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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53651 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53651)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, America and the World War, by Theodore
-Roosevelt
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: America and the World War
-
-
-Author: Theodore Roosevelt
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 2, 2016 [eBook #53651]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Charlene Taylor, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/americaworldwar01roos
-
-
-
-
-
-AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-BOOKS BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
-PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-
-
- THROUGH THE BRAZILIAN WILDERNESS.
- Illustrated. Large 8vo $3.50 _net_
-
- LIFE-HISTORIES OF AFRICAN GAME ANIMALS.
- With Edmund Heller. Illustrated. 2 vols. Large 8vo $10.00 _net_
-
- AFRICAN GAME TRAILS. An account of the African
- Wanderings of an American Hunter-Naturalist.
- Illustrated. Large 8vo $4.00 _net_
-
- OUTDOOR PASTIMES OF AN AMERICAN HUNTER.
- New Edition. Illustrated. 8vo $3.00 _net_
-
- HISTORY AS LITERATURE and Other Essays. 12mo $1.50 _net_
-
- OLIVER CROMWELL. Illustrated. 8vo $2.00 _net_
-
- THE ROUGH RIDERS. Illustrated. 8vo $1.50 _net_
-
- THE ROOSEVELT BOOK. Selections from the Writings
- of Theodore Roosevelt. 16mo 50 cents _net_
-
- AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR. 12mo 75 cents _net_
-
-
- THE ELKHORN EDITION. Complete Works of Theodore Roosevelt. 26
- volumes. Illustrated. 8vo. Sold by subscription.
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR
-
-by
-
-THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-Charles Scribner’S Sons
-1915
-
-Copyright, 1915, by
-Charles Scribner’S Sons
-
-Published January, 1915
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-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 slew
- Till 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 sky
- Fluttered and fell; the quick, bright ocean things
- Sank to the ooze; the footprints in the woods
- Vanished; the freed brute from the abattoir
- Starved on green pastures; and within the blood
- The 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 will
- Moulded 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 field
- Beset with carrion visions, foul decay.
- And sickening taints of air that made the earth
- One charnel of the shrivelled lines of war.
- And through all flesh that omnipresent fear
- Became the strangling fingers of a hand
- That choked aspiring thought and brave belief
- And love of loveliness and selfless deed
- Till 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 words
- Sweet as young starlight. Rose to heaven again
- The mystic challenge of the Nazarene,
- That deathless affirmation:--Man in God
- And 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.
-
- SAGAMORE HILL,
- January 1, 1915.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
- FOREWORD vii
-
- CHAPTER
- I. THE DUTY OF SELF-DEFENSE AND OF GOOD CONDUCT TOWARD
- OTHERS 1
-
- II. THE BELGIAN TRAGEDY 15
-
- III. UNWISE PEACE TREATIES A MENACE TO RIGHTEOUSNESS 44
-
- IV. THE CAUSES OF THE WAR 60
-
- V. HOW TO STRIVE FOR WORLD PEACE 74
-
- VI. THE PEACE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS 88
-
- VII. AN INTERNATIONAL POSSE COMITATUS 104
-
- VIII. SELF-DEFENSE WITHOUT MILITARISM 128
-
- IX. OUR PEACEMAKER, THE NAVY 156
-
- X. PREPAREDNESS AGAINST WAR 174
-
- XI. UTOPIA OR HELL? 220
-
- XII. SUMMING UP 244
-
-
-
-
-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 the Servian sides as regards this initial cause of the present
-world-wide war.
-
-Again, when once the war was started between Austria and Servia, it can
-well be argued that it was impossible for Russia not to take part. Had
-she not done so, she would have forfeited her claims to the leadership
-of the smaller Slav peoples; and the leading Russian liberals
-enthusiastically support the Russian government in this matter,
-asserting that Russia’s triumph in this particular struggle means a
-check to militarism, a stride toward greater freedom, and an advance
-in justice toward the Pole, the Jew, the Finn, and the people of the
-Caucasus.
-
-When Russia took part it may well be argued that it was impossible
-for Germany not to come to the defense of Austria, and that disaster
-would surely have attended her arms had she not followed the course
-she actually did follow as regards her opponents on her western
-frontier. As for her wonderful efficiency--her equipment, the foresight
-and decision of her General Staff, her instantaneous action, her
-indomitable persistence--there can be nothing but the praise and
-admiration due a stern, virile, and masterful people, a people entitled
-to hearty respect for their patriotism and far-seeing self-devotion.
-
-Yet again, it is utterly impossible to see how France could have acted
-otherwise than as she did act. She had done nothing to provoke the
-crisis, even although it be admitted that in the end she was certain
-to side with Russia. War was not declared by her, but against her,
-and she could not have escaped it save by having pursued in the past,
-and by willingness to pursue in the future, a course which would have
-left her as helpless as Luxembourg--and Luxembourg’s fate shows that
-helplessness does not offer the smallest guarantee of peace.
-
-When once Belgium was invaded, every circumstance of national honor
-and interest forced England to act precisely as she did act. She could
-not have held up her head among nations had she acted otherwise. In
-particular, she is entitled to the praise of all true lovers of peace,
-for it is only by action such as she took that neutrality treaties
-and treaties guaranteeing the rights of small powers will ever be
-given any value. The actions of Sir Edward Grey as he guided Britain’s
-foreign policy showed adherence to lofty standards of right combined
-with firmness of courage under great strain. The British position, and
-incidentally the German position, are tersely stated in the following
-extract from the report of Sir Edward Goschen, who at the outset of the
-war was British ambassador in Berlin. The report, in speaking of the
-interview between the ambassador and the German imperial chancellor,
-Herr von Bethmann-Hollweg, says:
-
- The chancellor [spoke] about twenty minutes. He said the step
- taken by Great Britain was terrible to a degree. Just for a
- word, “neutrality,” a word which in war time had been so often
- disregarded, just for a scrap of paper, Great Britain was
- going to make war on a kindred nation. What we had done was
- unthinkable. It was like striking a man from behind while he was
- fighting for his life against two assailants.
-
- I protested strongly against this statement, and said that in
- the same way as he wished me to understand that for strategical
- reasons it was a matter of life or death to Germany to advance
- through Belgium and violate the latter’s neutrality, so I would
- wish him to understand that it was, so to speak, a matter of life
- or death for the honor of Great Britain that she should keep her
- solemn engagement to do her utmost to defend Belgium’s neutrality
- if attacked. A solemn compact simply had to be kept, or what
- confidence could any one have in England’s engagement in the
- future?
-
-There is one nation, however, as to which there is no room for
-difference of opinion, whether we consider her wrongs or the justice
-of her actions. It seems to me impossible that any man can fail to
-feel the deepest sympathy with a nation which is absolutely guiltless
-of any wrong-doing, which has given proof of high valor, and yet which
-has suffered terribly, and which, if there is any meaning in the words
-“right” and “wrong,” has suffered wrongfully. Belgium is not in the
-smallest degree responsible for any of the conditions that during the
-last half century have been at work to impress a certain fatalistic
-stamp upon those actions of Austria, Russia, Germany, and France which
-have rendered this war inevitable. No European nation has had anything
-whatever to fear from Belgium. There was not the smallest danger of
-her making any aggressive movement, not even the slightest aggressive
-movement, against any one of her neighbors. Her population was mainly
-industrial and was absorbed in peaceful business. Her people were
-thrifty, hard-working, highly civilized, and in no way aggressive.
-She owed her national existence to the desire to create an absolutely
-neutral state. Her neutrality had been solemnly guaranteed by the great
-powers, including Germany as well as England and France.
-
-Suddenly, and out of a clear sky, her territory was invaded by an
-overwhelming German army. According to the newspaper reports, it
-was admitted in the Reichstag by German members that this act was
-“wrongful.” Of course, if there is any meaning to the words “right”
-and “wrong” in international matters, the act was wrong. The men who
-shape German policy take the ground that in matters of vital national
-moment there are no such things as abstract right and wrong, and that
-when a great nation is struggling for its existence it can no more
-consider the rights of neutral powers than it can consider the rights
-of its own citizens as these rights are construed in times of peace,
-and that everything must bend before the supreme law of national
-self-preservation. Whatever we may think of the morality of this plea,
-it is certain that almost all great nations have in time past again and
-again acted in accordance with it. England’s conduct toward Denmark in
-the Napoleonic wars, and the conduct of both England and France toward
-us during those same wars, admit only of this species of justification;
-and with less excuse the same is true of our conduct toward Spain in
-Florida nearly a century ago. Nevertheless we had hoped by the action
-taken at The Hague to mark an advance in international morality in such
-matters. The action taken by Germany toward Belgium, and the failure by
-the United States in any way to protest against such action, shows that
-there has been no advance. I wish to point out just what was done, and
-to emphasize Belgium’s absolute innocence and the horrible suffering
-and disaster that have overwhelmed her in spite of such innocence. And
-I wish to do this so that we as a nation may learn aright the lessons
-taught by the dreadful Belgian tragedy.
-
-Germany’s attack on Belgium was not due to any sudden impulse. It had
-been carefully planned for a score of years, on the assumption that
-the treaty of neutrality was, as Herr von Bethmann-Hollweg observed,
-nothing but “paper,” and that the question of breaking or keeping
-it was to be considered solely from the standpoint of Germany’s
-interest. The German railways up to the Belgian border are for the
-most part military roads, which have been double-tracked with a view
-to precisely the overwhelming attack that has just been delivered into
-and through Belgium. The great German military text-books, such as that
-of Bernhardi, in discussing and studying possible German campaigns
-against Russia and France, have treated advances through Belgium or
-Switzerland exactly as they have treated possible advances through
-German territory, it being assumed by the writers and by all for whom
-they wrote that no efficient rulers or military men would for a second
-consider a neutrality treaty or any other kind of treaty if it became
-to the self-interest of a party to break it. It must be remembered
-that the German system in no way limits its disregard of conventions
-to disregard of neutrality treaties. For example, in General von
-Bernhardi’s book, in speaking of naval warfare, he lays down the
-following rule: “Sometimes in peace even, if there is no other means
-of defending one’s self against a superior force, it will be advisable
-to attack the enemy by torpedo and submarine boats, and to inflict
-upon him unexpected losses.... War upon the enemy’s trade must also be
-conducted as ruthlessly as possible, since only then, in addition to
-the material damage inflicted upon the enemy, the necessary terror is
-spread among the merchant marine, which is even more important than
-the capture of actual prizes. A certain amount of terrorism must be
-practised on the sea, making peaceful tradesmen stay in safe harbors.”
-
-Belgium has felt the full effect of the practical application of these
-principles, and Germany has profited by them exactly as her statesmen
-and soldiers believed she would profit. They have believed that the
-material gain of trampling on Belgium would more than offset any
-material opposition which the act would arouse, and they treat with the
-utter and contemptuous derision which it deserves the mere pacificist
-clamor against wrong which is unaccompanied by the intention and effort
-to redress wrong by force.
-
-The Belgians, when invaded, valiantly defended themselves. They
-acted precisely as Andreas Hofer and his Tyrolese, and Koerner and
-the leaders of the North German Tugendbund acted in their day; and
-their fate has been the fate of Andreas Hofer, who was shot after his
-capture, and of Koerner, who was shot in battle. They fought valiantly,
-and they were overcome. They were then stamped under foot. Probably it
-is physically impossible for our people, living softly and at ease, to
-visualize to themselves the dreadful woe that has come upon the people
-of Belgium, and especially upon the poor people. Let each man think of
-his neighbors--of the carpenter, the station agent, the day-laborer,
-the farmer, the grocer--who are round about him, and think of these
-men deprived of their all, their homes destroyed, their sons dead or
-prisoners, their wives and children half starved, overcome with fatigue
-and horror, stumbling their way to some city of refuge, and when they
-have reached it, finding air-ships wrecking the houses with bombs and
-destroying women and children. The King shared the toil and danger of
-the fighting men; the Queen and her children suffered as other mothers
-and children suffered.
-
-Unquestionably what has been done in Belgium has been done in
-accordance with what the Germans sincerely believe to be the course
-of conduct necessitated by Germany’s struggle for life. But Germany’s
-need to struggle for her life does not make it any easier for the
-Belgians to suffer death. The Germans are in Belgium from no fault
-of the Belgians but purely because the Germans deemed it to their
-vital interest to violate Belgium’s rights. Therefore the ultimate
-responsibility for what has occurred at Louvain and what has occurred
-and is occurring in Brussels rests upon Germany and in no way upon
-Belgium. The invasion could have been averted by no action of Belgium
-that was consistent with her honor and self-respect. The Belgians would
-have been less than men had they not defended themselves and their
-country. For this, and for this only, they are suffering, somewhat as
-my own German ancestors suffered when Turenne ravaged the Palatinate,
-somewhat as my Irish ancestors suffered in the struggles that attended
-the conquests and reconquests of Ireland in the days of Cromwell
-and William. The suffering is by no means as great, but it is very
-great, and it is altogether too nearly akin to what occurred in the
-seventeenth century for us of the twentieth century to feel overmuch
-pleased with the amount of advance that has been made. It is neither
-necessary nor at the present time possible to sift from the charges,
-countercharges, and denials the exact facts as to the acts alleged
-to have been committed in various places. The prime fact as regards
-Belgium is that Belgium was an entirely peaceful and genuinely neutral
-power which had been guilty of no offence whatever. What has befallen
-her is due to the further fact that a great, highly civilized military
-power deemed that its own vital interests rendered imperative the
-infliction of this suffering on an inoffensive although valiant and
-patriotic little nation.
-
-I admire and respect the German people. I am proud of the German blood
-in my veins. But the sympathy and support of the American people should
-go out unreservedly to Belgium, and we should learn the lesson taught
-by Belgium’s fall. What has occurred to Belgium is precisely what would
-occur under similar conditions to us, unless we were able to show that
-the action would be dangerous.
-
-The rights and wrongs of these cases where nations violate the rules
-of morality in order to meet their own supposed needs can be precisely
-determined only when all the facts are known and when men’s blood is
-cool. Nevertheless, it is imperative, in the interest of civilization,
-to create international conditions which shall neither require nor
-permit such action in the future. Moreover, we should understand
-clearly just what these actions are and just what lessons we of the
-United States should learn from them so far as our own future is
-concerned.
-
-There are several such lessons. One is how complicated instead of how
-simple it is to decide what course we ought to follow as regards any
-given action supposed to be in the interest of peace. Of course I am
-speaking of the thing and not the name when I speak of peace. The
-ultrapacificists are capable of taking any position, yet I suppose
-that few among them now hold that there was value in the “peace” which
-was obtained by the concert of European powers when they prevented
-interference with Turkey while the Turks butchered some hundreds of
-thousands of Armenian men, women, and children. In the same way I do
-not suppose that even the ultrapacificists really feel that “peace”
-is triumphant in Belgium at the present moment. President Wilson has
-been much applauded by all the professional pacificists because he
-has announced that our desire for peace must make us secure it for
-ourselves by a neutrality so strict as to forbid our even whispering a
-protest against wrong-doing, lest such whispers might cause disturbance
-to our ease and well-being. We pay the penalty of this action--or,
-rather, supine inaction--on behalf of peace for ourselves, by
-forfeiting our right to do anything on behalf of peace for the Belgians
-in the present. We can maintain our neutrality only by refusal to do
-anything to aid unoffending weak powers which are dragged into the gulf
-of bloodshed and misery through no fault of their own. It is a grim
-comment on the professional pacificist theories as hitherto developed
-that, according to their view, our duty to preserve peace for ourselves
-necessarily means the abandonment of all effective effort to secure
-peace for other unoffending nations which through no fault of their own
-are trampled down by war.
-
-The next lesson we should learn is of far more immediate consequence
-to us than speculations about peace in the abstract. Our people
-should wake up to the fact that it is a poor thing to live in a
-fool’s paradise. What has occurred in this war ought to bring home
-to everybody what has of course long been known to all really
-well-informed men who were willing to face the truth and not try to
-dodge it. Until some method is devised of putting effective force
-behind arbitration and neutrality treaties neither these treaties nor
-the vague and elastic body of custom which is misleadingly termed
-international law will have any real effect in any serious crisis
-between us and any save perhaps one or two of the great powers. The
-average great military power looks at these matters purely from the
-standpoint of its own interests. Several months ago, for instance,
-Japan declared war on Germany. She has paid scrupulous regard to
-our own rights and feelings in the matter. The contention that she
-is acting in a spirit of mere disinterested altruism need not be
-considered. She believes that she has wrongs to redress and strong
-national interests to preserve. Nineteen years ago Germany joined
-with Russia to check Japan’s progress after her victorious war with
-China, and has since then itself built up a German colonial possession
-on Chinese soil. Doubtless the Japanese have never for one moment
-forgotten this act of Germany. Doubtless they also regard the presence
-of a strong European military power in China so near to Korea and
-Manchuria as a menace to Japan’s national life. With businesslike
-coolness the soldierly statesmen of Nippon have taken the chance which
-offered itself of at little cost retaliating for the injury inflicted
-upon them in the past and removing an obstacle to their future
-dominance in eastern Asia. Korea is absolutely Japan’s. To be sure, by
-treaty it was solemnly covenanted that Korea should remain independent.
-But Korea was itself helpless to enforce the treaty, and it was out of
-the question to suppose that any other nation with no interest of its
-own at stake would attempt to do for the Koreans what they were utterly
-unable to do for themselves. Moreover, the treaty rested on the false
-assumption that Korea could govern herself well. It had already been
-shown that she could not in any real sense govern herself at all. Japan
-could not afford to see Korea in the hands of a great foreign power.
-She regarded her duty to her children and her children’s children as
-overriding her treaty obligations. Therefore, when Japan thought the
-right time had come, it calmly tore up the treaty and took Korea, with
-the polite and businesslike efficiency it had already shown in dealing
-with Russia, and was afterward to show in dealing with Germany. The
-treaty, when tested, proved as utterly worthless as our own recent
-all-inclusive arbitration treaties--and worthlessness can go no further.
-
-Hysteria does not tend toward edification; and in this country hysteria
-is unfortunately too often the earmark of the ultrapacificist. Surely
-at this time there is more reason than ever to remember Professor
-Lounsbury’s remark concerning the “infinite capacity of the human brain
-to withstand the introduction of knowledge.” The comments of some
-doubtless well-meaning citizens of our own country upon the lessons
-taught by this terrible cataclysm of war are really inexplicable to
-any man who forgets the truth that Professor Lounsbury thus set forth.
-A writer of articles for a newspaper syndicate the other day stated
-that Germany was being opposed by the rest of the world because it had
-“inspired fear.” This thesis can, of course, be sustained. But Belgium
-has inspired no fear. Yet it has suffered infinitely more than Germany.
-Luxembourg inspired no fear. Yet it has been quietly taken possession
-of by Germany. The writer in question would find it puzzling to point
-out the particulars in which Belgium and Luxembourg--not to speak of
-China and Korea--are at this moment better off than Germany. Of course
-they are worse off; and this because Germany _has_ “inspired fear,”
-and they have not. Nevertheless, this writer drew the conclusion that
-“fear” was the only emotion which ought not to be inspired; and he
-advocated our abandonment of battle-ships and other means of defense,
-so that we might never inspire “fear” in any one. He forgot that,
-while it is a bad thing to inspire fear, it is a much worse thing to
-inspire contempt. Another newspaper writer pointed out that on the
-frontier between us and Canada there were no forts, and yet peace
-obtained; and drew the conclusion that forts and armed forces were
-inimical to national safety. This worthy soul evidently did not know
-that Luxembourg had no forts or armed forces, and therefore succumbed
-without a protest of any kind. If he does not admire the heroism of the
-Belgians and prefer it to the tame submission of the Luxembourgers,
-then this writer is himself unfit to live as a free man in a free
-country. The crown of ineptitude, however, was reached by an editor
-who announced, in praising the recent all-inclusive peace treaties,
-that “had their like been in existence between some of the European
-nations two weeks ago, the world might have been spared the great war.”
-It is rather hard to deal seriously with such a supposition. At this
-very moment the utter worthlessness, under great pressure, of even the
-rational treaties drawn to protect Belgium and Luxembourg has been
-shown. To suppose that under such conditions a bundle of bits of paper
-representing mere verbiage, with no guarantee, would count for anything
-whatever in a serious crisis is to show ourselves unfit to control the
-destinies of a great, just, and self-respecting people.
-
-These writers wish us to abandon all means of defending ourselves.
-Some of them advocate our abandoning the building of an efficient
-fleet. Yet at this moment Great Britain owes it that she is not in
-worse plight than Belgium solely to the fact that with far-sighted
-wisdom her statesmen have maintained her navy at the highest point of
-efficiency. At this moment the Japanese are at war with the Germans,
-and hostilities have been taking place in what but twenty years ago
-was Chinese territory, and what by treaty is unquestionably Chinese
-territory to-day. China has protested against the Japanese violation of
-Chinese neutrality in their operations against the Germans, but no heed
-has been paid to the protest, for China cannot back the protest by the
-use of armed force. Moreover, as China is reported to have pointed out
-to Germany, the latter power had violated Chinese neutrality just as
-Japan had done.
-
-Very possibly the writers above alluded to were sincere in their belief
-that they were advocating what was patriotic and wise when they urged
-that the United States make itself utterly defenseless so as to avoid
-giving an excuse for aggression. Yet these writers ought to have known
-that during their own lifetime China has been utterly defenseless and
-yet has suffered from aggression after aggression. Large portions
-of its territory are now in the possession of Russia, of Japan, of
-Germany, of France, of England. The great war between Russia and Japan
-was fought on what was nominally Chinese territory. At present, because
-a few months ago Servian assassins murdered the heir to the Austrian
-monarchy, Japan has fought Germany on Chinese territory. Luxembourg
-has been absolutely powerless and defenseless, has had no soldiers and
-no forts. It is off the map at this moment. Not only are none of the
-belligerents thinking about its rights, but no neutral is thinking
-about its rights, and this simply because Luxembourg could not defend
-itself. It is our duty to be patient with every kind of folly, but it
-is hard for a good American, for a man to whom his country is dear and
-who reveres the memories of Washington and Lincoln, to be entirely
-patient with the kind of folly that advocates reducing this country to
-the position of China and Luxembourg.
-
-One of the main lessons to learn from this war is embodied in the
-homely proverb: “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” Persistently only
-half of this proverb has been quoted in deriding the men who wish to
-safeguard our national interest and honor. Persistently the effort has
-been made to insist that those who advocate keeping our country able to
-defend its rights are merely adopting “the policy of the big stick.”
-In reality, we lay equal emphasis on the fact that it is necessary to
-speak softly; in other words, that it is necessary to be respectful
-toward all people and scrupulously to refrain from wronging them,
-while at the same time keeping ourselves in condition to prevent wrong
-being done to us. If a nation does not in this sense speak softly,
-then sooner or later the policy of the big stick is certain to result
-in war. But what befell Luxembourg five months ago, what has befallen
-China again and again during the past quarter of a century, shows that
-no amount of speaking softly will save any people which does not carry
-a big stick.
-
-America should have a coherent policy of action toward foreign powers,
-and this should primarily be based on the determination never to
-give offense when it can be avoided, always to treat other nations
-justly and courteously, and, as long as present conditions exist, to
-be prepared to defend our own rights ourselves. No other nation will
-defend them for us. No paper guarantee or treaty will be worth the
-paper on which it is written if it becomes to the interest of some
-other power to violate it, unless we have strength, and courage and
-ability to use that strength, back of the treaty. Every public man,
-every writer who speaks with wanton offensiveness of a foreign power or
-of a foreign people, whether he attacks England or France or Germany,
-whether he assails the Russians or the Japanese, is doing an injury to
-the whole American body politic. We have plenty of shortcomings at home
-to correct before we start out to criticise the shortcomings of others.
-Now and then it becomes imperatively necessary in the interests of
-humanity, or in our own vital interest, to act in a manner which will
-cause offense to some other power. This is a lamentable necessity; but
-when the necessity arises we must meet it and act as we are honorably
-bound to act, no matter what offense is given. We must always weigh
-well our duties in such a case, and consider the rights of others as
-well as our own rights, in the interest of the world at large. If after
-such consideration it is evident that we are bound to act along a
-certain line of policy, then it is mere weakness to refrain from doing
-so because offense is thereby given. But we must never act wantonly or
-brutally, or without regard to the essentials of genuine morality--a
-morality considering our interests as well as the interests of others,
-and considering the interests of future generations as well as of the
-present generation. We must so conduct ourselves that every big nation
-and every little nation that behaves itself shall never have to think
-of us with fear, and shall have confidence not only in our justice
-but in our courtesy. Submission to wrong-doing on our part would be
-mere weakness and would invite and insure disaster. We must not submit
-to wrong done to our honor or to our vital national interests. But
-we must be scrupulously careful always to speak with courtesy and
-self-restraint to others, always to act decently to others, and to give
-no nation any justification for believing that it has anything to fear
-from us as long as it behaves with decency and uprightness.
-
-Above all, let us avoid the policy of peace with insult, the policy of
-unpreparedness to defend our rights, with inability to restrain our
-representatives from doing wrong to or publicly speaking ill of others.
-The worst policy for the United States is to combine the unbridled
-tongue with the unready hand.
-
-We in this country have of course come lamentably short of our ideals.
-Nevertheless, in some ways our ideals have been high, and at times we
-have measurably realized them. From the beginning we have recognized
-what is taught in the words of Washington, and again in the great
-crisis of our national life in the words of Lincoln, that in the
-past free peoples have generally split and sunk on that great rock
-of difficulty caused by the fact that a government which recognizes
-the liberties of the people is not usually strong enough to preserve
-the liberties of the people against outside aggression. Washington
-and Lincoln believed that ours was a strong people and therefore fit
-for a strong government. They believed that it was only weak peoples
-that had to fear strong governments, and that to us it was given to
-combine freedom and efficiency. They belonged among that line of
-statesmen and public servants whose existence has been the negation of
-the theory that goodness is always associated with weakness, and that
-strength always finds its expression in violent wrong-doing. Edward
-the Confessor represented exactly the type which treats weakness and
-virtue as interchangeable terms. His reign was the prime cause of the
-conquest of England. Godoy, the Spanish statesman, a century ago, by
-the treaties he entered into and carried out, actually earned the title
-of “Prince of Peace” instead of merely lecturing about it; and the
-result of his peacefulness was the loss by Spain of the vast regions
-which, she then held in our country west of the Mississippi, and
-finally the overthrow of the Spanish national government, the setting
-up in Madrid of a foreign king by a foreign conqueror, and a long-drawn
-and incredibly destructive war. To statesmen of this kind Washington
-and Lincoln stand in as sharp contrast as they stand on the other side
-to the great absolutist chiefs such as Cæsar, Napoleon, Frederick the
-Great, and Cromwell. What was true of the personality of Washington
-and Lincoln was true of the policy they sought to impress upon our
-nation. They were just as hostile to the theory that virtue was to
-be confounded with weakness as to the theory that strength justified
-wrong-doing. No abundance of the milder virtues will save a nation that
-has lost the virile qualities; and, on the other hand, no admiration
-of strength must make us deviate from the laws of righteousness. The
-kind of “peace” advocated by the ultrapacificists of 1776 would have
-meant that we never would have had a country; the kind of “peace”
-advocated by the ultrapacificists in the early ’60’s would have meant
-the absolute destruction of the country. It would have been criminal
-weakness for Washington not to have fought for the independence of this
-country, and for Lincoln not to have fought for the preservation of
-the Union; just as in an infinitely smaller degree it would have been
-criminal weakness for us if we had permitted wrong-doing in Cuba to go
-on forever unchecked, or if we had failed to insist on the building
-of the Panama Canal in exactly the fashion that we did insist; and,
-above all, if we had failed to build up our navy as during the last
-twenty years it has been built up. No alliance, no treaty, and no
-easy good-will of other nations will save us if we are not true to
-ourselves; and, on the other hand, if we wantonly give offense to
-others, if we excite hatred and fear, then some day we will pay a heavy
-penalty.
-
-The most important lesson, therefore, for us to learn from Belgium’s
-fate is that, as things in the world now are, we must in any great
-crisis trust for our national safety to our ability and willingness to
-defend ourselves by our own trained strength and courage. We must not
-wrong others; and for our own safety we must trust, not to worthless
-bits of paper unbacked by power, and to treaties that are fundamentally
-foolish, but to our own manliness and clear-sighted willingness to face
-facts.
-
-There is, however, another lesson which this huge conflict may at least
-possibly teach. There is at least a chance that from this calamity
-a movement may come which will at once supplement and in the future
-perhaps altogether supplant the need of the kind of action so plainly
-indicated by the demands of the present. It is at least possible that
-the conflict will result in a growth of democracy in Europe, in at
-least a partial substitution of the rule of the people for the rule of
-those who esteem it their God-given right to govern the people. This,
-in its turn, would render it probably a little more unlikely that there
-would be a repetition of such disastrous warfare. I do not think that
-at present it would prevent the possibility of warfare. I think that
-in the great countries engaged, the peoples as a whole have been behind
-their sovereigns on both sides of this contest. Certainly the action of
-the Socialists in Germany, France, and Belgium, and, so far as we know,
-of the popular leaders in Russia, would tend to bear out the truth of
-this statement. But the growth of the power of the people, while it
-would not prevent war, would at least render it more possible than at
-present to make appeals which might result in some cases in coming to
-an accommodation based upon justice; for justice is what popular rule
-must be permanently based upon and must permanently seek to obtain or
-it will not itself be permanent.
-
-Moreover, the horror that right-thinking citizens feel over the awful
-tragedies of this war can hardly fail to make sensible men take an
-interest in genuine peace movements and try to shape them so that they
-shall be more practical than at present. I most earnestly believe in
-every rational movement for peace. My objection is only to movements
-that do not in very fact tell in favor of peace or else that sacrifice
-righteousness to peace. Of course this includes objection to all
-treaties that make believe to do what, as a matter of fact, they
-fail to do. Under existing conditions universal and all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties have been utterly worthless, because where there
-is no power to compel nations to arbitrate, and where it is perfectly
-certain that some nations will pay no respect to such agreements unless
-they can be forced to do so, it is mere folly for others to trust to
-promises impossible of performance; and it is an act of positive bad
-faith to make these promises when it is certain that the nation making
-them would violate them. But this does not in the least mean that we
-must abandon hope of taking action which will lessen the chance of
-war and make it more possible to circumscribe the limits of war’s
-devastation.
-
-For this result we must largely trust to sheer growth in morality and
-intelligence among the nations themselves. For a hundred years peace
-has obtained between us and Great Britain. No frontier in Europe is
-as long as the frontier between Canada and ourselves, and yet there
-is not a fort, nor an armed force worthy of being called such, upon
-it. This does not result from any arbitration treaty or any other
-treaty. Such treaties as those now existing are as a rule observed
-only when they serve to make a record of conditions that already exist
-and which they do not create. The fact simply is that there has been
-such growth of good feeling and intelligence that war between us and
-the British Empire is literally an impossibility, and there is no more
-chance of military movements across the Canadian border than there
-is of such movement between New York and New Hampshire or Quebec
-and Ontario. Slowly but surely, I believe, such feelings will grow,
-until war between the Englishman and the German, or the Russian, or
-the Frenchman, or between any of them and the American, will be as
-unthinkable as now between the Englishman or Canadian and the American.
-
-But something can be done to hasten this day by wise action. It may
-not be possible at once to have this action as drastic as would be
-ultimately necessary; but we should keep our purpose in view. The utter
-weakness of the Hague court, and the worthlessness when strain is put
-upon them of most treaties, spring from the fact that at present there
-is no means of enforcing the carrying out of the treaty or enforcing
-the decision of the court. Under such circumstances recommendations for
-universal disarmament stand on an intellectual par with recommendations
-to establish “peace” in New York City by doing away with the police.
-Disarmament of the free and liberty-loving nations would merely mean
-insuring the triumph of some barbarism or despotism, and if logically
-applied would mean the extinction of liberty and of all that makes
-civilization worth having throughout the world. But in view of what has
-occurred in this war, surely the time ought to be ripe for the nations
-to consider a great world agreement among all the civilized military
-powers _to back righteousness by force_. Such an agreement would
-establish an efficient world league for the peace of righteousness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-UNWISE PEACE TREATIES A MENACE TO RIGHTEOUSNESS
-
-
-In studying certain lessons which should be taught the United States by
-this terrible world war, it is not necessary for us to try exactly to
-assess or apportion the blame. There are plenty of previous instances
-of violation of treaties to be credited to almost all the nations
-engaged on one side or the other. We need not try to puzzle out why
-Italy and Japan seemingly construed similar treaties of alliance in
-diametrically opposite ways; nor need we decide which was justified or
-whether both were justified. It is quite immaterial to us, as regards
-certain of the lessons taught, whether the treaties alleged to be
-violated affect Luxembourg on the one hand or Bosnia on the other,
-whether it is the neutrality of China or the neutrality of Belgium that
-is violated.
-
-Yet again, we need always to keep in mind that, although it is culpable
-to break a treaty, it may be even worse recklessly to make a treaty
-which cannot be kept. Recklessness in making promises is the surest
-way in which to secure the discredit attaching to the breaking of
-promises. A treaty at present usually represents merely promise, not
-performance; and it is wicked to promise what will not or cannot be
-performed. Genuine good can even now be accomplished by narrowly
-limited and defined arbitration treaties which are not all-inclusive,
-if they deal with subjects on which arbitration can be accepted. This
-nation has repeatedly acted in obedience to such treaties; and great
-good has come from arbitrations in such cases as, for example, the
-Dogger Bank incident, when the Russian fleet fired on British trawlers
-during the Russo-Japanese war. But no good whatever has come from
-treaties that represented a sham; and under existing conditions it is
-hypocritical for a nation to announce that it will arbitrate questions
-of honor or vital interest, and folly to think that opponents will
-abide by such treaties. Bad although it is to negotiate such a treaty,
-it would be worse to abide by it.
-
-Under these conditions it is mischievous to a degree for a nation to
-trust to any treaty of the type now existing to protect it in great
-crises. Take the case of China as a living and present-day example.
-China has shown herself utterly impotent to defend her neutrality.
-Again and again she made this evident in the past. Order was not
-well kept at home and above all she was powerless to defend herself
-from outside attack. She has not prepared for war. She has kept
-utterly unprepared for war. Yet she has suffered more from war, in
-our own time, than any military power in the world during the same
-period. She has fulfilled exactly the conditions advocated by these
-well-meaning persons who for the last five months have been saying
-in speeches, editorials, articles for syndicates, and the like that
-the United States ought not to keep up battle-ships and ought not to
-trust to fortifications nor in any way to be ready or prepared to
-defend herself against hostile attack, but should endeavor to secure
-peace by being so inoffensive and helpless as not to arouse fear in
-others. The well-meaning people who write these editorials and make
-these speeches ought to understand that though it is a bad thing for
-a nation to arouse fear it is an infinitely worse thing to excite
-contempt; and every editor or writer or public man who tells us that we
-ought not to have battle-ships and that we ought to trust entirely to
-well-intentioned foolish all-inclusive arbitration treaties and abandon
-fortifications and not keep prepared, is merely doing his best to bring
-contempt upon the United States and to insure disaster in the future.
-
-Nor is China the only case in point. Luxembourg is a case in point.
-Korea is a case in point. Korea was utterly inoffensive and helpless.
-It neither took nor was capable of taking the smallest aggressive
-action against any one. It had no forts, no war-ships, no army worthy
-of the name. It excited no fear and no anger. But it did excite
-measureless contempt, and therefore it invited aggression.
-
-The point I wish to make is, first, the extreme unwisdom and
-impropriety of making promises that cannot be kept, and, second, the
-utter futility of expecting that in any save exceptional cases a strong
-power will keep a promise which it finds to its disadvantage, unless
-there is some way of putting force back of the demand that the treaty
-be observed.
-
-America has no claim whatever to superior virtue in this matter. We
-have shown an appalling recklessness in making treaties, especially
-all-inclusive arbitration treaties and the like, which in time of
-stress would not and could not be observed. When such a treaty is not
-observed the blame really rests upon the unwise persons who made the
-treaty. Unfortunately, however, this apportionment of blame cannot be
-made by outsiders. All they can say is that the country concerned--and
-I speak of the United States--does not keep faith. The responsibility
-for breaking an improper promise really rests with those who make it;
-but the penalty is paid by the whole country.
-
-There are certain respects in which I think the United States can
-fairly claim to stand ahead of most nations in its regard for
-international morality. For example, last spring when we took Vera
-Cruz, there were individuals within the city who fired at our troops in
-exactly the same fashion as that which is alleged to have taken place
-in Louvain. But it never for one moment entered the heads of our people
-to destroy Vera Cruz. In the same way, when we promised freedom to
-Cuba, we kept our promise, and after establishing an orderly government
-in Cuba withdrew our army and left her as an independent power;
-performing an act which, as far as I know, is entirely without parallel
-in the dealings of stronger with weaker nations.
-
-In the same way our action in San Domingo, when we took and
-administered her customs houses, represented a substantial and
-efficient achievement in the cause of international peace which stands
-high in the very honorable but scanty list of such actions by great
-nations in dealing with their less fortunate sisters. In the same way
-our handling of the Panama situation, both in the acquisition of the
-canal, in its construction, and in the attitude we have taken toward
-the dwellers on the Isthmus and all the nations of mankind, has been
-such as to reflect signal honor on our people. In the same way we
-returned the Chinese indemnity, because we deemed it excessive, just
-as previously we had returned a money indemnity to Japan. Similarly
-the disinterestedness with which we have administered the Philippines
-for the good of the Philippine people is something upon which we have a
-right to pride ourselves and shows the harm that would have been done
-had we not taken possession of the Philippines.
-
-But, unfortunately, in dealing with schemes of universal peace and
-arbitration, we have often shown an unwillingness to fulfil proper
-promises which we had already made by treaty, coupled with a reckless
-willingness to make new treaties with all kinds of promises which
-were either improper and ought not to be kept or which, even if
-proper, could not and would not be kept. It has again and again proved
-exceedingly difficult to get Congress to appropriate money to pay some
-obligation which under treaty or arbitration or the like has been
-declared to be owing by us to the citizens of some foreign nation.
-Often we have announced our intention to make sweeping arbitration
-treaties or agreements at the very time when by our conduct we were
-showing that in actual fact we had not the slightest intention of
-applying them with the sweeping universality we promised. In these
-cases we were usually, although not always, right in our refusal
-to apply the treaties, or rather the principles set forth in the
-treaties, to the concrete case at issue; but we were utterly wrong,
-we were, even although perhaps unintentionally, both insincere and
-hypocritical, when at the same time we made believe we intended that
-these principles would be universally applied. This was particularly
-true in connection with the universal arbitration treaties which our
-government unsuccessfully endeavored to negotiate some three years
-ago. Our government announced at that time that we intended to enter
-into universal arbitration treaties under which we would arbitrate
-everything, even including questions of honor and of vital national
-interest. At the very time that this announcement was made and the
-negotiation of the treaties begun, the government in case after case
-where specific performance of its pledges was demanded responded with
-a flat refusal to do the very thing it had announced its intention of
-doing.
-
-Recently, there have been negotiated in Washington thirty or forty
-little all-inclusive arbitration or so-called “peace” treaties, which
-represent as high a degree of fatuity as is often achieved in these
-matters. There is no likelihood that they will do us any great material
-harm because it is absolutely certain that we would not pay the
-smallest attention to them in the event of their being invoked in any
-matter where our interests were seriously involved; but it would do us
-moral harm to break them, even although this were the least evil of
-two evil alternatives. It is a discreditable thing that at this very
-moment, with before our eyes such proof of the worthlessness of the
-neutrality treaties affecting Belgium and Luxembourg, our nation should
-be negotiating treaties which convince every sensible and well-informed
-observer abroad that we are either utterly heedless in making promises
-which cannot be kept or else willing to make promises which we have no
-intention of keeping. What has just happened shows that such treaties
-are worthless except to the degree that force can and will be used in
-backing them.
-
-There are some well-meaning people, misled by mere words, who doubtless
-think that treaties of this kind do accomplish something. These good
-and well-meaning people may feel that I am not zealous in the cause
-of peace. This is the direct reverse of the truth. I abhor war. In
-common with all other thinking men I am inexpressibly saddened by the
-dreadful contest now waging in Europe. I put peace very high as an
-agent for bringing about righteousness. But if I must choose between
-righteousness and peace I choose righteousness. Therefore, I hold
-myself in honor bound to do anything in my power to advance the cause
-of the peace of righteousness throughout the world. I believe we can
-make substantial advances by international agreement in the line
-of achieving this purpose and in this book I state in outline just
-what I think can be done toward this end. But I hold that we will do
-nothing and less than nothing unless, pending the accomplishment of
-this purpose, we keep our own beloved country in such shape that war
-shall not strike her down; and, furthermore, unless we also seriously
-consider what the defects have been in the existing peace, neutrality,
-and arbitration treaties and in the attitude hitherto assumed by the
-professional pacificists, which have rendered these treaties such
-feeble aids to peace and the ultrapacificist attitude a positive
-obstacle to peace.
-
-The truth is that the advocates of world-wide peace, like all
-reformers, should bear in mind Josh Billings’s astute remark that “it
-is much easier to be a harmless dove than a wise serpent.” The worthy
-pacificists have completely forgotten that the Biblical injunction is
-two-sided and that we are bidden not only to be harmless as doves but
-also to be wise as serpents. The ultrapacificists have undoubtedly been
-an exceedingly harmless body so far as obtaining peace is concerned.
-They have exerted practically no influence in restraining wrong,
-although they have sometimes had a real and lamentable influence in
-crippling the forces of right and preventing them from dealing with
-wrong. An appreciable amount of good work has been done for peace
-by genuine lovers of peace, but it has not been done by the feeble
-folk of the peace movement, loquacious but impotent, who are usually
-unfortunately prominent in the movement and who excite the utter
-derision of the great powers of evil.
-
-Sincere lovers of peace who are wise have been obliged to face the fact
-that it is often a very complicated thing to secure peace without the
-sacrifice of righteousness. Furthermore, they have been obliged to face
-the fact that generally the only way to accomplish anything was by not
-trying to accomplish too much.
-
-The complicated nature of the problem is shown by the fact that whereas
-the real friends of righteousness believe that our duty to peace ought
-to be fulfilled by protesting against--and doubtless if necessary doing
-more than merely protest against--the violation of the rights secured
-to Belgium by treaty, the professional pacificists nervously point
-out that such a course would expose us to accusations of abandoning
-our “neutrality.” In theory these pacificists admit it to be our duty
-to uphold the Hague treaties of which we were among the signatory
-powers; but they are against effective action to uphold them, for they
-are pathetic believers in the all-sufficiency of signatures, placed
-on bits of paper. They have pinned their faith to the foolish belief
-that everything put in these treaties was forthwith guaranteed to all
-mankind. In dealing with the rights of neutrals Article 10 of Chapter
-1 explicitly states that if the territory of a neutral nation is
-invaded the repelling of such invasion by force shall not be esteemed a
-“hostile” act on the part of the neutral nation. Unquestionably under
-this clause Belgium has committed no hostile act. Yet, this sound
-declaration of morality, in a treaty that the leading world-powers have
-signed, amounts to precisely and exactly nothing so far as the rights
-of poor Belgium are concerned, because there is no way provided of
-enforcing the treaty and because the American government has decided
-that it can keep at peace and remain neutral only by declining to do
-what, according to the intention of the Hague treaty, it would be
-expected to do in securing peace for Belgium. In practice the Hague
-treaties have proved and will always prove useless while there is no
-sanction of force behind them. For the United States to proffer “good
-offices” to the various powers entering such a great conflict as the
-present one accomplishes not one particle of good; to refer them, when
-they mutually complain of wrongs, to a Hague court which is merely
-a phantom does less than no good. The Hague treaties can accomplish
-nothing, and ought not to have been entered into, unless in such a
-case as this of Belgium there is willingness to take efficient action
-under them. There could be no better illustration of how extremely
-complicated and difficult a thing it is in practice instead of in
-theory to make even a small advance in the cause of peace.
-
-I believe that international opinion can do something to arrest wrong;
-but only if it is aroused and finds some method of clear and forceful
-expression. For example, I hope that it has been aroused to the
-point of preventing any repetition at the expense of Brussels of the
-destruction which has befallen Louvain. The peaceful people of Brussels
-now live in dread of what may happen to them if the Germans should
-evacuate the city. In such an event it is possible that half a dozen
-fanatics, or half a dozen young roughs of the “Apache” type, in spite
-of everything that good citizens may do, will from some building fire
-on the retiring soldiers. In such case the offenders ought to be and
-must be treated with instant and unsparing rigor, and those clearly
-guilty of aiding or shielding them should also be so treated. But if
-in such case Brussels is in whole or in part destroyed as Louvain
-was destroyed, those destroying it will be guilty of a capital crime
-against civilization; and it is heartily to be regretted that civilized
-nations have not devised some method by which the collective power of
-civilization can be used to prevent or punish such crimes. In every
-great city there are plenty of reckless or fanatical or downright
-evil men eagerly ready to do some act which is abhorrent to the vast
-majority of their fellows; and it is wicked to punish with cruel
-severity immense multitudes of innocent men, women, and children for
-the misdeeds of a few rascals or fanatics. Of course, it is eminently
-right to punish by death these rascals or fanatics themselves.
-
-Kindly people who know little of life and nothing whatever of the
-great forces of international rivalry have exposed the cause of peace
-to ridicule by believing that serious wars could be avoided through
-arbitration treaties, peace treaties, neutrality treaties, and the
-action of the Hague court, without putting force behind such treaties
-and such action. The simple fact is that none of these existing
-treaties and no function of the Hague court hitherto planned and
-exercised have exerted or could exert the very smallest influence in
-maintaining peace when great conflicting international passions are
-aroused and great conflicting national interests are at stake. It
-happens that wars have been more numerous in the fifteen years since
-the first Hague conference than in the fifteen years prior to it. It
-was Russia that called the first and second Hague conferences, and in
-the interval she fought the war with Japan and is now fighting a far
-greater war. We bore a prominent part at the Hague conferences; but if
-the Hague court had been in existence in 1898 it could not have had the
-smallest effect upon our war with Spain; and neither would any possible
-arbitration treaty or peace treaty have had any effect. At the present
-moment Great Britain owes its immunity from invasion purely to its navy
-and to the fact that that navy has been sedulously exercised in time
-of peace so as to prepare it for war. Great Britain has always been
-willing to enter into any reasonable--and into some unreasonable--peace
-and arbitration treaties; but her fate now would have been the fate
-of Belgium and would not have been hindered in the smallest degree by
-these treaties, if she had not possessed a first-class navy. The navy
-has done a thousand times more for her peace than all the arbitration
-treaties and peace treaties of the type now existing that the wit of
-man could invent. I believe that national agreement in the future
-can do much toward minimizing the chance for war; but it must be by
-proceeding along different lines from those hitherto followed and in
-an entirely different spirit from the ultrapacificist or professional
-peace-at-any-price spirit.
-
-The Hague court has served a very limited, but a useful, purpose. Some,
-although only a small number, of the existing peace and arbitration
-treaties have served a useful purpose. But the purpose and the service
-have been strictly limited. Issues often arise between nations which
-are not of first-class importance, which do not affect their vital
-honor and interest, but which, if left unsettled, may eventually cause
-irritation that will have the worst possible results. The Hague court
-and the different treaties in question provide instrumentalities for
-settling such disputes, where the nations involved really wish to
-settle them but might be unable to do so if means were not supplied.
-This is a real service and one well worth rendering. These treaties
-and the Hague court have rendered such service again and again in time
-past. It has been a misfortune that some worthy people have anticipated
-too much and claimed too much in reference to them, for the failure
-of the excessive claims has blinded men to what they really have
-accomplished. To expect from them what they cannot give is merely
-short-sighted. To assert that they will give what they cannot give is
-mischievous. To promise that they will give what they cannot give is
-not only mischievous but hypocritical; and it is for this reason that
-such treaties as the thirty or forty all-inclusive arbitration or peace
-treaties recently negotiated at Washington, although unimportant, are
-slightly harmful.
-
-The Hague court has proved worthless in the present gigantic crisis.
-There is hardly a Hague treaty which in the present crisis has not
-in some respect been violated. However, a step toward the peaceful
-settlement of questions at issue between nations which are not vital
-and which do not mark a serious crisis has been accomplished on certain
-occasions in the past by the action of the Hague court and by rational
-and limited peace or arbitration treaties. Our business is to try to
-make this court of more effect and to enlarge the class of cases where
-its actions will be valuable. In order to do this, we must endeavor to
-put an international police force behind this international judiciary.
-At the same time we must refuse to do or say anything insincere.
-Above all, we must refuse to be misled into abandoning the policy of
-efficient self-defense, by any unfounded trust that the Hague court,
-as now constituted, and peace or arbitration treaties of the existing
-type, can in the smallest degree accomplish what they never have
-accomplished and never can accomplish. Neither the existing Hague
-court nor any peace treaties of the existing type will exert even the
-slightest influence in saving from disaster any nation that does not
-preserve the virile virtues and the long-sightedness that will enable
-it by its own might to guard its own honor, interest, and national
-life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE CAUSES OF THE WAR
-
-
-From what we have so far considered, two things are evident. First, it
-is quite clear that in the world, as it is at this moment situated,
-it is literally criminal, literally a crime against the nation, not
-to be adequately and thoroughly prepared in advance, so as to guard
-ourselves and hold our own in war. We should have a much better army
-than at present, including especially a far larger reserve upon which
-to draw in time of war. We should have first-class fortifications,
-especially on the canal and in Hawaii. Most important of all, we should
-not only have a good navy but should have it continually exercised
-in manœuvring. For nearly two years our navy has totally lacked
-the practice in manœuvring in fleet formation indispensable to its
-efficiency.
