Tuesday, February 23, 2010

I Couldn't Have Been in a Crowded Restaurant Seen by Multiple Witnesses because I was Robbing a Bank at the Time

But the belief that the world operates rationally is itself irrational. The example of Hitler both instructs and warns. The Nazi leader was not just an anti-Semite who actually believed his insane theories; he also made decisions that were in themselves crazy. For example, why did he declare war on the United States after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor? Why did he invade the Soviet Union before he had defeated Britain? In both cases, he had his reasons. And in both cases, his reasons were crazy.

-Richard Cohen
Richard Cohen is one of those authentic American morons who has managed to cobble together a whole crackpot Weltanschauung out of a hobbyist's affection for History Channel documentaries. Yes, Hitler was a certified fruitcake, but neither of Cohen's examples proves it, especially given that both of his points are totally historically inaccurate. Why did Hitler declare war on the United States after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor? Well, because the United States declared war on Japan, and Article III of the Tripartite Treaty dictated that the Axis powers enter and aid in any conflict in which a party not currently involved in either the European war or the Japanese-Chinese conflict declared war on an Axis Power. As for invading the Soviet Union, that was always the plan. The Battle of Britain and aborted Operation Sea Lion were late additions to the German war plan, and when the Luftwaffe failed to break British air defenses or the "will" of the British people through aerial bombartment, the Nazi government simply abandoned plans for an amphibious assault on Britian, correctly assuming that the British were in no condition to challenge Germany on the Continent at the time. Meanwhile, Operation Barbarossa was an early success, with the Wehrmacht making huge territorial gains very swiftly, and the subsequent reversals on the Eastern Front across the next two years had almost nothing to do with the failure to conquer Britain, despite what the D-Day hagiographers in the Anglosphere would tell you.

Anyway, the rest of the Cohen article is about how Crunktakular Mahmoud Ahmedinejad is and how Barack Obama should act more like Richard Nixon, whose record of wartime achievement . . . wait, what? I mean, what's remarkable at the article, what makes it an almost achetypal example of the kookjobbery that is the WaPo opinion page, is that after extrapolating incorrect lessons from fictionalized historical incidents, it then misapplies its own dishonest conclusions. It's like a criminal who fabricates an incredible alibi and then uses it prove that he's actually guilty.

29 comments:

Moloch-Agonistes said...

I like Richard Cohen. I enjoy Richard Cohen. My life is demonstrably superior due to the continued artistic production of Richard Cohen.

Who but Richard Cohen could so cogently observe that We've heard all this before?


Of course, that was all our fault

Cüneyt said...

But Japan was not attacked, as that article stipulates. They attacked the US after Pearl Harbor.

But definitely, invasion of Russia was always the plan. Hell, it said it in the guy's book. One can quibble with the timing, though.

Cüneyt said...

At, rather than after. Ugh.

Gridlock said...

This cannot stand.

Ashley said...

"And in both cases, his reasons were crazy."

I don't see the problem here. It's perfectly cromulent. Reason is crazy. Insanity is reason. I am the Bullgod.

Anonymous said...

While I don't read that ass Cohen - I do know me history. Worth noting that treaties aren't all that much. Japan and Russia avoided declaring war on each other despite treaty obligations (Russia finally did so - in August 1945). Hitler's very quick declaration of war on the US solved a big problem for Roosevelt, given US isolationist attitudes toward European war. Most definitely a stupid move for the Germans. Even a small delay would have tripped up the process a bit for the US.

Justin said...

IOZ, since you are in a Washington Post mood, I wondered if you had seen Jackson Diehl's latest?

davidly said...

Stupid move for the Germans? Are you kidding? It was a perfect out.

Ya see, Anony, 12:20pm - if that's your real name - life ain't Risk, and it ain't Monopoly, and it sure as hell ain't Life. Call it Riskopoly.

Willkommen ins Himmelsreich!

Charles F. Oxtrot said...

Given that Brown Bros Harriman financed the Weimar Republic, the only reason for Hitler to declare war on America was to allow American industrialists to double-dip on the war.

