall take the
steps necessary in order, by our own strength and wisdom, to
safeguard ourselves against such disaster as has occurred in Europe.
Events have shown that peace treaties, arbitration treaties,
neutrality treaties, Hague treaties, and the like as at present
existing, offer not even the smallest protection against such
disasters. The prime duty of the moment is therefore to keep Uncle
Sam in such a position that by his own stout heart and ready hand he
can defend the vital honor and vital interest of the American people.But
this is not our only duty, even although it is the only duty we can
immediately perform. The horror of what has occurred in Europe, which
has drawn into the maelstrom of war large parts of Asia, Africa,
Australasia, and even America, is altogether too great to permit us
to rest supine without endeavoring to prevent its repetition. We are
not to be excused if we do not make a resolute and intelligent effort
to devise some scheme which will minimize the chance for a recurrence
of such horror in the future and which will at least limit and
alleviate it if it should occur. In other words, it is our duty to
try to devise some efficient plan for securing the peace of
righteousness throughout the world.That
any plan will surely and automatically bring peace we cannot promise.
Nevertheless, I think a plan can be devised which will render it far
more difficult than at present to plunge us into a world war and far
more easy than at present to find workable and practical substitutes
even for ordinary war. In order to do this, however, it is necessary
that we shall fearlessly look facts in the face. We cannot devise
methods for securing peace which will actually work unless we are in
good faith willing to face the fact that the present all-inclusive
arbitration treaties, peace conferences, and the like, upon which our
well-meaning pacificists have pinned so much hope, have proved
utterly worthless under serious strain. We must face this fact and
clearly understand the reason for it before we can advance an
adequate remedy.It
is even more important not to pay heed to the pathetic infatuation of
the well-meaning persons who declare that this is “the last great
war.” During the last century such assertions have been made again
and again after the close of every great war. They represent nothing
but an amiable fatuity. The strong men of the United States must
protect the feeble; but they must not trust for guidance to the
feeble.In
these chapters I desire to ask my fellow countrymen and countrywomen
to consider the various lessons which are being writ in letters of
blood and steel before our eyes. I wish to ask their consideration,
first, of the immediate need that we shall realize the utter
hopelessness under actually existing conditions of our trusting for
our safety merely to the good-will of other powers or to treaties or
other “bits of paper” or to anything except our own steadfast
courage and preparedness. Second, I wish to point out what a
complicated and difficult thing it is to work for peace and how
difficult it may be to combine doing one’s duty in the endeavor to
bring peace for others without failing in one’s duty to secure
peace for one’s self; and therefore I wish to point out how unwise
it is to make foolish promises which under great strain it would be
impossible to keep.Third,
I wish to try to give practical expression to what I know is the hope
of the great body of our people. We should endeavor to devise some
method of action, in common with other nations, whereby there shall
be at least a reasonable chance of securing world peace and, in any
event, of narrowing the sphere of possible war and its horrors. To do
this it is equally necessary unflinchingly to antagonize the position
of the men who believe in nothing but brute force exercised without
regard to the rights of other nations, and unhesitatingly to condemn
the well-meaning but unwise persons who seek to mislead our people
into the belief that treaties, mere bits of paper, when unbacked by
force and when there is no one responsible for their enforcement, can
be of the slightest use in a serious crisis. Force unbacked by
righteousness is abhorrent. The effort to substitute for it vague
declamation for righteousness unbacked by force is silly. The
policeman must be put back of the judge in international law just as
he is back of the judge in municipal law. The effective power of
civilization must be put back of civilization’s collective purpose
to secure reasonable justice between nation and nation.First,
consider the lessons taught by this war as to the absolute need under
existing conditions of our being willing, ready, and able to defend
ourselves from unjust attack. What has befallen Belgium and
Luxembourg—not to speak of China—during the past five months
shows the utter hopelessness of trusting to any treaties, no matter
how well meant, unless back of them lies power sufficient to secure
their enforcement.At
the outset let me explain with all possible emphasis that in what I
am about to say at this time I am not criticising nor taking sides
with any one of the chief combatants in either group of warring
powers, so far as the relations between and among these chief powers
themselves are concerned. The causes for the present contest stretch
into the immemorial past. As far as the present generations of
Germans, Frenchmen, Russians, Austrians, and Servians are concerned,
their actions have been determined by deeds done and left undone by
many generations in the past. Not only the sovereigns but the peoples
engaged on each side believe sincerely in the justice of their
several causes. This is convincingly shown by the action of the
Socialists in Germany, France, and Belgium. Of all latter-day
political parties the Socialist is the one in which international
brotherhood is most dwelt upon, while international obligations are
placed on a par with national obligations. Yet the Socialists in
Germany and the Socialists in France and Belgium have all alike
thrown themselves into this contest with the same enthusiasm and,
indeed, the same bitterness as the rest of their countrymen. I am not
at this moment primarily concerned with passing judgment upon any of
the powers. I am merely instancing certain things that have occurred,
because of the vital importance that we as a people should take to
heart the lessons taught by these occurrences.At
the end of July Belgium and Luxembourg were independent nations. By
treaties executed in 1832 and 1867 their neutrality had been
guaranteed by the great nations round about them—Germany, France,
and England. Their neutrality was thus guaranteed with the express
purpose of keeping them at peace and preventing any invasion of their
territory during war. Luxembourg built no fortifications and raised
no army, trusting entirely to the pledged faith of her neighbors.