-
-Of all the lessons hitherto taught by the war, the most essential
-for us to take to heart is that taught by the catastrophe that has
-befallen Belgium. One side of this catastrophe, one lesson taught by
-Belgium’s case, is the immense gain in the self-respect of a people
-that has dared to fight heroically in the face of certain disaster and
-possible defeat. Every Belgian throughout the world carries his head
-higher now than he has ever carried it before, because of the proof
-of virile strength that his people have given. In the world at large
-there is not the slightest interest concerning Luxembourg’s ultimate
-fate; there is nothing more than amusement as to the discussion whether
-Japan or Germany is most to blame in connection with the infringement
-of Chinese neutrality. This is because neither China nor Luxembourg has
-been able and willing effectively to stand for her own rights. At this
-moment Luxembourg is enjoying “peace”--the peace of death. But Belgium
-has stood for her own rights. She has shown heroism, courage, and
-self-sacrifice, and, great though the penalty, the ultimate reward will
-be greater still.
-
-If ever this country is attacked and drawn into war as Belgium, through
-no fault of her own, was drawn into war, I hope most earnestly that
-she will emulate Belgium’s courage; and this she cannot do unless she
-is prepared in advance as Belgium was prepared. In one point, as I
-have already stated, I very earnestly hope that she will go beyond
-Belgium. If any great city, such as New York or San Francisco, Boston
-or Seattle, is held for ransom by a foreign foe, I earnestly hope that
-Americans, within the city and without, will insist that not one dollar
-of ransom shall be paid, and will gladly acquiesce in the absolute
-destruction of the city, by fire or in any other manner, rather than
-see a dollar paid into the war chest of our foes for the further
-prosecution of the war against us. Napoleon the Great made many regions
-pay for their own conquest and the conquest of the nations to which
-they belonged. But Spain and Russia would not pay, and the burning of
-Moscow and the defense of Saragossa marked the two great stages in the
-turn of the tide against him. The prime lesson of this war is that no
-nation can preserve its own self-respect, or the good-will of other
-nations, unless it keeps itself ready to exact justice from others,
-precisely as it should keep itself eager and willing to do justice to
-others.
-
-The second lesson is the utter inadequacy in times of great crises of
-existing peace and neutrality treaties, and of all treaties conceived
-in the spirit of the all-inclusive arbitration treaties recently
-adopted at Washington; and, in fact, of all treaties which do not put
-potential force behind the treaty, which do not create some kind of
-international police power to stand behind international sense of right
-as expressed in some competent tribunal.
-
-It remains to consider whether there is not--and I believe there
-is--some method which will bring nearer the day when international
-war of the kind hitherto waged and now waging between nations shall
-be relegated to that past which contains the kind of private war that
-was habitually waged between individuals up to the end of the Middle
-Ages. By degrees the work of a national police has been substituted
-for the exercise of the right of private war. The growth of sentiment
-in favor of peace within each nation accomplished little until an
-effective police force was put back of the sentiment. There are a few
-communities where such a police force is almost non-existent, although
-always latent in the shape of a sheriff’s posse or something of the
-kind. In all big communities, however, in all big cities, law is
-observed, innocent and law-abiding and peaceful people are protected
-and the disorderly and violent classes prevented from a riot of
-mischief and wrong-doing only by the presence of an efficient police
-force. Some analogous international police force must be created if war
-between nations is to be minimized as war between individuals has been
-minimized.
-
-It is, of course, essential that, if this end is to be accomplished, we
-shall face facts with the understanding of what they really signify.
-Not the slightest good is done by hysterical outcries for a peace which
-would consecrate wrong or leave wrongs unredressed. Little or nothing
-would be gained by a peace which merely stopped this war for the moment
-and left untouched all the causes that have brought it about. A peace
-which left the wrongs of Belgium unredressed, which did not leave her
-independent and secured against further wrong-doing, and which did not
-provide measures hereafter to safeguard all peaceful nations against
-suffering the fate that Belgium has suffered, would be mischievous
-rather than beneficial in its ultimate effects. If the United States
-had any part in bringing about such a peace it would be deeply to our
-discredit as a nation. Belgium has been terribly wronged, and the
-civilized world owes it to itself to see that this wrong is redressed
-and that steps are taken which will guarantee that hereafter conditions
-shall not be permitted to become such as either to require or to permit
-such action as that of Germany against Belgium. Surely all good and
-honest men who are lovers of peace and who do not use the great words
-“love of peace” to cloak their own folly and timidity must agree that
-peace is to be made the handmaiden of righteousness or else that it is
-worthless.
-
-England’s attitude in going to war in defense of Belgium’s rights,
-according to its guarantee, was not only strictly proper but represents
-the only kind of action that ever will make a neutrality treaty or
-peace treaty or arbitration treaty worth the paper on which it is
-written. The published despatches of the British government show that
-Sir Edward Grey clearly, emphatically, and scrupulously declined to
-commit his government to war until it became imperative to do so if
-Great Britain was to fulfil, as her honor and interest alike demanded,
-her engagements on behalf of the neutrality of Belgium. Of course, as
-far as Great Britain is concerned, she would not be honorably justified
-in making peace unless this object of her going to war was achieved.
-Our hearty sympathy should go out to her in this attitude.
-
-The case of Belgium in this war stands by itself. As regards all the
-other powers, it is not only possible to make out a real case in favor
-of every nation on each side, but it is also quite possible to show
-that, under existing conditions, each nation was driven by its vital
-interests to do what it did. The real nature of the problem we have
-ahead of us can only be grasped if this attitude of the several powers
-is thoroughly understood. To paint the Kaiser as a devil, merely bent
-on gratifying a wicked thirst for bloodshed, is an absurdity, and
-worse than an absurdity. I believe that history will declare that the
-Kaiser acted in conformity with the feelings of the German people and
-as he sincerely believed the interests of his people demanded; and, as
-so often before in his personal and family life, he and his family
-have given honorable proof that they possess the qualities that are
-characteristic of the German people. Every one of his sons went to
-the war, not nominally, but to face every danger and hardship. Two of
-his sons hastily married the girls to whom they were betrothed and
-immediately afterward left for the front.
-
-This was a fresh illustration of one of the most striking features
-of the outbreak of the war in Germany. In tens of thousands of cases
-the officers and enlisted men, who were engaged, married immediately
-before starting for the front. In many of the churches there were
-long queues of brides waiting for the ceremony, so as to enable their
-lovers to marry them just before they responded to the order that meant
-that they might have to sacrifice everything, including life, for the
-nation. A nation that shows such a spirit is assuredly a great nation.
-The efficiency of the German organization, the results of the German
-preparation in advance, were strikingly shown in the powerful forward
-movement of the first six weeks of the war and in the steady endurance
-and resolute resourcefulness displayed in the following months.
-
-Not only is the German organization, the German preparedness, highly
-creditable to Germany, but even more creditable is the spirit lying
-behind the organization. The men and women of Germany, from the
-highest to the lowest, have shown a splendid patriotism and abnegation
-of self. In reading of their attitude, it is impossible not to feel a
-thrill of admiration for the stern courage and lofty disinterestedness
-which this great crisis laid bare in the souls of the people. I most
-earnestly hope that we Americans, if ever the need may arise, will show
-similar qualities.
-
-It is idle to say that this is not a people’s war. The intensity of
-conviction in the righteousness of their several causes shown by the
-several peoples is a prime factor for consideration, if we are to take
-efficient means to try to prevent a repetition of this incredible world
-tragedy. History may decide in any war that one or the other party was
-wrong, and yet also decide that the highest qualities and powers of the
-human soul were shown by that party. We here in the United States have
-now grown practically to accept this view as regards our own Civil War,
-and we feel an equal pride in the high devotion to the right, as it was
-given each man to see the right, shown alike by the men who wore the
-blue and the men who wore the gray.
-
-The English feel that in this war they fight not only for themselves
-but for principle, for justice, for civilization, for a real and
-lasting world peace. Great Britain is backed by the great free
-democracies that under her flag have grown up in Canada, in Australia,
-in South Africa. She feels that she stands for the liberties and rights
-of weak nations everywhere. One of the most striking features of the
-war is the way in which the varied peoples of India have sprung to arms
-to defend the British Empire.
-
-The Russians regard the welfare of their whole people as at stake.
-The Russian Liberals believe that success for Russia means an end of
-militarism in Europe. They believe that the Pole, the Jew, the Finn,
-the man of the Caucasus will each and all be enfranchised, that the
-advance of justice and right in Russia will be immeasurably furthered
-by the triumph of the Russian people in this contest, and that the
-conflict was essential, not only to Russian national life but to the
-growth of freedom and justice within her boundaries.
-
-The people of Germany believe that they are engaged primarily in a
-fight for life of the Teuton against the Slav, of civilization against
-what they regard as a vast menacing flood of barbarism. They went to
-war because they believed the war was an absolute necessity, not merely
-to German well-being but to German national existence. They sincerely
-feel that the nations of western Europe are traitors to the cause of
-Occidental civilization, and that they themselves are fighting, each
-man for his own hearthstone, for his own wife and children, and all
-for the future existence of the generations yet to come.
-
-The French feel with passionate conviction that this is the last stand
-of France, and that if she does not now succeed and is again trampled
-under foot, her people will lose for all time their place in the
-forefront of that great modern civilization of which the debt to France
-is literally incalculable. It would be impossible too highly to admire
-the way in which the men and women of France have borne themselves in
-this nerve-shattering time of awful struggle and awful suspense. They
-have risen level to the hour’s need, whereas in 1870 they failed so to
-rise. The high valor of the French soldiers has been matched by the
-poise, the self-restraint, the dignity and the resolution with which
-the French people and the French government have behaved.
-
-Of Austria and Hungary, of Servia and Montenegro, exactly the same is
-true, and the people of each of these countries have shown the sternest
-and most heroic courage and the loftiest and most patriotic willingness
-for self-sacrifice.
-
-To each of these peoples the war seems a crusade against threatening
-wrong, and each man fervently believes in the justice of his cause.
-Moreover, each combatant fights with that terrible determination to
-destroy the opponent which springs from fear. It is not the fear
-which any one of these powers has inspired that offers the difficult
-problem. It is the fear which each of them genuinely feels. Russia
-believes that a quarter of the Slav people will be trodden under the
-heel of the Germans, unless she succeeds. France and England believe
-that their very existence depends on the destruction of the German
-menace. Germany believes that unless she can so cripple, and, if
-possible, destroy her western foes, as to make them harmless in the
-future, she will be unable hereafter to protect herself against the
-mighty Slav people on her eastern boundary and will be reduced to a
-condition of international impotence. Some of her leaders are doubtless
-influenced by worse motives; but the motives above given are, I
-believe, those that influence the great mass of Germans, and these are
-in their essence merely the motives of patriotism, of devotion to one’s
-people and one’s native land.
-
-We nations who are outside ought to recognize both the reality of
-this fear felt by each nation for others, together with the real
-justification for its existence. Yet we cannot sympathize with that
-fear-born anger which would vent itself in the annihilation of the
-conquered. The right attitude is to limit militarism, to destroy the
-menace of militarism, but to preserve the national integrity of each
-nation. The contestants are the great civilized peoples of Europe and
-Asia.
-
-Japan’s part in the war has been slight. She has borne herself with
-scrupulous regard not only to the rights but to the feelings of the
-people of the United States. Japan’s progress should be welcomed by
-every enlightened friend of humanity because of the promise it contains
-for the regeneration of Asia. All that is necessary in order to remove
-every particle of apprehension caused by this progress is to do what
-ought to be done in reference to her no less than in reference to
-European and American powers, namely, to develop a world policy which
-shall guarantee each nation against any menace that might otherwise be
-held for it in the growth and progress of another nation.
-
-The destruction of Russia is not thinkable, but if it were, it would
-be a most frightful calamity. The Slavs are a young people, of
-limitless possibilities, who from various causes have not been able
-to develop as rapidly as the peoples of central and western Europe.
-They have grown in civilization until their further advance has become
-something greatly to be desired, because it will be a factor of immense
-importance in the welfare of the world. All that is necessary is
-for Russia to throw aside the spirit of absolutism developed in her
-during the centuries of Mongol dominion. She will then be found doing
-what no other race can do and what it is of peculiar advantage to the
-English-speaking peoples that she should do.
-
-As for crushing Germany or crippling her and reducing her to political
-impotence, such an action would be a disaster to mankind. The Germans
-are not merely brothers; they are largely ourselves. The debt we owe
-to German blood is great; the debt we owe to German thought and to
-German example, not only in governmental administration but in all the
-practical work of life, is even greater. Every generous heart and every
-far-seeing mind throughout the world should rejoice in the existence of
-a stable, united, and powerful Germany, too strong to fear aggression
-and too just to be a source of fear to its neighbors.
-
-As for France, she has occupied, in the modern world, a position as
-unique as Greece in the world of antiquity. To have her broken or cowed
-would mean a loss to-day as great as the loss that was suffered by
-the world when the creative genius of the Greek passed away with his
-loss of political power and material greatness. The world cannot spare
-France.
-
-Now, the danger to each of these great and splendid civilizations
-arises far more from the fear that each feels than from the fear that
-each inspires. Belgium’s case stands apart. She inspired no fear.
-No peace should be made until her wrongs have been redressed, and
-the likelihood of the repetition of such wrongs provided against.
-She has suffered incredibly because the fear among the plain German
-people, among the Socialists, for instance, of the combined strength
-of France and Russia made them acquiesce in and support the policy of
-the military party, which was to disregard the laws of international
-morality and the plain and simple rights of the Belgian people.
-
-It is idle merely to make speeches and write essays against this fear,
-because at present the fear has a real basis. At present each nation
-has cause for the fear it feels. Each nation has cause to believe that
-its national life is in peril unless it is able to take the national
-life of one or more of its foes or at least hopelessly to cripple
-that foe. The causes of the fear must be removed or, no matter what
-peace may be patched up to-day or what new treaties may be negotiated
-to-morrow, these causes will at some future day bring about the same
-results, bring about a repetition of this same awful tragedy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-HOW TO STRIVE FOR WORLD PEACE
-
-
-In the preceding chapters I have endeavored to set forth, in a spirit
-of absolute fairness and calmness, the lessons as I see them that this
-war teaches all the world and especially the United States. I believe
-I have shown that, while, at least as against Belgium, there has been
-actual wrong-doing, yet on the whole and looking back at the real and
-ultimate causes rather than at the temporary occasions of the war,
-what has occurred is due primarily to the intense fear felt by each
-nation for other nations and to the anger born of that fear. Doubtless
-in certain elements, notably certain militaristic elements, of the
-population other motives have been at work; but I believe that the
-people of each country, in backing the government of that country, in
-the present war have been influenced mainly by a genuine patriotism and
-a genuine fear of what might happen to their beloved land in the event
-of aggression by other nations.
-
-Under such conditions, as I have shown, our duty is twofold. In the
-first place, events have clearly demonstrated that in any serious
-crisis treaties unbacked by force are not worth the paper upon which
-they are written. Events have clearly shown that it is the idlest of
-folly to assert and little short of treason against the nation for
-statesmen who should know better to pretend, that the salvation of any
-nation under existing world conditions can be trusted to treaties,
-to little bits of paper with names signed on them but without any
-efficient force behind them. The United States will be guilty of
-criminal misconduct, we of this generation will show ourselves traitors
-to our children and our children’s children if, as conditions are now,
-we do not keep ourselves ready to defend our hearths, trusting in great
-crises not to treaties, not to the ineffective good-will of outsiders,
-but to our own stout hearts and strong hands.
-
-So much for the first and most vital lesson. But we are not to be
-excused if we stop here. We must endeavor earnestly but with sanity to
-try to bring around better world conditions. We must try to shape our
-policy in conjunction with other nations so as to bring nearer the day
-when the peace of righteousness, the peace of justice and fair dealing,
-will be established among the nations of the earth. With this object
-in view, it is our duty carefully to weigh the influences which are at
-work or may be put to work in order to bring about this result and
-in every effective way to do our best to further the growth of these
-influences. When this has been done no American administration will
-be able to assert that it is reduced to humiliating impotence even
-to protest against such wrong as that committed on Belgium, because,
-forsooth, our “neutrality” can only be preserved by failure to help
-right what is wrong--and we shall then as a people have too much
-self-respect to enter into absurd, all-inclusive arbitration treaties,
-unbacked by force, at the very moment when we fail to do what is
-clearly demanded by our duty under the Hague treaties.
-
-Doubtless in the long run most is to be hoped from the slow growth of a
-better feeling, a more real feeling of brotherhood among the nations,
-among the peoples. The experience of the United States shows that
-there is no real foundation in race for the bitter antagonism felt
-among Slavs and Germans, French and English. There are in this country
-hundreds of thousands, millions, of men who by birth and parentage are
-of German descent, of French descent or Slavonic descent, or descended
-from each of the peoples within the British Islands. These different
-races not only get along well together here, but become knit into one
-people, and after a few generations their blood is mingled. In my own
-veins runs not only the blood of ancestors from the various peoples of
-the British Islands, English, Scotch, Welsh, and Irish, but also the
-blood of Frenchman and of German--not to speak of my forefathers from
-Holland. It is idle to tell us that the Frenchman and the German, the
-Slav and the Englishman are irreconcilably hostile one to the other
-because of difference of race. From our own daily experiences we know
-the contrary. We know that good men and bad men are to be found in
-each race. We know that the differences between the races above named
-and many others are infinitesimal compared with the vital points of
-likeness.
-
-But this growth is too slow by itself adequately to meet present
-needs. At present we are confronted with the fact that each nation
-must keep armed and must be ready to go to war because there is a real
-and desperate need to do so and because the penalty for failure may be
-to suffer a fate like that of China. At present in every great crisis
-treaties have shown themselves not worth the paper they are written on,
-and the multitude of peace congresses that have been held have failed
-to secure even the slightest tangible result, as regards any contest in
-which the passions of great nations were fully aroused and their vital
-interests really concerned. In other words, each nation at present in
-any crisis of fundamental importance has to rely purely on its own
-power, its own strength, its own individual force. The futility of
-international agreements in great crises has come from the fact that
-force was not back of them.
-
-What is needed in international matters is to create a judge and then
-to put police power back of the judge.
-
-So far the time has not been ripe to attempt this. Surely now, in view
-of the awful cataclysm of the present war, such a plan could at least
-be considered; and it may be that the combatants at the end will be
-willing to try it in order to secure at least a chance for the only
-kind of peace that is worth having, the peace that is compatible with
-self-respect. Merely to bring about a peace at the present moment,
-without providing for the elimination of the causes of war, would
-accomplish nothing of any permanent value, and the attempt to make it
-would probably represent nothing else than the adroit use of some more
-or less foolish or more or less self-interested outsider by some astute
-power which wished to see if it could not put its opponents in the
-wrong.
-
-If the powers were justified in going into this war by their vital
-interests, then they are required to continue the war until these
-vital interests are no longer in jeopardy. A peace which left without
-redress wrongs like those which Belgium has suffered or which in effect
-consecrated the partial or entire destruction of one or more nations
-and the survival in aggravated form of militarism and autocracy, and
-of international hatred in its most intense and virulent form, would
-really be only a worthless truce and would not represent the slightest
-advance in the cause of righteousness and of international morality.
-
-The essential thing to do is to free each nation from the besetting
-fear of its neighbor. This can only be done by removing the causes of
-such fear. The neighbor must no longer be a danger.
-
-Mere disarmament will not accomplish this result, and the disarmament
-of the free and enlightened peoples, so long as a single despotism or
-barbarism were left armed, would be a hideous calamity. If armaments
-were reduced while causes of trouble were in no way removed, wars
-would probably become somewhat more frequent just because they would
-be less expensive and less decisive. It is greatly to be desired that
-the growth of armaments should be arrested, but they cannot be arrested
-while present conditions continue. Mere treaties, mere bits of papers,
-with names signed to them and with no force back of them, have proved
-utterly worthless for the protection of nations, and where they are the
-only alternatives it is not only right but necessary that each nation
-should arm itself so as to be able to cope with any possible foe.
-
-The one permanent move for obtaining peace, which has yet been
-suggested, with any reasonable chance of attaining its object, is by an
-agreement among the great powers, in which each should pledge itself
-not only to abide by the decisions of a common tribunal but to back
-with force the decisions of that common tribunal. The great civilized
-nations of the world which do possess force, actual or immediately
-potential, should combine by solemn agreement in a great World League
-for the Peace of Righteousness. In a later chapter I shall briefly
-outline what such an agreement should attempt to perform. At present
-it is enough to say that such a world-agreement offers the only
-alternative to each nation’s relying purely on its own armed strength;
-for a treaty unbacked by force is in no proper sense of the word an
-alternative.
-
-Of course, if there were not reasonable good faith among the nations
-making such an agreement, it would fail. But it would not fail merely
-because one nation did not observe good faith. It would be impossible
-to say that such an agreement would at once and permanently bring
-universal peace. But it would certainly mark an immense advance. It
-would certainly mean that the chances of war were minimized and the
-prospects of limiting and confining and regulating war immensely
-increased. At present force, as represented by the armed strength
-of the nations, is wholly divorced from such instrumentalities
-for securing peace as international agreements and treaties. In
-consequence, the latter are practically impotent in great crises.
-There is no connection between force, on the one hand, and any scheme
-for securing international peace or justice on the other. Under these
-conditions every wise and upright nation must continue to rely for its
-own peace and well-being on its own force, its own strength. As all
-students of the law know, a right without a remedy is in no real sense
-of the word a right at all. In international matters the declaration of
-a right, or the announcement of a worthy purpose, is not only aimless,
-but is a just cause for derision and may even be mischievous, if force
-is not put behind the right or the purpose. Our business is to make
-force the agent of justice, the instrument of right in international
-matters as it has been made in municipal matters, in matters within
-each nation.
-
-One good purpose which would be served by the kind of international
-action I advocate is that of authoritatively deciding when treaties
-terminate or lapse. At present every treaty ought to contain provision
-for its abrogation; and at present the wrong done in disregarding a
-treaty may be one primarily of time and manner. Unquestionably it may
-become an imperative duty to abrogate a treaty. The Supreme Court of
-the United States set forth this right and duty in convincing manner
-when discussing our treaty with France during the administration of
-John Adams, and again a century later when discussing the Chinese
-treaty. The difficulty at present is that each case must be treated on
-its own merits; for in some cases it may be right and necessary for a
-nation to abrogate or denounce (not to violate) a treaty; and yet in
-other cases such abrogation may represent wrong-doing which should be
-suppressed by the armed strength of civilization. At present in cases
-where only two nations are concerned there is no substitute for such
-abrogation or violation of the treaty by one of them; for each of the
-two has to be judge in its own case. But the tribunal of a world league
-would offer the proper place to which to apply for the abrogation
-of treaties; and, with international force back of such a tribunal,
-the infraction of a treaty could be punished in whatever way the
-necessities of the case demanded.
-
-Such a scheme as the one hereinafter briefly outlined will not bring
-perfect justice any more than under municipal law we obtain perfect
-justice; but it will mark an immeasurable advance on anything now
-existing; for it will mean that at last a long stride has been taken
-in the effort to put the collective strength of civilized mankind
-behind the collective purpose of mankind to secure the peace of
-righteousness, the peace of justice among the nations of the earth.
-
-It may be, though I sincerely hope to the contrary, that such a
-scheme is for the immediate future Utopian--it certainly will not be
-Utopian for the remote future. If it is impossible in the immediate
-future to devise some working scheme by which force shall be put
-behind righteousness in disinterested and effective fashion, where
-international wrongs are concerned, then the only alternative will be
-for each free people to keep itself in shape with its own strength
-to defend its own rights and interests, and meanwhile to do all that
-can be done to help forward the slow growth of sentiment which is
-assuredly, although very gradually, telling against international
-wrong-doing and violence.
-
-Man, in recognizedly human shape, has been for ages on this planet,
-and the extraordinary discoveries in Egypt and Mesopotamia now enable
-us to see in dim fashion the beginning of historic times six or seven
-thousand years ago. In the earlier ages of which history speaks there
-was practically no such thing as an international conscience. The
-armies of Babylon and Assyria, Egypt and Persia felt no sense of
-obligation to outsiders and conquered merely because they wished to
-conquer. In Greece a very imperfect recognition of international
-right grew up so far as Greek communities were concerned, but it never
-extended to barbarians. In the Roman Empire this feeling grew slightly,
-if only for the reason that so many nations were included within its
-bounds and were forced to live peaceably together. In the Middle Ages
-the common Christianity of Europe created a real bond. There was at
-least a great deal of talk about the duties of Christian nations to
-one another; and although the action along the lines of the talk
-was lamentably insufficient, still the talk itself represented the
-dawning recognition of the fact that each nation might owe something
-to other nations and that it was not right to base action purely on
-self-interest.
-
-There has undoubtedly been a wide expansion of this feeling during the
-last few centuries, and particularly during the last century. It now
-extends so as to include not only Christian nations but also those
-non-Christian nations which themselves treat with justice and fairness
-the men of different creed. We are still a lamentably long distance
-away from the goal toward which we are striving; but we have taken a
-few steps toward that goal. A hundred years ago the English-speaking
-peoples of Britain and America regarded one another as inveterate and
-predestined enemies, just as three centuries previously had been the
-case in Great Britain itself between those who dwelt in the northern
-half and those who dwelt in the southern half of the island. Now war is
-unthinkable between us. Moreover, there is a real advance in good-will,
-respect, and understanding between the United States and all the other
-nations of the earth. The advance is not steady and it is interrupted
-at times by acts of unwisdom, which are quite as apt to be committed by
-ourselves as by other peoples; but the advance has gone on. There is
-far greater sentiment than ever before against unwarranted aggressions
-by stronger powers against weak powers; there is far greater feeling
-against misconduct, whether in small or big powers; and far greater
-feeling against brutality in war.
-
-This does not mean that the wrong-doing as regards any one of these
-matters has as yet been even approximately stopped or that the
-indignation against such wrong-doing is as yet anything like as
-effective as it should be. But we must not let our horror at the
-wrong that is still done blind us to the fact that there has been
-improvement. As late as the eighteenth century there were continual
-instances where small nations or provinces were overrun, just as
-Belgium has been overrun, without any feeling worth taking into account
-being thereby excited in the rest of mankind. In the seventeenth
-century affairs were worse. What has been done in Belgian cities has
-been very dreadful and the Belgian countryside has suffered in a way
-to wring our hearts; but our sympathy and indignation must not blind
-us to the fact that even in this case there has been a real advance
-during the last three hundred years and that such things as were done
-to Magdeburg and Wexford and Drogheda and the entire Palatinate in the
-seventeenth century are no longer possible.
-
-There is every reason to feel dissatisfied with the slow progress that
-has been made in putting a stop to wrong-doing; it is our bounden duty
-now to act so as to secure redress for wrong-doing; but nevertheless
-we must also recognize the fact that some progress has been made, and
-that there is now a good deal of real sentiment, and some efficient
-sentiment, against international wrong-doing. There has been a real
-growth toward international peace, justice, and fair dealing. We have
-still a long way to go before reaching the goal, but at least we have
-gone forward a little way toward the goal. This growth will continue.
-We must do everything that we can to make it continue. But we must not
-blind ourselves to the fact that as yet this growth is not such as in
-any shape or way to warrant us in relying for our ultimate safety in
-great national crises upon anything except the strong fibre of our
-national character, and upon such preparation in advance as will give
-that character adequate instruments wherewith to make proof of its
-strength.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE PEACE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
-
- “Come, Peace! not like a mourner bowed
- For honor lost and dear ones wasted,
- But proud, to meet a people proud,
- With eyes that tell o’ triumph tasted!
- Come, with han’ gripping on the hilt,
- An’ step that proves ye Victory’s daughter!
- Longin’ for you, our sperits wilt
- Like shipwrecked men’s on raf’s for water.
-
- “Come, while our country feels the lift
- Of a great instinct shouting ‘Forwards!’
- An’ knows that freedom ain’t a gift
- Thet tarries long in han’s of cowards!
- Come, sech ez mothers prayed for, when
- They kissed their cross with lips that quivered,
- An’ bring fair wages for brave men,
- A nation saved, a race delivered!”
-
-
-These are the noble lines of a noble poet, written in the sternest days
-of the great Civil War, when the writer, Lowell, was one among the
-millions of men who mourned the death in battle of kinsfolk dear to
-him. No man ever lived who hated an unjust war more than Lowell or who
-loved with more passionate fervor the peace of righteousness. Yet, like
-the other great poets of his day and country, like Holmes, who sent
-his own son to the war, like gentle Longfellow and the Quaker Whittier,
-he abhorred unrighteousness and ignoble peace more than war. These men
-had lofty souls. They possessed the fighting edge, without which no man
-is really great; for in the really great man there must be both the
-heart of gold and the temper of steel.
-
-In 1864 there were in the North some hundreds of thousands of men who
-praised peace as the supreme end, as a good more important than all
-other goods, and who denounced war as the worst of all evils. These
-men one and all assailed and denounced Abraham Lincoln, and all voted
-against him for President. Moreover, at that time there were many
-individuals in England and France who said it was the duty of those
-two nations to mediate between the North and the South, so as to stop
-the terrible loss of life and destruction of property which attended
-our Civil War; and they asserted that any Americans who in such event
-refused to accept their mediation and to stop the war would thereby
-show themselves the enemies of peace. Nevertheless, Abraham Lincoln
-and the men back of him by their attitude prevented all such effort at
-mediation, declaring that they would regard it as an unfriendly act to
-the United States. Looking back from a distance of fifty years, we can
-now see clearly that Abraham Lincoln and his supporters were right.
-Such mediation would have been a hostile act, not only to the United
-States but to humanity. The men who clamored for unrighteous peace
-fifty years ago this fall were the enemies of mankind.
-
-These facts should be pondered by the well-meaning men who always
-clamor for peace without regard to whether peace brings justice or
-injustice. Very many of the men and women who are at times misled into
-demanding peace, as if it were itself an end instead of being a means
-of righteousness, are men of good intelligence and sound heart who only
-need seriously to consider the facts, and who can then be trusted to
-think aright and act aright. There is, however, an element of a certain
-numerical importance among our people, including the members of the
-ultrapacificist group, who by their teachings do some real, although
-limited, mischief. They are a feeble folk, these ultrapacificists,
-morally and physically; but in a country where voice and vote are
-alike free, they may, if their teachings are not disregarded, create
-a condition of things where the crop they have sowed in folly and
-weakness will be reaped with blood and bitter tears by the brave men
-and high-hearted women of the nation.
-
-The folly preached by some of these individuals is somewhat startling,
-and if it were translated from words into deeds it would constitute a
-crime against the nation. One professed teacher of morality made the
-plea in so many words that we ought to follow the example of China and
-deprive ourselves of all power to repel foreign attack. Surely this
-writer must have possessed the exceedingly small amount of information
-necessary in order to know that nearly half of China was under foreign
-dominion and that while he was writing the Germans and Japanese were
-battling on Chinese territory and domineering as conquerors over the
-Chinese in that territory. Think of the abject soul of a man capable
-of holding up to the admiration of free-born American citizens such a
-condition of serfage under alien rule!
-
-Nor is the folly confined only to the male sex. A number of women
-teachers in Chicago are credited with having proposed, in view of the
-war, hereafter to prohibit in the teaching of history any reference
-to war and battles. Intellectually, of course, such persons show
-themselves unfit to be retained as teachers a single day, and indeed
-unfit to be pupils in any school more advanced than a kindergarten. But
-it is not their intellectual, it is also their moral shortcomings which
-are striking. The suppression of the truth is, of course, as grave an
-offense against morals as is the suggestion of the false or even the
-lie direct; and these teachers actually propose to teach untruths to
-their pupils.
-
-True teachers of history must tell the facts of history; and if they
-do not tell the facts both about the wars that were righteous and the
-wars that were unrighteous, and about the causes that led to these wars
-and to success or defeat in them, they show themselves morally unfit to
-train the minds of boys and girls. If in addition to telling the facts
-they draw the lessons that should be drawn from the facts, they will
-give their pupils a horror of all wars that are entered into wantonly
-or with levity or in a spirit of mere brutal aggression or save under
-dire necessity. But they will also teach that among the noblest deeds
-of mankind are those that have been done in great wars for liberty, in
-wars of self-defense, in wars for the relief of oppressed peoples, in
-wars for putting an end to wrong-doing in the dark places of the globe.
-
-Any teachers, in school or college, who occupied the position that
-these foolish, foolish teachers have sought to take, would be forever
-estopped from so much as mentioning Washington and Lincoln; because
-their lives are forever associated with great wars for righteousness.
-These teachers would be forever estopped from so much as mentioning
-the shining names of Marathon and Salamis. They would seek to blind
-their pupils’ eyes to the glory held in the deeds and deaths of Joan of
-Arc, of Andreas Hofer, of Alfred the Great, of Arnold von Winkelried,
-of Kosciusko and Rákóczy. They would be obliged to warn their pupils
-against ever reading Schiller’s “William Tell” or the poetry of
-Koerner. Such men are deaf to the lament running:
-
- “Oh, why, Patrick Sarsfield, did we let your ships sail,
- Across the dark waters from green Innisfail?”
-
-To them Holmes’s ballad of Bunker Hill and Whittier’s “Laus Deo,”
-MacMaster’s “Ode to the Old Continentals” and O’Hara’s “Bivouac of the
-Dead” are meaningless. Their cold and timid hearts are not stirred by
-the surge of the tremendous “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” On them
-lessons of careers like those of Timoleon and John Hampden are lost;
-in their eyes the lofty self-abnegation of Robert Lee and Stonewall
-Jackson was folly; their dull senses do not thrill to the deathless
-deaths of the men who died at Thermopylæ and at the Alamo--the fight of
-those grim Texans of which it was truthfully said that Thermopylæ had
-its messengers of death but the Alamo had none.
-
-It has actually been proposed by some of these shivering apostles of
-the gospel of national abjectness that, in view of the destruction that
-has fallen on certain peaceful powers of Europe, we should abandon all
-efforts at self-defense, should stop building battle-ships, and cease
-to take any measures to defend ourselves if attacked. It is difficult
-seriously to consider such a proposition. It is precisely and exactly
-as if the inhabitants of a village in whose neighborhood highway
-robberies had occurred should propose to meet the crisis by depriving
-the local policeman of his revolver and club.
-
-There are, however, many high-minded people who do not agree with
-these extremists, but who nevertheless need to be enlightened as to
-the actual facts. These good people, who are busy people and not able
-to devote much time to thoughts about international affairs, are often
-confused by men whose business it is to know better. For example, a
-few weeks ago these good people were stirred to a moment’s belief
-that something had been accomplished by the enactment at Washington
-of a score or two of all-inclusive arbitration treaties; being not
-unnaturally misled by the fact that those responsible for the passage
-of the treaties indulged in some not wholly harmless bleating as
-to the good effects they would produce. As a matter of fact, they
-_probably_ will not produce the smallest effect of any kind or sort.
-Yet it is _possible_ they may have a mischievous effect, inasmuch
-as under certain circumstances to fulfil them would cause frightful
-disaster to the United States, while to break them, even although under
-compulsion and because it was absolutely necessary, would be fruitful
-of keen humiliation to every right-thinking man who is jealous of our
-international good name.
-
-If for example, whatever the outcome of the present war, a great
-triumphant military despotism declared that it would not recognize
-the Monroe Doctrine or seized Magdalena Bay, or one of the Dutch West
-Indies, or the Island of St. Thomas, and fortified it; or if--as would
-be quite possible--it announced that we had no right to fortify the
-Isthmus of Panama, and itself landed on adjacent territory to erect
-similar fortifications; then, under these absurd treaties, we would
-be obliged, if we happened to have made one of them with one of the
-countries involved, to go into an interminable discussion of the
-subject before a joint commission, while the hostile nation proceeded
-to make its position impregnable. It seems incredible that the United
-States government could have made such treaties; but it has just done
-so, with the warm approval of the professional pacificists.
-
-These treaties were entered into when the administration had before
-its eyes at that very moment the examples of Belgium and Luxembourg,
-which showed beyond possibility of doubt, especially when taken in
-connection with other similar incidents that have occurred during the
-last couple of decades, that there are various great military empires
-in the Old World who will pay not one moment’s heed to the most solemn
-and binding treaty, if it is to their interest to break it. If any
-one of these empires, as the result of the present contest, obtains
-something approaching to a position of complete predominance in the
-Old World, it is absolutely certain that it would pay no heed whatever
-to these treaties, if it desired to better its position in the New
-World by taking possession of the Dutch or Danish West Indies or of the
-territory of some weak American state on the mainland of the continent.
-In such event we would be obliged either instantly ourselves to
-repudiate the scandalous treaties by which the government at Washington
-has just sought to tie our hands--and thereby expose ourselves in our
-turn to the charge of bad faith--or else we should have to abdicate our
-position as a great power and submit to abject humiliation.
-
-Since these articles of mine were written and published, I am glad to
-see that James Bryce, a lifelong advocate of peace and the stanchest
-possible friend of the United States, has taken precisely the position
-herein taken. He dwells, as I have dwelt, upon the absolute need of
-protecting small states that behave themselves from absorption in
-great military empires. He insists, as I have insisted, upon the need
-of the reduction of armaments, the quenching of the baleful spirit of
-militarism, and the admission of the peoples everywhere to a fuller
-share in the control of foreign policy--all to be accomplished by
-some kind of international league of peace. He adds, however, as the
-culminating and most important portion of his article:
-
-“But no scheme for preventing future wars will have any chance of
-success unless it rests upon the assurance that the states which enter
-it will loyally and steadfastly abide by it and that each and all of
-them will join in coercing by their overwhelming united strength any
-state which may disregard the obligations it has undertaken.”
-
-This is almost exactly what I have said. Indeed, it is almost word for
-word what I have said--an agreement which is all the more striking
-because when he wrote it Lord Bryce could not have known what I
-had written. We must insist on righteousness first and foremost.
-We must strive for peace always; but we must never hesitate to put
-righteousness above peace. In order to do this, we must put force back
-of righteousness, for, as the world now is, national righteousness
-without force back of it speedily becomes a matter of derision. To the
-doctrine that might makes right, it is utterly useless to oppose the
-doctrine of right unbacked by might.
-
-It is not even true that what the pacificists desire is right. The
-leaders of the pacificists of this country who for five months now have
-been crying, “Peace, peace,” have been too timid even to say that
-they want the peace to be a righteous one. We needlessly dignify such
-outcries when we speak of them as well-meaning. The weaklings who raise
-their shrill piping for a peace that shall consecrate successful wrong
-occupy a position quite as immoral as and infinitely more contemptible
-than the position of the wrong-doers themselves. The ruthless strength
-of the great absolutist leaders--Elizabeth of England, Catherine of
-Russia, Peter the Great, Frederick the Great, Napoleon, Bismarck--is
-certainly infinitely better for their own nations and is probably
-better for mankind at large than the loquacious impotence, ultimately
-trouble-breeding, which has recently marked our own international
-policy. A policy of blood and iron is sometimes very wicked; but it
-rarely does as much harm, and never excites as much derision, as a
-policy of milk and water--and it comes dangerously near flattery to
-call the foreign policy of the United States under President Wilson
-and Mr. Bryan merely one of milk and water. Strength at least commands
-respect; whereas the prattling feebleness that dares not rebuke any
-concrete wrong, and whose proposals for right are marked by sheer
-fatuity, is fit only to excite weeping among angels and among men the
-bitter laughter of scorn.
-
-At this moment any peace which leaves unredressed the wrongs of
-Belgium, and which does not effectively guarantee Belgium and all other
-small nations that behave themselves, against the repetition of such
-wrongs would be a well-nigh unmixed evil. As far as we personally are
-concerned, such a peace would inevitably mean that we should at once
-and in haste have to begin to arm ourselves or be exposed in our turn
-to the most frightful risk of disaster. Let our people take thought
-for the future. What Germany did to Belgium because her need was great
-and because she possessed the ruthless force with which to meet her
-need she would, of course, do to us if her need demanded it; and in
-such event what her representatives now say as to her intentions toward
-America would trouble her as little as her signature to the neutrality
-treaties troubled her when she subjugated Belgium. Nor does she stand
-alone in her views of international morality. More than one of the
-great powers engaged in this war has shown by her conduct in the past
-that if it profited her she would without the smallest scruple treat
-any land in the two Americas as Belgium has been treated. What has
-recently happened in the Old World should be pondered deeply by the
-nations of the New World; by Chile, Argentina, and Brazil no less than
-by the United States. The world war has proved beyond peradventure that
-the principle underlying the Monroe Doctrine is of vast moment to the
-welfare of all America, and that neither this nor any other principle
-can be made effective save as power is put behind it.
-
-Belgium was absolutely innocent of offense. Her cities have been laid
-waste or held to ransom for gigantic sums of money; her fruitful
-fields have been trampled into mire; her sons have died on the field
-of battle; her daughters are broken-hearted fugitives; a million of
-her people have fled to foreign lands. Entirely disregarding all
-accusations as to outrages on individuals, it yet remains true that
-disaster terrible beyond belief has befallen this peaceful nation
-of six million people who themselves had been guilty of not even
-the smallest wrong-doing. Louvain and Dinant are smoke-grimed and
-blood-stained ruins. Brussels has been held to enormous ransom,
-although it did not even strive to defend itself. Antwerp did strive
-to defend itself. Because soldiers in the forts attempted to repulse
-the enemy, hundreds of houses in the undefended city were wrecked with
-bombs from air-ships, and throngs of peaceful men, women, and children
-were driven from their homes by the sharp terror of death. Be it
-remembered always that not one man in Brussels, not one man in Antwerp,
-had even the smallest responsibility for the disaster inflicted upon
-them. Innocence has proved not even the smallest safeguard against
-such woe and suffering as we in this land can at present hardly imagine.
-
-What befell Antwerp and Brussels will surely some day befall New York
-or San Francisco, and may happen to many an inland city also, if we
-do not shake off our supine folly, if we trust for safety to peace
-treaties unbacked by force. At the beginning of last month, by the
-appointment of the President, peace services were held in the churches
-of this land. As far as these services consisted of sermons and prayers
-of good and wise people who wished peace only if it represented
-righteousness, who did not desire that peace should come unless it
-came to consecrate justice and not wrong-doing, good and not evil,
-the movement represented good. In so far, however, as the movement
-was understood to be one for immediate peace without any regard to
-righteousness or justice, without any regard for righting the wrongs of
-those who have been crushed by unmerited disaster, then the movement
-represented mischief, precisely as fifty years ago, in 1864, in our own
-country a similar movement for peace, to be obtained by acknowledgment
-of disunion and by the perpetuation of slavery, would have represented
-mischief. In the present case, however, the mischief was confined
-purely to those taking part in the movement in an unworthy spirit; for
-(like the peace parades and newspaper peace petitions) it was a merely
-subjective phenomenon; it had not the slightest effect of any kind,
-sort, or description upon any of the combatants abroad and could not
-possibly have any effect upon them. It is well for our own sakes that
-we should pray sincerely and humbly for the peace of righteousness; but
-we must guard ourselves from any illusion as to the news of our having
-thus prayed producing the least effect upon those engaged in the war.
-
-There is just one way in which to meet the upholders of the doctrine
-that might makes right. To do so we must prove that right will make
-might, by backing right with might.
-
-In his second inaugural address Andrew Jackson laid down the rule by
-which every national American administration ought to guide itself,
-saying: “The foreign policy adopted by our government is to do justice
-to all, and to submit to wrong by none.”
-
-The statement of the dauntless old fighter of New Orleans is as true
-now as when he wrote it. We must stand absolutely for righteousness.
-But to do so is utterly without avail unless we possess the strength
-and the loftiness of spirit which will back righteousness with deeds
-and not mere words. We must clear the rubbish from off our souls and
-admit that everything that has been done in passing peace treaties,
-arbitration treaties, neutrality treaties, Hague treaties, and the
-like, with no sanction of force behind them, amounts to literally and
-absolutely zero, to literally and absolutely nothing, in any time of
-serious crisis. We must recognize that to enter into foolish treaties
-which cannot be kept is as wicked as to break treaties which can and
-ought to be kept. We must labor for an international agreement among
-the great civilized nations which shall put the full force of all of
-them back of any one of them, and of any well-behaved weak nation,
-which is wronged by any other power. Until we have completed this
-purpose, we must keep ourselves ready, high of heart and undaunted of
-soul, to back our rights with our strength.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-AN INTERNATIONAL POSSE COMITATUS
-
-
-Most Western Americans who are past middle age remember young, rapidly
-growing, and turbulent communities in which there was at first
-complete anarchy. During the time when there was no central police
-power to which to appeal every man worth his salt, in other words
-every man fit for existence in such a community, had to be prepared
-to defend himself; and usually, although not always, the fact that he
-was prepared saved him from all trouble, whereas unpreparedness was
-absolutely certain to invite disaster.
-
-In such communities before there was a regular and fully organized
-police force there came an interval during which the preservation of
-the peace depended upon the action of a single official, a sheriff
-or marshal, who if the law was defied in arrogant fashion summoned
-a posse comitatus composed of as many armed, thoroughly efficient,
-law-abiding citizens as were necessary in order to put a stop to the
-wrong-doing. Under these conditions each man had to keep himself armed
-and both able and willing to respond to the call of the peace-officer;
-and furthermore, if he had a shred of wisdom he kept himself ready in
-an emergency to act on his own behalf if the peace-officer did not or
-could not do his duty.
-
-In such towns I have myself more than once seen well-meaning but
-foolish citizens endeavor to meet the exigencies of the case by simply
-passing resolutions of disarmament without any power back of them.
-That is, they passed self-denying ordinances, saying that nobody was
-to carry arms; but they failed to provide methods for carrying such
-ordinances into effect. In every case the result was the same. Good
-citizens for the moment abandoned their weapons. The bad men continued
-to carry them. Things grew worse instead of better; and then the
-good men came to their senses and clothed some representative of the
-police with power to employ force, potential or existing, against the
-wrong-doers.
-
-Affairs in the international world are at this time in analogous
-condition. There is no central police power, and not the least
-likelihood of its being created. Well-meaning enthusiasts have tried
-their hands to an almost unlimited extent in the way of devising
-all-inclusive arbitration treaties, neutrality treaties, disarmament
-proposals, and the like, with no force back of them, and the result
-has been stupendous and discreditable failure. Preparedness for war on
-the part of individual nations has sometimes but not always averted
-war. Unpreparedness for war, as in the case of China, Korea, and
-Luxembourg, has invariably invited smashing disaster, and sometimes
-complete conquest. Surely these conditions should teach a lesson that
-any man who runs may read unless his eyes have been blinded by folly or
-his heart weakened by cowardice.
-
-The immediately vital lesson for each individual nation is that as
-things are now it must in time of crisis rely on its own stout hearts
-and ready hands for self-defense. Existing treaties are utterly
-worthless so far as concerns protecting any free, well-behaved people
-from one of the great aggressive military monarchies of the world. The
-all-inclusive arbitration treaties such as those recently negotiated
-by Messrs. Wilson and Bryan, when taken in connection with our refusal
-to act under existing treaties, represent about the highest point of
-slightly mischievous fatuity which can be attained in international
-matters. Inasmuch as we ourselves are the power that initiated their
-negotiation, we can do our plain duty to ourselves and our neighbors
-only by ourselves proceeding from the outset on the theory, and by
-warning our neighbors, that these treaties in any time of crisis will
-certainly not be respected by any serious adversary, and probably will
-of necessity be violated by ourselves. They do not in even the very
-smallest degree relieve us of the necessity of preparedness for war. To
-this point of our duty to be prepared I will return later.
-
-But we ought not to and must not rest content merely with working for
-our own defense. The utterly appalling calamity that has befallen
-the civilized world during the last five months, and, above all, the
-horrible catastrophe that has overwhelmed Belgium without Belgium’s
-having the smallest responsibility in the matter, must make the
-least thoughtful realize how unsatisfactory is the present basis of
-international relations among civilized powers. In order to make things
-better several things are necessary. We must clearly grasp the fact
-that mere selfish avoidance of duty to others, even although covered by
-such fine words as “peace” and “neutrality,” is a wretched thing and an
-obstacle to securing the peace of righteousness throughout the world.
-We must recognize clearly the old common-law doctrine that a right
-without a remedy is void. We must firmly grasp the fact that measures
-should be taken to put force back of good faith in the observance of
-treaties. The worth of treaties depends purely upon the good faith with
-which they are executed; and it is mischievous folly to enter into
-treaties without providing for their execution and wicked folly to
-enter into them if they ought not to be executed.