OOPS.

Anonymous said...

A reminder.

Tom Friedman, 16 February 2002:

No, the axis-of-evil idea isn’t thought through – but that’s what I like about it. It says to these countries and their terrorist pals: “We know what you’re cooking in your bathtubs. We don’t know exactly what we’re going to do about it, but if you think we are going to just sit back and take another dose from you, you’re wrong. Meet Don Rumsfeld – he’s even crazier than you are.

I think I preferred it when Mr. Cohen regaled us with tales of how fucking funny he was. Because not learning from Tom Friedman's most egregious mistakes is a serious offense.

Anonymous said...

To Charles F.O.:

Have you been reading those back-issues of George Seldes' "In Fact" again?

Your wife only put them in the bathroom to save money on TP.

Once you go through those, she's going to replace them with Izzy Stone's "Trial of Socrates".

Anonymous said...

To Anonymous 2:54:

I'm not Mr. Foxtrot, but I think he would agree that it is better than Highlights for (Slow) Children.

Or do you have anything to say against Stone's work, or what C.F.O. noted, which happens to be both true and funny, unlike your contribution.

Anonymous said...

To anonymous 3:34:

I am afraid you mistook sardonic despair for antagonism.

Anonymous said...

and Article III of the Tripartite Treaty dictated that the Axis powers enter and aid in any conflict in which a party not currently involved in either the Europe

Oh, well in that case, yeah. After all, if there's one thing we know about ol' Adolf, it's that he was a stickler for adhering to the very letter of any treaty he signed. "A man's word is his bond!", he liked to say, right before falling on the floor, foaming at the mouth, and farting uncontrollably.

Jesus fucking christ.

Justin said...

They were Nazis, Dude?

Anonymous said...

Agree re: Russia, but with respect to Japan, that's a huge swing-and-miss. For further reference, see any history book, ever.

Anonymous said...

And with regards to html, I am even more embarrassing. Here's the real link.

Anonymous said...

Goddamn it!
http://www.2worldwar2.com/mistakes.htm#pearl-harbor

Enron said...

So according to Cohen, the United States is has its reasons, but the rationality is premised on insanity. Seems apt.

Christopher said...

So, what we're arguing here is that only an insane man would follow a contract that he himself voluntarily entered into.

I'm just throwing this out there, but it's possible that there may be reasons for acting against your immediate self-interest that are NOT evidence of insanity.

Anonymous said...

You guys are just not contextualizing all this properly.

You must think of the US as the well-intentioned missionary Davidson (played by Walter Huston), and the world as Sadie Thompson (played by Joan Crawford).
(It is not mandatory to think of IOZ as Mrs. Davidson, played by Beulah Bondi), although that's an intriguing bit of casting against type.)

Flip said...

Face peelers. People don't just "come up" with stuff like that; ergo

Rowan said...

Well, Anonymous@5:35, 5:36, and 5:37, that well-researched and documented website certainly changed all my opinions about anything that I may have disagreed with it regarding WWII. The citations alone! enough to drown a man.

Anonymous said...

Well rowan, if that website wasn't enough, just try reading any history book on WW2 ever.

Rowan said...

I have, nonny. That's how I can recognize a pile of traditional stereotypes when I see them. For example, the idea that Stalin was totally frozen and useless at the outset of Barbarossa is fairly well demolished by Richard Overy's dual-biography, The Dictators.

But it's an anecdotal story which will never die, and appear citationless on websites for as long as websites exist, hey?

Anonymous said...

In Soviet Russia, stereotypes demolish you.

Narwhal Pants said...

As an american moron who has cobbled together a functioning brain from saturday morning cartoons and old episodes of star trek I take offence at this article.

Anonymous said...

Not sure where to post this but I wanted to ask if anyone has heard of National Clicks?

Can someone help me find it?

Overheard some co-workers talking about it all week but didn't have time to ask so I thought I would post it here to see if someone could help me out.

Seems to be getting alot of buzz right now.

Thanks

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