Belgium, an extremely thrifty, progressive, and prosperous industrial
country, whose people are exceptionally hard-working and law-abiding,
raised an army and built forts for purely defensive purposes. Neither
nation committed the smallest act of hostility or aggression against
any one of its neighbors. Each behaved with absolute propriety. Each
was absolutely innocent of the slightest wrong-doing. Neither has the
very smallest responsibility for the disaster that has overwhelmed
her. Nevertheless as soon as the war broke out the territories of
both were overrun.Luxembourg
made no resistance. It is now practically incorporated in Germany.
Other nations have almost forgotten its existence and not the
slightest attention has been paid to its fate simply because it did
not fight, simply because it trusted solely to peaceful measures and
to the treaties which were supposed to guarantee it against harm. The
eyes of the world, however, are on Belgium because the Belgians have
fought hard and gallantly for all that makes life best worth having
to honorable men and women. In consequence, Belgium has been trampled
under foot. At this moment not only her men but her women and
children are enduring misery so dreadful that it is hard for us who
live at peace to visualize it to ourselves.The
fate of Luxembourg and of Belgium offers an instructive commentary on
the folly of the well-meaning people who a few years ago insisted
that the Panama Canal should not be fortified and that we should
trust to international treaties to protect it. After what has
occurred in Europe no sane man has any excuse for believing that such
treaties would avail us in our hour of need any more than they have
availed Belgium and Luxembourg—and, for that matter, Korea and
China—in their hours of need.If
a great world war should arise or if a great world-power were at war
with us under conditions that made it desirable for other nations not
to be drawn into the quarrel, any step that the hostile nation’s
real or fancied need demanded would unquestionably be taken, and any
treaty that stood in the way would be treated as so much waste paper
except so far as we could back it by force. If under such
circumstances Panama is retained and controlled by us, it will be
because our forts and garrison and our fleets on the ocean make it
unsafe to meddle with the canal and the canal zone. Were it only
protected by a treaty—that is, unless behind the treaty lay both
force and the readiness to use force—the canal would not be safe
for twenty-four hours. Moreover, in such case, the real blame would
lie at our own doors. We would not be helped at all, we would merely
make ourselves objects of derision, if under these circumstances we
screamed and clamored about the iniquity of those who violated the
treaty and took possession of Panama. The blame would rightly be
placed by the world upon our own supine folly, upon our own timidity
and weakness, and we would be adjudged unfit to hold what we had
shown ourselves too soft and too short-sighted to retain.The
most obvious lesson taught by what has occurred is the utter
worthlessness of treaties unless backed by force. It is evident that
as things are now, all-inclusive arbitration treaties, neutrality
treaties, treaties of alliance, and the like do not serve one
particle of good in protecting a peaceful nation when some great
military power deems its vital needs at stake, unless the rights of
this peaceful nation are backed by force. The devastation of Belgium,
the burning of Louvain, the holding of Brussels to heavy ransom, the
killing of women and children, the wrecking of houses in Antwerp by
bombs from air-ships have excited genuine sympathy among neutral
nations. But no neutral nation has protested; and while
unquestionably a neutral nation like the United States ought to have
protested, yet the only certain way to make such a protest effective
would be to put force back of it. Let our people remember that what
has been done to Belgium would unquestionably be done to us by any
great military power with which we were drawn into war, no matter how
just our cause. Moreover, it would be done without any more protest
on the part of neutral nations than we have ourselves made in the
case of Belgium.If,
as an aftermath of this war, some great Old-World power or
combination of powers made war on us because we objected to their
taking and fortifying Magdalena Bay or St. Thomas, our chance of
securing justice would rest exclusively on the efficiency of our
fleet and army, especially the fleet. No arbitration treaties, or
peace treaties, of the kind recently negotiated at Washington by the
bushelful, and no tepid good-will of neutral powers, would help us in
even the smallest degree. If our fleet were conquered, New York and
San Francisco would be seized and probably each would be destroyed as
Louvain was destroyed unless it were put to ransom as Brussels has
been put to ransom. Under such circumstances outside powers would
undoubtedly remain neutral exactly as we have remained neutral as
regards Belgium.Under
such conditions my own view is very strongly that the national