-
-It is necessary to devise means for putting the collective and
-efficient strength of all the great powers of civilization back of any
-well-behaved power which is wronged by another power. In other words,
-we must devise means for executing treaties in good faith, by the
-establishment of some great international tribunal, and by securing
-the enforcement of the decrees of this tribunal through the action of
-a posse comitatus of powerful and civilized nations, all of them being
-bound by solemn agreement to coerce any power that offends against
-the decrees of the tribunal. That there will be grave difficulties in
-successfully working out this plan I would be the first to concede,
-and I would be the first to insist that to work it out successfully
-would be impossible unless the nations acted in good faith. But the
-plan is feasible, and it is the only one which at the moment offers
-any chance of success. Ever since the days of Henry IV of France there
-has been a growth, slow and halting to be sure but yet evidently a
-growth, in recognition by the public conscience of civilized nations
-that there should be a method of making the rules of international
-morality obligatory and binding among the powers. But merely to trust
-to public opinion without organized force back of it is silly. Force
-must be put back of justice, and nations must not shrink from the duty
-of proceeding by any means that are necessary against wrong-doers.
-It is the failure to recognize these vital truths that has rendered
-the actions of our government during the last few years impotent
-to preserve world peace and fruitful only in earning for us the
-half-veiled derision of other nations.
-
-The attitude of the present administration during the last five months
-shows how worthless the present treaties, unbacked by force, are, and
-how utterly ineffective mere passive neutrality is to secure even
-the smallest advance in world morality. I have been very reluctant
-in any way to criticise the action of the present administration in
-foreign affairs; I have faithfully, and in some cases against my
-own deep-rooted personal convictions, sought to justify what it has
-done in Mexico and as regards the present war; but the time has come
-when loyalty to the administration’s action in foreign affairs means
-disloyalty to our national self-interest and to our obligations toward
-humanity at large. As regards Belgium the administration has clearly
-taken the ground that our own selfish ease forbids us to fulfil our
-explicit obligations to small neutral states when they are deeply
-wronged. It will never be possible in any war to commit a clearer
-breach of international morality than that committed by Germany in the
-invasion and subjugation of Belgium. Every one of the nations involved
-in this war, and the United States as well, have committed such
-outrages in the past. But the very purpose of the Hague conventions
-and of all similar international agreements was to put a stop to such
-misconduct in the future.
-
-At the outset I ask our people to remember that what I say is based on
-the assumption that we are bound in good faith to fulfil our treaty
-obligations; that we will neither favor nor condemn any other nation
-except on the ground of its behavior; that we feel as much good-will
-to the people of Germany or Austria as to the people of England, of
-France, or of Russia; that we speak for Belgium only as we could
-speak for Holland or Switzerland or one of the Scandinavian or Balkan
-nations; and that if the circumstances as regards Belgium had been
-reversed we would have protested as emphatically against wrong action
-by England or France as we now protest against wrong action by Germany.
-
-The United States and the great powers now at war were parties to the
-international code created in the regulations annexed to the Hague
-conventions of 1899 and 1907. As President, acting on behalf of this
-government, and in accordance with the unanimous wish of our people,
-I ordered the signature of the United States to these conventions.
-Most emphatically I would not have permitted such a farce to have
-gone through if it had entered my head that this government would not
-consider itself bound to do all it could to see that the regulations to
-which it made itself a party were actually observed when the necessity
-for their observance arose. I cannot imagine any sensible nation
-thinking it worth while to sign future Hague conventions if even such a
-powerful neutral as the United States does not care enough about them
-to protest against their open breach. Of the present neutral powers the
-United States of America is the most disinterested and the strongest,
-and should therefore bear the main burden of responsibility in this
-matter.
-
-It is quite possible to make an argument to the effect that we never
-should have entered into the Hague conventions, because our sole duty
-is to ourselves and not to others, and our sole concern should be to
-keep ourselves at peace, at any cost, and not to help other powers
-that are oppressed, and not to protest against wrong-doing. I do not
-myself accept this view; but in practice it is the view taken by the
-present administration, apparently with at the moment the approval of
-the mass of our people. Such a policy, while certainly not exalted, and
-in my judgment neither far-sighted nor worthy of a high-spirited and
-lofty-souled nation, is yet in a sense understandable, and in a sense
-defensible.
-
-But it is quite indefensible to make agreements and not live up to
-them. The climax of absurdity is for any administration to do what
-the present administration during the last five months has done. Mr.
-Wilson’s administration has shirked doing the duty plainly imposed on
-it by the obligations of the conventions already entered into; and at
-the same time it has sought to obtain cheap credit by entering into a
-couple of score new treaties infinitely more drastic than the old ones,
-and quite impossible of honest fulfilment. When the Belgian people
-complained of violations of the Hague tribunal, it was a mockery,
-it was a timid and unworthy abandonment of duty on our part, for
-President Wilson to refer them back to the Hague court, when he knew
-that the Hague court was less than a shadow unless the United States
-by doing its clear duty gave the Hague court some substance. If the
-Hague conventions represented nothing but the expression of feeble
-aspirations toward decency, uttered only in time of profound peace, and
-not to be even expressed above a whisper when with awful bloodshed and
-suffering the conventions were broken, then it was idle folly to enter
-into them. If, on the other hand, they meant anything, if the United
-States had a serious purpose, a serious sense of its obligations to
-world righteousness, when it entered into them, then its plain duty as
-the trustee of civilization is to investigate the charges solemnly made
-as to the violation of the Hague conventions. If such investigation is
-made, and if the charges prove well founded, then it is the duty of the
-United States to take whatever action may be necessary to vindicate the
-principles of international law set forth in these conventions.
-
-I am not concerned with the charges of individual atrocity. The prime
-fact is that Belgium committed no offense whatever, and yet that her
-territory has been invaded and her people subjugated. This prime fact
-cannot be left out of consideration in dealing with any matter that
-has occurred in connection with it. Her neutrality has certainly been
-violated, and this is in clear violation of the fundamental principles
-of the Hague conventions. It appears clear that undefended towns have
-been bombarded, and that towns which were defended have been attacked
-with bombs at a time when no attack was made upon the defenses. This
-is certainly in contravention of the Hague agreement forbidding the
-bombardment of undefended towns. Illegal and excessive contributions
-are expressly condemned under Articles 49 and 52 of the conventions. If
-these articles do not forbid the levying of such sums as $40,000,000
-from Brussels and $90,000,000 from the province of Brabant, then the
-articles are absolutely meaningless. Articles 43 and 50 explicitly
-forbid the infliction of a collective penalty, pecuniary or otherwise,
-on a population on account of acts of individuals for which it cannot
-be regarded as collectively responsible. Either this prohibition is
-meaningless or it prohibits just such acts as the punitive destruction
-of Visé, Louvain, Aerschot, and Dinant. Furthermore, a great deal of
-the appalling devastation of central and eastern Belgium has been
-apparently terrorizing and not punitive in its purpose, and this is
-explicitly forbidden by the Hague conventions.
-
-Now, it may be that there is an explanation and justification for
-a portion of what has been done. But if the Hague conventions mean
-anything, and if bad faith in the observation of treaties is not
-to be treated with cynical indifference, then the United States
-government should inform itself as to the facts, and should take
-whatever action is necessary in reference thereto. The extent to
-which the action should go may properly be a subject for discussion.
-But that there should be some action is beyond discussion; unless,
-indeed, we ourselves are content to take the view that treaties,
-conventions, and international engagements and agreements of all kinds
-are to be treated by us and by everybody else as what they have been
-authoritatively declared to be, “scraps of paper,” the writing on
-which is intended for no better purpose than temporarily to amuse the
-feeble-minded.
-
-If the above statements seem in the eyes of my German friends hostile
-to Germany, let me emphasize the fact that they are predicated upon a
-course of action which if extended and applied as it should be extended
-and applied would range the United States on the side of Germany if
-any such assault were made upon Germany as has been made upon Belgium,
-or if either Belgium or any of the other allies committed similar
-wrong-doing. Many Germans assert and believe that if Germany had not
-acted as she did France and England would have invaded Belgium and have
-committed similar wrongs. In such case it would have been our clear
-duty to behave toward them exactly as we ought now to behave toward
-Germany. But the fact that other powers might under other conditions do
-wrong, affords no justification for failure to act on the wrong that
-has actually been committed. It must always be kept in mind, however,
-that we cannot expect the nation against whose actions we protest to
-accept our position as warranted, unless we make it clear that we have
-both the will and the power to interfere on behalf of that nation if in
-its turn it is oppressed. In other words, we must show that we believe
-in right and therefore in living up to our promises in good faith; and,
-furthermore, that we are both able and ready to put might behind right.
-
-As I have before said, I think that the party in Germany which believes
-in a policy of aggression represents but a minority of the nation.
-It is powerful only because the great majority of the German people
-are rightfully in fear of aggression at the expense of Germany, and
-sanction striking only because they fear lest they themselves be
-struck. The greatest service that could be rendered to peace would
-be to convince Germany, as well as other powers, that in such event
-we would do all we could on behalf of the power that was wronged.
-Extremists in England, France, and Russia talk as if the proper outcome
-of the present war would be the utter dismemberment of Germany and her
-reduction to impotence such as that which followed for her upon the
-Thirty Years’ War. I have actually received letters from Frenchmen and
-Englishmen upbraiding me for what they regard as a pro-German leaning
-in these articles I have written. To these well-meaning persons I can
-only say that Americans who remember the extreme bitterness felt by
-Northerners for Southerners, and Southerners for Northerners, at the
-end of the Civil War, are saddened but in no wise astonished that
-other peoples should show a like bitterness. I can only repeat that to
-dismember and hopelessly shatter Germany would be a frightful calamity
-for mankind, precisely as the dismemberment and shattering of the
-British Empire or of the French Republic would be. It is right that the
-United States should regard primarily its own interests. But I believe
-that I speak for a considerable number of my countrymen when I say that
-we ought not solely to consider our own interests. Above all, we should
-not do as the present administration does; for it refuses to take any
-concrete action in favor of any nation which is wronged; and yet it
-also refuses to act so that we may ourselves be sufficient for our own
-protection.
-
-We ought not to trust in words unbacked by deeds. We should be able
-to defend ourselves. We should also be ready and able to join in
-preventing the infliction of disaster of the kind of which I speak upon
-any civilized power, great or small, whether it be at the present time
-Belgium, or at some future day Germany or England, Holland, Sweden or
-Hungary, Russia or Japan.
-
-So much for questions of international right, and of our duty to others
-in international affairs. Now for our duty to ourselves.
-
-A sincere desire to act well toward other nations must not blind us to
-the fact that as yet the standard of international morality is both
-low and irregular. The behavior of the great military empires of the
-Old World, in reference to their treaty obligations and their moral
-obligations toward countries such as Belgium, Finland, and Korea, shows
-that it would be utter folly for us in any grave crisis to trust to
-anything save our own preparedness and resolution for our safety. The
-other day there appeared in the newspapers extracts from a translation
-of a report made by an officer of the Prussian army staff outlining
-the plan of operations by Germany in the event of war with America.
-Great surprise was expressed by innocent Americans that such plans
-should be in existence, and certain gentlemen who speak for Germany
-denied that the report (which was printed and openly sold in Germany
-in pamphlet form) was “official.” Neither the resentment expressed
-nor yet the denials were necessary. One feature of the admirable
-preparedness in which Germany and Japan stand so far above all other
-nations, and especially above our own, is their careful consideration
-of hostilities with all possible antagonists. Bernhardi’s famous books
-treat of possible war with Austria, and possible attack by Austria upon
-Germany, although the prime lessons that they teach are those contained
-in the possibility of war as it has actually occurred, with Germany
-and Austria in alliance. This does not indicate German hostility to
-Austria; it merely indicates German willingness to look squarely in
-the face all possible facts. Of course, and quite properly, the German
-General Staff has carefully considered the question of hostilities
-with America, and, of course, plans were drawn up with minute care
-and prevision at the time when there was friction between the two
-countries over Samoa, at the time when Admiral Dietrich clashed with
-Dewey in Manila Bay, and on the later occasion when there was friction
-in connection with Venezuela. This did not represent any special German
-ill will toward America. It represented the common-sense--albeit
-somewhat cold-blooded--consideration of possibilities by Germany’s
-rulers; and the failure to give this consideration would have reflected
-severely upon these rulers--although I do not regard some of the
-actions proposed as proper from the standpoint of warfare as the United
-States has practised it. To become angry because such plans exist would
-be childish. To fail to profit by our knowledge that they certainly
-do exist would, however, be not merely childish but imbecile. I have
-myself become personally cognizant of the existence of such plans for
-operations against us, and of the larger features of their details, in
-two cases, affecting two different nations.
-
-The essential feature of these plans was (and doubtless is) the
-seizure of some of our great coast cities and the terrorization of
-these cities so as to make them give enormous ransoms; ransoms of
-such size that our own country would be crippled, whereas our foes
-would be enabled to run the war against us with a handsome profit to
-themselves. These plans are based, of course, upon the belief that we
-have not sufficient foresight and intelligence to keep our navy in
-first-class condition, and upon not merely the belief but the knowledge
-that our regular army is so small and our utter unpreparedness
-otherwise so great that on land we would be entirely helpless against
-a moderate-sized expeditionary force belonging to any first-class
-military power. Foreign military and naval observers know well that
-our navy has been used during the last eighteen months in connection
-with the Mexican situation in such manner as to accomplish the minimum
-of results as regards Mexico, while at the same time to do the maximum
-of damage in interrupting the manœuvring and the gun practice of our
-fleets. They regard Messrs. Wilson and Bryan as representative of the
-American people in their entire inability to understand the real nature
-of the forces that underlie international relations and the importance
-of preparedness. They are entirely cold-blooded in their views of us.
-Foreign rulers may despise us for our supine unpreparedness, and for
-our readiness to make treaties, taken together with our refusal to
-fulfil these treaties by seeking to avert wrong done to others. But
-their contempt will not prevent their using this nation as arbiter in
-order to bring about peace if to do so suits their purposes; and if, on
-the contrary, one or the other of the several great military empires
-becomes the world mistress as the result of this war, that power
-will infringe our rights whenever and to the extent that it deems it
-advantageous to do so, and will make war upon us whenever it believes
-that such war will be to its own advantage.
-
-In the event of such a war against us it is well to remember that the
-spiritless and selfish type of neutrality which we have observed in
-the present war will be remembered by all other nations on whichever
-side they have been engaged in this contest, and will give each of them
-more or less satisfaction in the event of disaster befalling us. These
-nations, if they come to a deadlock as the result of this war, will not
-be withheld by any sentiment of indignation against or contempt for us
-from utilizing the services of the President as a medium for bringing
-about peace, if this seems the most convenient method of getting peace.
-But, whether they do this or not, they will retain a smouldering ill
-will toward us, one and all of them; and if we were assailed it would
-be utterly quixotic, utterly foolish of any one of them to come to
-our aid no matter what wrongs were inflicted upon us. It would be
-quite impossible for any power to treat us worse than Belgium has been
-treated by Germany or to attack us with less warrant than was shown
-when Belgium was attacked. Bombs have been continually dropped by the
-Germans in the city of Paris and in other cities, wrecking private
-houses and killing men, women, and children at a time when there was no
-pretense that any military attacks were being made upon the cities, or
-that any other object was served than that of terrorizing the civilian
-population. Cities have been destroyed and others held to huge ransom.
-All these practices are forbidden by the Hague conventions. Inasmuch as
-we have not made a single protest against them when other powers have
-suffered, it would be both ridiculous and humiliating for us to make
-even the slightest appeal for assistance or to expect any assistance
-from any other powers if ever we in our turn suffer in like fashion.
-It would be purely our affair. We would have no right to expect that
-other powers would take the kind of action which we ourselves have
-refused to take. It would be our time to take our medicine, and it
-would be folly and cowardice to make wry faces over it or to expect
-sympathy, still less aid, from outsiders. As I have already stated, my
-own view is most strongly that, if we are assailed in accordance with
-the plans of foreign powers above mentioned, it would be our business
-positively to refuse to allow any city to ransom itself, and sternly
-to accept the destruction of New York, or San Francisco, or any other
-city as the alternative of such ransom. Our duty would be to accept
-these disasters as the payment rightfully due from us to fate for our
-folly in having listened to the clamor of the feeble folk among the
-ultrapacificists, and in having indorsed the unspeakable silliness of
-the policy contained in the proposed all-inclusive arbitration treaties
-of Mr. Taft and in the accomplished all-inclusive arbitration treaties
-of Messrs. Wilson and Bryan.
-
-I very earnestly hope that this nation will ultimately adopt a
-dignified and self-respecting policy in international affairs. I
-earnestly hope that ultimately we shall live up to every international
-obligation we have undertaken--exactly as we did live up to them
-during the seven and a half years while I was President. I earnestly
-hope that we shall ourselves become one of the joint guarantors of
-world peace under such a plan as that I in this book outline, and that
-we shall hold ourselves ready and willing to act as a member of the
-international posse comitatus to enforce the peace of righteousness as
-against any offender big or small. This would mean a great practical
-stride toward relief from the burden of excessive military preparation.
-It would mean that a long step had been taken toward at least
-minimizing and restricting the area and extent of possible warfare. It
-would mean that all liberty-loving and enlightened peoples, great and
-small, would be freed from the haunting nightmare of terror which now
-besets them when they think of the possible conquest of their land.
-
-Until this can be done we owe it to ourselves as a nation effectively
-to safeguard ourselves against all likelihood of disaster at the hands
-of a foreign foe. We should bring our navy up to the highest point of
-preparedness, we should handle it purely from military considerations,
-and should see that the training was never intermitted. We should make
-our little regular army larger and more effective than at present. We
-should provide for it an adequate reserve. In addition, I most heartily
-believe that we should return to the ideal held by our people in the
-days of Washington although never lived up to by them. We should
-follow the example of such typical democracies as Switzerland and
-Australia and provide and require military training for all our young
-men. Switzerland’s efficient army has unquestionably been the chief
-reason why in this war there has been no violation of her neutrality.
-Australia’s system of military training has enabled her at once to ship
-large bodies of first-rate fighting men to England’s aid. Our northern
-neighbors have done even better than Australia; perhaps special mention
-should be made of St. John, Newfoundland, which has sent to the front
-one in five of her adult male population, a larger percentage than
-any other city of the empire; a feat probably due to the fact that in
-practically all her schools there is good military training, while her
-young men have much practice in shooting tournaments. England at the
-moment is saved from the fate of Belgium only because of her navy; and
-the small size of her army, her lack of arms, her lack of previous
-preparations doubtless afford the chief reason why this war has
-occurred at all at this time. There would probably have been no war if
-England had followed the advice so often urged on her by the lamented
-Lord Roberts, for in that case she would have been able immediately to
-put in the field an army as large and effective as, for instance, that
-of France.
-
-Training of our young men in field manœuvres and in marksmanship, as
-is done in Switzerland, and to a slightly less extent in Australia,
-would be of immense advantage to the physique and morale of our whole
-population. It would not represent any withdrawal of our population
-from civil pursuits, such as occurs among the great military states
-of the European Continent. In Switzerland, for instance, the ground
-training is given in the schools, and the young man after graduating
-serves only some four months with the branch of the army to which he
-is attached, and after that only about eight days a year, not counting
-his rifle practice. All serve alike, rich and poor, without any
-exceptions; and all whom I have ever met, the poor even more than the
-rich, are enthusiastic over the beneficial effects of the service and
-the increase in self-reliance, self-respect, and efficiency which it
-has brought. The utter worthlessness of make-believe soldiers who have
-not been trained, and who are improvised on the Wilson-Bryan theory,
-will be evident to any one who cares to read such works as Professor
-Johnson’s recent volume on Bull Run. Our people should make a thorough
-study of the Swiss and Australian systems, and then adapt them to our
-own use. To do so would not be a stride toward war, as the feeble folk
-among the ultrapacificists would doubtless maintain. It would be the
-most effectual possible guarantee that peace would dwell within our
-borders; and it would also make it possible for us not only to insure
-peace for ourselves, but to have our words carry weight if we spoke
-against the commission of wrong and injustice at the expense of others.
-
-But we must always remember that no institutions will avail unless the
-private citizen has the right spirit. When a leading congressman,
-himself with war experience, shows conclusively in open speech in
-the House that we are utterly unprepared to do our duty to ourselves
-if assailed, President Wilson answers him with a cheap sneer, with
-unworthy levity; and the repeated warnings of General Wood are treated
-with the same indifference. Nevertheless, I do not believe that this
-attitude on the part of our public servants really represents the real
-convictions of the average American. The ideal citizen of a free state
-must have in him the stuff which in time of need will enable him to
-show himself a first-class fighting man who scorns either to endure
-or to inflict wrong. American society is sound at core and this means
-that at bottom we, as a people, accept as the basis of sound morality
-not slothful ease and soft selfishness and the loud timidity that
-fears every species of risk and hardship, but the virile strength of
-manliness which clings to the ideal of stern, unflinching performance
-of duty, and which follows whithersoever that ideal may lead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-SELF-DEFENSE WITHOUT MILITARISM
-
-
-The other day one of the typical ultrapacificists or peace-at-any-price
-men put the ultrapacificist case quite clearly, both in a statement of
-his own and by a quotation of what he called the “golden words” of Mr.
-Bryan at Mohonk. In arguing that we should under no conditions fight
-for our rights, and that we should make no preparation whatever to
-secure ourselves against wrong, this writer pointed out China as the
-proper model for America. He did this on the ground that China, which
-did not fight, was yet “older” than Rome, Greece, and Germany, which
-had fought, and that its example was therefore to be preferred.
-
-This, of course, is a position which saves the need of argument. If
-the average American wants to be a Chinaman, if China represents his
-ideal, then he should by all means follow the advice of pacificists
-like the writer in question and be a supporter of Mr. Bryan. If any man
-seriously believes that China has played a nobler and more useful part
-in the world than Athens and Rome and Germany, then he is quite right
-to try to Chinafy the United States. In such event he must of course
-believe that all the culture, all the literature, all the art, all the
-political and cultural liberty and social well-being, which modern
-Europe and the two Americas have inherited from Rome and Greece, and
-that all that has been done by Germany from the days of Charlemagne to
-the present time, represent mere error and confusion. He must believe
-that the average German or Frenchman or Englishman or inhabitant of
-North or South America occupies a lower moral, intellectual, and
-physical status than the average coolie who with his fellows composes
-the overwhelming majority of the Chinese population. To my mind such
-a proposition is unfit for debate outside of certain types of asylum.
-But those who sincerely take the view that this gentleman takes are
-unquestionably right in copying China in every detail, and nothing that
-I can say will appeal to them.
-
-The “golden words” of Mr. Bryan were as follows:
-
- I believe that this nation could stand before the world to-day
- and tell the world that it did not believe in war, that it did
- not believe that it was the right way to settle disputes, that
- it had no disputes which it was not willing to submit to the
- judgment of the world. If this nation did that, it not only
- would not be attacked by any other nation on the earth, but it
- would become the supreme power in the world.
-
-Of course, it is to be assumed that Mr. Bryan means what he says. If he
-does, then he is willing to submit to arbitration the question whether
-the Japanese have or have not the right to send unlimited numbers
-of immigrants to this shore. If Mr. Bryan does not mean this, among
-other specific things, then the “golden words” in question represent
-merely the emotionalism of the professional orator. Of course if Mr.
-Bryan means what he says, he also believes that we should not have
-interfered in Cuba and that Cuba ought now to be the property of
-Spain. He also believes that we ought to have permitted Colombia to
-reconquer and deprive of their independence the people of Panama, and
-that we should not have built the Panama Canal. He also believes that
-California and Texas ought now to be parts of Mexico, enjoying whatever
-blessings complete abstinence from foreign war has secured that country
-during the last three years. He also believes that the Declaration
-of Independence was an arbitrable matter and that the United States
-ought now to be a dependency of Great Britain. Unless Mr. Bryan does
-believe all of these things then his “golden words” represent only a
-rhetorical flourish. He is Secretary of State and the right-hand man
-of President Wilson, and President Wilson is completely responsible for
-whatever he says and for the things he does--or rather which he leaves
-undone.
-
-Now, it is quite useless for me to write with any view to convincing
-gentlemen like Mr. Bryan and the writer in question. If they really
-do represent our fellow countrymen, then they are right in holding
-up China as our ideal; not the modern China, not the China that is
-changing and moving forward, but old China. In such event Americans
-ought frankly to class themselves with the Chinese. That is where, on
-this theory, they belong. If this is so, then let us fervently pray
-that the Japanese or Germans or some other virile people that does not
-deify moral, mental, and physical impotence, may speedily come to rule
-over us.
-
-I am, however, writing on the assumption that Americans are still on
-the whole like their forefathers who followed Washington, and like
-their fathers who fought in the armies of Grant and Lee. I am writing
-on the assumption that, even though temporarily misled, they will
-not permanently and tamely submit to oppression, and that they will
-ultimately think intelligently as to what they should do to safeguard
-themselves against aggression. I abhor unjust war, and I deplore that
-the need even for just war should ever occur. I believe we should set
-our faces like flint against any policy of aggression by this country
-on the rights of any other country. But I believe that we should look
-facts in the face. I believe that it is unworthy weakness to fear to
-face the truth. Moreover, I believe that we should have in us that
-fibre of manhood which will make us follow duty whithersoever it may
-lead. Unquestionably, we should render all the service it is in our
-power to render to righteousness. To do this we must be able to back
-righteousness with force, to put might back of right. It may well be
-that by following out this theory we can in the end do our part in
-conjunction with other nations of the world to bring about, if not--as
-I hope--a world peace, yet at least an important minimizing of the
-chances for war and of the areas of possible war. But meanwhile it is
-absolutely our duty to prepare for our own defense.
-
-This country needs something like the Swiss system of war training for
-its young men. Switzerland is one of the most democratic governments in
-the world, and it has given its young men such an efficient training as
-to insure entire preparedness for war, without suffering from the least
-touch of militarism. Switzerland is at peace now primarily because
-all the great military nations that surround it know that its people
-have no intention of making aggression on anybody and yet that they
-are thoroughly prepared to hold their own and are resolute to fight to
-the last against any invader who attempts either to subjugate their
-territory or by violating its neutrality to make it a battle-ground.
-
-A bishop of the Episcopal Church recently wrote me as follows:
-
- How lamentable that we should stand idle, making no preparations
- to enforce peace, and crying “peace” when there is none! I have
- scant sympathy for the short-sightedness of those who decry
- preparation for war as a means of preventing it.
-
-The manager of a land company in Alabama writes me urging that some one
-speak for reasonable preparedness on the part of the nation. He states
-that it is always possible that we shall be engaged in hostilities with
-some first-class power, that he hopes and believes that war will never
-come, but adds:
-
- I may not believe that my home will burn down or that I am going
- to die within the period of my expectancy, but nevertheless I
- carry fire and life insurance to the full insurable value on my
- property and on my life to the extent of my ability. The only
- insurance of our liberties as a people is full preparation for
- a defense adequate against any attack and made in time to fully
- meet any attack. We do not _know_ the attack is coming; but to
- wait until it does come will be too late. Our present weakness
- lies in the wide-spread opinion among our people that this
- country is invincible because of its large population and vast
- resources. This I believe is true if, and only if, we use these
- resources or a small part of them to protect the major part,
- and if we train at least a part of our people how to defend the
- nation. Under existing conditions we can hardly hope to have
- an effective army in the field in less time than eight or ten
- months. To-day not one per cent of our people know anything about
- rifle shooting.
-
-I quote these two out of many letters, because they sum up the general
-feeling of men of vision. Both of my correspondents are most sincerely
-for peace. No man can possibly be more anxious for peace than I am.
-I ask those individuals who think of me as a firebrand to remember
-that during the seven and a half years I was President not a shot was
-fired at any soldier of a hostile nation by any American soldier or
-sailor, and there was not so much as a threat of war. Even when the
-state of Panama threw off the alien yoke of Colombia and when this
-nation, acting as was its manifest duty, by recognizing Panama as
-an independent state stood for the right of the governed to govern
-themselves on the Isthmus, as well as for justice and humanity,
-there was not a shot fired by any of our people at any Colombian.
-The blood recently shed at Vera Cruz, like the unpunished wrongs
-recently committed on our people in Mexico, had no parallel during my
-administration. When I left the presidency there was not a cloud on
-the horizon--and one of the reasons why there was not a cloud on the
-horizon was that the American battle fleet had just returned from its
-sixteen months’ trip around the world, a trip such as no other battle
-fleet of any power had ever taken, which it had not been supposed
-could be taken, and which exercised a greater influence for peace than
-all the peace congresses of the last fifty years. With Lowell I most
-emphatically believe that peace is not a gift that tarries long in the
-hands of cowards; and the fool and the weakling are no improvement on
-the coward.
-
-Nineteen centuries ago in the greatest of all books we were warned
-that whoso loses his life for righteousness shall save it and that he
-who seeks to save it shall lose it. The ignoble and abject gospel of
-those who would teach us that it is preferable to endure disgrace and
-discredit than to run any risk to life or limb would defeat its own
-purpose; for that kind of submission to wrong-doing merely invites
-further wrong-doing, as has been shown a thousand times in history and
-as is shown by the case of China in our own days. Moreover, our people,
-however ill-prepared, would never consent to such abject submission;
-and indeed as a matter of fact our publicists and public men and our
-newspapers, instead of being too humble and submissive, are only too
-apt to indulge in very offensive talk about foreign nations. Of all the
-nations of the world we are the one that combines the greatest amount
-of wealth with the smallest ability to defend that wealth. Surely one
-does not have to read history very much or ponder over philosophy a
-great deal in order to realize the truth that the one certain way
-to invite disaster is to be opulent, offensive, and unarmed. There
-is utter inconsistency between the ideal of making this nation the
-foremost commercial power in the world and of disarmament in the face
-of an armed world. There is utter inconsistency between the ideal of
-making this nation a power for international righteousness and at the
-same time refusing to make us a power efficient in anything save empty
-treaties and emptier promises.
-
-I do not believe in a large standing army. Most emphatically I do not
-believe in militarism. Most emphatically I do not believe in any policy
-of aggression by us. But I do believe that no man is really fit to be
-the free citizen of a free republic unless he is able to bear arms and
-at need to serve with efficiency in the efficient army of the republic.
-This is no new thing with me. For years I have believed that the young
-men of the country should know how to use a rifle and should have a
-short period of military training which, while not taking them for any
-length of time from civil pursuits, would make them quickly capable of
-helping defend the country in case of need. When I was governor of New
-York, acting in conjunction with the administration at Washington under
-President McKinley, I secured the sending abroad of one of the best
-officers in the New York National Guard, Colonel William Cary Sanger,
-to study the Swiss system. As President I had to devote my attention
-chiefly to getting the navy built up. But surely the sight of what has
-happened abroad ought to awaken our people to the need of action, not
-only as regards our navy but as regards our land forces also.
-
-Australia has done well in this respect. But Switzerland has worked out
-a comprehensive scheme with practical intelligence. She has not only
-solved the question of having men ready to fight, but she has solved
-the question of having arms to give these men. At present England is in
-more difficulty about arms than about men, and some of her people when
-sent to the front were armed with hunting rifles. Our own shortcomings
-are far greater. Indeed, they are so lamentable that it is hard to
-believe that our citizens as a whole know them. To equip half the
-number of men whom even the British now have in the field would tax
-our factories to the limit. In Switzerland, during the last two or
-three years of what corresponds to our high-school work the boy is
-thoroughly grounded in the rudiments of military training, discipline,
-and marksmanship. When he graduates he is put for some four to six
-months in the army to receive exactly the training he would get in time
-of war. After that he serves eight days a year and in addition often
-joins with his fellows in practising at a mark. He keeps his rifle
-and accoutrements in his home and is responsible for their condition.
-Efficiency is the watchword of Switzerland, and not least in its army.
-At the outbreak of this terrible war Switzerland was able to mobilize
-her forces in the corner of her territory between France and Germany
-as quickly as either of the great combatants could theirs; and no one
-trespassed upon her soil.
-
-The Swiss training does not to any appreciable extent take the man away
-from his work. But it does make him markedly more efficient for his
-work. The training he gets and his short service with the colors render
-him appreciably better able to do whatever his job in life is, and, in
-addition, benefit his health and spirits. The service is a holiday, and
-a holiday of the best because of the most useful type.
-
-There is no reason whatever why Americans should be unwilling or unable
-to do what Switzerland has done. We are a far wealthier country
-than Switzerland and could afford without the slightest strain the
-very trifling expense and the trifling consumption of time rendered
-necessary by such a system. It has really nothing in common with the
-universal service in the great conscript armies of the military powers.
-No man would be really taken out of industry. On the contrary, the
-average man would probably be actually benefited so far as doing his
-life-work is concerned. The system would be thoroughly democratic in
-its workings. No man would be exempted from the work and all would have
-to perform the work alike. It would be entirely possible to arrange
-that there should be a certain latitude as to the exact year when the
-four or six months’ service was given.
-
-Officers, of course, would need a longer training than the men. This
-could readily be furnished either by allowing numbers of extra students
-to take partial or short-term courses at West Point or by specifying
-optional courses in the high schools, the graduates of these special
-courses being tested carefully in their field-work and being required
-to give extra periods of service and being under the rigid supervision
-of the regular army. There could also be opportunities for promotion
-from the ranks for any one who chose to take the time and the trouble
-to fit himself.
-
-The four or six months’ service with the colors would be for the most
-part in the open field. The drill hall and the parade-ground do not
-teach more than five per cent of what a soldier must actually know.
-Any man who has had any experience with ordinary organizations of the
-National Guard when taken into camp knows that at first only a very
-limited number of the men have any idea of taking care of themselves
-and that the great majority suffer much from dyspepsia, just because
-they do not know how to take care of themselves. The soldier needs
-to spend some months in actual campaign practice under canvas with
-competent instructors before he gets to know his duty. If, however, he
-has had previous training in the schools of such a type as that given
-in Switzerland and then has this actual practice, he remains for some
-years efficient with no more training than eight or ten days a year.
-
-The training must be given in large bodies. It is essential that men
-shall get accustomed to the policing and sanitary care of camps in
-which there are masses of soldiers. Moreover, officers and especially
-the higher officers are wholly useless in war time unless they are
-accustomed to handle masses of men in co-operation with one another.
-
-There are small sections of our population out of which it is possible
-to improvise soldiers in a short time. Men who are accustomed to ride
-and to shoot and to live in the open and who are hardy and enduring and
-by nature possess the fighting edge already know most of what it is
-necessary that an infantryman or cavalryman should know, and they can
-be taught the remainder in a very short time by good officers. Morgan’s
-Virginia Riflemen, Andrew Jackson’s Tennesseans, Forrest’s Southwestern
-Cavalry were all men of this kind; but even such men are of real use
-only after considerable training or else if their leaders are born
-fighters and masters of men. Such leaders are rare. The ordinary
-dweller in civilization has to be taught to shoot, to walk (or ride if
-he is in the cavalry), to cook for himself, to make himself comfortable
-in the open, and to take care of his feet and his health generally.
-Artillerymen and engineers need long special training.
-
-It may well be that the Swiss on an average can be made into good
-troops quicker than our own men; but most assuredly there would be
-numbers of Americans who would not be behind the Swiss in such a
-matter. A body of volunteers of the kind I am describing would of
-course not be as good as a body of regulars of the same size, but they
-would be immeasurably better than the average soldiers produced by any
-system we now have or ever have had in connection with our militia. Our
-regular army would be strengthened by them at the very beginning and
-would be set free in its entirety for immediate aggressive action;
-and in addition a levy in mass of the young men of the right age would
-mean that two or three million troops were put into the field, who,
-although not as good as regulars, would at once be available in numbers
-sufficient to overwhelm any expeditionary force which it would be
-possible for any military power to send to our shores. The existence
-of such a force would render the immediate taking of cities like San
-Francisco, New York, or Boston an impossibility and would free us
-from all danger from sudden raids and make it impossible even for an
-army-corps to land with any prospect of success.
-
-Our people are so entirely unused to things military that it is
-probably difficult for the average man to get any clear idea of our
-shortcomings. Unlike what is true in the military nations of the Old
-World, here the ordinary citizen takes no interest in the working of
-our War Department in time of peace. No President gains the slightest
-credit for himself by paying attention to it. Then when a crisis comes
-and the War Department breaks down, instead of the people accepting
-what has happened with humility as due to their own fault during the
-previous two or three decades, there is a roar of wrath against the
-unfortunate man who happens to be in office at the time. There was such
-a roar of wrath against Secretary Alger in the Spanish War. Now, as a
-matter of fact, ninety per cent of our shortcomings when the war broke
-out with Spain could not have been remedied by any action on the part
-of the Secretary of War. They were due to what had been done ever since
-the close of the Civil War.
-
-We were utterly unprepared. There had been no real manœuvring of so
-much as a brigade and very rarely had any of our generals commanded
-even a good-sized regiment in the field. The enlisted men and the
-junior officers of the regular army were good. Most of the officers
-above the rank of captain were nearly worthless. There were striking
-exceptions of course, but, taking the average, I really believe that
-it would have been on the whole to the advantage of our army in 1898
-if all the regular officers above the rank of captain had been retired
-and if all the captains who were unfit to be placed in the higher
-positions had also been retired. The lieutenants were good. The lack
-of administrative skill was even more marked than the lack of military
-skill. No one who saw the congestion of trains, supplies, animals, and
-men at Tampa will ever forget the impression of helpless confusion
-that it gave him. The volunteer forces included some organizations and
-multitudes of individuals offering first-class material. But, as a
-whole, the volunteer army would have been utterly helpless against any
-efficient regular force at the outset of the 1898 war, probably almost
-as inefficient as were the two armies which fought one another at Bull
-Run in 1861. Even the efficiency of the regular army itself was such
-merely by comparison with the volunteers. I do not believe that any
-army in the world offered finer material than was offered by the junior
-officers and enlisted men of the regular army which disembarked on
-Cuban soil in June, 1898; and by the end of the next two weeks probably
-the average individual infantry or cavalry organization therein was
-at least as good as the average organization of the same size in an
-Old-World army. But taking the army as a whole and considering its
-management from the time it began to assemble at Tampa until the
-surrender of Santiago, I seriously doubt if it was as efficient as a
-really good European or Japanese army of half the size. Since then we
-have made considerable progress. Our little army of occupation that
-went to Cuba at the time of the revolution in Cuba ten years ago was
-thoroughly well handled and did at least as well as any foreign force
-of the same size could have done. But it did not include ten thousand
-men, that is, it did not include as many men as the smallest military
-power in Europe would assemble any day for manœuvres.
-
-This is no new thing in our history. If only we were willing to learn
-from our defeats and failures instead of paying heed purely to our
-successes, we would realize that what I have above described is one of
-the common phases of our history. In the War of 1812, at the outset of
-the struggle, American forces were repeatedly beaten, as at Niagara and
-Bladensburg, by an enemy one half or one quarter the strength of the
-American army engaged. Yet two years later these same American troops
-on the northern frontier, when trained and commanded by Brown, Scott,
-and Ripley, proved able to do what the finest troops of Napoleon were
-unable to do, that is, meet the British regulars on equal terms in the
-open; and the Tennessee backwoodsmen and Louisiana volunteers, when
-mastered and controlled by the iron will and warlike genius of Andrew
-Jackson, performed at New Orleans a really great feat. During the year
-1812 the American soldiers on shore suffered shameful and discreditable
-defeats, and yet their own brothers at sea won equally striking
-victories, and this because the men on shore were utterly unprepared
-and because the men at sea had been thoroughly trained and drilled long
-in advance.
-
-Exactly the same lessons are taught by the histories of other nations.
-When, during the Napoleonic wars, a small force of veteran French
-soldiers landed in Ireland they defeated without an effort five times
-their number of British and Irish troops at Castlebar. Yet the men
-whom they thus drove in wild flight were the own brothers of and often
-the very same men who a few years later, under Wellington, proved an
-overmatch for the flower of the French forces. The nation that waits
-until the crisis is upon it before taking measures for its own safety
-pays heavy toll in the blood of its best and its bravest and in bitter
-shame and humiliation. Small is the comfort it can then take from the
-memory of the times when the noisy and feeble folk in its own ranks
-cried “Peace, peace,” without taking one practical step to secure peace.
-
-We can never follow out a worthy national policy, we can never be of
-benefit to others or to ourselves, unless we keep steadily in view
-as our ideal that of the just man armed, the man who is fearless,
-self-reliant, ready, because he has prepared himself for possible
-contingencies; the man who is scornful alike of those who would advise
-him to do wrong and of those who would advise him tamely to suffer
-wrong. The great war now being waged in Europe and the fact that
-no neutral nation has ventured to make even the smallest effort to
-alleviate[1] or even to protest against the wrongs that have been
-done show with lamentable clearness that all the peace congresses
-of the past fifteen years have accomplished precisely and exactly
-nothing so far as any great crisis is concerned. Fundamentally this is
-because they have confined themselves to mere words, seemingly without
-realizing that mere words are utterly useless unless translated into
-deeds and that an ounce of promise which is accompanied by provision
-for a similar ounce of effective performance is worth at least a ton
-of promise as to which no effective method of performance is provided.
-Furthermore, a very serious blunder has been to treat peace as the end
-instead of righteousness as the end. The greatest soldier-patriots
-of history, Timoleon, John Hamden, Andreas Hofer, Koerner, the great
-patriot-statesman-soldiers like Washington, the great patriot-statesmen
-like Lincoln whose achievements for good depended upon the use of
-soldiers, have all achieved their immortal claim to the gratitude of
-mankind by what they did in just war. To condemn war in terms which
-include the wars these men waged or took part in precisely as they
-include the most wicked and unjust wars of history is to serve the
-devil and not God.
-
- [1] The much advertised sending of food and supplies to
- Belgium has been of most benefit to the German conquerors
- of Belgium. They have taken the money and food of the
- Belgians and permitted the Belgians to be supported by
- outsiders. Of course, it was far better to send them food,
- even under such conditions, than to let them starve; but
- the professional pacificists would do well to ponder the
- fact that if the neutral nations had been willing to
- prevent the invasion of Belgium, which could only be done
- by willingness and ability to use force, they would by
- this act of “war” have prevented more misery and suffering
- to innocent men, women, and children than the organized
- charity of all the “peaceful” nations of the world can now
- remove.
-
-Again, these peace people have persistently and resolutely blinked
-facts. One of the peace congresses sat in New York at the very time
-that the feeling in California about the Japanese question gravely
-threatened the good relations between ourselves and the great empire
-of Japan. The only thing which at the moment could practically be
-done for the cause of peace was to secure some proper solution of the
-question at issue between ourselves and Japan. But this represented
-real effort, real thought. The peace congress paid not the slightest
-serious attention to the matter and instead devoted itself to listening
-to speeches which favored the abolition of the United States navy and
-even in one case the prohibiting the use of tin soldiers in nurseries
-because of the militaristic effect on the minds of the little boys and
-girls who played with them!
-
-Ex-President Taft has recently said that it is hysterical to endeavor
-to prepare against war; and he at the same time explained that the
-only real possibility of war was to be found “in the wanton, reckless,
-wicked willingness on the part of a narrow section of the country to
-gratify racial prejudice and class hatred by flagrant breach of treaty
-right in the form of state law.” This characterization is, of course,
-aimed at the State of California for its action toward the Japanese.
-If--which may Heaven forfend--any trouble comes because of the action
-of California toward the Japanese, a prime factor in producing it will
-be the treaty negotiated four years ago with Japan; and no clearer
-illustration can be given of the mischief that comes to our people from
-the habit our public men have contracted of getting cheap applause for
-themselves by making treaties which they know to be shams, which they
-know cannot be observed. The result of such action is that there is
-one set of real facts, those that actually exist and must be reckoned
-with, and another set of make-believe facts which do not exist except
-on pieces of paper or in after-dinner speeches, which are known to be
-false but which serve to deceive well-meaning pacificists. Four years
-ago there was in existence a long-standing treaty with Japan under
-which we reserved the right to keep out Japanese laborers. Every man
-of any knowledge whatever of conditions on the Pacific Slope, and,
-indeed, generally throughout this country, knew, and knows now, that
-any immigration in mass to this country of the Japanese, whether the
-immigrants be industrial laborers or men whose labor takes the form of
-agricultural work or even the form of small shopkeeping, was and is
-absolutely certain to produce trouble of the most dangerous kind. The
-then administration entered on a course of conduct as regards Manchuria
-which not only deeply offended the Japanese but actually achieved the
-result of uniting the Russians and Japanese against us. To make amends
-for this serious blunder the administration committed the far worse
-blunder of endeavoring to placate Japanese opinion by the negotiation
-of a new treaty in which our right to exclude Japanese laborers,
-that is, to prevent Japanese immigration in mass, was abandoned. The
-extraordinary and lamentable fact in the matter was that the California
-senators acquiesced in the treaty. Apparently they took the view, which
-so many of our public men do take and which they are encouraged to take
-by the unwisdom of those who demand impossible treaties, that they were
-perfectly willing to please some people by passing the treaty because,
-if necessary, the opponents of the treaty could at any time be placated
-by its violation. One item in securing their support was the statement
-by the then administration that the Japanese authorities had said
-that they would promise under a “gentlemen’s agreement” to keep the
-immigrants out if only they were by treaty given the right to let them
-in. Under the preceding treaty, during my administration, the Japanese
-government had made and had in good faith kept such an agreement, the
-agreement being that as long as the Japanese government itself kept out
-Japanese immigrants and thereby relieved us of the necessity of passing
-any law to exclude them, no such law would be passed. Apparently the
-next administration did not perceive the fathomless difference between
-retaining the power to enact a law which was not enacted as long as no
-necessity for enacting it arose, and abandoning the power, surrendering
-the right, and trusting that the necessity to exercise it would not
-arise.
-
-I immensely admire and respect the Japanese people. I prize their
-good-will. I am proud of my personal relations with some of their
-leading men. Fifty years ago there was no possible community between
-the Japanese and ourselves. The events of the last fifty years have
-been so extraordinary that now Japanese statesmen, generals, artists,
-writers, scientific men, business men, can meet our corresponding men
-on terms of entire equality. I am fortunate enough to have a number
-of Japanese friends. I value their friendship. They and I meet on a
-footing of absolute equality, socially, politically, and in every
-other way. I respect and regard them precisely as in the case of my
-German and Russian, French and English friends. But there is no use
-blinking the truth because it is unpleasant. As yet the differences
-between the Japanese who work with their hands and the Americans who
-work with their hands are such that it is absolutely impossible for
-them, when brought into contact with one another in great numbers, to
-get on. Japan would not permit any immigration in mass of our people
-into her territory, and it is wholly inadvisable that there should be
-such immigration of her people into our territory. This is not because
-either side is inferior to the other but because they are different.
-As a matter of fact, these differences are sometimes in favor of the
-Japanese and sometimes in favor of the Americans. But they are so
-marked that at this time, whatever may be the case in the future,
-friction and trouble are certain to come if there is any immigration
-in mass of Japanese into this country, exactly as friction and trouble
-have actually come in British Columbia from this cause, and have been
-prevented from coming in Australia only by the most rigid exclusion
-laws. Under these conditions the way to avoid trouble is not by making
-believe that things which are not so are so but by courteously and
-firmly facing the situation. The two nations should be given absolutely
-reciprocal treatment. Students, statesmen, publicists, scientific men,
-all travellers, whether for business or pleasure, and all men engaged
-in international business, whether Japanese or American, should have
-absolute right of entry into one another’s countries and should be
-treated with the highest consideration while therein, but no settlement
-in mass should be permitted of the people of either country in the
-other country. All travelling and sojourning by the people of either
-country in the other country should be encouraged, but there should be
-no immigration of workers to, no settlement in, either country by the
-people of the other. I advocate this solution, which for years I have
-advocated, because I am not merely a friend but an intense admirer of
-Japan, because I am most anxious that America should learn from Japan
-the great amount that Japan can teach us and because I wish to work
-for the best possible feeling between the two countries. Each country
-has interests in the Pacific which can best be served by their cordial
-co-operation on a footing of frank and friendly equality; and in
-eastern Asiatic waters the interest and therefore the proper dominance
-of Japan are and will be greater than those of any other nation.
-If such a plan as that above advocated were once adopted by both
-our nations all sources of friction between the two countries would
-vanish at once. Ultimately I have no question that all restrictions of
-movement from one country to the other could be dispensed with. But
-to attempt to dispense with them in our day and our generation will
-fail; and even worse failure will attend the attempt to make believe to
-dispense with them while not doing so.
-
-It is eminently necessary that the United States should in good faith
-observe its treaties, and it is therefore eminently necessary not to
-pass treaties which it is absolutely certain will not be obeyed, and
-which themselves provoke disobedience to them. The height of folly, of
-course, is to pass treaties which will not be obeyed and the disregard
-of which may cause the gravest possible trouble, even war, and at
-the same time to refuse to prepare for war and to pass other foolish
-treaties calculated to lure our people into the belief that there will
-never be war.
-
-I advocate that our preparedness take such shape as to fit us to
-resist aggression, not to encourage us in aggression. I advocate
-preparedness that will enable us to defend our own shores and to
-defend the Panama Canal and Hawaii and Alaska, and prevent the seizure
-of territory at the expense of any commonwealth of the western
-hemisphere by any military power of the Old World. I advocate this
-being done in the most democratic manner possible. We Americans do
-not realize how fundamentally democratic our army really is. When
-I served in Cuba it was under General Sam Young and alongside of
-General Adna Chaffee. Both had entered the American army as enlisted
-men in the Civil War. Later, as President, I made both of them in
-succession lieutenant-generals and commanders of the army. On the
-occasion when General Chaffee was to appear at the White House for
-the first time as lieutenant-general, General Young sent him his own
-starred shoulder-straps with a little note saying that they were from
-“Private Young, ’61, to Private Chaffee, ’61.” Both of the fine old
-fellows represented the best type of citizen-soldier. Each was simply
-and sincerely devoted to peace and justice. Each was incapable of
-advocating our doing wrong to others. Neither could have understood
-willingness on the part of any American to see the United States
-submit tamely to insult or injury. Both typified the attitude that we
-Americans should take in our dealings with foreign countries.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-OUR PEACEMAKER, THE NAVY
-
-
-The course of the present administration in foreign affairs has now
-and then combined officiously offensive action toward foreign powers
-with tame submission to wrong-doing by foreign powers. As a nation we
-have refused to do our duty to others and yet we have at times tamely
-submitted to wrong at the hands of others. This has been notably
-true of our conduct in Mexico; and we have come perilously near such
-conduct in the case of Japan. It is also true of our activities as
-regards the European war. We failed to act in accordance with our
-obligations as a signatory power to the Hague treaties. In addition to
-the capital crime committed against Belgium we have seen outrage after
-outrage perpetrated in violation of the Hague conventions, and yet the
-administration has never ventured so much as a protest. It has even at
-times, and with wavering and vacillation, adopted policies unjust to
-one or the other of the two sets of combatants. But it has immediately
-abandoned these policies when the combatants in violent and improper
-fashion overrode them; and it has submitted with such tame servility
-to whatever the warring nations have dictated that in effect we see,
-as Theodore Woolsey, the expert on international law, has pointed out,
-the American government protecting belligerent interests abroad at the
-expense of neutral interests both at home and abroad. Not since the
-Napoleonic wars have belligerents acted with such high-handed disregard
-of the rights of neutrals. Germany was the first and greatest offender;
-and when we failed to protest in her case the administration perhaps
-felt ashamed to protest, felt that it was estopped from protesting, in
-other cases. England in its turn has violated our neutrality rights,
-and while exercising both force and ingenuity in making this violation
-effective has protested as if she herself were the injured party. As a
-matter of fact, England and France should note that in view of their
-command of the seas our war trade is of such value to them that certain
-congressmen, whose interest in Germany surpasses their interest in
-the United States, have sought by law totally to prohibit it. This
-proposed--and thoroughly improper--action is a sufficient answer to
-the charges of the Allies, and should remind them how ill they requite
-the service rendered by our merchants when they seek to block all our
-intercourse with other nations. They, however, are only to be blamed
-for short-sightedness; there is no reason why they should pay heed to
-American interests. But the administration should represent American
-interests; it should see that while we perform our duties as neutrals
-we should be protected in our rights as neutrals; and one of these
-rights is the trade in contraband. To prohibit this is to take part in
-the war for the benefit of one belligerent at the expense of another
-and to our own cost.
-
-Of course it would be an ignoble action on our part after having
-conspicuously failed to protest against the violation of Belgian
-neutrality to show ourselves overeager to protest against comparatively
-insignificant violations of our own neutral rights. But we should never
-have put ourselves in such a position as to make insistence on our own
-rights seem disregard for the rights of others. The proper course for
-us to pursue was, on the one hand, scrupulously to see that we did
-not so act as to injure any contending nation, unless required to do
-so in the name of morality and of our solemn treaty obligations, and
-also fearlessly to act on behalf of other nations which were wronged,
-as required by these treaty obligations; and, on the other hand, with
-courteous firmness to warn any nation which, for instance, seized or
-searched our ships against the accepted rules of international conduct
-that this we could not permit and that such a course should not be
-persevered in by any nation which desired our good-will. I believe I
-speak for at least a considerable portion of our people when I say that
-we wish to make it evident that we feel sincere good-will toward all
-nations; that any action we take against any nation is taken with the
-greatest reluctance and only because the wrong-doing of that nation
-imposes a distinct, although painful, duty upon us; and yet that we do
-not intend ourselves to submit to wrong-doing from any nation.
-
-Until an efficient world league for peace is in more than mere process
-of formation the United States must depend upon itself for protection
-where its vital interests are concerned. All the youth of the nation
-should be trained in warlike exercises and in the use of arms--as
-well as in the indispensable virtues of courage, self-restraint, and
-endurance--so as to be fit for national defense. But the right arm of
-the nation must be its navy. Our navy is our most efficient peacemaker.
-In order to use the navy effectively we should clearly define to
-ourselves the policy we intend to follow and the limits over which we
-expect our power to extend. Our own coasts, Alaska, Hawaii, and the
-Panama Canal and its approaches should represent the sphere in which
-we should expect to be able, single-handed, to meet and master any
-opponent from overseas.
-
-I exclude the Philippines. This is because I feel that the present
-administration has definitely committed us to a course of action which
-will make the early and complete severance of the Philippines from
-us not merely desirable but necessary. I have never felt that the
-Philippines were of any special use to us. But I have felt that we had
-a great task to perform there and that a great nation is benefited by
-doing a great task. It was our bounden duty to work primarily for the
-interests of the Filipinos; but it was also our bounden duty, inasmuch
-as the entire responsibility lay upon us, to consult our own judgment
-and not theirs in finally deciding what was to be done. It was our
-duty to govern the islands or to get out of the islands. It was most
-certainly not our duty to take the responsibility of staying in the
-islands without governing them. Still less was it--or is it--our duty
-to enter into joint arrangements with other powers about the islands;
-arrangements of confused responsibility and divided power of the
-kind sure to cause mischief. I had hoped that we would continue to
-govern the islands until we were certain that they were able to govern
-themselves in such fashion as to do justice to other nations and to
-repel injustice committed on them by other nations. To substitute for
-such government by ourselves either a government by the Filipinos with
-us guaranteeing them against outsiders, or a joint guarantee between us
-and outsiders, would be folly. It is eminently desirable to guarantee
-the neutrality of small civilized nations which have a high social
-and cultural status and which are so advanced that they do not fall
-into disorder or commit wrong-doing on others. But it is eminently
-undesirable to guarantee the neutrality or sovereignty of an inherently
-weak nation which is impotent to preserve order at home, to repel
-assaults from abroad, or to refrain from doing wrong to outsiders. It
-is even more undesirable to give such a guarantee with no intention of
-making it really effective. That this is precisely what the present
-administration would be delighted to do has been shown by its refusal
-to live up to its Hague promises at the very time that it was making
-similar new international promises by the batch. To enter into a joint
-guarantee of neutrality which in emergencies can only be rendered
-effective by force of arms is to incur a serious responsibility which
-ought to be undertaken in a serious spirit. To enter into it with no
-intention of using force, or of preparing force, in order at need to
-make it effective, represents the kind of silliness which is worse than
-wickedness.
-
-Above all, we should keep our promises. The present administration was
-elected on the outright pledge of giving the Filipinos independence.
-Apparently its course in the Philippines has proceeded upon the theory
-that the Filipinos are now fit to govern themselves. Whatever may be
-our personal and individual beliefs in this matter, we ought not as a
-nation to break faith or even to seem to break faith. I hope therefore
-that the Filipinos will be given their independence at an early date
-and without any guarantee from us which might in any way hamper our
-future action or commit us to staying on the Asiatic coast. I do not
-believe we should keep any foothold whatever in the Philippines. Any
-kind of position by us in the Philippines merely results in making
-them our heel of Achilles if we are attacked by a foreign power. They
-can be of no compensating benefit to us. If we were to retain complete
-control over them and to continue the course of action which in the
-past sixteen years has resulted in such immeasurable benefit for them,
-then I should feel that it was our duty to stay and work for them
-in spite of the expense incurred by us and the risk we thereby ran.
-But inasmuch as we have now promised to leave them and as we are now
-abandoning our power to work efficiently for and in them, I do not
-feel that we are warranted in staying in the islands in an equivocal
-position, thereby incurring great risk to ourselves without conferring
-any real compensating advantage, of a kind which we are bound to
-take into account, on the Filipinos themselves. If the Filipinos are
-entitled to independence then we are entitled to be freed from all the
-responsibility and risk which our presence in the islands entails upon
-us.
-
-The great nations of southernmost South America, Brazil, the Argentine,
-and Chile are now so far advanced in stability and power that there is
-no longer any need of applying the Monroe Doctrine as far as they are
-concerned; and this also relieves us as regards Uruguay and Paraguay
-the former of which is well advanced and neither of which has any
-interests with which we need particularly concern ourselves. As regards
-all these powers, therefore, we now have no duty save that doubtless if
-they got into difficulties and desired our aid we would gladly extend
-it, just as, for instance, we would to Australia and Canada. But we can
-now proceed on the assumption that they are able to help themselves and
-that any help we should be required to give would be given by us as an
-auxiliary rather than as a principal.
-
-Our naval problem, therefore, is primarily to provide for the
-protection of our own coasts and for the protection and policing of
-Hawaii, Alaska, and the Panama Canal and its approaches. This offers
-a definite problem which should be solved by our naval men. It is for
-them, having in view the lessons taught by this war, to say what is
-the exact type of fleet we require, the number and kind of submarines,
-of destroyers, of mines, and of air-ships to be used against hostile
-fleets, in addition to the cruisers and great fighting craft which must
-remain the backbone of the navy. Civilians may be competent to pass
-on the merits of the plans suggested by the naval men, but it is the
-naval men themselves who must make and submit the plans in detail. Lay
-opinion, however, should keep certain elementary facts steadily in mind.
-
-The navy must primarily be used for offensive purposes. Forts, not the
-navy, are to be used for defense. The only permanently efficient type
-of defensive is the offensive. A portion, and a very important portion,
-of our naval strength must be used with our own coast ordinarily as a
-base, its striking radius being only a few score miles, or a couple
-of hundred at the outside. The events of this war have shown that
-submarines can play a tremendous part. We should develop our force of
-submarines and train the officers and crews who have charge of them
-to the highest pitch of efficiency--for they will be useless in time
-of war unless those aboard them have been trained in time of peace.
-These submarines, when used in connection with destroyers and with
-air-ships, can undoubtedly serve to minimize the danger of successful
-attack on our own shores. But the prime lesson of the war, as regards
-the navy, is that the nation with a powerful seagoing navy, although it
-may suffer much annoyance and loss, yet is able on the whole to take
-the offensive and do great damage to a nation with a less powerful
-navy. Great Britain’s naval superiority over Germany has enabled her
-completely to paralyze all Germany’s sea commerce and to prevent goods
-from entering her ports. What is far more important, it has enabled the
-British to land two or three hundred thousand men to aid the French,
-and has enabled Canada and Australia to send a hundred thousand men
-from the opposite ends of the earth to Great Britain. If Germany had
-had the more powerful navy England would now have suffered the fate of
-Belgium.
-
-The capital work done by the German cruisers in the Atlantic, the
-Pacific, and the Indian Oceans shows how much can be accomplished in
-the way of hurting and damaging an enemy by even the weaker power if
-it possesses fine ships, well handled, able to operate thousands of
-miles from their own base. We must not fail to recognize this. Neither
-must we fail heartily and fully to recognize the capital importance of
-submarines as well as air-ships, torpedo-boat destroyers, and mines,
-as proved by the events of the last three months. But nothing that
-has yet occurred warrants us in feeling that we can afford to ease up
-in our programme of building battle-ships and cruisers, especially the
-former. The German submarines have done wonderfully in this war; their
-cruisers have done gallantly. But so far as Great Britain is concerned
-the vital and essential feature has been the fact that her great battle
-fleet has kept the German fleet immured in its own home ports, has
-protected Britain from invasion, and has enabled her land strength to
-be used to its utmost capacity beside the armies of France and Belgium.
-If the men who for years have clamored against Britain’s being prepared
-had had their way, if Britain during the last quarter of a century had
-failed to continue the upbuilding of her navy, if the English statesmen
-corresponding to President Wilson and Mr. Bryan had seen their ideas
-triumph, England would now be off the map as a great power and the
-British Empire would have dissolved, while London, Liverpool, and
-Birmingham would be in the condition of Antwerp and Brussels.
-
-The efficiency of the German personnel at sea has been no less
-remarkable than the efficiency of the German personnel on land. This
-is due partly to the spirit of the nation and partly to what is itself
-a consequence of that spirit, the careful training of the navy during
-peace under the conditions of actual service. When, early in 1909, our
-battle fleet returned from its sixteen months’ voyage around the world
-there was no navy in the world which, size for size, ship for ship,
-and squadron for squadron, stood at a higher pitch of efficiency. We
-blind ourselves to the truth if we believe that the same is true now.
-During the last twenty months, ever since Secretary Meyer left the Navy
-Department, there has been in our navy a great falling off relatively
-to other nations. It was quite impossible to avoid this while our
-national affairs were handled as they have recently been handled.
-The President who intrusts the Departments of State and the Navy to
-gentlemen like Messrs. Bryan and Daniels deliberately invites disaster,
-in the event of serious complications with a formidable foreign
-opponent. On the whole, there is no class of our citizens, big or
-small, who so emphatically deserve well of the country as the officers
-and the enlisted men of the army and navy. No navy in the world has
-such fine stuff out of which to make man-of-war’s men. But they must
-be heartily backed up, heartily supported, and sedulously trained.
-They must be treated well, and, above all, they must be treated so as
-to encourage the best among them by sharply discriminating against the
-worst. The utmost possible efficiency should be demanded of them. They
-are emphatically and in every sense of the word men; and real men
-resent with impatient contempt a policy under which less than their
-best is demanded. The finest material is utterly worthless without
-the best personnel. In such a highly specialized service as the navy
-constant training of a purely military type is an absolute necessity.
-At present our navy is lamentably short in many different material
-directions. There is actually but one torpedo for each torpedo tube. It
-seems incredible that such can be the case; yet it is the case. We are
-many thousands of men short in our enlistments. We are lamentably short
-in certain types of vessel. There is grave doubt as to the efficiency
-of many of our submarines and destroyers. But the shortcomings in our
-training are even more lamentable. To keep the navy cruising near
-Vera Cruz and in Mexican waters, without manœuvring, invites rapid
-deterioration. For nearly two years there has been no fleet manœuvring;
-and this fact by itself probably means a twenty-five per cent loss of
-efficiency. During the same periods most of the ships have not even
-had division gun practice. Not only should our navy be as large as our
-position and interest demand but it should be kept continually at the
-highest point of efficiency and should never be used save for its own
-appropriate military purposes. Of this elementary fact the present
-administration seems to be completely ignorant.
-
-President Wilson and Secretary Daniels assert that our navy is in
-efficient shape. Admiral Fiske’s testimony is conclusive to the
-contrary, although it was very cautiously given, as is but natural
-when a naval officer, if he tells the whole truth, must state what
-is unpleasant for his superiors to hear. Other naval officers have
-pointed out our deficiencies, and the newspapers state that some
-of them have been reprimanded for so doing. But there is no need
-for their testimony. There is one admitted fact which is absolutely
-conclusive in the matter. There has been no fleet manœuvring during
-the past twenty-two months. In spite of fleet manœuvring the navy may
-be unprepared. But it is an absolute certainty that without fleet
-manœuvring it cannot possibly be prepared. In the unimportant domain
-of sport there is not a man who goes to see the annual football game
-between Harvard and Yale who would not promptly cancel his ticket
-if either university should propose to put into the field a team
-which, no matter how good the players were individually, had not been
-practised as a team during the preceding sixty days. If in such event
-the president of either university or the coach of the team should
-announce that in spite of never having had any team practice the
-team was nevertheless in first-class condition, there is literally
-no intelligent follower of the game who would regard the utterance as
-serious. Why should President Wilson and Secretary Daniels expect the
-American public to show less intelligence as regards the vital matter
-of our navy than they do as regards a mere sport, a mere play? For
-twenty-two months there has been no fleet manœuvring. Since in the
-daily press, early in November, I, with emphasis, called attention to
-this fact Mr. Daniels has announced that shortly manœuvring will take
-place; and of course the failure to manœuvre for nearly two years has
-been due less to Mr. Daniels than to President Wilson’s futile and
-mischievous Mexican policy and his entire ignorance of the needs of
-the navy. I am glad that the administration has tardily waked up to
-the necessity of taking some steps to make the navy efficient, and if
-the President and the Secretary of the Navy bring forth fruits meet
-for repentance, I will most heartily acknowledge the fact--just as
-it has given me the utmost pleasure to praise and support President
-Wilson’s Secretary of War, Mr. Garrison. But misstatements as to actual
-conditions make but a poor preparation for the work of remedying these
-conditions, and President Wilson and Secretary Daniels try to conceal
-from the people our ominous naval shortcomings. The shortcomings
-are far-reaching, alike in material, organization, and practical
-training. The navy is absolutely unprepared; its efficiency has been
-terribly reduced under and because of the action of President Wilson
-and Secretary Daniels. Let them realize this fact and do all they can
-to remedy the wrong they have committed. Let Congress realize its own
-shortcomings. Far-reaching and thoroughgoing treatment, continued for
-a period of at least two and in all probability three years, is needed
-if the navy is to be placed on an equality, unit for unit, no less than
-in the mass, with the navies of England, Germany, and Japan. In the
-present war the deeds of the _Emden_, of the German submarines, of Von
-Spee’s squadron, have shown not merely efficiency but heroism; and the
-navies of Great Britain and Japan have been handled in masterly manner.
-Have the countrymen of Farragut, of Cushing, Buchanan, Winslow, and
-Semmes, of Decatur, Hull, Perry, and MacDonough, lost their address and
-courage, and are they willing to sink below the standard set by their
-forefathers?
-
-It has been said that the United States never learns by experience
-but only by disaster. Such method of education may at times prove
-costly. The slothful or short-sighted citizens who are now misled by
-the cries of the ultrapacificists would do well to remember events
-connected with the outbreak of the war with Spain. I was then
-Assistant Secretary of the Navy. At one bound our people passed from
-a condition of smug confidence that war never could occur (a smug
-confidence just as great as any we feel at present) to a condition of
-utterly unreasoning panic over what might be done to us by a very weak
-antagonist. One governor of a seaboard State announced that none of the
-National Guard regiments would be allowed to respond to the call of the
-President because they would be needed to prevent a Spanish invasion
-of that State--the Spaniards being about as likely to make such an
-invasion as we were to invade Timbuctoo or Turkestan. One congressman
-besought me to send a battle-ship to protect Jekyll Island, off the
-coast of Georgia. Another congressman asked me to send a battle-ship
-to protect a summer colony which centred around a large Atlantic-coast
-hotel in Connecticut. In my own neighborhood on Long Island clauses
-were gravely inserted into the leases of property to the effect that
-if the Spaniards destroyed the property the leases should terminate.
-Chambers of commerce, boards of trade, municipal authorities, leading
-business men, from one end of the country to the other, hysterically
-demanded, each of them, that a ship should be stationed to defend
-some particular locality; the theory being that our navy should be
-strung along both seacoasts, each ship by itself, in a purely defensive
-attitude--thereby making certain that even the Spanish navy could pick
-them all up in detail. One railway president came to protest to me
-against the choice of Tampa as a point of embarkation for our troops,
-on the ground that his railway was entitled to its share of the profit
-of transporting troops and munitions of war and that his railway
-went to New Orleans. The very senators and congressmen who had done
-everything in their power to prevent the building up and the efficient
-training of the navy screamed and shrieked loudest to have the navy
-diverted from its proper purpose and used to protect unimportant
-seaports. Surely our congressmen and, above all, our people need to
-learn that in time of crisis peace treaties are worthless, and the
-ultrapacificists of both sexes merely a burden on and a detriment to
-the country as a whole; that the only permanently useful defensive is
-the offensive, and that the navy is properly the offensive weapon of
-the nation.
-
-The navy of the United States is the right arm of the United States and
-is emphatically the peacemaker. Woe to our country if we permit that
-right arm to become palsied or even to become flabby and inefficient!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-PREPAREDNESS AGAINST WAR
-
-
-Military preparedness meets two needs. In the first place, it is a
-partial insurance against war. In the next place, it is a partial
-guarantee that if war comes the country will certainly escape dishonor
-and will probably escape material loss.
-
-The question of preparedness cannot be considered at all until we
-get certain things clearly in our minds. Right thinking, wholesome
-thinking, is essential as a preliminary to sound national action. Until
-our people understand the folly of certain of the arguments advanced
-against the action this nation needs, it is, of course, impossible to
-expect them to take such action.
-
-The first thing to understand is the fact that preparedness for war
-does not always insure peace but that it very greatly increases the
-chances of securing peace. Foolish people point out nations which, in
-spite of preparedness for war, have seen war come upon them, and then
-exclaim that preparedness against war is of no use. Such an argument
-is precisely like saying that the existence of destructive fires in
-great cities shows that there is no use in having a fire department.
-A fire department, which means preparedness against fire, does not
-prevent occasional destructive fires, but it does greatly diminish and
-may completely minimize the chances for wholesale destruction by fire.
-Nations that are prepared for war occasionally suffer from it; but if
-they are unprepared for it they suffer far more often and far more
-radically.
-
-Fifty years ago China, Korea, and Japan were in substantially the
-same stage of culture and civilization. Japan, whose statesmen had
-vision and whose people had the fighting edge, began a course of
-military preparedness, and the other two nations (one of them in
-natural resources immeasurably superior to Japan) remained unprepared.
-In consequence, Japan has immensely increased her power and standing
-and is wholly free from all danger of military invasion. Korea on the
-contrary, having first been dominated by Russia has now been conquered
-by Japan. China has been partially dismembered; one half of her
-territories are now subject to the dominion of foreign nations, which
-have time and again waged war between themselves on these territories,
-and her remaining territory is kept by her purely because these foreign
-nations are jealous of one another.
-
-In 1870 France was overthrown and suffered by far the most damaging
-and disastrous defeat she had suffered since the days of Joan of
-Arc--because she was not prepared. In the present war she has suffered
-terribly, but she is beyond all comparison better off than she was in
-1870, because she has been prepared. Poor Belgium, in spite of being
-prepared, was almost destroyed, because great neutral nations--the
-United States being the chief offender--have not yet reached the
-standard of international morality and of willingness to fight for
-righteousness which must be attained before they can guarantee small,
-well-behaved, civilized nations against cruel disaster. England,
-because she was prepared as far as her navy is concerned, has been able
-to avoid Belgium’s fate; and, on the other hand, if she had been as
-prepared with her army as France, she would probably have been able to
-avert the war and, if this could not have been done, would at any rate
-have been able to save both France and Belgium from invasion.
-
-In recent years Rumania, Bulgaria, and Servia have at times suffered
-terribly, and in some cases have suffered disaster, in spite of being
-prepared for war; but Bosnia and Herzegovina are under alien rule at
-this moment because they could no more protect themselves against
-Austria than they could against Turkey. While Greece was unprepared she
-was able to accomplish nothing, and she encountered disaster. As soon
-as she was prepared, she benefited immensely.
-
-Switzerland, at the time of the Napoleonic wars, was wholly unprepared
-for war. In spite of her mountains, her neighbors overran her at will.
-Great battles were fought on her soil, including one great battle
-between the French and the Russians; but the Swiss took no part in
-these battles. Their territory was practically annexed to the French
-Republic, and they were domineered over first by the Emperor Napoleon
-and then by his enemies. It was a bitter lesson, but the Swiss learned
-it. Since then they have gradually prepared for war as no other small
-state of Europe has done, and it is in consequence of this preparedness
-that none of the combatants has violated Swiss territory in the present
-struggle.
-
-The briefest examination of the facts shows that unpreparedness for war
-tends to lead to immeasurable disaster, and that preparedness, while
-it does not certainly avert war any more than the fire department of a
-city certainly averts fire, yet tends very strongly to guarantee the
-nation against war and to secure success in war if it should unhappily
-arise.
-
-Another argument advanced against preparedness for war is that such
-preparedness incites war. This, again, is not in accordance with
-the facts. Unquestionably certain nations have at times prepared
-for war with a view to foreign conquest. But the rule has been that
-unpreparedness for war does not have any real effect in securing peace,
-although it is always apt to make war disastrous, and that preparedness
-for war generally goes hand in hand with an increased caution in going
-to war.
-
-Striking examples of these truths are furnished by the history of the
-Spanish-American states. For nearly three quarters of a century after
-these states won their independence their history was little else than
-a succession of bloody revolutions and of wars among themselves as well
-as with outsiders, while during the same period there was little or
-nothing done in the way of effective military preparedness by one of
-them. During the last twenty or thirty years, however, certain of them,
-notably Argentina and Chile, have prospered and become stable. Their
-stability has been partly caused by, and partly accompanied by, a great
-increase in military preparedness. During this period Argentina and
-Chile have known peace as they never knew it before, and as the other
-Spanish-American countries have not known it either before or since,
-and at the same time their military efficiency has enormously increased.
-
-Proportionately, Argentina and Chile are in military strength beyond
-all comparison more efficient than the United States; and if our navy
-is permitted to deteriorate as it has been deteriorating for nearly
-two years, the same statement can soon be made, although with more
-qualification, of their naval strength. Preparedness for war has
-made them far less liable to have war. It has made them less and not
-more aggressive. It has also made them for the first time efficient
-potential factors in maintaining the Monroe Doctrine as coguarantors,
-on a footing of complete equality with the United States. The Monroe
-Doctrine, conceived not merely as a measure of foreign policy vital to
-the welfare of the United States, but even more as the proper joint
-foreign policy of all American nations, is by far the most efficient
-guarantee against war that can be offered the western hemisphere. By
-whatever name it is called, it is absolutely indispensable in order to
-keep this hemisphere mistress of its own destinies, able to prevent any
-part of it from falling under the dominion of any Old World power, and
-able absolutely to control in its own interest all colonization on and
-immigration to our shores from either Europe or Asia.
-
-The bloodiest and most destructive war in Spanish-American history,
-that waged by Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay against Paraguay, was
-waged when all the nations were entirely unprepared for war, especially
-the three victorious nations. During the last two or three decades
-Mexico, the Central American states, Colombia, and Venezuela have been
-entirely unprepared for war, as compared with Chile and Argentina.
-Yet, whereas Chile and Argentina have been at peace, the other states
-mentioned have been engaged in war after war of the most bloody
-and destructive character. Entire lack of preparedness for war has
-gone hand in hand with war of the worst type and with all the worst
-sufferings that war can bring.
-
-The lessons taught by Spanish-America are paralleled elsewhere. When
-Greece was entirely unprepared for war she nevertheless went to war
-with Turkey, exactly as she did when she was prepared; the only
-difference was that in the one case she suffered disaster and in the
-other she did not. The war between Italy and Turkey was due wholly
-to the fact that Turkey was not prepared--that she had no navy. The
-fact that in 1848 Prussia was entirely unprepared, and moreover
-had just been engaged in a revolution heartily approved by all the
-ultrapacificists and professional humanitarians, did not prevent her
-from entering on a war with Denmark. It merely prevented the war from
-being successful.
-
-Utter and complete lack of preparation on our part did not prevent our
-entering into war with Great Britain in 1812 and with Mexico in 1848.
-It merely exposed us to humiliation and disaster in the former war; in
-the latter, Mexico was even worse off as regards preparation than we
-were. As for civil war, of course military unpreparedness has not only
-never prevented it but, on the contrary, seems usually to have been one
-of the inciting causes.
-
-The fact that unpreparedness does not mean peace ought to be patent
-to every American who will think of what has occurred in this country
-during the last seventeen years. In 1898 we were entirely unprepared
-for war. No big nation, save and except our opponent, Spain, was more
-utterly unprepared than we were at that time, nor more utterly unfit
-for military operations. This did not, however, mean that peace was
-secured for a single additional hour. Our army and navy had been
-neglected for thirty-three years. This was due largely to the attitude
-of the spiritual forebears of those eminent clergymen, earnest social
-workers, and professionally humanitarian and peace-loving editors,
-publicists, writers for syndicates, speakers for peace congresses,
-pacificist college presidents, and the like who have recently come
-forward to protest against any inquiry into the military condition of
-this nation, on the ground that to supply our ships and forts with
-sufficient ammunition and to fill up the depleted ranks of the army and
-navy, and in other ways to prepare against war, will tend to interfere
-with peace. In 1898 the gentlemen of this sort had had their way for
-thirty-three years. Our army and navy had been grossly neglected. But
-the unpreparedness due to this neglect had not the slightest effect of
-any kind in preventing the war. The only effect it had was to cause
-the unnecessary and useless loss of thousands of lives in the war.
-Hundreds of young men perished in the Philippine trenches because,
-while the soldiers of Aguinaldo had modern rifles with smokeless
-powder, our troops had only the old black-powder Springfield. Hundreds
-more, nay thousands, died or had their health impaired for life in
-fever camps here in our own country and in the Philippines and Cuba,
-and suffered on transports, because we were entirely unprepared for
-war, and therefore no one knew how to take care of our men. The lives
-of these brave young volunteers were the price that this country paid
-for the past action of men like the clergymen, college presidents,
-editors, and humanitarians in question--none of whom, by the way,
-risked their own lives. They were also the price that this country paid
-for having had in previous cabinets just such incompetents as in time
-of peace Presidents so often, for political reasons, put into American
-cabinets--just such incompetents as President Wilson has put into the
-Departments of State and of the Navy.
-
-Now and then the ultrapacificists point out the fact that war is bad
-because the best men go to the front and the worst stay at home. There
-is a certain truth in this. I do not believe that we ought to permit
-pacificists to stay at home and escape all risk, while their braver and
-more patriotic fellow countrymen fight for the national well-being.
-It is for this reason that I wish that we would provide for universal
-military training for our young men, and in the event of serious war
-make all men do their part instead of letting the whole burden fall
-upon the gallant souls who volunteer. But as there is small likelihood
-of any such course being followed in the immediate future, I at least
-hope that we will so prepare ourselves in time of peace as to make our
-navy and army thoroughly efficient; and also to enable us in time of
-war to handle our volunteers in such shape that the loss among them
-shall be due to the enemy’s bullets instead of, as is now the case,
-predominantly to preventable sickness which we do not prevent. I call
-the attention of the ultrapacificists to the fact that in the last
-half century all the losses among our men caused by “militarism,” as
-they call it, that is, by the arms of an enemy in consequence of our
-going to war, have been far less than the loss caused among these same
-soldiers by applied pacificism, that is, by our government having
-yielded to the wishes of the pacificists and declined in advance to
-make any preparations for war. The professional peace people have
-benefited the foes and ill-wishers of their country; but it is probably
-the literal fact to say that in the actual deed, by the obstacles they
-have thrown in the way of making adequate preparation in advance, they
-have caused more loss of life among American soldiers, fighting for
-the honor of the American flag, during the fifty years since the close
-of the Civil War than has been caused by the foes whom we have fought
-during that period.[2]
-
- [2] Some of the leading pacificists are men who have made great
- fortunes in industry. Of course industry inevitably takes
- toll of life. Far more lives have been lost in this country
- by men engaged in bridge building, tunnel digging, mining,
- steel manufacturing, the erection of sky-scrapers, the
- operations of the fishing fleet, and the like, than in all
- our battles in all our foreign wars put together. Such loss
- of life no more justifies us in opposing righteous wars
- than in opposing necessary industry. There was certainly
- far greater loss of life, and probably greater needless
- and preventable and uncompensated loss of life, in the
- industries out of which Mr. Carnegie made his gigantic
- fortune than has occurred among our troops in war during
- the time covered by Mr. Carnegie’s activities on behalf of
- peace.
-
-But the most striking instance of the utter failure of unpreparedness
-to stop war has been shown by President Wilson himself. President
-Wilson has made himself the great official champion of unpreparedness
-in military and naval matters. His words and his actions about foreign
-war have their nearest parallel in the words and the actions of
-President Buchanan about civil war; and in each case there has been
-the same use of verbal adroitness to cover mental hesitancy. By his
-words and his actions President Wilson has done everything possible
-to prevent this nation from making its army and navy effective and to
-increase the inefficiency which he already found existing. We were
-unprepared when he took office, and every month since we have grown
-still less prepared. Yet this fact did not prevent President Wilson,
-the great apostle of unpreparedness, the great apostle of pacificism
-and anti-militarism, from going to war with Mexico last spring. It
-merely prevented him, or, to speak more accurately, the same mental
-peculiarities which made him the apostle of unpreparedness also
-prevented him, from making the war efficient. His conduct rendered the
-United States an object of international derision because of the way in
-which its affairs were managed. President Wilson made no declaration
-of war. He did not in any way satisfy the requirements of common
-international law before acting. He invaded a neighboring state, with
-which he himself insisted we were entirely at peace, and occupied the
-most considerable seaport of the country after military operations
-which resulted in the loss of the lives of perhaps twenty of our men
-and five or ten times that number of Mexicans; and then he sat supine,
-and refused to allow either the United States or Mexico to reap any
-benefit from what had been done.
-
-It is idle to say that such an amazing action was not war. It was an
-utterly futile war and achieved nothing; but it was war. We had ample
-justification for interfering in Mexico and even for going to war
-with Mexico, if after careful consideration this course was deemed
-necessary. But the President did not even take notice of any of the
-atrocious wrongs Americans had suffered, or deal with any of the
-grave provocations we had received. His statement of justification
-was merely that “we are in Mexico to serve mankind, if we can find a
-way.” Evidently he did not have in his mind any particular idea of
-how he was to “serve mankind,” for, after staying eight months in
-Mexico, he decided that he could not “find a way” and brought his
-army home. He had not accomplished one single thing. At one time it
-was said that we went to Vera Cruz to stop the shipment of arms into
-Mexico. But after we got there we allowed the shipments to continue.
-At another time it was said that we went there in order to exact an
-apology for an insult to the flag. But we never did exact the apology,
-and we left Vera Cruz without taking any steps to get an apology. In
-all our history there has been no more extraordinary example of queer
-infirmity of purpose in an important crisis than was shown by President
-Wilson in this matter. His business was either not to interfere at
-all or to interfere hard and effectively. This was the sole policy
-which should have been allowed by regard for the dignity and honor of
-the government of the United States and the welfare of our people.
-In the actual event President Wilson interfered, not enough to quell
-civil war, not enough to put a stop to or punish the outrages on
-American citizens, but enough to incur fearful responsibilities. Then,
-having without authority of any kind, either under the Constitution
-or in international law or in any other way, thus interfered, and
-having interfered to worse than no purpose, and having made himself
-and the nation partly responsible for the atrocious wrongs committed
-on Americans and on foreigners generally in Mexico by the bandit
-chiefs whom he was more or less furtively supporting, President
-Wilson abandoned his whole policy and drew out of Mexico to resume
-his “watchful waiting.” When the President, who has made himself the
-chief official exponent of the doctrine of unpreparedness, thus shows
-that even in his hands unpreparedness has not the smallest effect in
-preventing war, there ought to be little need of discussing the matter
-further.
-
-Preparedness for war occasionally has a slight effect in creating or
-increasing an aggressive and militaristic spirit. Far more often it
-distinctly diminishes it. In Switzerland, for instance, which we
-can well afford to take as a model for ourselves, effectiveness in
-preparation, and the retention and development of all the personal
-qualities which give the individual man the fighting edge, have in no
-shape or way increased the militarist or aggressive spirit. On the
-contrary, they have doubtless been among the factors that have made the
-Swiss so much more law-abiding and less homicidal than we are.
-
-The ultrapacificists have been fond of prophesying the immediate
-approach of a universally peaceful condition throughout the world,
-which will render it unnecessary to prepare against war because there
-will be no more war. This represents in some cases well-meaning
-and pathetic folly. In other cases it represents mischievous and
-inexcusable folly. But it always represents folly. At best, it
-represents the inability of some well-meaning men of weak mind, and of
-some men of strong but twisted mind, either to face or to understand
-facts.
-
-These prophets of the inane are not peculiar to our own day. A little
-over a century and a quarter ago a noted Italian pacificist and
-philosopher, Aurelio Bertela, summed up the future of civilized mankind
-as follows: “The political system of Europe has arrived at perfection.
-An equilibrium has been attained which henceforth will preserve peoples
-from subjugation. Few reforms are now needed and these will be
-accomplished peaceably. Europe has no need to fear revolution.”
-
-These sapient statements (which have been paralleled by hundreds of
-utterances in the many peace congresses of the last couple of decades)
-were delivered in 1787, the year in which the French Assembly of
-Notables ushered in the greatest era of revolution, domestic turmoil,
-and international war in all history--an era which still continues and
-which shows not the smallest sign of coming to an end. Never before
-have there been wars on so great a scale as during this century and
-a quarter; and the greatest of all these wars is now being waged.
-Never before, except for the ephemeral conquests of certain Asiatic
-barbarians, have there been subjugations of civilized peoples on so
-great a scale.
-
-During this period here and there something has been done for peace,
-much has been done for liberty, and very much has been done for reform
-and advancement. But the professional pacificists, taken as a class
-throughout the entire period, have done nothing for permanent peace
-and less than nothing for liberty and for the forward movement of
-mankind. Hideous things have been done in the name of liberty, in the
-name of order, in the name of religion; and the victories that have
-been gained against these iniquities have been gained by strong men,
-armed, who put their strength at the service of righteousness and who
-were hampered and not helped by the futility of the men who inveighed
-against all use of armed strength.
-
-The effective workers for the peace of righteousness were men like
-Stein, Cavour, and Lincoln; that is, men who dreamed great dreams, but
-who were also pre-eminently men of action, who stood for the right, and
-who knew that the right would fail unless might was put behind it. The
-prophets of pacificism have had nothing whatever in common with these
-great men; and whenever they have preached mere pacificism, whenever
-they have failed to put righteousness first and to advocate peace as
-the handmaiden of righteousness, they have done evil and not good.
-
-After the exhaustion of the Napoleonic struggles there came thirty-five
-years during which there was no great war, while what was called “the
-long peace” was broken only by minor international wars or short-lived
-revolutionary contests. Good, but not far-sighted, men in various
-countries, but especially in England, Germany, and our own country,
-forthwith began to dream dreams--not of a universal peace that should
-be founded on justice and righteousness backed by strength, but of a
-universal peace to be obtained by the prattle of weaklings and the
-outpourings of amiable enthusiasts who lacked the fighting edge.
-About 1850, for instance, the first large peace congress was held.
-There were numbers of kindly people who felt that this congress, and
-the contemporary international exposition, also the first of its kind,
-heralded the beginning of a régime of universal peace. As a matter of
-fact, there followed twenty years during which a number of great and
-bloody wars took place--wars far surpassing in extent, in duration, in
-loss of life and property, and in importance anything that had been
-seen since the close of the Napoleonic contest.
-
-Then there came another period of nearly thirty years during which
-there were relatively only a few wars, and these not of the highest
-importance. Again upright and intelligent but uninformed men began to
-be misled by foolish men into the belief that world peace was about to
-be secured, on a basis of amiable fatuity all around and under the lead
-of the preachers of the diluted mush of make-believe morality. A number
-of peace congresses, none of which accomplished anything, were held,
-and also certain Hague conferences, which did accomplish a certain
-small amount of real good but of a strictly limited kind. It was well
-worth going into these Hague conferences, but only on condition of
-clearly understanding how strictly limited was the good that they
-accomplished. The hysterical people who treated them as furnishing a
-patent peace panacea did nothing but harm, and partially offset the
-real but limited good the conferences actually accomplished. Indeed,
-the conferences undoubtedly did a certain amount of damage because
-of the preposterous expectations they excited among well-meaning but
-ill-informed and unthinking persons. These persons really believed
-that it was possible to achieve the millennium by means that would not
-have been very effective in preserving peace among the active boys
-of a large Sunday-school--let alone grown-up men in the world as it
-actually is. A pathetic commentary on their attitude is furnished by
-the fact that the fifteen years that have elapsed since the first Hague
-conference have seen an immense increase of war, culminating in the
-present war, waged by armies, and with bloodshed, on a scale far vaster
-than ever before in the history of mankind.
-
-All these facts furnish no excuse whatever for our failing to work
-zealously for peace, but they absolutely require us to understand that
-it is noxious to work for a peace not based on righteousness, and
-useless to work for a peace based on righteousness unless we put force
-back of righteousness. At present this means that adequate preparedness
-against war offers to our nation its sole guarantee against wrong and
-aggression.
-
-Emerson has said that in the long run the most uncomfortable truth is
-a safer travelling companion than the most agreeable falsehood. The
-advocates of peace will accomplish nothing except mischief until they
-are willing to look facts squarely in the face. One of these facts is
-that universal military service, wherever tried, has on the whole been
-a benefit and not a harm to the people of the nation, so long as the
-demand upon the average man’s life has not been for too long a time.
-The Swiss people have beyond all question benefited by their system
-of limited but universal preparation for military service. The same
-thing is true of Australia, Chile, and Argentina. In every one of these
-countries the short military training given has been found to increase
-in marked fashion the social and industrial efficiency, the ability to
-do good industrial work, of the man thus trained. It would be well for
-the United States from every standpoint immediately to provide such
-strictly limited universal military training.
-
-But it is well also for the United States to understand that a system
-of military training which from our standpoint would be excessive and
-unnecessary in order to meet our needs, may yet work admirably for some
-other nation. The two nations that during the last fifty years have
-made by far the greatest progress are Germany and Japan; and they are
-the two nations in which preparedness for war in time of peace has
-been carried to the highest point of scientific development. The feat
-of Japan has been something absolutely without precedent in recorded
-history. Great civilizations, military, industrial, and artistic,
-have arisen and flourished in Asia again and again in the past. But
-never before has an Asiatic power succeeded in adopting civilization
-of the European or most advanced type and in developing it to a point
-of military and industrial efficiency equalled only by one power of
-European blood.
-
-As for Germany, we believers in democracy who also understand, as every
-sound-thinking democrat must, that democracy cannot succeed unless it
-shows the same efficiency that is shown by autocracy (as Switzerland
-on a small scale has shown it) need above all other men carefully to
-study what Germany has accomplished during the last half century. Her
-military efficiency has not been more astounding than her industrial
-and social efficiency; and the essential thing in her career of
-greatness has been the fact that this industrial and social efficiency
-is in part directly based upon the military efficiency and in part
-indirectly based upon it, because based upon the mental, physical, and
-moral qualities developed by the military efficiency. The solidarity
-and power of collective action, the trained ability to work hard for an
-end which is afar off in the future, the combination of intelligent
-forethought with efficient and strenuous action--all these together
-have given her her extraordinary industrial pre-eminence; and all of
-these have been based upon her military efficiency.
-
-The Germans have developed patriotism of the most intense kind, and
-although this patriotism expresses itself in thunderous songs, in
-speeches and in books, it does not confine itself to these methods
-of expression, but treats them merely as incitements to direct and
-efficient action. After five months of war, Germany has on the whole
-been successful against opponents which in population outnumber her
-over two to one, and in natural resources are largely superior. Russian
-and French armies have from time to time obtained lodgement on German
-soil; but on the whole the fighting has been waged by German armies on
-Russian, French, and Belgian territory. On her western frontier, it is
-true, she was checked and thrown back after her first drive on Paris,
-and again checked and thrown slightly back when, after the fall of
-Antwerp, she attempted to advance along the Belgian coast. But in the
-west she has on the whole successfully pursued the offensive, and her
-battle lines are in the enemies’ territory, although she has had to
-face the entire strength of France, England, and Belgium.
-
-Moreover, she did this with only a part of her forces. At the same time
-she was also obliged to use immense armies, singly or in conjunction
-with the Austrians, against the Russians on her Eastern frontier. No
-one can foretell the issue of the war. But what Germany has already
-done must extort the heartiest admiration for her grim efficiency.
-It could have been done only by a masterful people guided by keen
-intelligence and inspired by an intensely patriotic spirit.
-
-France has likewise shown to fine advantage in this war (in spite
-of certain marked shortcomings, such as the absurd uniforms of her
-soldiers) because of her system of universal military training. England
-has suffered lamentably because there has been no such system. Great
-masses of Englishmen, including all her men at the front, have behaved
-so as to command our heartiest admiration. But qualification must
-be made when the nation as a whole is considered. Her professional
-soldiers, her navy, and her upper classes have done admirably; but
-the English papers describe certain sections of her people as making
-a poor showing in their refusal to volunteer. The description of
-the professional football matches, attended by tens of thousands of
-spectators, none of whom will enlist, makes a decent man ardently
-wish that under a rigid conscription law the entire body of players,
-promoters, and spectators could be sent to the front. Scotland and
-Canada have apparently made an extraordinary showing; the same thing
-is true of sections, high and low, of society in England proper; but
-it is also true that certain sections of the British democracy under
-a system of free volunteering have shown to disadvantage compared to
-Germany, where military service is universal. The lack of foresight
-in preparation was also shown by the inability of the authorities to
-furnish arms and equipment for the troops that were being raised. These
-shortcomings are not alluded to by me in a censorious spirit, and least
-of all with any idea of reflecting on England, but purely that our own
-people may profit by the lessons taught. America should pay heed to
-these facts and profit by them; and we can only so profit if we realize
-that under like conditions we should at the moment make a much poorer
-showing than England has made.
-
-It is indispensable to remember that in the cases of both Germany and
-Japan their extraordinary success has been due directly to that kind
-of efficiency in war which springs only from the highest efficiency in
-preparedness for war. Until educated people who sincerely desire peace
-face this fact with all of its implications, unpleasant and pleasant,
-they will not be able to better present international conditions. In
-order to secure this betterment, conditions must be created which
-will enable civilized nations to achieve such efficiency without being
-thereby rendered dangerous to their neighbors and to civilization
-as a whole. Americans, particularly, and, to a degree only slightly
-less, Englishmen and Frenchmen need to remember this fact, for while
-the ultrapacificists, the peace-at-any-price men, have appeared
-sporadically everywhere, they have of recent years been most numerous
-and noxious in the United States, in Great Britain, and in France.
-
-Inasmuch as in our country, where, Heaven knows, we have evils enough
-with which to grapple, none of these evils is in even the smallest
-degree due to militarism--inasmuch as to inveigh against militarism
-in the United States is about as useful as to inveigh against eating
-horse-flesh in honor of Odin--this seems curious. But it is true.
-Probably it is merely another illustration of the old, old truth
-that persons who shrink from grappling with grave and real evils
-often strive to atone to their consciences for such failure by empty
-denunciation of evils which to them offer no danger and no temptation;
-which, as far as they are concerned, do not exist. Such denunciation is
-easy. It is also worthless.
-
-American college presidents, clergymen, professors, and publicists
-with much pretension--some of it founded on fact--to intelligence
-have praised works like that of Mr. Bloch, who “proved” that war was
-impossible, and like those of Mr. Norman Angell, who “proved” that it
-was an illusion to believe that it was profitable. The greatest and
-most terrible wars in history have taken place since Mr. Bloch wrote.
-When Mr. Angell wrote no unprejudiced man of wisdom could have failed
-to understand that the two most successful nations of recent times,
-Germany and Japan, owed their great national success to successful war.
-The United States owes not only its greatness but its very existence
-to the fact that in the Civil War the men who controlled its destinies
-were the fighting men. The counsels of the ultrapacificists, the
-peace-at-any-price men of that day, if adopted, would have meant not
-only the death of the nation but an incalculable disaster to humanity.
-A righteous war may at any moment be essential to national welfare; and
-it is a lamentable fact that nations have sometimes profited greatly by
-war that was not righteous. Such evil profit will never be done away
-with until armed force is put behind righteousness.
-
-We must also remember, however, that the mischievous folly of the
-men whose counsels tend to inefficiency and impotence is not worse
-than the baseness of the men who in a spirit of mean and cringing
-admiration of brute force gloss over, or justify, or even deify, the
-exhibition of unscrupulous strength. Writings like those of Homer
-Lea, or of Nietzsche, or even of Professor Treitschke--not to speak of
-Carlyle--are as objectionable as those of Messrs. Bloch and Angell.
-Our people need to pay homage to the great efficiency and the intense
-patriotism of Germany. But they need no less fully to realize that this
-patriotism has at times been accompanied by callous indifference to the
-rights of weaker nations, and that this efficiency has at times been
-exercised in a way that represents a genuine setback to humanity and
-civilization. Germany’s conduct toward Belgium can be justified only
-in accordance with a theory which will also justify Napoleon’s conduct
-toward Spain and his treatment of Prussia and of all Germany during
-the six years succeeding Jena. I do not see how any man can fail to
-sympathize with Stein and Schornhorst; with Andreas Hofer, with the
-Maid of Saragossa, with Koerner and the Tugendbund; and if he does so
-sympathize, he must extend the same sympathy and admiration to King
-Albert and the Belgians.
-
-Moreover, it is well for Americans always to remember that what
-has been done to Belgium would, of course, be done to us just as
-unhesitatingly if the conditions required it.
-
-Of course, the lowest depth is reached by the professional pacificists
-who continue to scream for peace without daring to protest against any
-concrete wrong committed against peace. These include all of our fellow
-countrymen who at the present time clamor for peace without explicitly
-and clearly declaring that the first condition of peace should be the
-righting of the wrongs of Belgium, reparation to her, and guarantee
-against the possible repetition of such wrongs at the expense of any
-well-behaved small civilized power in the future. It may be that peace
-will come without such reparation and guarantee but if so it will be
-as emphatically the peace of unrighteousness as was the peace made at
-Tilsit a hundred and seven years ago.