interest would be best served by refusing the payment of all ransom
and accepting the destruction of the cities and then continuing the
war until by our own strength and indomitable will we had exacted
ample atonement from our foes. This would be a terrible price to pay
for unpreparedness; and those responsible for the unpreparedness
would thereby be proved guilty of a crime against the nation. Upon
them would rest the guilt of all the blood and misery. The innocent
would have to atone for their folly and strong men would have to undo
and offset it by submitting to the destruction of our cities rather
than consent to save them by paying money which would be used to
prosecute the war against the rest of the country. If our people are
wise and far-sighted and if they still have in their blood the iron
of the men who fought under Grant and Lee, they will, in the event of
such a war, insist upon this price being paid, upon this course being
followed. They will then in the end exact, from the nation which
assails us, atonement for the misery and redress for the wrong done.
They will not rely upon the ineffective good-will of neutral
outsiders. They will show a temper that will make our foes think
twice before meddling with us again.The
great danger to peace so far as this country is concerned arises from
such pacificists as those who have made and applauded our recent
all-inclusive arbitration treaties, who advocate the abandonment of
our policy of building battle-ships and the refusal to fortify the
Panama Canal. It is always possible that these persons may succeed in
impressing foreign nations with the belief that they represent our
people. If they ever do succeed in creating this conviction in the
minds of other nations, the fate of the United States will speedily
be that of China and Luxembourg, or else it will be saved therefrom
only by long-drawn war, accompanied by incredible bloodshed and
disaster.It
is those among us who would go to the front in such event—as I and
my four sons would go—who are the really far-sighted and earnest
friends of peace. We desire measures taken in the real interest of
peace because we, who at need would fight, but who earnestly hope
never to be forced to fight, have most at stake in keeping peace. We
object to the actions of those who do most talking about the
necessity of peace because we think they are really a menace to the
just and honorable peace which alone this country will in the long
run support. We object to their actions because we believe they
represent a course of conduct which may at any time produce a war in
which we and not they would labor and suffer.In
such a war the prime fact to be remembered is that the men really
responsible for it would not be those who would pay the penalty. The
ultrapacificists are rarely men who go to battle. Their fault or
their folly would be expiated by the blood of countless thousands of
plain and decent American citizens of the stamp of those, North and
South alike, who in the Civil War laid down all they had, including
life itself, in battling for the right as it was given to them to see
the right.
CHAPTER II THE BELGIAN TRAGEDY
Peace is worthless unless it serves
the cause of righteousness. Peace which consecrates militarism is
of small service. Peace obtained by crushing the liberty and life
of just and unoffending peoples is as cruel as the most cruel war.
It should ever be our honorable effort to serve one of the world’s
most vital needs by doing all in our power to bring about
conditions which will give some effective protection to weak or
small nations which themselves keep order and act with justice
toward the rest of mankind. There can be no higher international
duty than to safeguard the existence and independence of
industrious, orderly states, with a high personal and national
standard of conduct, but without the military force of the great
powers; states, for instance, such as Belgium, Holland,
Switzerland, the Scandinavian countries, Uruguay, and others. A
peace which left Belgium’s wrongs unredressed and which did not
provide against the recurrence of such wrongs as those from which
she has suffered would not be a real peace.As regards the actions of most of the combatants in the
hideous world-wide war now raging it is possible sincerely to take
and defend either of the opposite views concerning their actions.
The causes of any such great and terrible contest almost always lie
far back in the past, and the seeming immediate cause is usually
itself in major part merely an effect of many preceding causes. The
assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne was partly
or largely due to the existence of political and often murderous
secret societies in Servia which the Servian government did not
suppress; and it did not suppress them because the “bondage” of the
men and women of the Servian race in Bosnia and Herzegovina to
Austria was such a source of ever-present irritation to the
Servians that their own government was powerless to restrain them.
Strong arguments can be advanced on both the Austrian and th
[...]