-
-When the President appoints a day of prayer for peace, without
-emphatically making it evident that the prayer should be for the
-redress of the wrongs without which peace would be harmful, he cannot
-be considered as serving righteousness. When Mr. Bryan concludes
-absurd all-inclusive arbitration treaties and is loquacious to peace
-societies about the abolition of war, without daring to protest against
-the hideous wrongs done Belgium, he feebly serves unrighteousness.
-More comic manifestations, of course entirely useless but probably
-too fatuous to be really mischievous, are those which find expression
-in the circulation of peace postage-stamps with doves on them, or in
-taking part in peace parades--they might as well be antivaccination
-parades--or in the circulation of peace petitions to be signed by
-school-children, which for all their possible effect might just as well
-relate to the planet Mars.
-
-International peace will only come when the nations of the world form
-some kind of league which provides for an international tribunal to
-decide on international matters, which decrees that treaties and
-international agreements are never to be entered into recklessly and
-foolishly, and when once entered into are to be observed with entire
-good faith, and which puts the collective force of civilization
-behind such treaties and agreements and court decisions and against
-any wrong-doing or recalcitrant nation. The all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties negotiated by the present administration amount to almost
-nothing. They are utterly worthless for good. They are however slightly
-mischievous because:
-
-1. There is no provision for their enforcement, and,
-
-2. They would be in some cases not only impossible but improper to
-enforce.
-
-A treaty is a promise. It is like a promise to pay in the commercial
-world. Its value lies in the means provided for redeeming the promise.
-To make it, and not redeem it, is vicious. A United States gold
-certificate is valuable because gold is back of it. If there were
-nothing back of it the certificate would sink to the position of
-fiat money, which is irredeemable, and therefore valueless; as in the
-case of our Revolutionary currency. The Wilson-Bryan all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties represent nothing whatever but international fiat
-money. To make them is no more honest than it is to issue fiat money.
-Mr. Bryan would not make a good Secretary of the Treasury, but he
-would do better in that position than as Secretary of State. For his
-type of fiat obligations is a little worse in international than in
-internal affairs. The all-inclusive arbitration treaties, in whose free
-and unlimited negotiation Mr. Bryan takes such pleasure, are of less
-value than the thirty-cent dollars, whose free and unlimited coinage he
-formerly advocated.
-
-An efficient world league for peace is as yet in the future; and it may
-be, although I sincerely hope not, in the far future. The indispensable
-thing for every free people to do in the present day is with efficiency
-to prepare against war by making itself able physically to defend its
-rights and by cultivating that stern and manly spirit without which no
-material preparation will avail.
-
-The last point is all essential. It is not of much use to provide
-an armed force if that force is composed of poltroons and
-ultrapacificists. Such men should be sent to the front, of course, for
-they should not be allowed to shirk the danger which their braver
-fellow countrymen willingly face, and under proper discipline some use
-can be made of them; but the fewer there are of them in a nation the
-better the army of that nation will be.
-
-A Yale professor--he might just as well have been a Harvard
-professor--is credited in the press with saying the other day that
-he wishes the United States would take the position that if attacked
-it would not defend itself, and would submit unresistingly to any
-spoliation. The professor said that this would afford such a beautiful
-example to mankind that war would undoubtedly be abolished. Magazine
-writers, and writers of syndicate articles published in reputable
-papers, have recently advocated similar plans. Men who talk this way
-are thoroughly bad citizens. Few members of the criminal class are
-greater enemies of the republic.
-
-American citizens must understand that they cannot advocate or
-acquiesce in an evil course of action and then escape responsibility
-for the results. If disaster comes to our navy in the near future it
-will be directly due to the way the navy has been handled during the
-past twenty-two months, and a part of the responsibility will be shared
-by every man who has failed effectively to protest against, or in any
-way has made himself responsible for, the attitude of the present
-administration in foreign affairs and as regards the navy.
-
-The first and most important thing for us as a people to do, in order
-to prepare ourselves for self-defense, is to get clearly in our minds
-just what our policy is to be, and to insist that our public servants
-shall make their words and their deeds correspond. As has already been
-pointed out, the present administration was elected on the explicit
-promise that the Philippines should be given their independence, and
-it has taken action in the Philippines which can only be justified
-on the theory that this independence is to come in the immediate
-future. I believe that we have rendered incalculable service to the
-Philippines, and that what we have there done has shown in the most
-striking manner the extreme mischief that would have followed if,
-in 1898 and the subsequent years, we had failed to do our duty in
-consequence of following the advice of Mr. Bryan and the pacificists
-or anti-imperialists of that day. But we must keep our promises; and
-we ought now to leave the islands completely at as early a date as
-possible.
-
-There remains to defend--the United States proper, the Panama Canal and
-its approaches, Alaska, and Hawaii. To defend all these is vital to our
-honor and interest. For such defense preparedness is essential.
-
-The first and most essential form of preparedness should be making the
-navy efficient. Absolutely and relatively, our navy has never been at
-such a pitch of efficiency as in February, 1909, when the battle fleet
-returned from its voyage around the world. Unit for unit, there was
-no other navy in the world which was at that time its equal. During
-the next four years we had an admirable Secretary of the Navy, Mr.
-Meyer--we were fortunate in having then and since good Secretaries of
-War in Mr. Stimson and Mr. Garrison. Owing to causes for which Mr.
-Meyer was in no way responsible, there was a slight relative falling
-off in the efficiency of the navy, and probably a slight absolute
-falling off during the following four years. But it remained very
-efficient.
-
-Since Mr. Daniels came in, and because of the action taken by Mr.
-Daniels under the direction of President Wilson, there has been a most
-lamentable reduction in efficiency. If at this moment we went to war
-with a first-class navy of equal strength to our own, there would be a
-chance not only of defeat but of disgrace. It is probably impossible
-to put the navy in really first-class condition with Mr. Daniels at
-its head, precisely as it is impossible to conduct our foreign affairs
-with dignity and efficiency while Mr. Bryan is at the head of the State
-Department.
-
-But the great falling off in naval efficiency has been due primarily
-to the policy pursued by President Wilson himself. He has kept the
-navy in Mexican waters. The small craft at Tampico and elsewhere could
-have rendered real service, but the President refused to allow them
-to render such service, and left English and German sea officers to
-protect our people. The great war craft were of no use at all; yet at
-this moment he has brought back from Mexico the army which could be
-of some use and has kept there the war-ships which cannot be of any
-use, and which suffer terribly in efficiency from being so kept. The
-fleet has had no manœuvring for twenty-two months. It has had almost
-no gun practice by division during that time. There is not enough
-powder; there are not enough torpedoes; the bottoms of the ships are
-foul; there are grave defects in the submarines; there is a deficiency
-in aircraft; the under-enlistments indicate a deficiency of from ten
-thousand to twenty thousand men; the whole service is being handled in
-such manner as to impair its fitness and morale.
-
-Congress should summon before its committees the best naval experts
-and provide the battle-ships, cruisers, submarines, floating mines,
-and aircraft that these experts declare to be necessary for the full
-protection of the United States. It should bear in mind that while
-many of these machines of war are essentially to be used in striking
-from the coasts themselves, yet that others must be designed to keep
-the enemy afar from these coasts. Mere defensive by itself cannot
-permanently avail. The only permanently efficient defensive arm is
-one which can act offensively. Our navy must be fitted for attack,
-for delivering smashing blows, in order effectively to defend our own
-shores. Above all, we should remember that a highly trained personnel
-is absolutely indispensable, for without it no material preparation is
-of the least avail.
-
-But the navy alone will not suffice in time of great crisis. If England
-had adopted the policy urged by Lord Roberts, there would probably have
-been no war and certainly the war would now have been at an end, as
-she would have been able to protect Belgium, as well as herself, and
-to save France from invasion. Relatively to the Continent, England was
-utterly unprepared; but she was a miracle of preparedness compared to
-us. There are many ugly features connected with the slowness of certain
-sections of the English people to volunteer and with their deficiency
-in rifles, horses, and equipment; and there have been certain military
-and naval shortcomings; but until we have radically altered our
-habits of thought and action we can only say with abashed humility
-that if England has not shown to advantage compared to Germany, she
-has certainly done far better than we would have done, and than, as
-a matter of fact, we actually have done during the past twenty-two
-months, both as regards Mexico and as regards the fulfilment of our
-duty in the situation created by the world war.
-
-Congress should at once act favorably along the lines recommended in
-the recent excellent report of the Secretary of War and in accordance
-with the admirable plan outlined in the last report of the Chief
-of Staff of the army, General Wotherspoon--a report with which his
-predecessor as Chief of Staff, General Wood, appears to be in complete
-sympathy. Our army should be doubled in size. An effective reserve
-should be created. Every year there should be field manœuvres on a
-large scale, a hundred thousand being engaged for several weeks. The
-artillery should be given the most scientific training. The equipment
-should be made perfect at every point. Rigid economy should be demanded.
-
-Every officer and man should be kept to the highest standard of
-physical and moral fitness. The unfit should be ruthlessly weeded out.
-At least one third of the officers in each grade should be promoted
-on merit without regard to seniority, and the least fit for promotion
-should be retired. Every unit of the regular army and reserve should be
-trained to the highest efficiency under war conditions.
-
-But this is not enough. There should be at least ten times the
-number of rifles and the quantity of ammunition in the country that
-there are now. In our high schools and colleges a system of military
-training like that which obtains in Switzerland and Australia should
-be given. Furthermore, all our young men should be trained in actual
-field-service under war conditions; preferably on the Swiss, but if not
-on the Swiss then on the Argentinian or Chilean model.
-
-The Swiss model would probably be better for our people. It would
-necessitate only four to six months’ service shortly after graduation
-from high school or college, and thereafter only about eight days a
-year. No man could buy a substitute; no man would be excepted because
-of his wealth; all would serve in the ranks on precisely the same terms
-side by side.
-
-Under this system the young men would be trained to shoot, to march,
-to take care of themselves in the open, and to learn those habits of
-self-reliance and law-abiding obedience which are not only essential
-to the efficiency of a citizen soldiery, but are no less essential to
-the efficient performance of civic duties in a free democracy. My own
-firm belief is that this system would help us in civil quite as much
-as in military matters. It would increase our social and industrial
-efficiency. It would help us to habits of order and respect for law.
-
-This proposal does not represent anything more than carrying out the
-purpose of the second amendment to the Federal Constitution, which
-declares that a well-regulated militia is necessary to the security
-of a free nation. The Swiss army is a well-regulated militia; and,
-therefore it is utterly different from any militia we have ever had.
-The system of compulsory training and universal service has worked
-admirably in Switzerland. It has saved the Swiss from war. It has
-developed their efficiency in peace.
-
-In theory, President Wilson advocates unpreparedness, and in the actual
-fact he practises, on our behalf, tame submission to wrong-doing
-and refusal to stand for our own rights or for the rights of any
-weak power that is wronged. We who take the opposite view advocate
-merely acting as Washington urged us to act, when in his first annual
-address he said: “To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual
-means for preserving peace. A free people ought not only to be armed
-but disciplined; to which end a uniform and well-digested plan is
-requisite.” Jefferson was not a fighting man, but even Jefferson,
-writing to Monroe in 1785, urged the absolute need of building up
-our navy if we wished to escape oppression to our commerce and “the
-present disrespect of the nations of Europe,” and added the pregnant
-sentence: “A coward is much more exposed to quarrels than a man of
-spirit.” As President, he urged our people to train themselves to arms,
-so as to constitute a citizen soldiery, in terms that showed that his
-object was to accomplish exactly what the Swiss have accomplished, and
-what is advocated in this book. In one annual message he advocated
-“the organization of 300,000 able-bodied men between the ages of
-eighteen and twenty-five for offense or defense at any time or in any
-place where they may be wanted.” In a letter to Monroe he advocated
-compulsory military service, saying: “We must train and classify the
-whole of our male citizenry and make military instruction a part of
-collegiate education. We can never be safe until this is done.” The
-methods taken by Jefferson and the Americans of Jefferson’s day to
-accomplish this object were fatally defective. But their purpose was
-the same that those who think as we do now put forward. The difference
-is purely that we present efficient methods for accomplishing this
-purpose. Washington was a practical man of high ideals who always
-strove to reduce his ideals to practice. His address to Congress in
-December, 1793, ought to have been read by President Wilson before
-the latter sent in his message of 1914 with its confused advocacy
-of unpreparedness and its tone of furtive apology for submission to
-insult. Washington said: “There is much due to the United States
-among nations which will be withheld, if not absolutely lost, by the
-reputation of weakness. If we desire to avoid insult, we must be able
-to repel it. If we desire to secure peace ... it must be known that we
-are at all times ready for war,” and he emphasized the fact that the
-peace thus secured by preparedness for war is the most potent method of
-obtaining material prosperity.
-
-The need of such a system as that which I advocate is well brought out
-in a letter I recently received from a college president. It runs in
-part as follows:
-
- What the average young fellow of eighteen to thirty doesn’t know
- about shooting and riding makes an appalling total. I remember
- very well visiting the First Connecticut Regiment a day or two
- before it left for service in the Spanish War. A good many of
- my boys were with them and I went to see them off. One fellow
- in particular, of whom I was and am very fond, took me to his
- tent and proudly exhibited his rifle, calling attention to the
- beautiful condition to which he had brought it. It certainly was
- extremely shiny, and I commended him for his careful cleansing of
- his death-dealing weapon. Then I discovered that the firing-pin
- (it was an old Springfield) was rusted immovably into its place,
- and that my boy didn’t know that there was any firing-pin. He had
- learned to expect that if you put a cartridge into the breech,
- pulled down the block, and pulled the trigger, it would probably
- go off if he had previously cocked it; but he had never done any
- of these things.
-
- It was my fortune to grow up amid surroundings and in a time
- when every boy had and used a gun. Any boy fourteen years old
- who was not the proprietor of some kind of shooting-iron and
- fairly proficient in its use was in disgrace. Such a situation
- was unthinkable. So we were all fairly dependable shots with
- a fowling-piece or rifle. As a result of this and subsequent
- experience, I really believe that so long as my aging body would
- endure hardship, and provided further that I could be prevented
- from running away, I should be a more efficient soldier than most
- of the young fellows on our campus to-day.
-
- I have watched with much dissatisfaction the gradual
- disappearance of the military schools here in the East. There
- are some prominent and useful ones in the West, but they are far
- too few, and I do not believe there is any preliminary military
- training of any sort in our public schools. I fear that the
- military training required by law in certain agricultural and
- other schools receiving federal aid is more or less of a fake;
- the object seeming to be to get the appropriation and make the
- least possible return.
-
- If in any way you can bring it about that our boys shall be
- taught to shoot, I believe with you that they can learn the
- essentials of drill very quickly when need arises. And even so,
- however, our rulers must learn the necessity of having rifles
- enough and ammunition enough to meet any emergency at all likely
- to occur.
-
-It is idle for this nation to trust to arbitration and neutrality
-treaties unbacked by force. It is idle to trust to the tepid good-will
-of other nations. It is idle to trust to alliances. Alliances change.
-Russia and Japan are now fighting side by side, although nine years ago
-they were fighting against one another. Twenty years ago Russia and
-Germany stood side by side. Fifteen years ago England was more hostile
-to Russia, and even to France, than she was to Germany. It is perfectly
-possible that after the close of this war the present allies will fall
-out, or that Germany and Japan will turn up in close alliance.
-
-It is our duty to try to work for a great world league for righteous
-peace enforced by power; but no such league is yet in sight. At present
-the prime duty of the American people is to abandon the inane and
-mischievous principle of watchful waiting--that is, of slothful and
-timid refusal either to face facts or to perform duty. Let us act
-justly toward others; and let us also be prepared with stout heart and
-strong hand to defend our rights against injustice from others.
-
-In his recent report the Secretary of War, Mr. Garrison, has put the
-case for preparedness in the interest of honorable peace so admirably
-that what he says should be studied by all our people. It runs in part
-as follows:
-
- “This, then, leaves for consideration the imminent questions of
- military policy; the considerations which, in my view, should be
- taken into account in determining the same; and the suggestions
- which occur to me to be pertinent in the circumstances.
-
- It would be premature to attempt now to draw the ultimate lessons
- from the war in Europe. It is an imperative duty, however, to
- heed so much of what it brings home to us as is incontrovertible
- and not to be changed by any event, leaving for later and
- more detailed and comprehensive consideration what its later
- developments and final conclusions may indicate.
-
- For orderly treatment certain preliminary considerations may be
- usefully adverted to. It is, of course, not necessary to dwell on
- the blessings of peace and the horrors of war. Every one desires
- peace, just as every one desires health, contentment, affection,
- sufficient means for comfortable existence, and other similarly
- beneficent things. But peace and the other states of being just
- mentioned are not always or even often solely within one’s own
- control. Those who are thoughtful and have courage face the facts
- of life, take lessons from experience, and strive by wise conduct
- to attain the desirable things, and by prevision and precaution
- to protect and defend them when obtained. It may truthfully be
- said that eternal vigilance is the price which must be paid in
- order to obtain the desirable things of life and to defend them.
-
- In collective affairs the interests of the group are confided
- to the government, and it thereupon is charged with the duty to
- preserve and defend these things. The government must exercise
- for the nation the precautionary, defensive, and preservative
- measures necessary to that end. All governments must therefore
- have force--physical force--_i. e._, military force, for these
- purposes. The question for each nation when this matter is under
- consideration is, How much force should it have and of what
- should that force consist?
-
- In the early history of our nation there was a natural, almost
- inevitable, abhorrence of military force, because it connoted
- military despotism. Most, if not all, of the early settlers
- in this country came from nations where a few powerful persons
- tyrannically imposed their will upon the people by means of
- military power. The consequence was that the oppressed who
- fled to this country necessarily connected military force with
- despotism and had a dread thereof. Of course, all this has
- long since passed into history. No reasonable person in this
- country to-day has the slightest shadow of fear of military
- despotism, nor of any interference whatever by military force
- in the conduct of civil affairs. The military and the civil are
- just as completely and permanently separated in this country as
- the church and the state are; the subjection of the military
- to the civil is settled and unchangeable. The only reason for
- adverting to the obsolete condition is to anticipate the action
- of those who will cite from the works of the founders of the
- republic excerpts showing a dread of military ascendancy in
- our government. Undoubtedly, at the time such sentiments were
- expressed there was a very real dread. At the present time such
- expressions are entirely inapplicable and do not furnish even a
- presentable pretext for opposing proper military preparation.
-
- It also seems proper, in passing, to refer to the frame of
- mind of those who use the word “militarism” as the embodiment
- of the doctrine of brute force and loosely apply it to any
- organized preparation of military force, and therefore deprecate
- any adequate military preparation because it is a step in the
- direction of the contemned “militarism.” It is perfectly apparent
- to any one who approaches the matter with an unprejudiced mind
- that what constitutes undesirable militarism, as distinguished
- from a necessary, proper, and adequate preparation of the
- military resources of the nation, depends upon the position in
- which each nation finds itself, and varies with every nation
- and with different conditions in each nation at different
- times. Every nation must have adequate force to protect itself
- from domestic insurrections, to enforce its laws, and to repel
- invasions; that is, every nation that has similar characteristics
- to those of a self-respecting man. (The Constitution obliges the
- United States to protect each State against invasion.) If it
- prepares and maintains more military force than is necessary for
- the purposes just named, then it is subject to the conviction, in
- the public opinion of the world, of having embraced “militarism,”
- unless it intends aggression for a cause which the public
- opinion of the world conceives to be a righteous one. To the
- extent, however, that it confines its military preparedness
- to the purposes first mentioned, there is neither warrant nor
- justification in characterizing such action as “militarism.”
- Those who would thus characterize it do so because they have
- reached the conclusion that a nation to-day can properly dispense
- with a prepared military force, and therefore they apply the word
- to any preparation or organization of the military resources of
- the nation. Not being able to conceive how a reasonable, prudent,
- patriotic man can reach such a conclusion, I cannot conceive any
- arguments or statements that would alter such a state of mind. It
- disregards all known facts, flies in the face of all experience,
- and must rest upon faith in that which has not yet been made
- manifest.
-
- Whatever the future may hold in the way of agreements between
- nations, followed by actual disarmament thereof, of international
- courts of arbitration, and other greatly-to-be-desired measures
- to lessen or prevent conflict between nation and nation, we all
- know that at present these conditions are not existing. We can
- and will eagerly adapt ourselves to each beneficent development
- along these lines; but to merely enfeeble ourselves in the
- meantime would, in my view, be unthinkable folly. By neglecting
- and refusing to provide ourselves with the necessary means of
- self-protection and self-defense we could not hasten or in any
- way favorably influence the ultimate results we desire in these
- respects.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-UTOPIA OR HELL?
-
-
-Sherman’s celebrated declaration about war has certainly been borne
-out by what has happened in Europe, and above all in Belgium, during
-the last four months. That war is hell I will concede as heartily as
-any ultrapacificist. But the only alternative to war, that is to hell,
-is the adoption of some plan substantially like that which I herein
-advocate and which has itself been called utopian. It is possible that
-it is utopian for the time being; that is, that nations are not ready
-as yet to accept it. But it is also possible that after this war has
-come to an end the European contestants will be sufficiently sobered to
-be willing to consider some such proposal, and that the United States
-will abandon the folly of the pacificists and be willing to co-operate
-in some practical effort for the only kind of peace worth having, the
-peace of justice and righteousness.
-
-The proposal is not in the least utopian, if by utopian we understand
-something that is theoretically desirable but impossible. What I
-propose is a working and realizable Utopia. My proposal is that the
-efficient civilized nations--those that are efficient in war as well as
-in peace--shall join in a world league for the peace of righteousness.
-This means that they shall by solemn covenant agree as to their
-respective rights which shall not be questioned; that they shall agree
-that all other questions arising between them shall be submitted to a
-court of arbitration; and that they shall also agree--and here comes
-the vital and essential point of the whole system--to act with the
-combined military strength of all of them against any recalcitrant
-nation, against any nation which transgresses at the expense of any
-other nation the rights which it is agreed shall not be questioned,
-or which on arbitrable matters refuses to submit to the decree of the
-arbitral court.
-
-In its essence this plan means that there shall be a great
-international treaty for the peace of righteousness; that this treaty
-shall explicitly secure to each nation and except from the operations
-of any international tribunal such matters as its territorial
-integrity, honor, and vital interest, and shall guarantee it in the
-possession of these rights; that this treaty shall therefore by its
-own terms explicitly provide against making foolish promises which
-cannot and ought not to be kept; that this treaty shall be observed
-with absolute good faith--for it is worse than useless to enter into
-treaties until their observance in good faith is efficiently secured.
-Finally, and most important, this treaty shall put force back of
-righteousness, shall provide a method of securing by the exercise of
-force the observance of solemn international obligations. This is to be
-accomplished by all the powers covenanting to put their whole strength
-back of the fulfilment of the treaty obligations, including the decrees
-of the court established under and in accordance with the treaty.
-
-This proposal, therefore, meets the well-found objections against the
-foolish and mischievous all-inclusive arbitration treaties recently
-negotiated by Mr. Bryan under the direction of President Wilson. These
-treaties, like the all-inclusive arbitration treaties which President
-Taft started to negotiate, explicitly include as arbitrable, or as
-proper subjects for action by joint commissions, questions of honor
-and of vital national interest. No such provision should be made. No
-such provision is made as among private individuals in any civilized
-community. No man is required to “arbitrate” a slap in the face or an
-insult to his wife; no man is expected to “arbitrate” with a burglar
-or a highwayman. If in private life one individual takes action which
-immediately jeopardizes the life or limb or even the bodily well-being
-and the comfort of another, the wronged party does not have to go into
-any arbitration with the wrong-doer. On the contrary, the policeman or
-constable or sheriff immediately and summarily arrests the wrong-doer.
-The subsequent trial is not in the nature of arbitration at all. It is
-in the nature of a criminal proceeding. The wronged man is merely a
-witness and not necessarily an essential witness. For example, if, in
-the streets of New York, one man assaults another or steals his watch,
-and a policeman is not near by, the wronged man is not only justified
-in knocking down the assailant or thief, but fails in his duty if he
-does not so act. If a policeman is near by, the policeman promptly
-arrests the wrong-doer. The magistrate does not arbitrate the question
-of property rights in the watch nor anything about the assault. He
-satisfies himself as to the facts and delivers judgment against the
-offender.
-
-A covenant between the United States and any other power to arbitrate
-all questions, including those involving national honor and interest,
-neither could nor ought to be kept. Such a covenant will be harmless
-only if no such questions ever arise. Now, all the worth of promises
-made in the abstract lies in the way in which they are fulfilled in the
-concrete. The Wilson-Bryan arbitration treaties are to be tested in
-this manner. The theory is, of course, that these treaties are to be
-made with all nations, and this is correct, because it would be a far
-graver thing to refuse to make them with some nations than to refuse
-to enter into them with any nation at all. The proposal is, in effect,
-and disregarding verbiage, that all questions shall be arbitrated or
-settled by the action of a joint commission--questions really vital to
-us would, as a matter of fact, be settled adversely to us pending such
-action. There are many such questions which in the concrete we would
-certainly not arbitrate. I mention one, only as an example. Do Messrs.
-Wilson and Bryan, or do they not, mean to arbitrate, if Japan should
-so desire, the question whether Japanese laborers are to be allowed
-to come in unlimited numbers to these shores? If they do mean this,
-let them explicitly state that fact--merely as an illustration--to the
-Senate committee, so that the Senate committee shall understand what
-it is doing when it ratifies these treaties. If they do not mean this,
-then let them promptly withdraw all the treaties so as not to expose
-us to the charge of hypocrisy, of making believe to do what we have no
-intention of doing, and of making promises which we have no intention
-of keeping. I have mentioned one issue only; but there are scores of
-other issues which I could mention which this government would under no
-circumstances agree to arbitrate.
-
-In the same way, we must explicitly recognize that all the peace
-congresses and the like that have been held of recent years have done
-no good whatever to the cause of world peace. All their addresses and
-resolutions about arbitration and disarmament and such matters have
-been on the whole slightly worse than useless. Disregarding the Hague
-conventions, it is the literal fact that none of the peace congresses
-that have been held for the last fifteen or twenty years--to speak
-only of those of which I myself know the workings--have accomplished
-the smallest particle of good. In so far as they have influenced free,
-liberty-loving, and self-respecting nations not to take measures for
-their own defense they have been positively mischievous. In no respect
-have they achieved anything worth achieving; and the present world war
-proves this beyond the possibility of serious question.
-
-The Hague conventions stand by themselves. They have accomplished a
-certain amount--although only a small amount--of actual good. This was
-in so far as they furnished means by which nations which did not wish
-to quarrel were able to settle international disputes not involving
-their deepest interests. Questions between nations continually arise
-which are not of first-class importance; which, for instance, refer to
-some illegal act by or against a fishing schooner, to some difficulty
-concerning contracts, to some question of the interpretation of a
-minor clause in a treaty, or to the sporadic action of some hot-headed
-or panic-struck official. In these cases, where neither nation wishes
-to go to war, the Hague court has furnished an easy method for the
-settlement of the dispute without war. This does not mark a very great
-advance; but it is an advance, and was worth making.
-
-The fact that it is the only advance that the Hague court has
-accomplished makes the hysterical outbursts formerly indulged in by the
-ultrapacificists concerning it seem in retrospect exceedingly foolish.
-While I had never shared the hopes of these ultrapacificists, I had
-hoped for more substantial good than has actually come from the Hague
-conventions. This was because I accept promises as meaning something.
-The ultrapacificists, whether from timidity, from weakness, or from
-sheer folly, seem wholly unable to understand that the fulfilment
-of a promise has anything to do with making the promise. The most
-striking example that could possibly be furnished has been furnished
-by Belgium. Under my direction as President, the United States signed
-the Hague conventions. All the nations engaged in the present war
-signed these conventions, although one or two of the nations qualified
-their acceptance, or withheld their signatures to certain articles.
-This, however, did not in the least relieve the signatory powers from
-the duty to guarantee one another in the enjoyment of the rights
-supposed to be secured by the conventions. To make this guarantee
-worth anything, it was, of course, necessary actively to enforce it
-against any power breaking the convention or acting against its clear
-purpose. To make it really effective it should be enforced as quickly
-against non-signatory as against signatory powers; for to give a power
-free permission to do wrong if it did not sign would put a premium on
-non-signing, so far as big, aggressive powers are concerned.
-
-I authorized the signature of the United States to these conventions.
-They forbid the violation of neutral territory, and, of course, the
-subjugation of unoffending neutral nations, as Belgium has been
-subjugated. They forbid such destruction as that inflicted on Louvain,
-Dinant, and other towns in Belgium, the burning of their priceless
-public libraries and wonderful halls and churches, and the destruction
-of cathedrals such as that at Rheims. They forbid the infliction of
-heavy pecuniary penalties and the taking of severe punitive measures at
-the expense of civilian populations. They forbid the bombardment--of
-course including the dropping of bombs from aeroplanes--of unfortified
-cities and of cities whose defenses were not at the moment attacked.
-They forbid such actions as have been committed against various cities,
-Belgian, French, and English, not for military reason but for the
-purpose of terrorizing the civilian population by killing and wounding
-men, women, and children who were non-combatants. All of these offenses
-have been committed by Germany. I took the action I did in directing
-these conventions to be signed on the theory and with the belief that
-the United States intended to live up to its obligations, and that our
-people understood that living up to solemn obligations, like any other
-serious performance of duty, means willingness to make effort and to
-incur risk. If I had for one moment supposed that signing these Hague
-conventions meant literally nothing whatever beyond the expression
-of a pious wish which any power was at liberty to disregard with
-impunity, in accordance with the dictation of self-interest, I would
-certainly not have permitted the United States to be a party to such
-a mischievous farce. President Wilson and Secretary Bryan, however,
-take the view that when the United States assumes obligations in order
-to secure small and unoffending neutral nations or non-combatants
-generally against hideous wrong, its action is not predicated on any
-intention to make the guarantee effective. They take the view that
-when we are asked to redeem in the concrete, promises we made in the
-abstract, our duty is to disregard our obligations and to preserve
-ignoble peace for ourselves by regarding with cold-blooded and timid
-indifference the most frightful ravages of war committed at the expense
-of a peaceful and unoffending country. This is the cult of cowardice.
-That Messrs. Wilson and Bryan profess it and put it in action would
-be of small consequence if only they themselves were concerned. The
-importance of their action is that it commits the United States.
-
-Elaborate technical arguments have been made to justify this timid and
-selfish abandonment of duty, this timid and selfish failure to work for
-the world peace of righteousness, by President Wilson and Secretary
-Bryan. No sincere believer in disinterested and self-sacrificing work
-for peace can justify it; and work for peace will never be worth much
-unless accompanied by courage, effort, and self-sacrifice. Yet those
-very apostles of pacificism who, when they can do so with safety,
-scream loudest for peace, have made themselves objects of contemptuous
-derision by keeping silence in this crisis, or even by praising Mr.
-Wilson and Mr. Bryan for having thus abandoned the cause of peace. They
-are supported by the men who insist that all that we are concerned
-with is escaping even the smallest risk that might follow upon the
-performance of duty to any one except ourselves. This last is not a
-very exalted plea. It is, however, defensible. But if, as a nation,
-we intend to act in accordance with it, we must never promise to do
-anything for any one else.
-
-The technical arguments as to the Hague conventions not requiring us to
-act will at once be brushed aside by any man who honestly and in good
-faith faces the situation. Either the Hague conventions meant something
-or else they meant nothing. If, in the event of their violation, none
-of the signatory powers were even to protest, then of course they meant
-nothing; and it was an act of unspeakable silliness to enter into them.
-If, on the other hand, they meant anything whatsoever, it was the duty
-of the United States, as the most powerful, or at least the richest and
-most populous, neutral nation, to take action for upholding them when
-their violation brought such appalling disaster to Belgium. There is no
-escape from this alternative.
-
-The first essential to working out successfully any scheme whatever for
-world peace is to understand that nothing can be accomplished unless
-the powers entering into the agreement act in precisely the reverse
-way from that in which President Wilson and Secretary Bryan have acted
-as regards the Hague conventions and the all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties during the past six months. The prime fact to consider in
-securing any peace agreement worth entering into, or that will have
-any except a mischievous effect, is that the nations entering into the
-agreement shall make no promises that ought not to be made, that they
-shall in good faith live up to the promises that are made, and that
-they shall put their whole strength unitedly back of these promises
-against any nation which refuses to carry out the agreement, or which,
-if it has not made the agreement, nevertheless violates the principles
-which the agreement enforces. In other words, international agreements
-intended to produce peace must proceed much along the lines of the
-Hague conventions; but a power signing them, as the United States
-signed the Hague conventions, must do so with the intention in good
-faith to see that they are carried out, and to use force to accomplish
-this, if necessary.
-
-To violate these conventions, to violate neutrality treaties, as
-Germany has done in the case of Belgium, is a dreadful wrong. It
-represents the gravest kind of international wrong-doing. But it is
-really not quite so contemptible, it does not show such short-sighted
-and timid inefficiency, _and, above all, such selfish indifference to
-the cause of permanent and righteous peace_ as has been shown by us of
-the United States (thanks to President Wilson and Secretary Bryan) in
-refusing to fulfil our solemn obligations by taking whatever action
-was necessary in order to clear our skirts from the guilt of tame
-acquiescence in a wrong which we had solemnly undertaken to oppose.
-
-It has been a matter of very real regret to me to have to speak in the
-way I have felt obliged to speak as to German wrong-doing in Belgium,
-because so many of my friends, not only Germans, but Americans of
-German birth and even Americans of German descent, have felt aggrieved
-at my position. As regards my friends, the Americans of German birth
-or descent, I can only say that they are in honor bound to regard all
-international matters solely from the standpoint of the interest of the
-United States, and of the demands of a lofty international morality.
-I recognize no divided allegiance in American citizenship. As regards
-Germany, my stand is for the real interest of the mass of the German
-people. If the German people as a whole would only look at it rightly,
-they would see that my position is predicated upon the assumption that
-we ought to act as unhesitatingly in favor of Germany if Germany were
-wronged as in favor of Belgium when Belgium is wronged.
-
-There are in Germany a certain number of Germans who adopt
-the Treitschke and Bernhardi view of Germany’s destiny and of
-international morality generally. These men are fundamentally exactly
-as hostile to America as to all other foreign powers. They look down
-with contempt upon Americans as well as upon all other foreigners.
-They regard it as their right to subdue these inferior beings. They
-acknowledge toward them no duty, in the sense that duty is understood
-between equals. I call the attention of my fellow Americans of German
-origin who wish this country to act toward Belgium, not in accordance
-with American traditions, interests, and ideals, but in accordance
-with the pro-German sympathies of certain citizens of German descent,
-to the statement of Treitschke that “to civilization at large the
-[Americanizing] of the German-Americans means a heavy loss. Among
-Germans there can no longer be any question that the civilization of
-mankind suffers every time a German is transformed into a Yankee.”
-
-I do not for one moment believe that the men who follow Treitschke
-in his hatred of and contempt for all non-Germans, and Bernhardi in
-his contempt for international morality, are a majority of the German
-people or even a very large minority. I think that the great majority
-of the Germans, who have approved Germany’s action toward Belgium, have
-been influenced by the feeling that it was a vital necessity in order
-to save Germany from destruction and subjugation by France and Russia,
-perhaps assisted by England. Fear of national destruction will prompt
-men to do almost anything, and the proper remedy for outsiders to work
-for is the removal of the fear. If Germany were absolutely freed from
-danger of aggression on her eastern and western frontiers, I believe
-that German public sentiment would refuse to sanction such acts as
-those against Belgium. The only effective way to free it from this
-fear is to have outside nations like the United States in good faith
-undertake the obligation to defend Germany’s honor and territorial
-integrity, if attacked, exactly as they would defend the honor and
-territorial integrity of Belgium, or of France, Russia, Japan, or
-England, or any other well-behaved, civilized power, if attacked.
-
-This can only be achieved by some such world league of peace as that
-which I advocate. Most important of all, it can only be achieved by
-the willingness and ability of great, free powers to put might back
-of right, to make their protest against wrong-doing effective by, if
-necessary, punishing the wrong-doer. It is this fact which makes the
-clamor of the pacificists for “peace, peace,” without any regard to
-righteousness, so abhorrent to all right-thinking people. There are
-multitudes of professional pacificists in the United States, and of
-well-meaning but ill-informed persons who sympathize with them from
-ignorance. There are not a few astute persons, bankers of foreign
-birth, and others, who wish to take sinister advantage of the folly
-of these persons, in the interest of Germany. All of these men clamor
-for immediate peace. They wish the United States to take action for
-immediate peace or for a truce, under conditions designed to leave
-Belgium with her wrongs unredressed and in the possession of Germany.
-They strive to bring about a peace which would contain within itself
-the elements of frightful future disaster, by making no effective
-provision to prevent the repetition of such wrong-doing as has been
-inflicted upon Belgium. All of the men advocating such action,
-including the professional pacificists, the big business men largely
-of foreign birth, and the well-meaning but feeble-minded creatures
-among their allies, and including especially all those who from sheer
-timidity or weakness shrink from duty, occupy a thoroughly base and
-improper position. The peace advocates of this stamp stand on an exact
-par with men who, if there was an epidemic of lawlessness in New York,
-should come together to demand the immediate cessation of all activity
-by the police, and should propose to substitute for it a request that
-the highwaymen, white slavers, black-handers, and burglars cease
-their activities for the moment on condition of retaining undisturbed
-possession of the ill-gotten spoils they had already acquired. The
-only effective friend of peace in a big city is the man who makes the
-police force thoroughly efficient, who tries to remove the causes of
-crime, but who unhesitatingly insists upon the punishment of criminals.
-Pacificists who believe that all use of force in international matters
-can be abolished will do well to remember that the only efficient
-police forces are those whose members are scrupulously careful not to
-commit acts of violence when it is possible to avoid them, but who
-are willing and able, when the occasion arises, to subdue the worst
-kind of wrong-doers by means of the only argument that wrong-doers
-respect, namely, successful force. What is thus true in private life is
-similarly true in international affairs.
-
-No man can venture to state the exact details that should be followed
-in securing such a world league for the peace of righteousness. But,
-not to leave the matter nebulous, I submit the following plan. It would
-prove entirely workable, if nations entered into it with good faith,
-and if they treated their obligations under it in the spirit in which
-the United States treated its obligations as regarded the independence
-of Cuba, giving good government to the Philippines, and building
-the Panama Canal; the same spirit in which England acted when the
-neutrality of Belgium was violated.
-
-All the civilized powers which are able and willing to furnish and to
-use force, when force is required to back up righteousness--and only
-the civilized powers who possess virile manliness of character and the
-willingness to accept risk and labor when necessary to the performance
-of duty are entitled to be considered in this matter--should join to
-create an international tribunal and to provide rules in accordance
-with which that tribunal should act. These rules would have to accept
-the _status quo_ at some given period; for the endeavor to redress all
-historical wrongs would throw us back into chaos. They would lay down
-the rule that the territorial integrity of each nation was inviolate;
-that it was to be guaranteed absolutely its sovereign rights in certain
-particulars, including, for instance, the right to decide the terms
-on which immigrants should be admitted to its borders for purposes
-of residence, citizenship, or business; in short, all its rights in
-matters affecting its honor and vital interest. Each nation should be
-guaranteed against having any of these specified rights infringed upon.
-They would not be made arbitrable, any more than an individual’s right
-to life and limb is made arbitrable; they would be mutually guaranteed.
-All other matters that could arise between these nations should be
-settled by the international court. The judges should act not as
-national representatives, but purely as judges, and in any given case
-it would probably be well to choose them by lot, excluding, of course,
-the representatives of the powers whose interests were concerned. Then,
-and most important, the nations should severally guarantee to use their
-entire military force, if necessary, against any nation which defied
-the decrees of the tribunal or which violated any of the rights which
-in the rules it was expressly stipulated should be reserved to the
-several nations, the rights to their territorial integrity and the
-like. Under such conditions--to make matters concrete--Belgium would be
-safe from any attack such as that made by Germany, and Germany would be
-relieved from the haunting fear its people now have lest the Russians
-and the French, backed by other nations, smash the empire and its
-people.
-
-In addition to the contracting powers, a certain number of outside
-nations should be named as entitled to the benefits of the court.
-These nations should be chosen from those which are as civilized and
-well-behaved as the great contracting nations, but which, for some
-reason or other, are unwilling or unable to guarantee to help execute
-the decrees of the court by force. They would have no right to take
-part in the nomination of judges, for no people are entitled to do
-anything toward establishing a court unless they are able and willing
-to face the risk, labor, and self-sacrifice necessary in order to
-put police power behind the court. But they would be treated with
-exact justice; and in the event of any one of the great contracting
-powers having trouble with one of them, they would be entitled to go
-into court, have a decision rendered, and see the decision supported,
-precisely as in the case of a dispute between any two of the great
-contracting powers themselves.
-
-No power should be admitted into the first circle, that of the
-contracting powers, unless it is civilized, well-behaved, and able
-to do its part in enforcing the decrees of the court. China, for
-instance, could not be admitted, nor could Turkey, although for
-different reasons, whereas such nations as Germany, France, England,
-Italy, Russia, the United States, Japan, Brazil, the Argentine, Chile,
-Uruguay, Switzerland, Holland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Belgium
-would all be entitled to go in. If China continues to behave as well
-as it has during the last few years it might soon go into the second
-line of powers which would be entitled to the benefits of the court,
-although not entitled to send judges to it. Mexico would, of course,
-not be entitled to admission at present into either circle. At present
-every European power with the exception of Turkey would be so entitled;
-but sixty years ago the kingdom of Naples, for instance, would not
-have been entitled to come in, and there are various South American
-communities which at the present time would not be entitled to come
-in; and, of course, this would at present be true of most independent
-Asiatic states and of all independent African states. The council
-should have power to exclude any nation which completely fell from
-civilization, as Mexico, partly with the able assistance of President
-Wilson’s administration, has fallen during the past few years. There
-are various South and Central American states which have never been
-entitled to the consideration as civilized, orderly, self-respecting
-powers which would entitle them to be treated on terms of equality in
-the fashion indicated. As regards these disorderly and weak outsiders,
-it might well be that after a while some method would be devised to
-deal with them by common agreement of the civilized powers; but until
-this was devised and put into execution they would have to be left as
-at present.
-
-Of course, grave difficulties would be encountered in devising such
-a plan and in administering it afterward, and no human being can
-guarantee that it would absolutely succeed. But I believe that it could
-be made to work and that it would mark a very great improvement over
-what obtains now. At this moment there is hell in Belgium and hell
-in Mexico; and the ultrapacificists in this country have their full
-share of the responsibility for this hell. They are not primary factors
-in producing it. They lack the virile power to be primary factors in
-producing anything, good or evil, that needs daring and endurance.
-But they are secondary factors; for the man who tamely acquiesces in
-wrong-doing is a secondary factor in producing that wrong-doing. Most
-certainly the proposed plan would be dependent upon reasonable good
-faith for its successful working, but this is only to say what is also
-true of every human institution. Under the proposed plan there would be
-a strong likelihood of bettering world conditions. If it is a Utopia,
-it is a Utopia of a very practical kind.
-
-Such a plan is as yet in the realm of mere speculation. At present
-the essential thing for each self-respecting, liberty-loving nation
-to do is to put itself in position to defend its own rights. Recently
-President Wilson, in his message to Congress, has announced that we
-are in no danger and will not be in any danger; and ex-President Taft
-has stated that the awakening of interest in our defenses indicates
-“mild hysteria.” Such utterances show fatuous indifference to the
-teachings of history. They represent precisely the attitude which a
-century ago led to the burning of Washington by a small expeditionary
-hostile force, and to such paralyzing disaster in war as almost to
-bring about the break-up of the Union. In his message President Wilson
-justifies a refusal to build up our navy by asking--as if we were
-discussing a question of pure metaphysics--“When will the experts tell
-us just what kind of ships we should construct--and when will they
-be right for ten years together? Who shall tell us now what sort of
-navy to build?” and actually adds, after posing and leaving unanswered
-these questions: “I turn away from the subject. It is not new. There
-is no need to discuss it.” Lovers of Dickens who turn to the second
-paragraph of chapter XI of “Our Mutual Friend” will find this attitude
-of President Wilson toward preparedness interestingly paralleled by
-the attitude Mr. Podsnap took in “getting rid of disagreeables” by
-the use of the phrases, “I don’t want to know about them! I refuse
-to discuss them! I don’t admit them!” thus “clearing the world of
-its most difficult problems by sweeping them behind him. For they
-affronted him.” If during the last ten years England’s attitude toward
-preparedness for war and the upbuilding of her navy had been determined
-by statesmanship such as is set forth in these utterances of President
-Wilson, the island would now be trampled into bloody mire, as Belgium
-has been trampled. If Germany had followed such advice--or rather no
-advice-during the last ten years, she would now have been wholly unable
-so much as to assert her rights anywhere.
-
-Let us immediately make our navy thoroughly efficient; and this can
-only be done by reversing the policy that President Wilson has followed
-for twenty-two months. Recently Secretary Daniels has said, as quoted
-by the press, that he intends to provide for the safety of both the
-Atlantic and Pacific coasts by dividing our war fleet between the
-two oceans. Such division of the fleet, having in view the disaster
-which exactly similar action brought on Russia ten years ago, would be
-literally a crime against the nation. Neither our foreign affairs nor
-our naval affairs can be satisfactorily managed when the President is
-willing to put in their respective departments gentlemen like Messrs.
-Bryan and Daniels. President Wilson would not have ventured to make
-either of these men head of the Treasury Department, because he would
-thereby have offended the concrete interests of American business men.
-But as Secretary of State and Secretary of the Navy the harm they do
-is to the country as a whole. No concrete interest is immediately
-affected; and, as it is only our own common welfare in the future, only
-the welfare of our children, only the honor and interest of the United
-States through the generations that are concerned, it is deemed safe to
-disregard this welfare and to take chances with our national honor and
-interest.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-SUMMING UP
-
-
-“Blessed are the peacemakers,” not merely the peace lovers; for action
-is what makes thought operative and valuable. Above all, the peace
-prattlers are in no way blessed. On the contrary, only mischief has
-sprung from the activities of the professional peace prattlers, the
-ultrapacificists, who, with the shrill clamor of eunuchs, preach the
-gospel of the milk and water of virtue and scream that belief in the
-efficacy of diluted moral mush is essential to salvation.
-
-It seems necessary every time I state my position to guard against
-the counterwords of wilful folly by reiterating that my disagreement
-with the peace-at-any-price men, the ultrapacificists, is not in the
-least because they favor peace. I object to them, first, because they
-have proved themselves futile and impotent in working for peace, and,
-second, because they commit what is not merely the capital error but
-the crime against morality of failing to uphold righteousness as the
-all-important end toward which we should strive. In actual practice
-they advocate the peace of unrighteousness just as fervently as they
-advocate the peace of righteousness. I have as little sympathy as
-they have for the men who deify mere brutal force, who insist that
-power justifies wrong-doing, and who declare that there is no such
-thing as international morality. But the ultrapacificists really play
-into the hands of these men. To condemn equally might which backs
-right and might which overthrows right is to render positive service
-to wrong-doers. It is as if in private life we condemned alike both
-the policeman and the dynamiter or black-hand kidnapper or white
-slaver whom he has arrested. To denounce the nation that wages war in
-self-defense, or from a generous desire to relieve the oppressed, in
-the same terms in which we denounce war waged in a spirit of greed
-or wanton folly stands on an exact par with denouncing equally a
-murderer and the policeman who, at peril of his life and by force of
-arms, arrests the murderer. In each case the denunciation denotes not
-loftiness of soul but weakness both of mind and of morals.
-
-In a capital book, by a German, Mr. Edmund von Mach, entitled “What
-Germany Wants,” there is the following noble passage at the outset:
-
- During the preparation of this book the writer received from his
- uncle, a veteran army officer living in Dresden, a brief note
- containing the following laconic record:
-
- “1793, your great-grandfather at Kostheim.
-
- “1815, your grandfather at Liegnitz.
-
- “1870, myself--all severely wounded by French bullets.
-
- “1914, my son, captain in the 6th Regiment of Dragoons.
-
- “Four generations obliged to fight the French!”
-
- When the writer turns to his American friends of French descent,
- he finds there similar records, and often even greater sorrow,
- for death has come to many of them. In Europe their families and
- his have looked upon each other as enemies for generations, while
- a few years in the clarifying atmosphere of America have made
- friends of former Frenchmen, Germans, Russians, and Englishmen.
-
- Jointly they pray that the present war may not be carried to
- such a pass that an early and honorable peace becomes impossible
- for any one of these great nations. Is it asking too much that
- America may be vouchsafed in not too distant a future to do for
- their respective native lands what the American institutions
- have done for them individually, help them to regard each other
- at their true worth, unblinded by traditional hatred or fiery
- passion?
-
-It is in the spirit of this statement that we Americans should act. We
-are a people different from, but akin, to all the nations of Europe.
-We should feel a real friendship for each of the contesting powers and
-a real desire to work so as to secure justice for each. This cannot
-be done by preserving a tame and spiritless neutrality which treats
-good and evil on precisely the same basis. Such a neutrality never
-has enabled and never will enable any nation to do a great work for
-righteousness. Our true course should be to judge each nation on its
-conduct, unhesitatingly to antagonize every nation that does ill as
-regards the point on which it does ill, and equally without hesitation
-to act, as cool-headed and yet generous wisdom may dictate, so as
-disinterestedly to further the welfare of all.
-
-One of the greatest of international duties ought to be the protection
-of small, highly civilized, well-behaved, and self-respecting states
-from oppression and conquest by their powerful military neighbors. Such
-nations as Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, Uruguay, Denmark, Norway,
-and Sweden play a great and honorable part in the development of
-civilization. The subjugation of any one of them is a crime against,
-the destruction of any one of them is a loss to, mankind.
-
-I feel in the strongest way that we should have interfered, at least
-to the extent of the most emphatic diplomatic protest and at the
-very outset--and then by whatever further action was necessary--in
-regard to the violation of the neutrality of Belgium; for this act
-was the earliest and the most important and, in its consequences, the
-most ruinous of all the violations and offenses against treaties
-committed by any combatant during the war. But it was not the only
-one. The Japanese and English forces not long after violated Chinese
-neutrality in attacking Kiao-Chau. It has been alleged and not denied
-that the British ship _Highflyer_ sunk the _Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse_
-in neutral Spanish waters, this being also a violation of the Hague
-conventions; and on October 10th the German government issued an
-official protest about alleged violations of the Geneva convention by
-the French. Furthermore, the methods employed in strewing portions of
-the seas with floating mines have been such as to warrant the most
-careful investigation by any neutral nations which treat neutrality
-pacts and Hague conventions as other than merely dead letters. Not a
-few offenses have been committed against our own people.
-
-If, instead of observing a timid and spiritless neutrality, we had
-lived up to our obligations by taking action in all of these cases
-without regard to which power it was that was alleged to have done
-wrong, we would have followed the only course that would both have
-told for world righteousness and have served our own self-respect. The
-course actually followed by Messrs. Wilson, Bryan, and Daniels has
-been to permit our own power for self-defense steadily to diminish
-while at the same time refusing to do what we were solemnly bound to
-do in order to protest against wrong and to render some kind of aid
-to weak nations that had been wronged. Inasmuch as, in the first and
-greatest and the most ruinous case of violation of neutral rights and
-of international morality, this nation, under the guidance of Messrs.
-Wilson and Bryan, kept timid silence and dared not protest, it would
-be--and is--an act of deliberate bad faith to protest only as regards
-subsequent and less important violations. Of course, if, as a people,
-we frankly take the ground that our actions are based upon nothing
-whatever but our own selfish and short-sighted interest, it is possible
-to protest only against violations of neutrality that at the moment
-unfavorably affect our own interests. Inaction is often itself the most
-offensive form of action; the administration has persistently refused
-to live up to the solemn national obligations to strive to protect
-other unoffending nations from wrong; and this conduct adds a peculiar
-touch of hypocrisy to the action taken at the same time in signing a
-couple of score of all-inclusive arbitration treaties pretentiously
-heralded as serving world righteousness. If we had acted as we ought to
-have acted regarding Belgium we could then with a clear conscience have
-made effective protest regarding every other case of violation of the
-rights of neutrals or of offenses committed by the belligerents against
-one another or against us in violation of the Hague conventions.
-Moreover, the attitude of the administration has not even placated
-the powers it was desired to please. Thanks to its action, the United
-States during the last five months has gained neither the good-will nor
-the respect of any of the combatants. On the contrary, it has steadily
-grown rather more disliked and rather less respected by all of them.
-
-In facing a difficult and critical situation, any administration is
-entitled to a free hand until it has had time to develop the action
-which it considers appropriate, for often there is more than one
-way in which it is possible to take efficient action. But when so
-much time has passed, either without action or with only mischievous
-action, as gravely to compromise both the honor and the interest of
-the country, then it becomes a duty for self-respecting citizens to
-whom their country is dear to speak out. From the very outset I felt
-that the administration was following a wrong course. But no action of
-mine could make it take the right course, and there was a possibility
-that there was some object aside from political advantage in the
-course followed. I kept silence as long as silence was compatible
-with regard for the national honor and welfare. I spoke only when it
-became imperative to speak under penalty of tame acquiescence in tame
-failure to perform national duty. It has become evident that the
-administration has had no plan whatever save the dexterous avoidance
-of all responsibility and therefore of all duty, and the effort to
-persuade our people as a whole that this inaction was for their
-interest--combined with other less openly expressed and less worthy
-efforts of purely political type.
-
-There is therefore no longer any reason for failure to point out that
-if the President and Secretary of State had been thoroughly acquainted
-in advance, as of course they ought to have been acquainted, with
-the European situation, and if they had possessed an intelligent and
-resolute purpose squarely to meet their heavy responsibilities and
-thereby to serve the honor of this country and the interest of mankind,
-they would have taken action on July 29th, 30th, or 31st, certainly
-not later than August 1st. On such occasions there is a peculiar
-applicability in the old proverb: Nine tenths of wisdom consists in
-being wise in time. If those responsible for the management of our
-foreign affairs had been content to dwell in a world of fact instead of
-a world of third-rate fiction, they would have understood that at such
-a time of world crisis it was an unworthy avoidance of duty to fuss
-with silly little all-inclusive arbitration treaties when the need of
-the day demanded that they devote all their energies to the terrible
-problems of the day. They would have known that a German invasion
-of Switzerland was possible but improbable and a German invasion of
-Belgium overwhelmingly probable. They would have known that vigorous
-action by the United States government, taken with such entire good
-faith as to make it evident that it was in the interest of Belgium
-and not in the interest of France and England, and that if there was
-occasion it would be taken against France and England as quickly as
-against Germany, might very possibly have resulted in either putting
-a stop to the war or in localizing and narrowly circumscribing its
-area. It is, of course, possible that the action would have failed of
-its immediate purpose. But even in that case it cannot be doubted that
-it would have been efficient as a check upon the subsequent wrongs
-committed.
-
-Nor was the opportunity for action limited in time. Even if the
-administration had failed thus to act at the outset of the war, the
-protests officially made both by the German Emperor and by the Belgian
-government to the President as to alleged misconduct in the prosecution
-of the war not only gave him warrant for action but required him to
-act. Meanwhile, from the moment when the war was declared, it became
-inexcusable of the administration not to take immediate steps to
-put the navy into efficient shape, and at least to make our military
-forces on land more respectable. It is possible not to justify but to
-explain the action of the administration in using the navy for the
-sixteen months prior to this war in such a way as greatly to impair
-its efficiency; for of course when the President selected Mr. Daniels
-as Secretary of the Navy he showed, on the supposition that he was not
-indifferent to its welfare, an entire ignorance of what that welfare
-demanded; and therefore the failure to keep the navy efficient may have
-been due at first to mere inability to exercise foresight. But with war
-impending, such failure to exercise foresight became inexcusable. None
-of the effective fighting craft are of any real use so far as Mexico
-is concerned. The navy should at once have been assembled in northern
-waters, either in the Atlantic or the Pacific, and immediate steps
-taken to bring it to the highest point of efficiency.
-
-It is because I believe our attitude should be one of sincere good-will
-toward all nations that I so strongly feel that we should endeavor
-to work for a league of peace among all nations rather than trust to
-alliances with any particular group. Moreover, alliances are very
-shifty and uncertain. Within twenty years England has regarded France
-as her immediately dangerous opponent; within ten years she has felt
-that Russia was the one power against which she must at all costs
-guard herself; and during the same period there have been times when
-Belgium has hated England with a peculiar fervor. Alliances must be
-based on self-interest and must continually shift. But in such a world
-league as that of which we speak and dream, the test would be conduct
-and not merely selfish interest, and so there would be no shifting of
-policy.
-
-It is not yet opportune to discuss in detail the exact method by
-which the nations of the world shall put the collective strength of
-civilization behind the purpose of civilization to do right, using as
-an instrumentality for peace such a world league. I have in the last
-chapter given the bare outline of such a plan. Probably at the outset
-it would be an absolute impossibility to devise a non-national or
-purely international police force which would be effective in a great
-crisis. The prime necessity is that all the great nations should agree
-in good faith to use their combined warlike strength to coerce any
-nation, whichever one it may be, that declines to abide the decision of
-some competent international tribunal.
-
-Our business is to create the beginnings of international order out of
-the world of nations as these nations actually exist. We do not have to
-deal with a world of pacificists and therefore we must proceed on the
-assumption that treaties will never acquire sanctity until nations are
-ready to seal them with their blood. We are not striving for peace in
-heaven. That is not our affair. What we were bidden to strive for is
-“peace on earth and good-will toward men.” To fulfil this injunction
-it is necessary to treat the earth as it is and men as they are, as
-an indispensable pre-requisite to making the earth a better place in
-which to live and men better fit to live in it. It is inexcusable moral
-culpability on our part to pretend to carry out this injunction in such
-fashion as to nullify it; and this we do if we make believe that the
-earth is what it is not and if our professions of bringing good-will
-toward men are in actual practice shown to be empty shams. Peace
-congresses, peace parades, the appointment and celebration of days
-of prayer for peace, and the like, which result merely in giving the
-participants the feeling that they have accomplished something and are
-therefore to be excused from hard, practical work for righteousness,
-are empty shams. Treaties such as the recent all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties are worse than empty shams and convict us as a nation of
-moral culpability when our representatives sign them at the same time
-that they refuse to risk anything to make good the signatures we have
-already affixed to the Hague conventions.
-
-Moderate and sensible treaties which mean something and which can
-and will be enforced mark a real advance for the human race. As has
-been well said: “It is our business to make no treaties which we are
-not ready to maintain with all our resources, for every such ‘scrap
-of paper’ is like a forged check--an assault on our credit in the
-world.” Promises that are idly given and idly broken represent profound
-detriment to the morality of nations. Until no promise is idly entered
-into and until promises that have once been made are kept, at no
-matter what cost of risk and effort and positive loss, just so long
-will distrust and suspicion and wrong-doing rack the world. No honest
-lawyer will hesitate to advise his client against signing a contract
-either detrimental to his interests or impossible of fulfilment;
-and the individual who signs such a contract at once makes himself
-either an object of suspicion to sound-headed men or else an object of
-derision to all men. One of the stock jokes in the comic columns of
-the newspapers refers to the man who swears off or takes the pledge,
-or makes an indefinite number of good resolutions on New Year’s Day,
-and fails to keep his pledge or promise or resolution; this was one of
-Mark Twain’s favorite subjects for derision. The man who continually
-makes new promises without living up to those he has already made, and
-who takes pledges which he breaks, is rightly treated as an object for
-contemptuous fun. The nation which behaves in like manner deserves no
-higher consideration.
-
-The conduct of President Wilson and Secretary Bryan in signing these
-all-inclusive treaties at the same time that they have kept silent
-about the breaking of the Hague conventions has represented the kind of
-wrong-doing to this nation that would be represented in private life
-by the conduct of the individuals who sign such contracts as those
-mentioned. The administration has looked on without a protest while
-the Hague conventions have been torn up and thrown to the wind. It has
-watched the paper structure of good-will collapse without taking one
-step to prevent it; and yet foolish pacificists, the very men who in
-the past have been most vociferous about international morality, have
-praised it for this position. The assertion that our neutrality carries
-with it the obligation to be silent when our own Hague conventions are
-destroyed represents an active step against the peace of righteousness.
-The only way to show that our faith in public law was real was to
-protest against the assault on international morality implied in the
-invasion of Belgium.
-
-Unless some one at some time is ready to take some chance for the
-sake of internationalism, that is of international morality, it will
-remain what it is to-day, an object of derision to aggressive nations.
-Even if nothing more than an emphatic protest had been made against
-what was done in Belgium--it is not at this time necessary for me
-to state exactly what, in my judgment, ought to have been done--the
-foundations would have been laid for an effective world opinion against
-international cynicism. Pacificists claim that we have acted so as to
-preserve the good-will of Europe and to exercise a guiding influence
-in the settlement of the war. This is an idea which appeals to the
-thoughtless, for it gratifies our desire to keep out of trouble and
-also our vanity by the hope that we shall do great things with small
-difficulty. It may or may not be that the settlement will finally be
-made by a peace congress in which the President of the United States
-will hold titular position of headship. But under conditions as they
-are now the real importance of the President in such a peace congress
-will be comparable to the real importance of the drum-major when he
-walks at the head of a regiment. Small boys regard the drum-major as
-much more important than the regimental commander; and the pacificist
-grown-ups who applaud peace congresses sometimes show as regards the
-drum-majors of these congresses the same touching lack of insight
-which small boys show toward real drum-majors. As a matter of fact,
-if the United States enters such a congress with nothing but a record
-of comfortable neutrality or tame acquiescence in violated Hague
-conventions, plus an array of vague treaties with no relation to
-actual facts, it will be allowed to fill the position of international
-drum-major and of nothing more; and even this position it will be
-allowed to fill only so long as it suits the convenience of the men
-who have done the actual fighting. The warring nations will settle
-the issues in accordance with their own strength and position. Under
-such conditions we shall be treated as we deserve to be treated, as a
-nation of people who mean well feebly, whose words are not backed by
-deeds, who like to prattle about both their own strength and their own
-righteousness, but who are unwilling to run the risks without which
-righteousness cannot be effectively served, and who are also unwilling
-to undergo the toil of intelligent and hard-working preparation without
-which strength when tested proves weakness.
-
-In this world it is as true of nations as of individuals that the
-things best worth having are rarely to be obtained in cheap fashion.
-There is nothing easier than to meet in congresses and conventions and
-pass resolutions in favor of virtue. There is also nothing more futile
-unless those passing the resolutions are willing to make them good by
-labor and endurance and active courage and self-denial. Readers of John
-Hay’s poems will remember the scorn therein expressed for those who
-“resoloot till the cows come home,” but do not put effort back of their
-words. Those who would teach our people that service can be rendered or
-greatness attained in easy, comfortable fashion, without facing risk,
-hardship, and difficulty, are teaching what is false and mischievous.
-Courage, hard work, self-mastery, and intelligent effort are all
-essential to successful life. As a rule, the slothful ease of life is
-in inverse proportion to its true success. This is true of the private
-lives of farmers, business men, and mechanics. It is no less true of
-the life of the nation which is made up of these farmers, business men,
-and mechanics.
-
-As yet, as events have most painfully shown, there is nothing to be
-expected by any nation in a great crisis from anything except its
-own strength. Under these circumstances it is criminal in the United
-States not to prepare. Critics have stated that in advocating universal
-military service on the Swiss plan in this country, I am advocating
-militarism. I am not concerned with mere questions of terminology. The
-plan I advocate would be a corrective of every evil which we associate
-with the name of militarism. It would tend for order and self-respect
-among our people. Not the smallest evil among the many evils that
-exist in America is due to militarism. Save in the crisis of the Civil
-War there has been no militarism in the United States and the only
-militarist President we have ever had was Abraham Lincoln. Universal
-service of the Swiss type would be educational in the highest and
-best sense of the word. In Switzerland, as compared with the United
-States, there are, relatively to the population, only one tenth the
-number of murders and of crimes of violence. Doubtless other causes
-have contributed to this, but doubtless also the intelligent collective
-training of the Swiss people in habits of obedience, of self-reliance,
-self-restraint and endurance, of applied patriotism and collective
-action, has been a very potent factor in producing this good result.
-
-As I have already said, I know of my own knowledge that two nations
-which on certain occasions were obliged, perhaps as much by our fault
-as by theirs, to take into account the question of possible war with
-the United States, planned in such event to seize the Panama Canal and
-to take and ransom or destroy certain of our great coast cities. They
-planned this partly in the belief that our navy would intermittently
-be allowed to become extremely inefficient, just as during the last
-twenty months it has become inefficient, and partly in the belief
-that our people are so wholly unmilitary, and so ridden to death
-on the one hand by foolish pacificists and on the other by brutal
-materialists whose only God is money, that we would not show ourselves
-either resolutely patriotic or efficient even in what belated action
-our utter lack of preparation permitted us to take. I believe that
-these nations were and are wrong in their estimate of the underlying
-strength of the American character. I believe that if war did really
-come both the ultrapacificists, the peace-at-any-price men, and the
-merely brutal materialists, who count all else as nothing compared to
-the gratification of their greed for gain or their taste for ease,
-for pleasure, and for vacuous excitement, would be driven before the
-gale of popular feeling as leaves are driven through the fall woods.
-But such aroused public feeling in the actual event would be wholly
-inadequate to make good our failure to prepare.
-
-We should in all humility imitate not a little of the spirit so much
-in evidence among the Germans and the Japanese, the two nations which
-in modern times have shown the most practical type of patriotism,
-the greatest devotion to the common weal, the greatest success in
-developing their economic resources and abilities from within, and the
-greatest far-sightedness in safeguarding the country against possible
-disaster from without. In the _Journal of the Military Service
-Institution_ for the months of November and December of the present
-year will be found a quotation from a Japanese military paper, _The
-Comrades’ Magazine_, which displays an amount of practical good sense
-together with patriotism and devotion to the welfare of the average
-man which could well be copied by our people and which is worthy of
-study by every intelligent American. Germany’s success in industrialism
-has been as extraordinary and noteworthy as her success in securing
-military efficiency, and fundamentally has been due to the development
-of the same qualities in the nation.
-
-At present the United States does not begin to get adequate return
-in the way of efficient preparation for defense from the amount of
-money appropriated every year. Both the executive and Congress are
-responsible for this--and of course this means that the permanent
-and ultimate responsibility rests on the people. It is really less a
-question of spending more money than of knowing how to get the best
-results for the money that we do spend. Most emphatically there should
-be a comprehensive plan both for defense and for expenditure. The best
-military and naval authorities--not merely the senior officers but the
-best officers--should be required to produce comprehensive plans for
-battle-ships, for submarines, for air-ships, for proper artillery,
-for a more efficient regular army, and for a great popular reserve
-behind the army. Every useless military post should be forthwith
-abandoned; and this cannot be done save by getting Congress to accept
-or reject plans for defense and expenditure in their entirety. If each
-congressman or senator can put in his special plea for the erection
-or retention of a military post for non-military reasons, and for
-the promotion or favoring of some given officer or group of officers
-also for non-military reasons, we can rest assured that good results
-can never be obtained. Here, again, what is needed is not plans by
-outsiders but the insistence by outsiders upon the army and navy
-officers being required to produce the right plans, being backed up
-when they do produce the right plans, and being held to a strict
-accountability for any failure, active or passive, in their duty.
-
-Moreover, these plans must be treated as part of the coherent policy of
-the nation in international affairs. With a gentleman like Mr. Bryan
-in the State Department it may be accepted as absolutely certain that
-we never will have the highest grade of efficiency in the Departments
-of War and of the Navy. With a gentleman like Mr. Daniels at the
-head of the navy, it may be accepted as certain that the navy will
-not be brought to the level of its possible powers. This means that
-the people as a whole must demand of their leaders that they treat
-seriously the navy and army and our foreign policy.
-
-The waste in our navy and army is very great. This is inevitable as
-long as we do not discriminate against the inefficient and as long
-as we fail to put a premium upon efficiency. When I was President I
-found out that a very large proportion of the old officers of the
-army and even of the navy were physically incompetent to perform many
-of their duties. The public was wholly indifferent on the subject.
-Congress would not act. As a preliminary, and merely as a preliminary,
-I established a regulation that before promotion officers should be
-required to walk fifty miles or ride one hundred miles in three days.
-This was in no way a sufficient test of an officer’s fitness. It
-merely served to rid the service of men whose unfitness was absolutely
-ludicrous. Yet in Congress and in the newspapers an extraordinary
-din was raised against this test on the ground that it was unjust to
-faithful elderly officers! The pacificists promptly assailed it on
-the ground that to make the army efficient was a “warlike” act. All
-kinds of philanthropists, including clergymen and college presidents,
-wrote me that my action showed not only callousness of heart but also
-a regrettable spirit of militarism. Any officer who because of failure
-to come up to the test or for other reasons was put out of the service
-was certain to receive ardent congressional championship; and every
-kind of pressure was brought to bear on behalf of the unfit, while
-hardly the slightest effective championship was given the move from
-any outside source. This was because public opinion was absolutely
-uneducated on the subject. In our country the men who in time of
-peace speak loudest about war are usually the ultrapacificists whose
-activities have been shown to be absolutely futile for peace, but who
-do a little mischief by persuading a number of well-meaning persons
-that preparedness for war is unnecessary.
-
-It is not desirable that civilians, acting independently of and without
-the help of military and naval advisers, shall prepare minute or
-detailed plans as to what ought to be done for our national defense.
-But civilians are competent to advocate plans in outline exactly as
-I have here advocated them. Moreover, and most important, they are
-competent to try to make public opinion effective in these matters. A
-democracy must have proper leaders. But these leaders must be able to
-appeal to a proper sentiment in the democracy. It is the prime duty of
-every right-thinking citizen at this time to aid his fellow countrymen
-to understand the need of working wisely for peace, the folly of acting
-unwisely for peace, and, above all, the need of real and thorough
-national preparedness against war.
-
-Former Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte, in one of his admirable
-articles, in which he discusses armaments and treaties, has spoken as
-follows:
-
- Indeed, it is so obviously impolitic, on the part of the
- administration and its party friends, to avow a purpose to keep
- the people in the dark as to our preparedness (or rather as to
- our virtually admitted unpreparedness) to protect the national
- interests, safety, and honor, that a practical avowal of such
- purpose on their part would seem altogether incredible, but for
- certain rather notorious facts developed by our experience during
- the last year and three quarters.
-
- It has gradually become evident, or, at least, probable that
- the mind (wherever that mind may be located) which determines,
- or has, as yet, determined, our foreign policy under President
- Wilson, really relies upon a timid neutrality and innumerable
- treaties of general arbitration as sufficient to protect us from
- foreign aggression; and advisedly wishes to keep us virtually
- unarmed and helpless to defend ourselves, so that a sense of
- our weakness may render us sufficiently pusillanimous to pocket
- all insults, to submit to any form of outrage, to resent no
- provocation, and to abdicate completely and forever the dignity
- and the duties of a great nation.
-
- In the absence of actual experience, a strong effort of the
- imagination would be required, at least on the part of the
- writer, to conceive of anybody’s not finding such an outlook
- for his country utterly intolerable; but incredulity must yield
- to decisive proof. Even the votaries of this novel cult of
- cowardice, however, are evidently compelled to recognize that, as
- yet, they constitute a very small minority among Americans, and,
- for this reason, they would keep their fellow countrymen, as far
- as may be practicable, in the dark as to our national weakness
- and our national dangers; they delight in gagging soldiers and
- sailors and, to the extent of their power, everybody else who
- may speak with any authority, and, if they could, would shut out
- every ray of light which might aid public opinion to see things
- as they are.
-
- * * * * *
-
- There is no room for difference as to the utter absurdity of
- reliance on treaties, no matter how solemn or with whomsoever
- made, as substitutes for proper armaments to assure the national
- safety; Belgium’s fate stares in the face any one who should even
- dream of this. Her neutrality was established and guaranteed, not
- by one treaty but by several treaties, not by one power but by
- all the powers; yet she has been completely ruined because she
- relied upon these treaties, refused to violate them herself and
- tried, in good faith, to fulfil the obligations they imposed on
- her.
-
- For any public man, with this really terrible object-lesson
- before his eyes, to seriously ask us to believe that arbitration
- treaties or Hague tribunals or anything else within that order of
- ideas can be trusted to take the place of preparation impeaches
- either his sincerity or his sanity, and impeaches no less
- obviously the common sense of his readers or hearers.
-
- A nation unable to protect itself may have to pay a frightful
- price nowadays as a penalty for the misfortune of weakness; the
- Belgians may be, in a measure, consoled for their misfortune by
- the world’s respect and sympathy; in the like case, we should
- be further and justly punished by the world’s unbounded and
- merited contempt, for our weakness would be the fruit of our own
- ignominious cowardice and incredible folly.
-
-Secretary Garrison in his capital report says that if our outlying
-possessions are even insufficiently manned our mobile home army will
-consist of less than twenty-five thousand men, only about twice the
-size of the police force of New York City. Yet, in the face of this,
-certain newspaper editors, college presidents, pacificist bankers and,
-I regret to say, certain clergymen and philanthropists enthusiastically
-champion the attitude of President Wilson and Mr. Bryan in refusing
-to prepare for war. As one of them put it the other day: “The way
-to prevent war is not to fight.” Luxembourg did not fight! Does
-this gentleman regard the position of Luxembourg at this moment as
-enviable? China has not recently fought. Does the gentleman think
-that China’s position is in consequence a happy one? If advisers of
-this type, if these college presidents and clergymen and editors of
-organs of culture and the philanthropists who give this advice spoke
-only for themselves, if the humiliation and disgrace were to come
-only on them, no one would have a right to object. They have servile
-souls; and if they chose serfdom of the body for themselves only, it
-would be of small consequence to others. But, unfortunately, their
-words have a certain effect upon this country; and that effect is
-intolerably evil. Doubtless it is the influence of these men which is
-largely responsible for the attitude of the President. The President
-attacks preparedness in the name of antimilitarism. The preparedness we
-advocate is that of Switzerland, the least militaristic of countries.
-Autocracy may use preparedness for the creation of an aggressive
-and provocative militarism that invites and produces war; but in a
-democracy preparedness means security against aggression and the best
-guarantee of peace. The President in his message has in effect declared
-that his theory of neutrality, which is carried to the point of a
-complete abandonment of the rights of innocent small nations, and his
-theory of non-preparedness, which is carried to the point of gross
-national inefficiency, are both means for securing to the United States
-a leading position in bringing about peace. The position he would thus
-secure would be merely that of drum-major at the peace conference; and
-he would do well to remember that if the peace that is brought about
-should result in leaving Belgium’s wrongs unredressed and turning
-Belgium over to Germany, in enthroning militarism as the chief factor
-in the modern world, and in consecrating the violation of treaties,
-then the United States, by taking part in such a conference, would have
-rendered an evil service to mankind.
-
-At present our navy is in wretched shape. Our army is infinitesimal.
-This large, rich republic is far less efficient from a military
-standpoint than Switzerland, Holland, or Denmark. In spite of the
-fact that the officers and enlisted men of our navy and army offer
-material on the whole better than the officers and men of any other
-navy or army, these two services have for so many years been neglected
-by Congress, and during the last two years have been so mishandled
-by the administration, that at the present time an energetic and
-powerful adversary could probably with ease drive us not only from
-the Philippines but from Hawaii, and take possession of the Canal and
-Alaska. If invaded by a serious army belonging to some formidable Old
-World empire, we would be for many months about as helpless as China;
-and, as nowadays large armies can cross the ocean, we might be crushed
-beyond hope of recuperation inside of a decade. Yet those now at the
-head of public affairs refuse themselves to face facts and seek to
-mislead the people as to the facts.
-
-President Wilson is, of course, fully and completely responsible for
-Mr. Bryan. Mr. Bryan appreciates this and loyally endeavors to serve
-the President and to come to his defense at all times. As soon as
-President Wilson had announced that there was no need of preparations
-to defend ourselves, because we loved everybody and everybody loved us
-and because our mission was to spread the gospel of peace, Mr. Bryan
-came to his support with hearty enthusiasm and said: “The President
-knows that if this country needed a million men, and needed them in
-a day, the call would go out at sunrise and the sun would go down on
-a million men in arms.” One of the President’s stanchest newspaper
-adherents lost its patience over this utterance and remarked: “More
-foolish words than these of the Secretary of State were never spoken
-by mortal man in reply to a serious argument.” However, Mr. Bryan had
-a good precedent, although he probably did not know it. Pompey, when
-threatened by Cæsar, and told that his side was unprepared, responded
-that he had only to “stamp his foot” and legions would spring from
-the ground. In the actual event, the “stamping” proved as effectual
-against Cæsar as Mr. Bryan’s “call” would under like circumstances. I
-once heard a Bryanite senator put Mr. Bryan’s position a little more
-strongly than it occurred to Mr. Bryan himself to put it. The senator
-in question announced that we needed no regular army, because in the
-event of war “ten million freemen would spring to arms, the equals of
-any regular soldiers in the world.” I do not question the emotional
-or oratorical sincerity either of Mr. Bryan or of the senator. Mr.
-Bryan is accustomed to performing in vacuo; and both he and President
-Wilson, as regards foreign affairs, apparently believe they are living
-in a world of two dimensions, and not in the actual workaday world,
-which has three dimensions. This was equally true of the senator in
-question. If the senator’s ten million men sprang to arms at this
-moment, they would have at the outside some four hundred thousand
-modern rifles to which to spring. Perhaps six hundred thousand more
-could spring to squirrel pieces and fairly good shotguns. The remaining
-nine million men would have to “spring” to axes, scythes, hand-saws,
-gimlets, and similar arms. As for Mr. Bryan’s million men who would at
-sunset respond under arms to a call made at sunrise, the suggestion is
-such a mere rhetorical flourish that it is not worthy even of humorous
-treatment; a high-school boy making such a statement in a theme would
-be marked zero by any competent master. But it is an exceedingly
-serious thing, it is not in the least a humorous thing, that the man
-making such a statement should be the chief adviser of the President
-in international matters, and should hold the highest office in the
-President’s gift.
-
-Nor is Mr. Bryan in any way out of sympathy with President Wilson in
-this matter. The President, unlike Mr. Bryan, uses good English and
-does not say things that are on their face ridiculous. Unfortunately,
-his cleverness of style and his entire refusal to face facts apparently
-make him believe that he really has dismissed and done away with ugly
-realities whenever he has uttered some pretty phrase about them. This
-year we are in the presence of a crisis in the history of the world.
-In the terrible whirlwind of war all the great nations of the world,
-save the United States and Italy, are facing the supreme test of their
-history. All of the pleasant and alluring but futile theories of the
-pacificists, all the theories enunciated in the peace congresses
-of the past twenty years, have vanished at the first sound of the
-drumming guns. The work of all the Hague conventions, and all the
-arbitration treaties, neutrality treaties, and peace treaties of the
-last twenty years has been swept before the gusts of war like withered
-leaves before a November storm. In this great crisis the stern and
-actual facts have shown that the fate of each nation depends not in
-the least upon any elevated international aspirations to which it has
-given expression in speech or treaty, but on practical preparation, on
-intensity of patriotism, on grim endurance, and on the possession of
-the fighting edge. Yet, in the face of all this, the President of the
-United States sends in a message dealing with national defense, which
-is filled with prettily phrased platitudes of the kind applauded at the
-less important type of peace congress, and with sentences cleverly
-turned to conceal from the average man the fact that the President has
-no real advice to give, no real policy to propose. There is just one
-point as to which he does show real purpose for a tangible end. He
-dwells eagerly upon the hope that we may obtain “the opportunity to
-counsel and obtain peace in the world” among the warring nations and
-adjures us not to jeopardize this chance (for the President to take
-part in the peace negotiations) by at this time making any preparations
-for self-defense. In effect, we are asked not to put our own shores
-in defensible condition lest the President may lose the chance to
-be at the head of the congress which may compose the differences
-of Europe. In effect, he asks us not to build up the navy, not to
-provide for an efficient citizen army, not to get ammunition for our
-guns and torpedoes for our torpedo-tubes, lest somehow or other this
-may make the President of the United States an unacceptable mediator
-between Germany and Great Britain! It is an honorable ambition for the
-President to desire to be of use in bringing about peace in Europe;
-but only on condition that the peace thus brought is the peace of
-righteousness, and only on condition that he does not sacrifice this
-country’s vital interests for a clatter of that kind of hollow applause
-through which runs an undertone of sinister jeering. He must not
-sacrifice to this ambition the supreme interest of the American people.
-Nor must he believe that the possibility of his being umpire will have
-any serious effect on the terrible war game that is now being played;
-the outcome of the game will depend upon the prowess of the players.
-No gain will come to our nation, or to any other nation, if President
-Wilson permits himself to be deluded concerning the part the United
-States may take in the promotion of European peace.
-
-Peace in Europe will be made by the warring nations. They and they
-alone will in fact determine the terms of settlement. The United States
-may be used as a convenient means of getting together; but that is all.
-If the nations of Europe desire peace and our assistance in securing
-it, it will be because they have fought as long as they will or can. It
-will not be because they regard us as having set a spiritual example to
-them by sitting idle, uttering cheap platitudes, and picking up their
-trade, while they have poured out their blood like water in support of
-the ideals in which, with all their hearts and souls, they believe.
-For us to assume superior virtue in the face of the war-worn nations
-of the Old World will not make us more acceptable as mediators among
-them. Such self-consciousness on our part will not impress the nations
-who have sacrificed and are sacrificing all that is dearest to them in
-the world, for the things that they believe to be the noblest in the
-world. The storm that is raging in Europe at this moment is terrible
-and evil; but it is also grand and noble. Untried men who live at ease
-will do well to remember that there is a certain sublimity even in
-Milton’s defeated archangel, but none whatever in the spirits who kept
-neutral, who remained at peace, and dared side neither with hell nor
-with heaven. They will also do well to remember that when heroes have
-battled together, and have wrought good and evil, and when the time has
-come out of the contest to get all the good possible and to prevent as
-far as possible the evil from being made permanent, they will not be
-influenced much by the theory that soft and short-sighted outsiders
-have put themselves in better condition to stop war abroad by making
-themselves defenseless at home.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not
-changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors and occasional unbalanced quotation marks
-were corrected.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, America and the World War, by Theodore
-Roosevelt</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: America and the World War</p>
-<p>Author: Theodore Roosevelt</p>
-<p>Release Date: December 2, 2016 [eBook #53651]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Charlene Taylor, Charlie Howard,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/americaworldwar01roos">
- https://archive.org/details/americaworldwar01roos</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 19em;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="492" height="800" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<h1 class="vspace2">AMERICA<br />
-<span class="small">AND</span><br />
-THE WORLD WAR</h1>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="newpage p4 ad">
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="b1"><a id="BOOKS_BY_THEODORE_ROOSEVELT"></a><span class="smaller wspace">BOOKS BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center bold wspace">PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="bold">THROUGH THE BRAZILIAN WILDERNESS.</span><br />
-Illustrated. Large 8vo <span class="right">$3.50 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">LIFE-HISTORIES OF AFRICAN GAME ANIMALS.<br />
-With Edmund Heller.</span> Illustrated.<br />
-2 vols. Large 8vo <span class="right">$10.00 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">AFRICAN GAME TRAILS. An account of the African<br />
-Wanderings of an American Hunter-Naturalist.</span><br />
-Illustrated. Large 8vo <span class="right">$4.00 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">OUTDOOR PASTIMES OF AN AMERICAN HUNTER.</span><br />
-New Edition. Illustrated. 8vo <span class="right">$3.00 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">HISTORY AS LITERATURE and Other Essays.</span><br />
-12mo <span class="right">$1.50 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">OLIVER CROMWELL.</span> Illustrated. 8vo <span class="right">$2.00 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">THE ROUGH RIDERS.</span> Illustrated. 8vo <span class="right">$1.50 <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">THE ROOSEVELT BOOK. Selections from the Writings<br />
-of Theodore Roosevelt.</span> 16mo <span class="right">50 cents <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="bold">AMERICA AND THE WORLD WAR.</span><br />
-12mo <span class="right">75 cents <i>net</i></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="bold">THE ELKHORN EDITION. Complete Works of
-Theodore Roosevelt.</span> 26 volumes. Illustrated.
-8vo. Sold by subscription.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace2 wspace">
-<span class="large">AMERICA</span><br />
-AND<br />
-<span class="xxlarge">THE WORLD WAR</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center vspace larger"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-THEODORE ROOSEVELT</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center larger wspace vspace">NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="larger">CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</span><br />
-1915
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center small">
-Copyright, 1915, by<br />
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS<br />
-<br />
-Published January, 1915
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 6.625em;">
-<img src="images/i_000.jpg" width="106" height="121" alt="Publisher's Logo" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PRAYER_FOR_PEACE"></a>PRAYER FOR PEACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Now these were visions in the night of war:<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">I prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Sent down a grievous plague on humankind,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">A black and tumorous plague that softly slew<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Till nations and their armies were no more&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i4">And there was perfect peace ...<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">I prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Decreed the Truce of Life:&mdash;Wings in the sky<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Fluttered and fell; the quick, bright ocean things<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Sank to the ooze; the footprints in the woods<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Vanished; the freed brute from the abattoir<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Starved on green pastures; and within the blood<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The death-work at the root of living ceased;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And men gnawed clods and stones, blasphemed and died&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i4">And there was perfect peace ...<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">I prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Bowed the free neck beneath a yoke of steel,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Dumbed the free voice that springs in lyric speech,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Killed the free art that glows on all mankind,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And made one iron nation lord of earth,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Which in the monstrous matrix of its will<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Moulded a spawn of slaves. There was One Might&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And there was perfect peace ...<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">I prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Palsied all flesh with bitter fear of death.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The shuddering slayers fled to town and field<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Beset with carrion visions, foul decay.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And sickening taints of air that made the earth<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">One charnel of the shrivelled lines of war.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And through all flesh that omnipresent fear<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Became the strangling fingers of a hand<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">That choked aspiring thought and brave belief<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And love of loveliness and selfless deed<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Till flesh was all, flesh wallowing, styed in fear,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">In festering fear that stank beyond the stars&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i4">And there was perfect peace ...<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But I awoke, wroth with high God and prayer.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">I prayed for peace; God, answering my prayer,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Spake very softly of forgotten things,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Spake very softly old remembered words<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Sweet as young starlight. Rose to heaven again<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The mystic challenge of the Nazarene,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">That deathless affirmation:&mdash;Man in God<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And God in man willing the God to be ...<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And there was war and peace, and peace and war,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Full year and lean, joy, anguish, life and death,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Doing their work on the evolving soul,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The soul of man in God and God in man.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">For death is nothing in the sum of things,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And life is nothing in the sum of things,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And flesh is nothing in the sum of things,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But man in God is all and God in man,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Will merged in will, love immanent in love,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Moving through visioned vistas to one goal&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The goal of man in God and God in man,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And of all life in God and God in life&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The far fruition of our earthly prayer,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">“Thy will be done!” ... There is no other peace!<br /></span>
-</div>
-
-<div class="attrib"><span class="smcap">William Samuel Johnson.</span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii">vii</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="FOREWORD"></a>FOREWORD</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the New York <cite>Evening Post</cite> 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&mdash;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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii">viii</a></span>
-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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix">ix</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x">x</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>In the following chapters, substantially reproduced
-from articles contributed to the Wheeler<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi">xi</a></span>
-Syndicate and also to <cite>The Outlook</cite>, <cite>The Independent</cite>,
-and <cite>Everybody’s</cite>, 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:</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii">xii</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>In every serious crisis the present Hague conventions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii">xiii</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv">xiv</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xv">xv</a></span>
-her example we will be carrying out the precepts
-of Washington.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p class="sigright">
-<span class="smcap">Theodore Roosevelt.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="in0 smaller">
-<span class="smcap">Sagamore Hill</span>,<br />
-<span class="in1">January 1, 1915.</span>
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr class="xsmall">
- <td> </td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Foreword</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#FOREWORD">vii</a></td></tr>
- <tr class="xsmall">
- <td class="tdr">CHAPTER</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Duty of Self-Defense and of Good Conduct toward Others</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Belgian Tragedy</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">15</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Unwise Peace Treaties a Menace to Righteousness</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">44</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Causes of the War</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">60</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">How to Strive for World Peace</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">74</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Peace of Righteousness</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">88</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An International Posse Comitatus</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">104</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Self-Defense without Militarism</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">128</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Our Peacemaker, the Navy</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">156</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Preparedness against War</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">174</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Utopia or Hell?</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">220</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Summing Up</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">244</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE DUTY OF SELF-DEFENSE AND OF
-GOOD CONDUCT TOWARD OTHERS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> 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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>What occurred in Europe is on a giant scale
-like the disaster to the <i>Titanic</i>. 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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>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,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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&mdash;not to speak of China&mdash;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.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-should take to heart the lessons taught by these
-occurrences.</p>
-
-<p>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&mdash;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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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&mdash;and, for that matter, Korea and
-China&mdash;in their hours of need.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-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&mdash;that
-is, unless behind the treaty lay both force
-and the readiness to use force&mdash;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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<p>It is those among us who would go to the front
-in such event&mdash;as I and my four sons would go&mdash;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<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-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.</p>
-
-<p>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.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">15</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE BELGIAN TRAGEDY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Peace</span> 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.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-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 the Servian sides as regards this
-initial cause of the present world-wide war.</p>
-
-<p>Again, when once the war was started between
-Austria and Servia, it can well be argued that it
-was impossible for Russia not to take part. Had
-she not done so, she would have forfeited her
-claims to the leadership of the smaller Slav peoples;
-and the leading Russian liberals enthusiastically
-support the Russian government in this
-matter, asserting that Russia’s triumph in this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-particular struggle means a check to militarism,
-a stride toward greater freedom, and an advance
-in justice toward the Pole, the Jew, the Finn,
-and the people of the Caucasus.</p>
-
-<p>When Russia took part it may well be argued
-that it was impossible for Germany not to come
-to the defense of Austria, and that disaster would
-surely have attended her arms had she not followed
-the course she actually did follow as regards
-her opponents on her western frontier. As
-for her wonderful efficiency&mdash;her equipment, the
-foresight and decision of her General Staff, her
-instantaneous action, her indomitable persistence&mdash;there
-can be nothing but the praise and admiration
-due a stern, virile, and masterful people,
-a people entitled to hearty respect for their
-patriotism and far-seeing self-devotion.</p>
-
-<p>Yet again, it is utterly impossible to see how
-France could have acted otherwise than as she
-did act. She had done nothing to provoke the
-crisis, even although it be admitted that in the
-end she was certain to side with Russia. War
-was not declared by her, but against her, and she
-could not have escaped it save by having pursued
-in the past, and by willingness to pursue in the
-future, a course which would have left her as
-helpless as Luxembourg&mdash;and Luxembourg’s fate
-shows that helplessness does not offer the smallest
-guarantee of peace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-When once Belgium was invaded, every circumstance
-of national honor and interest forced
-England to act precisely as she did act. She
-could not have held up her head among nations
-had she acted otherwise. In particular, she is
-entitled to the praise of all true lovers of peace,
-for it is only by action such as she took that
-neutrality treaties and treaties guaranteeing the
-rights of small powers will ever be given any
-value. The actions of Sir Edward Grey as he
-guided Britain’s foreign policy showed adherence
-to lofty standards of right combined with firmness
-of courage under great strain. The British
-position, and incidentally the German position,
-are tersely stated in the following extract from
-the report of Sir Edward Goschen, who at the
-outset of the war was British ambassador in
-Berlin. The report, in speaking of the interview
-between the ambassador and the German
-imperial chancellor, Herr von Bethmann-Hollweg,
-says:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The chancellor [spoke] about twenty minutes. He
-said the step taken by Great Britain was terrible to a
-degree. Just for a word, “neutrality,” a word which in
-war time had been so often disregarded, just for a scrap
-of paper, Great Britain was going to make war on a
-kindred nation. What we had done was unthinkable.
-It was like striking a man from behind while he was
-fighting for his life against two assailants.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-I protested strongly against this statement, and said
-that in the same way as he wished me to understand
-that for strategical reasons it was a matter of life or
-death to Germany to advance through Belgium and
-violate the latter’s neutrality, so I would wish him to
-understand that it was, so to speak, a matter of life or
-death for the honor of Great Britain that she should keep
-her solemn engagement to do her utmost to defend
-Belgium’s neutrality if attacked. A solemn compact
-simply had to be kept, or what confidence could any one
-have in England’s engagement in the future?</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>There is one nation, however, as to which
-there is no room for difference of opinion, whether
-we consider her wrongs or the justice of her
-actions. It seems to me impossible that any
-man can fail to feel the deepest sympathy with a
-nation which is absolutely guiltless of any wrong-doing,
-which has given proof of high valor, and
-yet which has suffered terribly, and which, if
-there is any meaning in the words “right” and
-“wrong,” has suffered wrongfully. Belgium is
-not in the smallest degree responsible for any of
-the conditions that during the last half century
-have been at work to impress a certain fatalistic
-stamp upon those actions of Austria, Russia,
-Germany, and France which have rendered this
-war inevitable. No European nation has had
-anything whatever to fear from Belgium. There
-was not the smallest danger of her making any
-aggressive movement, not even the slightest aggressive<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-movement, against any one of her neighbors.
-Her population was mainly industrial and
-was absorbed in peaceful business. Her people
-were thrifty, hard-working, highly civilized, and
-in no way aggressive. She owed her national
-existence to the desire to create an absolutely
-neutral state. Her neutrality had been solemnly
-guaranteed by the great powers, including Germany
-as well as England and France.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, and out of a clear sky, her territory
-was invaded by an overwhelming German army.
-According to the newspaper reports, it was admitted
-in the Reichstag by German members
-that this act was “wrongful.” Of course, if
-there is any meaning to the words “right” and
-“wrong” in international matters, the act was
-wrong. The men who shape German policy take
-the ground that in matters of vital national moment
-there are no such things as abstract right
-and wrong, and that when a great nation is
-struggling for its existence it can no more consider
-the rights of neutral powers than it can
-consider the rights of its own citizens as these
-rights are construed in times of peace, and that
-everything must bend before the supreme law of
-national self-preservation. Whatever we may
-think of the morality of this plea, it is certain
-that almost all great nations have in time past
-again and again acted in accordance with it.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-England’s conduct toward Denmark in the Napoleonic
-wars, and the conduct of both England
-and France toward us during those same wars,
-admit only of this species of justification; and
-with less excuse the same is true of our conduct
-toward Spain in Florida nearly a century ago.
-Nevertheless we had hoped by the action taken
-at The Hague to mark an advance in international
-morality in such matters. The action taken by
-Germany toward Belgium, and the failure by
-the United States in any way to protest against
-such action, shows that there has been no advance.
-I wish to point out just what was done, and to
-emphasize Belgium’s absolute innocence and the
-horrible suffering and disaster that have overwhelmed
-her in spite of such innocence. And I
-wish to do this so that we as a nation may learn
-aright the lessons taught by the dreadful Belgian
-tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>Germany’s attack on Belgium was not due to
-any sudden impulse. It had been carefully
-planned for a score of years, on the assumption
-that the treaty of neutrality was, as Herr von Bethmann-Hollweg
-observed, nothing but “paper,”
-and that the question of breaking or keeping it
-was to be considered solely from the standpoint
-of Germany’s interest. The German railways up
-to the Belgian border are for the most part military
-roads, which have been double-tracked with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-a view to precisely the overwhelming attack that
-has just been delivered into and through Belgium.
-The great German military text-books, such as
-that of Bernhardi, in discussing and studying
-possible German campaigns against Russia and
-France, have treated advances through Belgium
-or Switzerland exactly as they have treated
-possible advances through German territory, it
-being assumed by the writers and by all for whom
-they wrote that no efficient rulers or military
-men would for a second consider a neutrality
-treaty or any other kind of treaty if it became
-to the self-interest of a party to break it. It
-must be remembered that the German system
-in no way limits its disregard of conventions to
-disregard of neutrality treaties. For example, in
-General von Bernhardi’s book, in speaking of
-naval warfare, he lays down the following rule:
-“Sometimes in peace even, if there is no other
-means of defending one’s self against a superior
-force, it will be advisable to attack the enemy by
-torpedo and submarine boats, and to inflict upon
-him unexpected losses.... War upon the enemy’s
-trade must also be conducted as ruthlessly as
-possible, since only then, in addition to the material
-damage inflicted upon the enemy, the
-necessary terror is spread among the merchant
-marine, which is even more important than the
-capture of actual prizes. A certain amount of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-terrorism must be practised on the sea, making
-peaceful tradesmen stay in safe harbors.”</p>
-
-<p>Belgium has felt the full effect of the practical
-application of these principles, and Germany has
-profited by them exactly as her statesmen and
-soldiers believed she would profit. They have
-believed that the material gain of trampling on
-Belgium would more than offset any material opposition
-which the act would arouse, and they
-treat with the utter and contemptuous derision
-which it deserves the mere pacificist clamor
-against wrong which is unaccompanied by the
-intention and effort to redress wrong by force.</p>
-
-<p>The Belgians, when invaded, valiantly defended
-themselves. They acted precisely as
-Andreas Hofer and his Tyrolese, and Koerner
-and the leaders of the North German Tugendbund
-acted in their day; and their fate has been the
-fate of Andreas Hofer, who was shot after his
-capture, and of Koerner, who was shot in battle.
-They fought valiantly, and they were overcome.
-They were then stamped under foot. Probably
-it is physically impossible for our people, living
-softly and at ease, to visualize to themselves the
-dreadful woe that has come upon the people of
-Belgium, and especially upon the poor people.
-Let each man think of his neighbors&mdash;of the carpenter,
-the station agent, the day-laborer, the
-farmer, the grocer&mdash;who are round about him,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-and think of these men deprived of their all, their
-homes destroyed, their sons dead or prisoners,
-their wives and children half starved, overcome
-with fatigue and horror, stumbling their way to
-some city of refuge, and when they have reached
-it, finding air-ships wrecking the houses with
-bombs and destroying women and children. The
-King shared the toil and danger of the fighting
-men; the Queen and her children suffered as other
-mothers and children suffered.</p>
-
-<p>Unquestionably what has been done in Belgium
-has been done in accordance with what the Germans
-sincerely believe to be the course of conduct
-necessitated by Germany’s struggle for life.
-But Germany’s need to struggle for her life does
-not make it any easier for the Belgians to suffer
-death. The Germans are in Belgium from no
-fault of the Belgians but purely because the Germans
-deemed it to their vital interest to violate
-Belgium’s rights. Therefore the ultimate responsibility
-for what has occurred at Louvain
-and what has occurred and is occurring in Brussels
-rests upon Germany and in no way upon
-Belgium. The invasion could have been averted
-by no action of Belgium that was consistent with
-her honor and self-respect. The Belgians would
-have been less than men had they not defended
-themselves and their country. For this, and for
-this only, they are suffering, somewhat as my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-own German ancestors suffered when Turenne
-ravaged the Palatinate, somewhat as my Irish
-ancestors suffered in the struggles that attended
-the conquests and reconquests of Ireland in the
-days of Cromwell and William. The suffering is
-by no means as great, but it is very great, and it
-is altogether too nearly akin to what occurred in
-the seventeenth century for us of the twentieth
-century to feel overmuch pleased with the amount
-of advance that has been made. It is neither
-necessary nor at the present time possible to sift
-from the charges, countercharges, and denials the
-exact facts as to the acts alleged to have been
-committed in various places. The prime fact as
-regards Belgium is that Belgium was an entirely
-peaceful and genuinely neutral power which had
-been guilty of no offence whatever. What has
-befallen her is due to the further fact that a great,
-highly civilized military power deemed that its
-own vital interests rendered imperative the infliction
-of this suffering on an inoffensive although
-valiant and patriotic little nation.</p>
-
-<p>I admire and respect the German people. I
-am proud of the German blood in my veins. But
-the sympathy and support of the American people
-should go out unreservedly to Belgium, and we
-should learn the lesson taught by Belgium’s fall.
-What has occurred to Belgium is precisely what
-would occur under similar conditions to us, unless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-we were able to show that the action would be
-dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>The rights and wrongs of these cases where
-nations violate the rules of morality in order to
-meet their own supposed needs can be precisely
-determined only when all the facts are known and
-when men’s blood is cool. Nevertheless, it is imperative,
-in the interest of civilization, to create
-international conditions which shall neither require
-nor permit such action in the future. Moreover,
-we should understand clearly just what
-these actions are and just what lessons we of
-the United States should learn from them so far
-as our own future is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>There are several such lessons. One is how
-complicated instead of how simple it is to decide
-what course we ought to follow as regards any
-given action supposed to be in the interest of
-peace. Of course I am speaking of the thing
-and not the name when I speak of peace. The
-ultrapacificists are capable of taking any position,
-yet I suppose that few among them now
-hold that there was value in the “peace” which
-was obtained by the concert of European powers
-when they prevented interference with Turkey
-while the Turks butchered some hundreds of
-thousands of Armenian men, women, and children.
-In the same way I do not suppose that
-even the ultrapacificists really feel that “peace”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-is triumphant in Belgium at the present moment.
-President Wilson has been much applauded by
-all the professional pacificists because he has announced
-that our desire for peace must make us
-secure it for ourselves by a neutrality so strict
-as to forbid our even whispering a protest against
-wrong-doing, lest such whispers might cause disturbance
-to our ease and well-being. We pay
-the penalty of this action&mdash;or, rather, supine
-inaction&mdash;on behalf of peace for ourselves, by forfeiting
-our right to do anything on behalf of peace
-for the Belgians in the present. We can maintain
-our neutrality only by refusal to do anything to
-aid unoffending weak powers which are dragged
-into the gulf of bloodshed and misery through no
-fault of their own. It is a grim comment on the
-professional pacificist theories as hitherto developed
-that, according to their view, our duty to
-preserve peace for ourselves necessarily means the
-abandonment of all effective effort to secure peace
-for other unoffending nations which through no
-fault of their own are trampled down by war.</p>
-
-<p>The next lesson we should learn is of far more
-immediate consequence to us than speculations
-about peace in the abstract. Our people should
-wake up to the fact that it is a poor thing to live
-in a fool’s paradise. What has occurred in this
-war ought to bring home to everybody what has
-of course long been known to all really well-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">28</a></span>informed
-men who were willing to face the truth
-and not try to dodge it. Until some method is
-devised of putting effective force behind arbitration
-and neutrality treaties neither these
-treaties nor the vague and elastic body of custom
-which is misleadingly termed international law
-will have any real effect in any serious crisis between
-us and any save perhaps one or two of the
-great powers. The average great military power
-looks at these matters purely from the standpoint
-of its own interests. Several months ago, for
-instance, Japan declared war on Germany. She
-has paid scrupulous regard to our own rights
-and feelings in the matter. The contention that
-she is acting in a spirit of mere disinterested
-altruism need not be considered. She believes
-that she has wrongs to redress and strong national
-interests to preserve. Nineteen years ago Germany
-joined with Russia to check Japan’s progress
-after her victorious war with China, and has
-since then itself built up a German colonial possession
-on Chinese soil. Doubtless the Japanese
-have never for one moment forgotten this act of
-Germany. Doubtless they also regard the presence
-of a strong European military power in
-China so near to Korea and Manchuria as a
-menace to Japan’s national life. With businesslike
-coolness the soldierly statesmen of Nippon
-have taken the chance which offered itself of at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-little cost retaliating for the injury inflicted upon
-them in the past and removing an obstacle to
-their future dominance in eastern Asia. Korea
-is absolutely Japan’s. To be sure, by treaty it
-was solemnly covenanted that Korea should remain
-independent. But Korea was itself helpless
-to enforce the treaty, and it was out of the
-question to suppose that any other nation with
-no interest of its own at stake would attempt to
-do for the Koreans what they were utterly unable
-to do for themselves. Moreover, the treaty
-rested on the false assumption that Korea could
-govern herself well. It had already been shown
-that she could not in any real sense govern herself
-at all. Japan could not afford to see Korea
-in the hands of a great foreign power. She regarded
-her duty to her children and her children’s
-children as overriding her treaty obligations.
-Therefore, when Japan thought the right
-time had come, it calmly tore up the treaty and
-took Korea, with the polite and businesslike
-efficiency it had already shown in dealing with
-Russia, and was afterward to show in dealing
-with Germany. The treaty, when tested, proved
-as utterly worthless as our own recent all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties&mdash;and worthlessness can go no
-further.</p>
-
-<p>Hysteria does not tend toward edification; and
-in this country hysteria is unfortunately too often<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-the earmark of the ultrapacificist. Surely at
-this time there is more reason than ever to remember
-Professor Lounsbury’s remark concerning
-the “infinite capacity of the human brain to
-withstand the introduction of knowledge.” The
-comments of some doubtless well-meaning citizens
-of our own country upon the lessons taught
-by this terrible cataclysm of war are really inexplicable
-to any man who forgets the truth that
-Professor Lounsbury thus set forth. A writer of
-articles for a newspaper syndicate the other day
-stated that Germany was being opposed by the
-rest of the world because it had “inspired fear.”
-This thesis can, of course, be sustained. But
-Belgium has inspired no fear. Yet it has suffered
-infinitely more than Germany. Luxembourg inspired
-no fear. Yet it has been quietly taken
-possession of by Germany. The writer in question
-would find it puzzling to point out the particulars
-in which Belgium and Luxembourg&mdash;not
-to speak of China and Korea&mdash;are at this moment
-better off than Germany. Of course they are
-worse off; and this because Germany <em>has</em> “inspired
-fear,” and they have not. Nevertheless, this
-writer drew the conclusion that “fear” was the
-only emotion which ought not to be inspired; and
-he advocated our abandonment of battle-ships and
-other means of defense, so that we might never
-inspire “fear” in any one. He forgot that, while<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-it is a bad thing to inspire fear, it is a much worse
-thing to inspire contempt. Another newspaper
-writer pointed out that on the frontier between
-us and Canada there were no forts, and yet peace
-obtained; and drew the conclusion that forts and
-armed forces were inimical to national safety.
-This worthy soul evidently did not know that
-Luxembourg had no forts or armed forces, and
-therefore succumbed without a protest of any
-kind. If he does not admire the heroism of the
-Belgians and prefer it to the tame submission of
-the Luxembourgers, then this writer is himself
-unfit to live as a free man in a free country. The
-crown of ineptitude, however, was reached by an
-editor who announced, in praising the recent all-inclusive
-peace treaties, that “had their like been
-in existence between some of the European nations
-two weeks ago, the world might have been
-spared the great war.” It is rather hard to deal
-seriously with such a supposition. At this very
-moment the utter worthlessness, under great pressure,
-of even the rational treaties drawn to protect
-Belgium and Luxembourg has been shown. To
-suppose that under such conditions a bundle of
-bits of paper representing mere verbiage, with no
-guarantee, would count for anything whatever in
-a serious crisis is to show ourselves unfit to control
-the destinies of a great, just, and self-respecting
-people.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-These writers wish us to abandon all means of
-defending ourselves. Some of them advocate our
-abandoning the building of an efficient fleet.
-Yet at this moment Great Britain owes it that
-she is not in worse plight than Belgium solely to
-the fact that with far-sighted wisdom her statesmen
-have maintained her navy at the highest
-point of efficiency. At this moment the Japanese
-are at war with the Germans, and hostilities have
-been taking place in what but twenty years ago
-was Chinese territory, and what by treaty is
-unquestionably Chinese territory to-day. China
-has protested against the Japanese violation of
-Chinese neutrality in their operations against the
-Germans, but no heed has been paid to the protest,
-for China cannot back the protest by the use
-of armed force. Moreover, as China is reported
-to have pointed out to Germany, the latter power
-had violated Chinese neutrality just as Japan had
-done.</p>
-
-<p>Very possibly the writers above alluded to were
-sincere in their belief that they were advocating
-what was patriotic and wise when they urged that
-the United States make itself utterly defenseless
-so as to avoid giving an excuse for aggression.
-Yet these writers ought to have known that during
-their own lifetime China has been utterly defenseless
-and yet has suffered from aggression after
-aggression. Large portions of its territory are now<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-in the possession of Russia, of Japan, of Germany,
-of France, of England. The great war between
-Russia and Japan was fought on what was nominally
-Chinese territory. At present, because a few
-months ago Servian assassins murdered the heir to
-the Austrian monarchy, Japan has fought Germany
-on Chinese territory. Luxembourg has been absolutely
-powerless and defenseless, has had no
-soldiers and no forts. It is off the map at this
-moment. Not only are none of the belligerents
-thinking about its rights, but no neutral is thinking
-about its rights, and this simply because
-Luxembourg could not defend itself. It is our
-duty to be patient with every kind of folly, but
-it is hard for a good American, for a man to whom
-his country is dear and who reveres the memories
-of Washington and Lincoln, to be entirely patient
-with the kind of folly that advocates reducing
-this country to the position of China and Luxembourg.</p>
-
-<p>One of the main lessons to learn from this war
-is embodied in the homely proverb: “Speak
-softly and carry a big stick.” Persistently only
-half of this proverb has been quoted in deriding
-the men who wish to safeguard our national interest
-and honor. Persistently the effort has been
-made to insist that those who advocate keeping
-our country able to defend its rights are merely
-adopting “the policy of the big stick.” In reality,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-we lay equal emphasis on the fact that it is necessary
-to speak softly; in other words, that it is
-necessary to be respectful toward all people and
-scrupulously to refrain from wronging them, while
-at the same time keeping ourselves in condition
-to prevent wrong being done to us. If a nation
-does not in this sense speak softly, then sooner
-or later the policy of the big stick is certain to
-result in war. But what befell Luxembourg five
-months ago, what has befallen China again and
-again during the past quarter of a century, shows
-that no amount of speaking softly will save any
-people which does not carry a big stick.</p>
-
-<p>America should have a coherent policy of
-action toward foreign powers, and this should
-primarily be based on the determination never
-to give offense when it can be avoided, always
-to treat other nations justly and courteously, and,
-as long as present conditions exist, to be prepared
-to defend our own rights ourselves. No other
-nation will defend them for us. No paper guarantee
-or treaty will be worth the paper on which
-it is written if it becomes to the interest of some
-other power to violate it, unless we have strength,
-and courage and ability to use that strength,
-back of the treaty. Every public man, every
-writer who speaks with wanton offensiveness of a
-foreign power or of a foreign people, whether he
-attacks England or France or Germany, whether<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-he assails the Russians or the Japanese, is doing
-an injury to the whole American body politic.
-We have plenty of shortcomings at home to correct
-before we start out to criticise the shortcomings
-of others. Now and then it becomes imperatively
-necessary in the interests of humanity, or
-in our own vital interest, to act in a manner
-which will cause offense to some other power.
-This is a lamentable necessity; but when the
-necessity arises we must meet it and act as we
-are honorably bound to act, no matter what offense
-is given. We must always weigh well our
-duties in such a case, and consider the rights of
-others as well as our own rights, in the interest
-of the world at large. If after such consideration
-it is evident that we are bound to act along a
-certain line of policy, then it is mere weakness to
-refrain from doing so because offense is thereby
-given. But we must never act wantonly or
-brutally, or without regard to the essentials of
-genuine morality&mdash;a morality considering our interests
-as well as the interests of others, and considering
-the interests of future generations as
-well as of the present generation. We must so
-conduct ourselves that every big nation and every
-little nation that behaves itself shall never have to
-think of us with fear, and shall have confidence
-not only in our justice but in our courtesy. Submission
-to wrong-doing on our part would be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-mere weakness and would invite and insure disaster.
-We must not submit to wrong done to
-our honor or to our vital national interests. But
-we must be scrupulously careful always to speak
-with courtesy and self-restraint to others, always
-to act decently to others, and to give no nation
-any justification for believing that it has anything
-to fear from us as long as it behaves with decency
-and uprightness.</p>
-
-<p>Above all, let us avoid the policy of peace with
-insult, the policy of unpreparedness to defend our
-rights, with inability to restrain our representatives
-from doing wrong to or publicly speaking ill
-of others. The worst policy for the United States
-is to combine the unbridled tongue with the unready
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>We in this country have of course come lamentably
-short of our ideals. Nevertheless, in some
-ways our ideals have been high, and at times we
-have measurably realized them. From the beginning
-we have recognized what is taught in
-the words of Washington, and again in the great
-crisis of our national life in the words of Lincoln,
-that in the past free peoples have generally
-split and sunk on that great rock of difficulty
-caused by the fact that a government which recognizes
-the liberties of the people is not usually
-strong enough to preserve the liberties of the
-people against outside aggression. Washington<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-and Lincoln believed that ours was a strong people
-and therefore fit for a strong government.
-They believed that it was only weak peoples that
-had to fear strong governments, and that to us
-it was given to combine freedom and efficiency.
-They belonged among that line of statesmen
-and public servants whose existence has been
-the negation of the theory that goodness is always
-associated with weakness, and that strength
-always finds its expression in violent wrong-doing.
-Edward the Confessor represented exactly the
-type which treats weakness and virtue as interchangeable
-terms. His reign was the prime cause
-of the conquest of England. Godoy, the Spanish
-statesman, a century ago, by the treaties he
-entered into and carried out, actually earned the
-title of “Prince of Peace” instead of merely lecturing
-about it; and the result of his peacefulness
-was the loss by Spain of the vast regions which,
-she then held in our country west of the Mississippi,
-and finally the overthrow of the Spanish
-national government, the setting up in Madrid
-of a foreign king by a foreign conqueror, and a
-long-drawn and incredibly destructive war. To
-statesmen of this kind Washington and Lincoln
-stand in as sharp contrast as they stand on the
-other side to the great absolutist chiefs such as
-Cæsar, Napoleon, Frederick the Great, and Cromwell.
-What was true of the personality of Washington<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-and Lincoln was true of the policy they
-sought to impress upon our nation. They were
-just as hostile to the theory that virtue was to
-be confounded with weakness as to the theory
-that strength justified wrong-doing. No abundance
-of the milder virtues will save a nation that
-has lost the virile qualities; and, on the other
-hand, no admiration of strength must make us
-deviate from the laws of righteousness. The
-kind of “peace” advocated by the ultrapacificists
-of 1776 would have meant that we never would
-have had a country; the kind of “peace” advocated
-by the ultrapacificists in the early ’60’s
-would have meant the absolute destruction of
-the country. It would have been criminal weakness
-for Washington not to have fought for the
-independence of this country, and for Lincoln
-not to have fought for the preservation of the
-Union; just as in an infinitely smaller degree it
-would have been criminal weakness for us if we
-had permitted wrong-doing in Cuba to go on forever
-unchecked, or if we had failed to insist on
-the building of the Panama Canal in exactly the
-fashion that we did insist; and, above all, if we
-had failed to build up our navy as during the last
-twenty years it has been built up. No alliance,
-no treaty, and no easy good-will of other nations
-will save us if we are not true to ourselves; and,
-on the other hand, if we wantonly give offense to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-others, if we excite hatred and fear, then some
-day we will pay a heavy penalty.</p>
-
-<p>The most important lesson, therefore, for us
-to learn from Belgium’s fate is that, as things in
-the world now are, we must in any great crisis
-trust for our national safety to our ability and
-willingness to defend ourselves by our own
-trained strength and courage. We must not
-wrong others; and for our own safety we must
-trust, not to worthless bits of paper unbacked
-by power, and to treaties that are fundamentally
-foolish, but to our own manliness and clear-sighted
-willingness to face facts.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, another lesson which this
-huge conflict may at least possibly teach. There
-is at least a chance that from this calamity a
-movement may come which will at once supplement
-and in the future perhaps altogether supplant
-the need of the kind of action so plainly indicated
-by the demands of the present. It is at
-least possible that the conflict will result in a
-growth of democracy in Europe, in at least a
-partial substitution of the rule of the people for
-the rule of those who esteem it their God-given
-right to govern the people. This, in its turn,
-would render it probably a little more unlikely
-that there would be a repetition of such disastrous
-warfare. I do not think that at present it would
-prevent the possibility of warfare. I think that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-in the great countries engaged, the peoples as a
-whole have been behind their sovereigns on both
-sides of this contest. Certainly the action of the
-Socialists in Germany, France, and Belgium, and,
-so far as we know, of the popular leaders in Russia,
-would tend to bear out the truth of this statement.
-But the growth of the power of the people,
-while it would not prevent war, would at
-least render it more possible than at present to
-make appeals which might result in some cases in
-coming to an accommodation based upon justice;
-for justice is what popular rule must be permanently
-based upon and must permanently seek
-to obtain or it will not itself be permanent.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the horror that right-thinking citizens
-feel over the awful tragedies of this war can
-hardly fail to make sensible men take an interest
-in genuine peace movements and try to shape
-them so that they shall be more practical than at
-present. I most earnestly believe in every rational
-movement for peace. My objection is only to
-movements that do not in very fact tell in favor
-of peace or else that sacrifice righteousness to
-peace. Of course this includes objection to all
-treaties that make believe to do what, as a matter
-of fact, they fail to do. Under existing conditions
-universal and all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties have been utterly worthless, because
-where there is no power to compel nations to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-arbitrate, and where it is perfectly certain that
-some nations will pay no respect to such agreements
-unless they can be forced to do so, it is
-mere folly for others to trust to promises impossible
-of performance; and it is an act of positive bad
-faith to make these promises when it is certain
-that the nation making them would violate them.
-But this does not in the least mean that we must
-abandon hope of taking action which will lessen
-the chance of war and make it more possible to
-circumscribe the limits of war’s devastation.</p>
-
-<p>For this result we must largely trust to sheer
-growth in morality and intelligence among the
-nations themselves. For a hundred years peace
-has obtained between us and Great Britain. No
-frontier in Europe is as long as the frontier between
-Canada and ourselves, and yet there is
-not a fort, nor an armed force worthy of being
-called such, upon it. This does not result from
-any arbitration treaty or any other treaty. Such
-treaties as those now existing are as a rule observed
-only when they serve to make a record of
-conditions that already exist and which they do
-not create. The fact simply is that there has
-been such growth of good feeling and intelligence
-that war between us and the British Empire
-is literally an impossibility, and there is no
-more chance of military movements across the
-Canadian border than there is of such movement<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-between New York and New Hampshire or Quebec
-and Ontario. Slowly but surely, I believe,
-such feelings will grow, until war between the
-Englishman and the German, or the Russian, or
-the Frenchman, or between any of them and
-the American, will be as unthinkable as now between
-the Englishman or Canadian and the American.</p>
-
-<p>But something can be done to hasten this day
-by wise action. It may not be possible at once to
-have this action as drastic as would be ultimately
-necessary; but we should keep our purpose in
-view. The utter weakness of the Hague court,
-and the worthlessness when strain is put upon
-them of most treaties, spring from the fact that at
-present there is no means of enforcing the carrying
-out of the treaty or enforcing the decision of
-the court. Under such circumstances recommendations
-for universal disarmament stand on an
-intellectual par with recommendations to establish
-“peace” in New York City by doing away with
-the police. Disarmament of the free and liberty-loving
-nations would merely mean insuring the
-triumph of some barbarism or despotism, and if
-logically applied would mean the extinction of
-liberty and of all that makes civilization worth
-having throughout the world. But in view of
-what has occurred in this war, surely the time
-ought to be ripe for the nations to consider a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-great world agreement among all the civilized
-military powers <em>to back righteousness by force</em>.
-Such an agreement would establish an efficient
-world league for the peace of righteousness.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">44</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">UNWISE PEACE TREATIES A MENACE
-TO RIGHTEOUSNESS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> studying certain lessons which should be
-taught the United States by this terrible world
-war, it is not necessary for us to try exactly
-to assess or apportion the blame. There are plenty
-of previous instances of violation of treaties to be
-credited to almost all the nations engaged on one
-side or the other. We need not try to puzzle out
-why Italy and Japan seemingly construed similar
-treaties of alliance in diametrically opposite ways;
-nor need we decide which was justified or whether
-both were justified. It is quite immaterial to us,
-as regards certain of the lessons taught, whether
-the treaties alleged to be violated affect Luxembourg
-on the one hand or Bosnia on the other,
-whether it is the neutrality of China or the neutrality
-of Belgium that is violated.</p>
-
-<p>Yet again, we need always to keep in mind that,
-although it is culpable to break a treaty, it may
-be even worse recklessly to make a treaty which
-cannot be kept. Recklessness in making promises
-is the surest way in which to secure the discredit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-attaching to the breaking of promises. A
-treaty at present usually represents merely promise,
-not performance; and it is wicked to promise
-what will not or cannot be performed. Genuine
-good can even now be accomplished by narrowly
-limited and defined arbitration treaties which are
-not all-inclusive, if they deal with subjects on
-which arbitration can be accepted. This nation
-has repeatedly acted in obedience to such treaties;
-and great good has come from arbitrations in such
-cases as, for example, the Dogger Bank incident,
-when the Russian fleet fired on British trawlers
-during the Russo-Japanese war. But no good
-whatever has come from treaties that represented
-a sham; and under existing conditions it is hypocritical
-for a nation to announce that it will arbitrate
-questions of honor or vital interest, and folly
-to think that opponents will abide by such treaties.
-Bad although it is to negotiate such a treaty, it
-would be worse to abide by it.</p>
-
-<p>Under these conditions it is mischievous to a
-degree for a nation to trust to any treaty of the
-type now existing to protect it in great crises.
-Take the case of China as a living and present-day
-example. China has shown herself utterly
-impotent to defend her neutrality. Again and
-again she made this evident in the past. Order
-was not well kept at home and above all she was
-powerless to defend herself from outside attack.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-She has not prepared for war. She has kept
-utterly unprepared for war. Yet she has suffered
-more from war, in our own time, than any military
-power in the world during the same period.
-She has fulfilled exactly the conditions advocated
-by these well-meaning persons who for the last
-five months have been saying in speeches, editorials,
-articles for syndicates, and the like that the
-United States ought not to keep up battle-ships
-and ought not to trust to fortifications nor in
-any way to be ready or prepared to defend herself
-against hostile attack, but should endeavor
-to secure peace by being so inoffensive and helpless
-as not to arouse fear in others. The well-meaning
-people who write these editorials and
-make these speeches ought to understand that
-though it is a bad thing for a nation to arouse fear
-it is an infinitely worse thing to excite contempt;
-and every editor or writer or public man who
-tells us that we ought not to have battle-ships and
-that we ought to trust entirely to well-intentioned
-foolish all-inclusive arbitration treaties and abandon
-fortifications and not keep prepared, is merely
-doing his best to bring contempt upon the United
-States and to insure disaster in the future.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is China the only case in point. Luxembourg
-is a case in point. Korea is a case in point.
-Korea was utterly inoffensive and helpless. It
-neither took nor was capable of taking the smallest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-aggressive action against any one. It had no
-forts, no war-ships, no army worthy of the name.
-It excited no fear and no anger. But it did excite
-measureless contempt, and therefore it invited
-aggression.</p>
-
-<p>The point I wish to make is, first, the extreme
-unwisdom and impropriety of making promises
-that cannot be kept, and, second, the utter futility
-of expecting that in any save exceptional cases
-a strong power will keep a promise which it finds
-to its disadvantage, unless there is some way of
-putting force back of the demand that the treaty
-be observed.</p>
-
-<p>America has no claim whatever to superior
-virtue in this matter. We have shown an appalling
-recklessness in making treaties, especially all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties and the like, which
-in time of stress would not and could not be observed.
-When such a treaty is not observed the
-blame really rests upon the unwise persons who
-made the treaty. Unfortunately, however, this
-apportionment of blame cannot be made by outsiders.
-All they can say is that the country concerned&mdash;and
-I speak of the United States&mdash;does not
-keep faith. The responsibility for breaking an improper
-promise really rests with those who make
-it; but the penalty is paid by the whole country.</p>
-
-<p>There are certain respects in which I think the
-United States can fairly claim to stand ahead of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-most nations in its regard for international morality.
-For example, last spring when we took
-Vera Cruz, there were individuals within the city
-who fired at our troops in exactly the same fashion
-as that which is alleged to have taken place
-in Louvain. But it never for one moment entered
-the heads of our people to destroy Vera
-Cruz. In the same way, when we promised freedom
-to Cuba, we kept our promise, and after
-establishing an orderly government in Cuba withdrew
-our army and left her as an independent
-power; performing an act which, as far as I know,
-is entirely without parallel in the dealings of
-stronger with weaker nations.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way our action in San Domingo,
-when we took and administered her customs
-houses, represented a substantial and efficient
-achievement in the cause of international peace
-which stands high in the very honorable but
-scanty list of such actions by great nations in
-dealing with their less fortunate sisters. In the
-same way our handling of the Panama situation,
-both in the acquisition of the canal, in its construction,
-and in the attitude we have taken toward
-the dwellers on the Isthmus and all the nations of
-mankind, has been such as to reflect signal honor
-on our people. In the same way we returned the
-Chinese indemnity, because we deemed it excessive,
-just as previously we had returned a money<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-indemnity to Japan. Similarly the disinterestedness
-with which we have administered the Philippines
-for the good of the Philippine people is
-something upon which we have a right to pride
-ourselves and shows the harm that would have
-been done had we not taken possession of the
-Philippines.</p>
-
-<p>But, unfortunately, in dealing with schemes of
-universal peace and arbitration, we have often
-shown an unwillingness to fulfil proper promises
-which we had already made by treaty, coupled
-with a reckless willingness to make new treaties
-with all kinds of promises which were either improper
-and ought not to be kept or which, even
-if proper, could not and would not be kept. It
-has again and again proved exceedingly difficult
-to get Congress to appropriate money to pay
-some obligation which under treaty or arbitration
-or the like has been declared to be owing by
-us to the citizens of some foreign nation. Often
-we have announced our intention to make sweeping
-arbitration treaties or agreements at the very
-time when by our conduct we were showing that
-in actual fact we had not the slightest intention
-of applying them with the sweeping universality
-we promised. In these cases we were usually,
-although not always, right in our refusal to apply
-the treaties, or rather the principles set forth in
-the treaties, to the concrete case at issue; but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-we were utterly wrong, we were, even although
-perhaps unintentionally, both insincere and hypocritical,
-when at the same time we made believe
-we intended that these principles would be universally
-applied. This was particularly true in connection
-with the universal arbitration treaties
-which our government unsuccessfully endeavored
-to negotiate some three years ago. Our government
-announced at that time that we intended
-to enter into universal arbitration treaties under
-which we would arbitrate everything, even including
-questions of honor and of vital national
-interest. At the very time that this announcement
-was made and the negotiation of the treaties begun,
-the government in case after case where
-specific performance of its pledges was demanded
-responded with a flat refusal to do the very thing
-it had announced its intention of doing.</p>
-
-<p>Recently, there have been negotiated in Washington
-thirty or forty little all-inclusive arbitration
-or so-called “peace” treaties, which represent
-as high a degree of fatuity as is often achieved
-in these matters. There is no likelihood that
-they will do us any great material harm because
-it is absolutely certain that we would not pay the
-smallest attention to them in the event of their
-being invoked in any matter where our interests
-were seriously involved; but it would do us moral
-harm to break them, even although this were the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-least evil of two evil alternatives. It is a discreditable
-thing that at this very moment, with
-before our eyes such proof of the worthlessness of
-the neutrality treaties affecting Belgium and
-Luxembourg, our nation should be negotiating
-treaties which convince every sensible and well-informed
-observer abroad that we are either
-utterly heedless in making promises which cannot
-be kept or else willing to make promises which we
-have no intention of keeping. What has just
-happened shows that such treaties are worthless
-except to the degree that force can and will be
-used in backing them.</p>
-
-<p>There are some well-meaning people, misled by
-mere words, who doubtless think that treaties of
-this kind do accomplish something. These good
-and well-meaning people may feel that I am not
-zealous in the cause of peace. This is the direct
-reverse of the truth. I abhor war. In common
-with all other thinking men I am inexpressibly
-saddened by the dreadful contest now waging in
-Europe. I put peace very high as an agent for
-bringing about righteousness. But if I must
-choose between righteousness and peace I choose
-righteousness. Therefore, I hold myself in honor
-bound to do anything in my power to advance the
-cause of the peace of righteousness throughout
-the world. I believe we can make substantial
-advances by international agreement in the line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-of achieving this purpose and in this book I
-state in outline just what I think can be done
-toward this end. But I hold that we will do
-nothing and less than nothing unless, pending
-the accomplishment of this purpose, we keep our
-own beloved country in such shape that war shall
-not strike her down; and, furthermore, unless we
-also seriously consider what the defects have
-been in the existing peace, neutrality, and arbitration
-treaties and in the attitude hitherto assumed
-by the professional pacificists, which have
-rendered these treaties such feeble aids to peace
-and the ultrapacificist attitude a positive obstacle
-to peace.</p>
-
-<p>The truth is that the advocates of world-wide
-peace, like all reformers, should bear in mind
-Josh Billings’s astute remark that “it is much
-easier to be a harmless dove than a wise serpent.”
-The worthy pacificists have completely forgotten
-that the Biblical injunction is two-sided and that
-we are bidden not only to be harmless as doves
-but also to be wise as serpents. The ultrapacificists
-have undoubtedly been an exceedingly
-harmless body so far as obtaining peace is concerned.
-They have exerted practically no influence
-in restraining wrong, although they have
-sometimes had a real and lamentable influence in
-crippling the forces of right and preventing them
-from dealing with wrong. An appreciable amount<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-of good work has been done for peace by genuine
-lovers of peace, but it has not been done by the
-feeble folk of the peace movement, loquacious but
-impotent, who are usually unfortunately prominent
-in the movement and who excite the utter
-derision of the great powers of evil.</p>
-
-<p>Sincere lovers of peace who are wise have been
-obliged to face the fact that it is often a very complicated
-thing to secure peace without the sacrifice
-of righteousness. Furthermore, they have
-been obliged to face the fact that generally the
-only way to accomplish anything was by not
-trying to accomplish too much.</p>
-
-<p>The complicated nature of the problem is shown
-by the fact that whereas the real friends of righteousness
-believe that our duty to peace ought to be
-fulfilled by protesting against&mdash;and doubtless if
-necessary doing more than merely protest against&mdash;the
-violation of the rights secured to Belgium by
-treaty, the professional pacificists nervously point
-out that such a course would expose us to accusations
-of abandoning our “neutrality.” In theory
-these pacificists admit it to be our duty to uphold
-the Hague treaties of which we were among the
-signatory powers; but they are against effective
-action to uphold them, for they are pathetic believers
-in the all-sufficiency of signatures, placed
-on bits of paper. They have pinned their faith
-to the foolish belief that everything put in these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-treaties was forthwith guaranteed to all mankind.
-In dealing with the rights of neutrals Article 10 of
-Chapter 1 explicitly states that if the territory
-of a neutral nation is invaded the repelling of
-such invasion by force shall not be esteemed a
-“hostile” act on the part of the neutral nation.
-Unquestionably under this clause Belgium has
-committed no hostile act. Yet, this sound declaration
-of morality, in a treaty that the leading
-world-powers have signed, amounts to precisely
-and exactly nothing so far as the rights of poor Belgium
-are concerned, because there is no way provided
-of enforcing the treaty and because the
-American government has decided that it can
-keep at peace and remain neutral only by declining
-to do what, according to the intention of the
-Hague treaty, it would be expected to do in securing
-peace for Belgium. In practice the Hague
-treaties have proved and will always prove useless
-while there is no sanction of force behind
-them. For the United States to proffer “good
-offices” to the various powers entering such a great
-conflict as the present one accomplishes not one
-particle of good; to refer them, when they mutually
-complain of wrongs, to a Hague court which is
-merely a phantom does less than no good. The
-Hague treaties can accomplish nothing, and ought
-not to have been entered into, unless in such a
-case as this of Belgium there is willingness to take<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-efficient action under them. There could be no
-better illustration of how extremely complicated
-and difficult a thing it is in practice instead of in
-theory to make even a small advance in the cause
-of peace.</p>
-
-<p>I believe that international opinion can do
-something to arrest wrong; but only if it is
-aroused and finds some method of clear and forceful
-expression. For example, I hope that it has
-been aroused to the point of preventing any repetition
-at the expense of Brussels of the destruction
-which has befallen Louvain. The peaceful
-people of Brussels now live in dread of what may
-happen to them if the Germans should evacuate
-the city. In such an event it is possible that half
-a dozen fanatics, or half a dozen young roughs
-of the “Apache” type, in spite of everything
-that good citizens may do, will from some building
-fire on the retiring soldiers. In such case the
-offenders ought to be and must be treated with
-instant and unsparing rigor, and those clearly
-guilty of aiding or shielding them should also be
-so treated. But if in such case Brussels is in whole
-or in part destroyed as Louvain was destroyed,
-those destroying it will be guilty of a capital
-crime against civilization; and it is heartily to
-be regretted that civilized nations have not devised
-some method by which the collective power
-of civilization can be used to prevent or punish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-such crimes. In every great city there are plenty
-of reckless or fanatical or downright evil men
-eagerly ready to do some act which is abhorrent
-to the vast majority of their fellows; and it is
-wicked to punish with cruel severity immense
-multitudes of innocent men, women, and children
-for the misdeeds of a few rascals or fanatics. Of
-course, it is eminently right to punish by death
-these rascals or fanatics themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Kindly people who know little of life and nothing
-whatever of the great forces of international
-rivalry have exposed the cause of peace to ridicule
-by believing that serious wars could be avoided
-through arbitration treaties, peace treaties, neutrality
-treaties, and the action of the Hague court,
-without putting force behind such treaties and
-such action. The simple fact is that none of these
-existing treaties and no function of the Hague
-court hitherto planned and exercised have exerted
-or could exert the very smallest influence in
-maintaining peace when great conflicting international
-passions are aroused and great conflicting
-national interests are at stake. It happens
-that wars have been more numerous in the fifteen
-years since the first Hague conference than in the
-fifteen years prior to it. It was Russia that
-called the first and second Hague conferences,
-and in the interval she fought the war with Japan
-and is now fighting a far greater war. We bore<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-a prominent part at the Hague conferences; but
-if the Hague court had been in existence in 1898
-it could not have had the smallest effect upon our
-war with Spain; and neither would any possible
-arbitration treaty or peace treaty have had any
-effect. At the present moment Great Britain owes
-its immunity from invasion purely to its navy
-and to the fact that that navy has been sedulously
-exercised in time of peace so as to prepare it for
-war. Great Britain has always been willing to
-enter into any reasonable&mdash;and into some unreasonable&mdash;peace
-and arbitration treaties; but her
-fate now would have been the fate of Belgium
-and would not have been hindered in the smallest
-degree by these treaties, if she had not possessed a
-first-class navy. The navy has done a thousand
-times more for her peace than all the arbitration
-treaties and peace treaties of the type now existing
-that the wit of man could invent. I believe
-that national agreement in the future can do much
-toward minimizing the chance for war; but it
-must be by proceeding along different lines from
-those hitherto followed and in an entirely different
-spirit from the ultrapacificist or professional peace-at-any-price
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>The Hague court has served a very limited,
-but a useful, purpose. Some, although only a
-small number, of the existing peace and arbitration
-treaties have served a useful purpose. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-the purpose and the service have been strictly limited.
-Issues often arise between nations
-which are not of first-class importance, which do
-not affect their vital honor and interest, but
-which, if left unsettled, may eventually cause irritation
-that will have the worst possible results.
-The Hague court and the different treaties in
-question provide instrumentalities for settling
-such disputes, where the nations involved really
-wish to settle them but might be unable to do so
-if means were not supplied. This is a real service
-and one well worth rendering. These treaties
-and the Hague court have rendered such service
-again and again in time past. It has been a misfortune
-that some worthy people have anticipated
-too much and claimed too much in reference to
-them, for the failure of the excessive claims has
-blinded men to what they really have accomplished.
-To expect from them what they cannot
-give is merely short-sighted. To assert that they
-will give what they cannot give is mischievous.
-To promise that they will give what they cannot
-give is not only mischievous but hypocritical;
-and it is for this reason that such treaties as
-the thirty or forty all-inclusive arbitration or peace
-treaties recently negotiated at Washington, although
-unimportant, are slightly harmful.</p>
-
-<p>The Hague court has proved worthless in the
-present gigantic crisis. There is hardly a Hague<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-treaty which in the present crisis has not in some
-respect been violated. However, a step toward
-the peaceful settlement of questions at issue between
-nations which are not vital and which do
-not mark a serious crisis has been accomplished
-on certain occasions in the past by the action of
-the Hague court and by rational and limited
-peace or arbitration treaties. Our business is to
-try to make this court of more effect and to enlarge
-the class of cases where its actions will be
-valuable. In order to do this, we must endeavor
-to put an international police force behind this
-international judiciary. At the same time we
-must refuse to do or say anything insincere.
-Above all, we must refuse to be misled into abandoning
-the policy of efficient self-defense, by any
-unfounded trust that the Hague court, as now
-constituted, and peace or arbitration treaties of
-the existing type, can in the smallest degree accomplish
-what they never have accomplished and
-never can accomplish. Neither the existing Hague
-court nor any peace treaties of the existing type
-will exert even the slightest influence in saving
-from disaster any nation that does not preserve
-the virile virtues and the long-sightedness that
-will enable it by its own might to guard its own
-honor, interest, and national life.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">60</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE CAUSES OF THE WAR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">From</span> what we have so far considered, two
-things are evident. First, it is quite clear
-that in the world, as it is at this moment
-situated, it is literally criminal, literally a crime
-against the nation, not to be adequately and
-thoroughly prepared in advance, so as to guard
-ourselves and hold our own in war. We should
-have a much better army than at present, including
-especially a far larger reserve upon
-which to draw in time of war. We should have
-first-class fortifications, especially on the canal
-and in Hawaii. Most important of all, we should
-not only have a good navy but should have it
-continually exercised in manœuvring. For nearly
-two years our navy has totally lacked the practice
-in manœuvring in fleet formation indispensable to
-its efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the lessons hitherto taught by the war,
-the most essential for us to take to heart is that
-taught by the catastrophe that has befallen Belgium.
-One side of this catastrophe, one lesson
-taught by Belgium’s case, is the immense gain in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-the self-respect of a people that has dared to fight
-heroically in the face of certain disaster and possible
-defeat. Every Belgian throughout the
-world carries his head higher now than he has
-ever carried it before, because of the proof of
-virile strength that his people have given. In
-the world at large there is not the slightest interest
-concerning Luxembourg’s ultimate fate; there is
-nothing more than amusement as to the discussion
-whether Japan or Germany is most to blame
-in connection with the infringement of Chinese
-neutrality. This is because neither China nor
-Luxembourg has been able and willing effectively
-to stand for her own rights. At this moment
-Luxembourg is enjoying “peace”&mdash;the peace of
-death. But Belgium has stood for her own rights.
-She has shown heroism, courage, and self-sacrifice,
-and, great though the penalty, the ultimate reward
-will be greater still.</p>
-
-<p>If ever this country is attacked and drawn into
-war as Belgium, through no fault of her own, was
-drawn into war, I hope most earnestly that she
-will emulate Belgium’s courage; and this she cannot
-do unless she is prepared in advance as Belgium
-was prepared. In one point, as I have
-already stated, I very earnestly hope that she will
-go beyond Belgium. If any great city, such as
-New York or San Francisco, Boston or Seattle, is
-held for ransom by a foreign foe, I earnestly hope<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-that Americans, within the city and without, will
-insist that not one dollar of ransom shall be paid,
-and will gladly acquiesce in the absolute destruction
-of the city, by fire or in any other manner,
-rather than see a dollar paid into the war chest
-of our foes for the further prosecution of the war
-against us. Napoleon the Great made many
-regions pay for their own conquest and the conquest
-of the nations to which they belonged.
-But Spain and Russia would not pay, and the
-burning of Moscow and the defense of Saragossa
-marked the two great stages in the turn of the
-tide against him. The prime lesson of this war
-is that no nation can preserve its own self-respect,
-or the good-will of other nations, unless it keeps
-itself ready to exact justice from others, precisely
-as it should keep itself eager and willing to do
-justice to others.</p>
-
-<p>The second lesson is the utter inadequacy in
-times of great crises of existing peace and neutrality
-treaties, and of all treaties conceived in
-the spirit of the all-inclusive arbitration treaties
-recently adopted at Washington; and, in fact, of
-all treaties which do not put potential force behind
-the treaty, which do not create some kind of
-international police power to stand behind international
-sense of right as expressed in some competent
-tribunal.</p>
-
-<p>It remains to consider whether there is not&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">63</a></span>and
-I believe there is&mdash;some method which will
-bring nearer the day when international war of
-the kind hitherto waged and now waging between
-nations shall be relegated to that past which contains
-the kind of private war that was habitually
-waged between individuals up to the end of the
-Middle Ages. By degrees the work of a national
-police has been substituted for the exercise of the
-right of private war. The growth of sentiment
-in favor of peace within each nation accomplished
-little until an effective police force was put back
-of the sentiment. There are a few communities
-where such a police force is almost non-existent,
-although always latent in the shape of a sheriff’s
-posse or something of the kind. In all big communities,
-however, in all big cities, law is observed,
-innocent and law-abiding and peaceful people are
-protected and the disorderly and violent classes
-prevented from a riot of mischief and wrong-doing
-only by the presence of an efficient police
-force. Some analogous international police force
-must be created if war between nations is to be
-minimized as war between individuals has been
-minimized.</p>
-
-<p>It is, of course, essential that, if this end is to
-be accomplished, we shall face facts with the
-understanding of what they really signify. Not
-the slightest good is done by hysterical outcries
-for a peace which would consecrate wrong or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-leave wrongs unredressed. Little or nothing
-would be gained by a peace which merely stopped
-this war for the moment and left untouched all
-the causes that have brought it about. A peace
-which left the wrongs of Belgium unredressed,
-which did not leave her independent and secured
-against further wrong-doing, and which did not
-provide measures hereafter to safeguard all peaceful
-nations against suffering the fate that Belgium
-has suffered, would be mischievous rather than
-beneficial in its ultimate effects. If the United
-States had any part in bringing about such a
-peace it would be deeply to our discredit as a
-nation. Belgium has been terribly wronged, and
-the civilized world owes it to itself to see that this
-wrong is redressed and that steps are taken which
-will guarantee that hereafter conditions shall not
-be permitted to become such as either to require or
-to permit such action as that of Germany against
-Belgium. Surely all good and honest men who
-are lovers of peace and who do not use the great
-words “love of peace” to cloak their own folly
-and timidity must agree that peace is to be made
-the handmaiden of righteousness or else that it is
-worthless.</p>
-
-<p>England’s attitude in going to war in defense
-of Belgium’s rights, according to its guarantee,
-was not only strictly proper but represents the
-only kind of action that ever will make a neutrality<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-treaty or peace treaty or arbitration treaty
-worth the paper on which it is written. The published
-despatches of the British government show
-that Sir Edward Grey clearly, emphatically, and
-scrupulously declined to commit his government
-to war until it became imperative to do so if Great
-Britain was to fulfil, as her honor and interest
-alike demanded, her engagements on behalf of the
-neutrality of Belgium. Of course, as far as Great
-Britain is concerned, she would not be honorably
-justified in making peace unless this object of her
-going to war was achieved. Our hearty sympathy
-should go out to her in this attitude.</p>
-
-<p>The case of Belgium in this war stands by itself.
-As regards all the other powers, it is not
-only possible to make out a real case in favor of
-every nation on each side, but it is also quite possible
-to show that, under existing conditions, each
-nation was driven by its vital interests to do what
-it did. The real nature of the problem we have
-ahead of us can only be grasped if this attitude of
-the several powers is thoroughly understood. To
-paint the Kaiser as a devil, merely bent on gratifying
-a wicked thirst for bloodshed, is an absurdity,
-and worse than an absurdity. I believe that
-history will declare that the Kaiser acted in conformity
-with the feelings of the German people
-and as he sincerely believed the interests of his
-people demanded; and, as so often before in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-personal and family life, he and his family have
-given honorable proof that they possess the qualities
-that are characteristic of the German people.
-Every one of his sons went to the war, not nominally,
-but to face every danger and hardship.
-Two of his sons hastily married the girls to whom
-they were betrothed and immediately afterward
-left for the front.</p>
-
-<p>This was a fresh illustration of one of the most
-striking features of the outbreak of the war in
-Germany. In tens of thousands of cases the
-officers and enlisted men, who were engaged, married
-immediately before starting for the front.
-In many of the churches there were long queues
-of brides waiting for the ceremony, so as to enable
-their lovers to marry them just before they responded
-to the order that meant that they might
-have to sacrifice everything, including life, for
-the nation. A nation that shows such a spirit is
-assuredly a great nation. The efficiency of the
-German organization, the results of the German
-preparation in advance, were strikingly shown in
-the powerful forward movement of the first six
-weeks of the war and in the steady endurance
-and resolute resourcefulness displayed in the following
-months.</p>
-
-<p>Not only is the German organization, the German
-preparedness, highly creditable to Germany,
-but even more creditable is the spirit lying behind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-the organization. The men and women of Germany,
-from the highest to the lowest, have shown
-a splendid patriotism and abnegation of self. In
-reading of their attitude, it is impossible not to
-feel a thrill of admiration for the stern courage
-and lofty disinterestedness which this great crisis
-laid bare in the souls of the people. I most earnestly
-hope that we Americans, if ever the need
-may arise, will show similar qualities.</p>
-
-<p>It is idle to say that this is not a people’s war.
-The intensity of conviction in the righteousness
-of their several causes shown by the several peoples
-is a prime factor for consideration, if we are
-to take efficient means to try to prevent a repetition
-of this incredible world tragedy. History
-may decide in any war that one or the other party
-was wrong, and yet also decide that the highest
-qualities and powers of the human soul were
-shown by that party. We here in the United
-States have now grown practically to accept this
-view as regards our own Civil War, and we feel
-an equal pride in the high devotion to the right,
-as it was given each man to see the right, shown
-alike by the men who wore the blue and the men
-who wore the gray.</p>
-
-<p>The English feel that in this war they fight not
-only for themselves but for principle, for justice,
-for civilization, for a real and lasting world peace.
-Great Britain is backed by the great free democracies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-that under her flag have grown up in Canada,
-in Australia, in South Africa. She feels that
-she stands for the liberties and rights of weak
-nations everywhere. One of the most striking
-features of the war is the way in which the varied
-peoples of India have sprung to arms to defend
-the British Empire.</p>
-
-<p>The Russians regard the welfare of their whole
-people as at stake. The Russian Liberals believe
-that success for Russia means an end of militarism
-in Europe. They believe that the Pole, the Jew,
-the Finn, the man of the Caucasus will each and
-all be enfranchised, that the advance of justice
-and right in Russia will be immeasurably furthered
-by the triumph of the Russian people in this contest,
-and that the conflict was essential, not only
-to Russian national life but to the growth of freedom
-and justice within her boundaries.</p>
-
-<p>The people of Germany believe that they are
-engaged primarily in a fight for life of the Teuton
-against the Slav, of civilization against what they
-regard as a vast menacing flood of barbarism.
-They went to war because they believed the war
-was an absolute necessity, not merely to German
-well-being but to German national existence.
-They sincerely feel that the nations of western
-Europe are traitors to the cause of Occidental civilization,
-and that they themselves are fighting,
-each man for his own hearthstone, for his own wife<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-and children, and all for the future existence of
-the generations yet to come.</p>
-
-<p>The French feel with passionate conviction that
-this is the last stand of France, and that if she does
-not now succeed and is again trampled under foot,
-her people will lose for all time their place in the
-forefront of that great modern civilization of
-which the debt to France is literally incalculable.
-It would be impossible too highly to admire the
-way in which the men and women of France
-have borne themselves in this nerve-shattering
-time of awful struggle and awful suspense. They
-have risen level to the hour’s need, whereas in
-1870 they failed so to rise. The high valor of the
-French soldiers has been matched by the poise,
-the self-restraint, the dignity and the resolution
-with which the French people and the French
-government have behaved.</p>
-
-<p>Of Austria and Hungary, of Servia and Montenegro,
-exactly the same is true, and the people of
-each of these countries have shown the sternest
-and most heroic courage and the loftiest and most
-patriotic willingness for self-sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>To each of these peoples the war seems a crusade
-against threatening wrong, and each man
-fervently believes in the justice of his cause.
-Moreover, each combatant fights with that terrible
-determination to destroy the opponent which
-springs from fear. It is not the fear which any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-one of these powers has inspired that offers the
-difficult problem. It is the fear which each of
-them genuinely feels. Russia believes that a
-quarter of the Slav people will be trodden under
-the heel of the Germans, unless she succeeds.
-France and England believe that their very existence
-depends on the destruction of the German
-menace. Germany believes that unless she can so
-cripple, and, if possible, destroy her western foes,
-as to make them harmless in the future, she will
-be unable hereafter to protect herself against the
-mighty Slav people on her eastern boundary and
-will be reduced to a condition of international impotence.
-Some of her leaders are doubtless influenced
-by worse motives; but the motives above
-given are, I believe, those that influence the great
-mass of Germans, and these are in their essence
-merely the motives of patriotism, of devotion to
-one’s people and one’s native land.</p>
-
-<p>We nations who are outside ought to recognize
-both the reality of this fear felt by each nation for
-others, together with the real justification for its
-existence. Yet we cannot sympathize with that
-fear-born anger which would vent itself in the
-annihilation of the conquered. The right attitude
-is to limit militarism, to destroy the menace of
-militarism, but to preserve the national integrity
-of each nation. The contestants are the great
-civilized peoples of Europe and Asia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-Japan’s part in the war has been slight. She has
-borne herself with scrupulous regard not only to
-the rights but to the feelings of the people of the
-United States. Japan’s progress should be welcomed
-by every enlightened friend of humanity
-because of the promise it contains for the regeneration
-of Asia. All that is necessary in order to
-remove every particle of apprehension caused by
-this progress is to do what ought to be done in
-reference to her no less than in reference to European
-and American powers, namely, to develop
-a world policy which shall guarantee each nation
-against any menace that might otherwise be held
-for it in the growth and progress of another nation.</p>
-
-<p>The destruction of Russia is not thinkable, but
-if it were, it would be a most frightful calamity.
-The Slavs are a young people, of limitless possibilities,
-who from various causes have not been
-able to develop as rapidly as the peoples of central
-and western Europe. They have grown in civilization
-until their further advance has become
-something greatly to be desired, because it will be
-a factor of immense importance in the welfare of
-the world. All that is necessary is for Russia to
-throw aside the spirit of absolutism developed in
-her during the centuries of Mongol dominion.
-She will then be found doing what no other race
-can do and what it is of peculiar advantage to the
-English-speaking peoples that she should do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-As for crushing Germany or crippling her and
-reducing her to political impotence, such an action
-would be a disaster to mankind. The Germans
-are not merely brothers; they are largely ourselves.
-The debt we owe to German blood is
-great; the debt we owe to German thought and to
-German example, not only in governmental administration
-but in all the practical work of life,
-is even greater. Every generous heart and every
-far-seeing mind throughout the world should rejoice
-in the existence of a stable, united, and powerful
-Germany, too strong to fear aggression and
-too just to be a source of fear to its neighbors.</p>
-
-<p>As for France, she has occupied, in the modern
-world, a position as unique as Greece in the world
-of antiquity. To have her broken or cowed
-would mean a loss to-day as great as the loss that
-was suffered by the world when the creative
-genius of the Greek passed away with his loss
-of political power and material greatness. The
-world cannot spare France.</p>
-
-<p>Now, the danger to each of these great and splendid
-civilizations arises far more from the fear that
-each feels than from the fear that each inspires.
-Belgium’s case stands apart. She inspired no
-fear. No peace should be made until her wrongs
-have been redressed, and the likelihood of the
-repetition of such wrongs provided against. She
-has suffered incredibly because the fear among the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-plain German people, among the Socialists, for instance,
-of the combined strength of France and
-Russia made them acquiesce in and support the
-policy of the military party, which was to disregard
-the laws of international morality and the
-plain and simple rights of the Belgian people.</p>
-
-<p>It is idle merely to make speeches and write
-essays against this fear, because at present the
-fear has a real basis. At present each nation has
-cause for the fear it feels. Each nation has cause
-to believe that its national life is in peril unless
-it is able to take the national life of one or more
-of its foes or at least hopelessly to cripple that foe.
-The causes of the fear must be removed or, no
-matter what peace may be patched up to-day or
-what new treaties may be negotiated to-morrow,
-these causes will at some future day bring about
-the same results, bring about a repetition of this
-same awful tragedy.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">74</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">HOW TO STRIVE FOR WORLD PEACE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> the preceding chapters I have endeavored
-to set forth, in a spirit of absolute fairness
-and calmness, the lessons as I see them that
-this war teaches all the world and especially the
-United States. I believe I have shown that,
-while, at least as against Belgium, there has been
-actual wrong-doing, yet on the whole and looking
-back at the real and ultimate causes rather than
-at the temporary occasions of the war, what has
-occurred is due primarily to the intense fear felt
-by each nation for other nations and to the anger
-born of that fear. Doubtless in certain elements,
-notably certain militaristic elements, of the population
-other motives have been at work; but I
-believe that the people of each country, in backing
-the government of that country, in the present war
-have been influenced mainly by a genuine patriotism
-and a genuine fear of what might happen
-to their beloved land in the event of aggression
-by other nations.</p>
-
-<p>Under such conditions, as I have shown, our
-duty is twofold. In the first place, events have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-clearly demonstrated that in any serious crisis
-treaties unbacked by force are not worth the
-paper upon which they are written. Events have
-clearly shown that it is the idlest of folly to assert
-and little short of treason against the nation for
-statesmen who should know better to pretend,
-that the salvation of any nation under existing
-world conditions can be trusted to treaties, to
-little bits of paper with names signed on them but
-without any efficient force behind them. The
-United States will be guilty of criminal misconduct,
-we of this generation will show ourselves
-traitors to our children and our children’s children
-if, as conditions are now, we do not keep ourselves
-ready to defend our hearths, trusting in
-great crises not to treaties, not to the ineffective
-good-will of outsiders, but to our own stout hearts
-and strong hands.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the first and most vital lesson.
-But we are not to be excused if we stop here. We
-must endeavor earnestly but with sanity to try
-to bring around better world conditions. We must
-try to shape our policy in conjunction with other
-nations so as to bring nearer the day when the
-peace of righteousness, the peace of justice and
-fair dealing, will be established among the nations
-of the earth. With this object in view, it is our
-duty carefully to weigh the influences which are
-at work or may be put to work in order to bring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-about this result and in every effective way to do
-our best to further the growth of these influences.
-When this has been done no American administration
-will be able to assert that it is reduced
-to humiliating impotence even to protest against
-such wrong as that committed on Belgium, because,
-forsooth, our “neutrality” can only be preserved
-by failure to help right what is wrong&mdash;and
-we shall then as a people have too much self-respect
-to enter into absurd, all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties, unbacked by force, at the very moment
-when we fail to do what is clearly demanded
-by our duty under the Hague treaties.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless in the long run most is to be hoped
-from the slow growth of a better feeling, a more
-real feeling of brotherhood among the nations,
-among the peoples. The experience of the United
-States shows that there is no real foundation in
-race for the bitter antagonism felt among Slavs
-and Germans, French and English. There are in
-this country hundreds of thousands, millions, of
-men who by birth and parentage are of German
-descent, of French descent or Slavonic descent,
-or descended from each of the peoples within the
-British Islands. These different races not only
-get along well together here, but become knit
-into one people, and after a few generations their
-blood is mingled. In my own veins runs not only
-the blood of ancestors from the various peoples<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-of the British Islands, English, Scotch, Welsh,
-and Irish, but also the blood of Frenchman and
-of German&mdash;not to speak of my forefathers from
-Holland. It is idle to tell us that the Frenchman
-and the German, the Slav and the Englishman
-are irreconcilably hostile one to the other
-because of difference of race. From our own
-daily experiences we know the contrary. We
-know that good men and bad men are to be found
-in each race. We know that the differences between
-the races above named and many others
-are infinitesimal compared with the vital points
-of likeness.</p>
-
-<p>But this growth is too slow by itself adequately
-to meet present needs. At present we are confronted
-with the fact that each nation must keep
-armed and must be ready to go to war because
-there is a real and desperate need to do so and
-because the penalty for failure may be to suffer
-a fate like that of China. At present in every
-great crisis treaties have shown themselves not
-worth the paper they are written on, and the
-multitude of peace congresses that have been held
-have failed to secure even the slightest tangible
-result, as regards any contest in which the passions
-of great nations were fully aroused and their
-vital interests really concerned. In other words,
-each nation at present in any crisis of fundamental
-importance has to rely purely on its own power,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-its own strength, its own individual force. The
-futility of international agreements in great crises
-has come from the fact that force was not
-back of them.</p>
-
-<p>What is needed in international matters is to
-create a judge and then to put police power back
-of the judge.</p>
-
-<p>So far the time has not been ripe to attempt
-this. Surely now, in view of the awful cataclysm
-of the present war, such a plan could at least be
-considered; and it may be that the combatants
-at the end will be willing to try it in order to secure
-at least a chance for the only kind of peace
-that is worth having, the peace that is compatible
-with self-respect. Merely to bring about a
-peace at the present moment, without providing
-for the elimination of the causes of war, would
-accomplish nothing of any permanent value, and
-the attempt to make it would probably represent
-nothing else than the adroit use of some more or
-less foolish or more or less self-interested outsider
-by some astute power which wished to see
-if it could not put its opponents in the wrong.</p>
-
-<p>If the powers were justified in going into this
-war by their vital interests, then they are required
-to continue the war until these vital interests
-are no longer in jeopardy. A peace which
-left without redress wrongs like those which Belgium
-has suffered or which in effect consecrated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-the partial or entire destruction of one or more
-nations and the survival in aggravated form of
-militarism and autocracy, and of international
-hatred in its most intense and virulent form,
-would really be only a worthless truce and would
-not represent the slightest advance in the cause
-of righteousness and of international morality.</p>
-
-<p>The essential thing to do is to free each nation
-from the besetting fear of its neighbor. This
-can only be done by removing the causes of such
-fear. The neighbor must no longer be a danger.</p>
-
-<p>Mere disarmament will not accomplish this
-result, and the disarmament of the free and enlightened
-peoples, so long as a single despotism
-or barbarism were left armed, would be a hideous
-calamity. If armaments were reduced while
-causes of trouble were in no way removed, wars
-would probably become somewhat more frequent
-just because they would be less expensive and less
-decisive. It is greatly to be desired that the
-growth of armaments should be arrested, but they
-cannot be arrested while present conditions continue.
-Mere treaties, mere bits of papers, with
-names signed to them and with no force back of
-them, have proved utterly worthless for the protection
-of nations, and where they are the only
-alternatives it is not only right but necessary
-that each nation should arm itself so as to be
-able to cope with any possible foe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-The one permanent move for obtaining peace,
-which has yet been suggested, with any reasonable
-chance of attaining its object, is by an agreement
-among the great powers, in which each
-should pledge itself not only to abide by the decisions
-of a common tribunal but to back with
-force the decisions of that common tribunal.
-The great civilized nations of the world which do
-possess force, actual or immediately potential,
-should combine by solemn agreement in a great
-World League for the Peace of Righteousness.
-In a later chapter I shall briefly outline what
-such an agreement should attempt to perform.
-At present it is enough to say that such a world-agreement
-offers the only alternative to each nation’s
-relying purely on its own armed strength;
-for a treaty unbacked by force is in no proper
-sense of the word an alternative.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, if there were not reasonable good
-faith among the nations making such an agreement,
-it would fail. But it would not fail merely
-because one nation did not observe good faith.
-It would be impossible to say that such an agreement
-would at once and permanently bring universal
-peace. But it would certainly mark an
-immense advance. It would certainly mean that
-the chances of war were minimized and the prospects
-of limiting and confining and regulating war
-immensely increased. At present force, as represented<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-by the armed strength of the nations, is
-wholly divorced from such instrumentalities for
-securing peace as international agreements and
-treaties. In consequence, the latter are practically
-impotent in great crises. There is no connection
-between force, on the one hand, and any
-scheme for securing international peace or justice
-on the other. Under these conditions every wise
-and upright nation must continue to rely for its
-own peace and well-being on its own force, its
-own strength. As all students of the law know, a
-right without a remedy is in no real sense of the
-word a right at all. In international matters the
-declaration of a right, or the announcement of a
-worthy purpose, is not only aimless, but is a just
-cause for derision and may even be mischievous,
-if force is not put behind the right or the purpose.
-Our business is to make force the agent of justice,
-the instrument of right in international matters
-as it has been made in municipal matters, in
-matters within each nation.</p>
-
-<p>One good purpose which would be served by the
-kind of international action I advocate is that of
-authoritatively deciding when treaties terminate
-or lapse. At present every treaty ought to contain
-provision for its abrogation; and at present
-the wrong done in disregarding a treaty may be
-one primarily of time and manner. Unquestionably
-it may become an imperative duty to abrogate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-a treaty. The Supreme Court of the United
-States set forth this right and duty in convincing
-manner when discussing our treaty with France
-during the administration of John Adams, and
-again a century later when discussing the Chinese
-treaty. The difficulty at present is that each
-case must be treated on its own merits; for in
-some cases it may be right and necessary for a
-nation to abrogate or denounce (not to violate)
-a treaty; and yet in other cases such abrogation
-may represent wrong-doing which should be suppressed
-by the armed strength of civilization.
-At present in cases where only two nations are
-concerned there is no substitute for such abrogation
-or violation of the treaty by one of them;
-for each of the two has to be judge in its own case.
-But the tribunal of a world league would offer
-the proper place to which to apply for the abrogation
-of treaties; and, with international force
-back of such a tribunal, the infraction of a treaty
-could be punished in whatever way the necessities
-of the case demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Such a scheme as the one hereinafter briefly outlined
-will not bring perfect justice any more than
-under municipal law we obtain perfect justice; but
-it will mark an immeasurable advance on anything
-now existing; for it will mean that at last a long
-stride has been taken in the effort to put the collective
-strength of civilized mankind behind the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-collective purpose of mankind to secure the peace
-of righteousness, the peace of justice among the
-nations of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>It may be, though I sincerely hope to the contrary,
-that such a scheme is for the immediate
-future Utopian&mdash;it certainly will not be Utopian
-for the remote future. If it is impossible in the
-immediate future to devise some working scheme
-by which force shall be put behind righteousness
-in disinterested and effective fashion, where international
-wrongs are concerned, then the only
-alternative will be for each free people to keep itself
-in shape with its own strength to defend its
-own rights and interests, and meanwhile to do all
-that can be done to help forward the slow growth
-of sentiment which is assuredly, although very
-gradually, telling against international wrong-doing
-and violence.</p>
-
-<p>Man, in recognizedly human shape, has been
-for ages on this planet, and the extraordinary discoveries
-in Egypt and Mesopotamia now enable
-us to see in dim fashion the beginning of historic
-times six or seven thousand years ago. In the
-earlier ages of which history speaks there was practically
-no such thing as an international conscience.
-The armies of Babylon and Assyria,
-Egypt and Persia felt no sense of obligation to
-outsiders and conquered merely because they
-wished to conquer. In Greece a very imperfect<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-recognition of international right grew up so far
-as Greek communities were concerned, but it
-never extended to barbarians. In the Roman
-Empire this feeling grew slightly, if only for the
-reason that so many nations were included within
-its bounds and were forced to live peaceably together.
-In the Middle Ages the common Christianity
-of Europe created a real bond. There
-was at least a great deal of talk about the duties
-of Christian nations to one another; and although
-the action along the lines of the talk was lamentably
-insufficient, still the talk itself represented
-the dawning recognition of the fact that each nation
-might owe something to other nations and
-that it was not right to base action purely on self-interest.</p>
-
-<p>There has undoubtedly been a wide expansion
-of this feeling during the last few centuries, and
-particularly during the last century. It now extends
-so as to include not only Christian nations
-but also those non-Christian nations which themselves
-treat with justice and fairness the men of
-different creed. We are still a lamentably long
-distance away from the goal toward which we are
-striving; but we have taken a few steps toward
-that goal. A hundred years ago the English-speaking
-peoples of Britain and America regarded
-one another as inveterate and predestined enemies,
-just as three centuries previously had been the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-case in Great Britain itself between those who
-dwelt in the northern half and those who dwelt
-in the southern half of the island. Now war is
-unthinkable between us. Moreover, there is a
-real advance in good-will, respect, and understanding
-between the United States and all the
-other nations of the earth. The advance is not
-steady and it is interrupted at times by acts of
-unwisdom, which are quite as apt to be committed
-by ourselves as by other peoples; but the advance
-has gone on. There is far greater sentiment than
-ever before against unwarranted aggressions by
-stronger powers against weak powers; there is
-far greater feeling against misconduct, whether in
-small or big powers; and far greater feeling against
-brutality in war.</p>
-
-<p>This does not mean that the wrong-doing as
-regards any one of these matters has as yet been
-even approximately stopped or that the indignation
-against such wrong-doing is as yet anything
-like as effective as it should be. But we must
-not let our horror at the wrong that is still done
-blind us to the fact that there has been improvement.
-As late as the eighteenth century there
-were continual instances where small nations or
-provinces were overrun, just as Belgium has been
-overrun, without any feeling worth taking into
-account being thereby excited in the rest of mankind.
-In the seventeenth century affairs were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-worse. What has been done in Belgian cities
-has been very dreadful and the Belgian countryside
-has suffered in a way to wring our hearts;
-but our sympathy and indignation must not blind
-us to the fact that even in this case there has
-been a real advance during the last three hundred
-years and that such things as were done to Magdeburg
-and Wexford and Drogheda and the entire
-Palatinate in the seventeenth century are no
-longer possible.</p>
-
-<p>There is every reason to feel dissatisfied with
-the slow progress that has been made in putting
-a stop to wrong-doing; it is our bounden duty
-now to act so as to secure redress for wrong-doing;
-but nevertheless we must also recognize
-the fact that some progress has been made, and
-that there is now a good deal of real sentiment,
-and some efficient sentiment, against international
-wrong-doing. There has been a real growth toward
-international peace, justice, and fair dealing. We
-have still a long way to go before reaching the
-goal, but at least we have gone forward a little
-way toward the goal. This growth will continue.
-We must do everything that we can to make it
-continue. But we must not blind ourselves to
-the fact that as yet this growth is not such as in
-any shape or way to warrant us in relying for
-our ultimate safety in great national crises upon
-anything except the strong fibre of our national<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-character, and upon such preparation in advance
-as will give that character adequate instruments
-wherewith to make proof of its strength.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">88</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE PEACE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“Come, Peace! not like a mourner bowed<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">For honor lost and dear ones wasted,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But proud, to meet a people proud,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">With eyes that tell o’ triumph tasted!<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Come, with han’ gripping on the hilt,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">An’ step that proves ye Victory’s daughter!<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Longin’ for you, our sperits wilt<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Like shipwrecked men’s on raf’s for water.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“Come, while our country feels the lift<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Of a great instinct shouting ‘Forwards!’<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">An’ knows that freedom ain’t a gift<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Thet tarries long in han’s of cowards!<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Come, sech ez mothers prayed for, when<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">They kissed their cross with lips that quivered,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">An’ bring fair wages for brave men,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">A nation saved, a race delivered!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">These</span> are the noble lines of a noble poet,
-written in the sternest days of the great
-Civil War, when the writer, Lowell, was
-one among the millions of men who mourned the
-death in battle of kinsfolk dear to him. No man
-ever lived who hated an unjust war more than
-Lowell or who loved with more passionate fervor
-the peace of righteousness. Yet, like the other
-great poets of his day and country, like Holmes,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-who sent his own son to the war, like gentle Longfellow
-and the Quaker Whittier, he abhorred unrighteousness
-and ignoble peace more than war.
-These men had lofty souls. They possessed the
-fighting edge, without which no man is really
-great; for in the really great man there must be
-both the heart of gold and the temper of steel.</p>
-
-<p>In 1864 there were in the North some hundreds
-of thousands of men who praised peace as the
-supreme end, as a good more important than all
-other goods, and who denounced war as the worst
-of all evils. These men one and all assailed and
-denounced Abraham Lincoln, and all voted
-against him for President. Moreover, at that
-time there were many individuals in England and
-France who said it was the duty of those two nations
-to mediate between the North and the South,
-so as to stop the terrible loss of life and destruction
-of property which attended our Civil War;
-and they asserted that any Americans who in
-such event refused to accept their mediation and
-to stop the war would thereby show themselves
-the enemies of peace. Nevertheless, Abraham
-Lincoln and the men back of him by their attitude
-prevented all such effort at mediation, declaring
-that they would regard it as an unfriendly act
-to the United States. Looking back from a distance
-of fifty years, we can now see clearly that
-Abraham Lincoln and his supporters were right.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-Such mediation would have been a hostile act, not
-only to the United States but to humanity. The
-men who clamored for unrighteous peace fifty
-years ago this fall were the enemies of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>These facts should be pondered by the well-meaning
-men who always clamor for peace without
-regard to whether peace brings justice or injustice.
-Very many of the men and women who
-are at times misled into demanding peace, as if it
-were itself an end instead of being a means of
-righteousness, are men of good intelligence and
-sound heart who only need seriously to consider
-the facts, and who can then be trusted to think
-aright and act aright. There is, however, an element
-of a certain numerical importance among
-our people, including the members of the ultrapacificist
-group, who by their teachings do some
-real, although limited, mischief. They are a
-feeble folk, these ultrapacificists, morally and
-physically; but in a country where voice and
-vote are alike free, they may, if their teachings
-are not disregarded, create a condition of things
-where the crop they have sowed in folly and weakness
-will be reaped with blood and bitter tears by
-the brave men and high-hearted women of the
-nation.</p>
-
-<p>The folly preached by some of these individuals
-is somewhat startling, and if it were translated
-from words into deeds it would constitute a crime<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-against the nation. One professed teacher of
-morality made the plea in so many words that
-we ought to follow the example of China and deprive
-ourselves of all power to repel foreign attack.
-Surely this writer must have possessed the exceedingly
-small amount of information necessary
-in order to know that nearly half of China was
-under foreign dominion and that while he was
-writing the Germans and Japanese were battling
-on Chinese territory and domineering as conquerors
-over the Chinese in that territory. Think
-of the abject soul of a man capable of holding up
-to the admiration of free-born American citizens
-such a condition of serfage under alien rule!</p>
-
-<p>Nor is the folly confined only to the male sex.
-A number of women teachers in Chicago are
-credited with having proposed, in view of the war,
-hereafter to prohibit in the teaching of history any
-reference to war and battles. Intellectually, of
-course, such persons show themselves unfit to
-be retained as teachers a single day, and indeed
-unfit to be pupils in any school more advanced
-than a kindergarten. But it is not their intellectual,
-it is also their moral shortcomings which are
-striking. The suppression of the truth is, of
-course, as grave an offense against morals as is
-the suggestion of the false or even the lie direct;
-and these teachers actually propose to teach untruths
-to their pupils.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-True teachers of history must tell the facts of
-history; and if they do not tell the facts both
-about the wars that were righteous and the wars
-that were unrighteous, and about the causes that
-led to these wars and to success or defeat in them,
-they show themselves morally unfit to train the
-minds of boys and girls. If in addition to telling
-the facts they draw the lessons that should be
-drawn from the facts, they will give their pupils
-a horror of all wars that are entered into wantonly
-or with levity or in a spirit of mere brutal aggression
-or save under dire necessity. But they will
-also teach that among the noblest deeds of mankind
-are those that have been done in great wars
-for liberty, in wars of self-defense, in wars for the
-relief of oppressed peoples, in wars for putting an
-end to wrong-doing in the dark places of the globe.</p>
-
-<p>Any teachers, in school or college, who occupied
-the position that these foolish, foolish teachers
-have sought to take, would be forever estopped
-from so much as mentioning Washington and
-Lincoln; because their lives are forever associated
-with great wars for righteousness. These
-teachers would be forever estopped from so much
-as mentioning the shining names of Marathon and
-Salamis. They would seek to blind their pupils’
-eyes to the glory held in the deeds and deaths
-of Joan of Arc, of Andreas Hofer, of Alfred the
-Great, of Arnold von Winkelried, of Kosciusko<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-and Rákóczy. They would be obliged to warn
-their pupils against ever reading Schiller’s “William
-Tell” or the poetry of Koerner. Such men
-are deaf to the lament running:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“Oh, why, Patrick Sarsfield, did we let your ships sail,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Across the dark waters from green Innisfail?”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To them Holmes’s ballad of Bunker Hill and
-Whittier’s “Laus Deo,” MacMaster’s “Ode to the
-Old Continentals” and O’Hara’s “Bivouac of
-the Dead” are meaningless. Their cold and
-timid hearts are not stirred by the surge of the
-tremendous “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” On
-them lessons of careers like those of Timoleon and
-John Hampden are lost; in their eyes the lofty
-self-abnegation of Robert Lee and Stonewall Jackson
-was folly; their dull senses do not thrill to the
-deathless deaths of the men who died at Thermopylæ
-and at the Alamo&mdash;the fight of those
-grim Texans of which it was truthfully said that
-Thermopylæ had its messengers of death but the
-Alamo had none.</p>
-
-<p>It has actually been proposed by some of these
-shivering apostles of the gospel of national abjectness
-that, in view of the destruction that has fallen
-on certain peaceful powers of Europe, we should
-abandon all efforts at self-defense, should stop
-building battle-ships, and cease to take any measures
-to defend ourselves if attacked. It is difficult<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-seriously to consider such a proposition. It
-is precisely and exactly as if the inhabitants of a
-village in whose neighborhood highway robberies
-had occurred should propose to meet the crisis by
-depriving the local policeman of his revolver and
-club.</p>
-
-<p>There are, however, many high-minded people
-who do not agree with these extremists, but who
-nevertheless need to be enlightened as to the
-actual facts. These good people, who are busy
-people and not able to devote much time to
-thoughts about international affairs, are often confused
-by men whose business it is to know better.
-For example, a few weeks ago these good
-people were stirred to a moment’s belief that
-something had been accomplished by the enactment
-at Washington of a score or two of all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties; being not unnaturally
-misled by the fact that those responsible for the
-passage of the treaties indulged in some not wholly
-harmless bleating as to the good effects they would
-produce. As a matter of fact, they <em>probably</em> will
-not produce the smallest effect of any kind or sort.
-Yet it is <em>possible</em> they may have a mischievous
-effect, inasmuch as under certain circumstances to
-fulfil them would cause frightful disaster to the
-United States, while to break them, even although
-under compulsion and because it was absolutely
-necessary, would be fruitful of keen humiliation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-to every right-thinking man who is jealous of our
-international good name.</p>
-
-<p>If for example, whatever the outcome of the
-present war, a great triumphant military despotism
-declared that it would not recognize the Monroe
-Doctrine or seized Magdalena Bay, or one of
-the Dutch West Indies, or the Island of St.
-Thomas, and fortified it; or if&mdash;as would be quite
-possible&mdash;it announced that we had no right to
-fortify the Isthmus of Panama, and itself landed
-on adjacent territory to erect similar fortifications;
-then, under these absurd treaties, we
-would be obliged, if we happened to have made
-one of them with one of the countries involved,
-to go into an interminable discussion of the subject
-before a joint commission, while the hostile
-nation proceeded to make its position impregnable.
-It seems incredible that the United States
-government could have made such treaties; but
-it has just done so, with the warm approval of
-the professional pacificists.</p>
-
-<p>These treaties were entered into when the
-administration had before its eyes at that very
-moment the examples of Belgium and Luxembourg,
-which showed beyond possibility of doubt,
-especially when taken in connection with other
-similar incidents that have occurred during the
-last couple of decades, that there are various great
-military empires in the Old World who will pay<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-not one moment’s heed to the most solemn and
-binding treaty, if it is to their interest to break
-it. If any one of these empires, as the result of
-the present contest, obtains something approaching
-to a position of complete predominance in the
-Old World, it is absolutely certain that it would
-pay no heed whatever to these treaties, if it desired
-to better its position in the New World by
-taking possession of the Dutch or Danish West Indies
-or of the territory of some weak American
-state on the mainland of the continent. In such
-event we would be obliged either instantly ourselves
-to repudiate the scandalous treaties by
-which the government at Washington has just
-sought to tie our hands&mdash;and thereby expose ourselves
-in our turn to the charge of bad faith&mdash;or
-else we should have to abdicate our position as
-a great power and submit to abject humiliation.</p>
-
-<p>Since these articles of mine were written and
-published, I am glad to see that James Bryce, a
-lifelong advocate of peace and the stanchest possible
-friend of the United States, has taken precisely
-the position herein taken. He dwells, as
-I have dwelt, upon the absolute need of protecting
-small states that behave themselves from
-absorption in great military empires. He insists,
-as I have insisted, upon the need of the reduction
-of armaments, the quenching of the baleful spirit
-of militarism, and the admission of the peoples<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-everywhere to a fuller share in the control of foreign
-policy&mdash;all to be accomplished by some kind
-of international league of peace. He adds, however,
-as the culminating and most important portion
-of his article:</p>
-
-<p>“But no scheme for preventing future wars will
-have any chance of success unless it rests upon the
-assurance that the states which enter it will loyally
-and steadfastly abide by it and that each and all
-of them will join in coercing by their overwhelming
-united strength any state which may disregard
-the obligations it has undertaken.”</p>
-
-<p>This is almost exactly what I have said. Indeed,
-it is almost word for word what I have said&mdash;an
-agreement which is all the more striking
-because when he wrote it Lord Bryce could not
-have known what I had written. We must insist
-on righteousness first and foremost. We must
-strive for peace always; but we must never hesitate
-to put righteousness above peace. In order
-to do this, we must put force back of righteousness,
-for, as the world now is, national righteousness
-without force back of it speedily becomes a matter
-of derision. To the doctrine that might makes
-right, it is utterly useless to oppose the doctrine
-of right unbacked by might.</p>
-
-<p>It is not even true that what the pacificists desire
-is right. The leaders of the pacificists of this
-country who for five months now have been crying,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-“Peace, peace,” have been too timid even to
-say that they want the peace to be a righteous one.
-We needlessly dignify such outcries when we
-speak of them as well-meaning. The weaklings
-who raise their shrill piping for a peace that shall
-consecrate successful wrong occupy a position
-quite as immoral as and infinitely more contemptible
-than the position of the wrong-doers themselves.
-The ruthless strength of the great absolutist
-leaders&mdash;Elizabeth of England, Catherine
-of Russia, Peter the Great, Frederick the Great,
-Napoleon, Bismarck&mdash;is certainly infinitely better
-for their own nations and is probably better for
-mankind at large than the loquacious impotence,
-ultimately trouble-breeding, which has recently
-marked our own international policy. A policy of
-blood and iron is sometimes very wicked; but it
-rarely does as much harm, and never excites as
-much derision, as a policy of milk and water&mdash;and
-it comes dangerously near flattery to call the
-foreign policy of the United States under President
-Wilson and Mr. Bryan merely one of milk
-and water. Strength at least commands respect;
-whereas the prattling feebleness that dares not
-rebuke any concrete wrong, and whose proposals
-for right are marked by sheer fatuity, is fit only
-to excite weeping among angels and among men
-the bitter laughter of scorn.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment any peace which leaves unredressed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-the wrongs of Belgium, and which does
-not effectively guarantee Belgium and all other
-small nations that behave themselves, against the
-repetition of such wrongs would be a well-nigh
-unmixed evil. As far as we personally are concerned,
-such a peace would inevitably mean that
-we should at once and in haste have to begin to
-arm ourselves or be exposed in our turn to the
-most frightful risk of disaster. Let our people
-take thought for the future. What Germany did
-to Belgium because her need was great and because
-she possessed the ruthless force with which
-to meet her need she would, of course, do to us if
-her need demanded it; and in such event what
-her representatives now say as to her intentions
-toward America would trouble her as little as her
-signature to the neutrality treaties troubled her
-when she subjugated Belgium. Nor does she
-stand alone in her views of international morality.
-More than one of the great powers engaged
-in this war has shown by her conduct in
-the past that if it profited her she would without
-the smallest scruple treat any land in the two
-Americas as Belgium has been treated. What
-has recently happened in the Old World should be
-pondered deeply by the nations of the New World;
-by Chile, Argentina, and Brazil no less than by
-the United States. The world war has proved
-beyond peradventure that the principle underlying<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-the Monroe Doctrine is of vast moment to
-the welfare of all America, and that neither this
-nor any other principle can be made effective
-save as power is put behind it.</p>
-
-<p>Belgium was absolutely innocent of offense.
-Her cities have been laid waste or held to ransom
-for gigantic sums of money; her fruitful fields
-have been trampled into mire; her sons have
-died on the field of battle; her daughters are
-broken-hearted fugitives; a million of her people
-have fled to foreign lands. Entirely disregarding
-all accusations as to outrages on individuals, it
-yet remains true that disaster terrible beyond belief
-has befallen this peaceful nation of six million
-people who themselves had been guilty of not
-even the smallest wrong-doing. Louvain and Dinant
-are smoke-grimed and blood-stained ruins.
-Brussels has been held to enormous ransom,
-although it did not even strive to defend itself.
-Antwerp did strive to defend itself. Because
-soldiers in the forts attempted to repulse the
-enemy, hundreds of houses in the undefended city
-were wrecked with bombs from air-ships, and
-throngs of peaceful men, women, and children
-were driven from their homes by the sharp terror
-of death. Be it remembered always that not one
-man in Brussels, not one man in Antwerp, had
-even the smallest responsibility for the disaster
-inflicted upon them. Innocence has proved not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-even the smallest safeguard against such woe and
-suffering as we in this land can at present hardly
-imagine.</p>
-
-<p>What befell Antwerp and Brussels will surely
-some day befall New York or San Francisco, and
-may happen to many an inland city also, if we do
-not shake off our supine folly, if we trust for safety
-to peace treaties unbacked by force. At the beginning
-of last month, by the appointment of the
-President, peace services were held in the churches
-of this land. As far as these services consisted of
-sermons and prayers of good and wise people who
-wished peace only if it represented righteousness,
-who did not desire that peace should come unless
-it came to consecrate justice and not wrong-doing,
-good and not evil, the movement represented good.
-In so far, however, as the movement was understood
-to be one for immediate peace without any
-regard to righteousness or justice, without any
-regard for righting the wrongs of those who have
-been crushed by unmerited disaster, then the
-movement represented mischief, precisely as fifty
-years ago, in 1864, in our own country a similar
-movement for peace, to be obtained by acknowledgment
-of disunion and by the perpetuation of
-slavery, would have represented mischief. In the
-present case, however, the mischief was confined
-purely to those taking part in the movement in
-an unworthy spirit; for (like the peace parades<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-and newspaper peace petitions) it was a merely
-subjective phenomenon; it had not the slightest
-effect of any kind, sort, or description upon any
-of the combatants abroad and could not possibly
-have any effect upon them. It is well for our own
-sakes that we should pray sincerely and humbly
-for the peace of righteousness; but we must
-guard ourselves from any illusion as to the news
-of our having thus prayed producing the least
-effect upon those engaged in the war.</p>
-
-<p>There is just one way in which to meet the upholders
-of the doctrine that might makes right.
-To do so we must prove that right will make might,
-by backing right with might.</p>
-
-<p>In his second inaugural address Andrew Jackson
-laid down the rule by which every national American
-administration ought to guide itself, saying:
-“The foreign policy adopted by our government
-is to do justice to all, and to submit to wrong by
-none.”</p>
-
-<p>The statement of the dauntless old fighter of
-New Orleans is as true now as when he wrote it.
-We must stand absolutely for righteousness. But
-to do so is utterly without avail unless we possess
-the strength and the loftiness of spirit which will
-back righteousness with deeds and not mere words.
-We must clear the rubbish from off our souls and
-admit that everything that has been done in passing
-peace treaties, arbitration treaties, neutrality<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-treaties, Hague treaties, and the like, with no
-sanction of force behind them, amounts to literally
-and absolutely zero, to literally and absolutely
-nothing, in any time of serious crisis. We
-must recognize that to enter into foolish treaties
-which cannot be kept is as wicked as to break
-treaties which can and ought to be kept. We
-must labor for an international agreement among
-the great civilized nations which shall put the full
-force of all of them back of any one of them, and
-of any well-behaved weak nation, which is wronged
-by any other power. Until we have completed
-this purpose, we must keep ourselves ready, high
-of heart and undaunted of soul, to back our rights
-with our strength.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">104</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AN INTERNATIONAL POSSE COMITATUS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Most</span> Western Americans who are past
-middle age remember young, rapidly
-growing, and turbulent communities in
-which there was at first complete anarchy. During
-the time when there was no central police
-power to which to appeal every man worth his
-salt, in other words every man fit for existence
-in such a community, had to be prepared to
-defend himself; and usually, although not always,
-the fact that he was prepared saved him
-from all trouble, whereas unpreparedness was absolutely
-certain to invite disaster.</p>
-
-<p>In such communities before there was a regular
-and fully organized police force there came an
-interval during which the preservation of the
-peace depended upon the action of a single official,
-a sheriff or marshal, who if the law was defied in
-arrogant fashion summoned a posse comitatus
-composed of as many armed, thoroughly efficient,
-law-abiding citizens as were necessary in order to
-put a stop to the wrong-doing. Under these conditions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-each man had to keep himself armed and
-both able and willing to respond to the call of
-the peace-officer; and furthermore, if he had a
-shred of wisdom he kept himself ready in an
-emergency to act on his own behalf if the peace-officer
-did not or could not do his duty.</p>
-
-<p>In such towns I have myself more than once
-seen well-meaning but foolish citizens endeavor
-to meet the exigencies of the case by simply
-passing resolutions of disarmament without any
-power back of them. That is, they passed self-denying
-ordinances, saying that nobody was to
-carry arms; but they failed to provide methods
-for carrying such ordinances into effect. In every
-case the result was the same. Good citizens for
-the moment abandoned their weapons. The bad
-men continued to carry them. Things grew worse
-instead of better; and then the good men came
-to their senses and clothed some representative of
-the police with power to employ force, potential
-or existing, against the wrong-doers.</p>
-
-<p>Affairs in the international world are at this
-time in analogous condition. There is no central
-police power, and not the least likelihood of its
-being created. Well-meaning enthusiasts have
-tried their hands to an almost unlimited extent
-in the way of devising all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties, neutrality treaties, disarmament proposals,
-and the like, with no force back of them,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-and the result has been stupendous and discreditable
-failure. Preparedness for war on the part
-of individual nations has sometimes but not always
-averted war. Unpreparedness for war, as
-in the case of China, Korea, and Luxembourg,
-has invariably invited smashing disaster, and
-sometimes complete conquest. Surely these conditions
-should teach a lesson that any man who
-runs may read unless his eyes have been blinded
-by folly or his heart weakened by cowardice.</p>
-
-<p>The immediately vital lesson for each individual
-nation is that as things are now it must in time
-of crisis rely on its own stout hearts and ready
-hands for self-defense. Existing treaties are utterly
-worthless so far as concerns protecting any free,
-well-behaved people from one of the great aggressive
-military monarchies of the world. The all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties such as those recently
-negotiated by Messrs. Wilson and Bryan, when
-taken in connection with our refusal to act under
-existing treaties, represent about the highest point
-of slightly mischievous fatuity which can be attained
-in international matters. Inasmuch as we
-ourselves are the power that initiated their negotiation,
-we can do our plain duty to ourselves and
-our neighbors only by ourselves proceeding from
-the outset on the theory, and by warning our neighbors,
-that these treaties in any time of crisis will
-certainly not be respected by any serious adversary,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-and probably will of necessity be violated by
-ourselves. They do not in even the very smallest
-degree relieve us of the necessity of preparedness
-for war. To this point of our duty to be prepared
-I will return later.</p>
-
-<p>But we ought not to and must not rest content
-merely with working for our own defense. The
-utterly appalling calamity that has befallen the
-civilized world during the last five months, and,
-above all, the horrible catastrophe that has overwhelmed
-Belgium without Belgium’s having the
-smallest responsibility in the matter, must make
-the least thoughtful realize how unsatisfactory is
-the present basis of international relations among
-civilized powers. In order to make things better
-several things are necessary. We must clearly
-grasp the fact that mere selfish avoidance of duty
-to others, even although covered by such fine
-words as “peace” and “neutrality,” is a wretched
-thing and an obstacle to securing the peace of
-righteousness throughout the world. We must recognize
-clearly the old common-law doctrine that a
-right without a remedy is void. We must firmly
-grasp the fact that measures should be taken to
-put force back of good faith in the observance
-of treaties. The worth of treaties depends purely
-upon the good faith with which they are executed;
-and it is mischievous folly to enter into
-treaties without providing for their execution and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-wicked folly to enter into them if they ought not
-to be executed.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to devise means for putting the
-collective and efficient strength of all the great
-powers of civilization back of any well-behaved
-power which is wronged by another power. In
-other words, we must devise means for executing
-treaties in good faith, by the establishment of
-some great international tribunal, and by securing
-the enforcement of the decrees of this tribunal
-through the action of a posse comitatus of powerful
-and civilized nations, all of them being bound
-by solemn agreement to coerce any power that
-offends against the decrees of the tribunal. That
-there will be grave difficulties in successfully
-working out this plan I would be the first to concede,
-and I would be the first to insist that to
-work it out successfully would be impossible
-unless the nations acted in good faith. But the
-plan is feasible, and it is the only one which at the
-moment offers any chance of success. Ever since
-the days of Henry IV of France there has been a
-growth, slow and halting to be sure but yet evidently
-a growth, in recognition by the public conscience
-of civilized nations that there should be a
-method of making the rules of international
-morality obligatory and binding among the powers.
-But merely to trust to public opinion without
-organized force back of it is silly. Force must be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-put back of justice, and nations must not shrink
-from the duty of proceeding by any means that
-are necessary against wrong-doers. It is the failure
-to recognize these vital truths that has rendered
-the actions of our government during the
-last few years impotent to preserve world peace
-and fruitful only in earning for us the half-veiled
-derision of other nations.</p>
-
-<p>The attitude of the present administration during
-the last five months shows how worthless the
-present treaties, unbacked by force, are, and how
-utterly ineffective mere passive neutrality is to
-secure even the smallest advance in world morality.
-I have been very reluctant in any way to
-criticise the action of the present administration
-in foreign affairs; I have faithfully, and in some
-cases against my own deep-rooted personal convictions,
-sought to justify what it has done in
-Mexico and as regards the present war; but the
-time has come when loyalty to the administration’s
-action in foreign affairs means disloyalty
-to our national self-interest and to our obligations
-toward humanity at large. As regards Belgium
-the administration has clearly taken the ground
-that our own selfish ease forbids us to fulfil our
-explicit obligations to small neutral states when
-they are deeply wronged. It will never be possible
-in any war to commit a clearer breach of international
-morality than that committed by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-Germany in the invasion and subjugation of
-Belgium. Every one of the nations involved in
-this war, and the United States as well, have
-committed such outrages in the past. But the
-very purpose of the Hague conventions and of
-all similar international agreements was to put a
-stop to such misconduct in the future.</p>
-
-<p>At the outset I ask our people to remember
-that what I say is based on the assumption that
-we are bound in good faith to fulfil our treaty
-obligations; that we will neither favor nor condemn
-any other nation except on the ground of its
-behavior; that we feel as much good-will to the
-people of Germany or Austria as to the people of
-England, of France, or of Russia; that we speak
-for Belgium only as we could speak for Holland
-or Switzerland or one of the Scandinavian or
-Balkan nations; and that if the circumstances as
-regards Belgium had been reversed we would have
-protested as emphatically against wrong action
-by England or France as we now protest against
-wrong action by Germany.</p>
-
-<p>The United States and the great powers now
-at war were parties to the international code
-created in the regulations annexed to the Hague
-conventions of 1899 and 1907. As President,
-acting on behalf of this government, and in accordance
-with the unanimous wish of our people,
-I ordered the signature of the United States to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-these conventions. Most emphatically I would
-not have permitted such a farce to have gone
-through if it had entered my head that this government
-would not consider itself bound to do
-all it could to see that the regulations to which it
-made itself a party were actually observed when
-the necessity for their observance arose. I cannot
-imagine any sensible nation thinking it worth
-while to sign future Hague conventions if even
-such a powerful neutral as the United States
-does not care enough about them to protest
-against their open breach. Of the present neutral
-powers the United States of America is the most
-disinterested and the strongest, and should therefore
-bear the main burden of responsibility in this
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite possible to make an argument to the
-effect that we never should have entered into the
-Hague conventions, because our sole duty is to
-ourselves and not to others, and our sole concern
-should be to keep ourselves at peace, at any
-cost, and not to help other powers that are oppressed,
-and not to protest against wrong-doing.
-I do not myself accept this view; but in practice
-it is the view taken by the present administration,
-apparently with at the moment the approval
-of the mass of our people. Such a policy, while
-certainly not exalted, and in my judgment neither
-far-sighted nor worthy of a high-spirited and lofty-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">112</a></span>souled
-nation, is yet in a sense understandable,
-and in a sense defensible.</p>
-
-<p>But it is quite indefensible to make agreements
-and not live up to them. The climax of absurdity
-is for any administration to do what the present
-administration during the last five months has
-done. Mr. Wilson’s administration has shirked
-doing the duty plainly imposed on it by the
-obligations of the conventions already entered
-into; and at the same time it has sought to
-obtain cheap credit by entering into a couple
-of score new treaties infinitely more drastic than
-the old ones, and quite impossible of honest fulfilment.
-When the Belgian people complained
-of violations of the Hague tribunal, it was a
-mockery, it was a timid and unworthy abandonment
-of duty on our part, for President Wilson
-to refer them back to the Hague court, when he
-knew that the Hague court was less than a
-shadow unless the United States by doing its
-clear duty gave the Hague court some substance.
-If the Hague conventions represented nothing
-but the expression of feeble aspirations toward
-decency, uttered only in time of profound peace,
-and not to be even expressed above a whisper
-when with awful bloodshed and suffering the
-conventions were broken, then it was idle folly
-to enter into them. If, on the other hand, they
-meant anything, if the United States had a serious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-purpose, a serious sense of its obligations to
-world righteousness, when it entered into them,
-then its plain duty as the trustee of civilization
-is to investigate the charges solemnly made as to
-the violation of the Hague conventions. If such
-investigation is made, and if the charges prove
-well founded, then it is the duty of the United
-States to take whatever action may be necessary
-to vindicate the principles of international law
-set forth in these conventions.</p>
-
-<p>I am not concerned with the charges of individual
-atrocity. The prime fact is that Belgium
-committed no offense whatever, and yet that
-her territory has been invaded and her people
-subjugated. This prime fact cannot be left out
-of consideration in dealing with any matter that
-has occurred in connection with it. Her neutrality
-has certainly been violated, and this is in
-clear violation of the fundamental principles of
-the Hague conventions. It appears clear that
-undefended towns have been bombarded, and
-that towns which were defended have been attacked
-with bombs at a time when no attack
-was made upon the defenses. This is certainly
-in contravention of the Hague agreement forbidding
-the bombardment of undefended towns.
-Illegal and excessive contributions are expressly
-condemned under Articles 49 and 52 of the conventions.
-If these articles do not forbid the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-levying of such sums as $40,000,000 from Brussels
-and $90,000,000 from the province of Brabant,
-then the articles are absolutely meaningless.
-Articles 43 and 50 explicitly forbid the infliction
-of a collective penalty, pecuniary or otherwise, on
-a population on account of acts of individuals for
-which it cannot be regarded as collectively responsible.
-Either this prohibition is meaningless
-or it prohibits just such acts as the punitive
-destruction of Visé, Louvain, Aerschot, and
-Dinant. Furthermore, a great deal of the appalling
-devastation of central and eastern Belgium
-has been apparently terrorizing and not punitive
-in its purpose, and this is explicitly forbidden by
-the Hague conventions.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it may be that there is an explanation
-and justification for a portion of what has been
-done. But if the Hague conventions mean anything,
-and if bad faith in the observation of
-treaties is not to be treated with cynical indifference,
-then the United States government should
-inform itself as to the facts, and should take whatever
-action is necessary in reference thereto. The
-extent to which the action should go may properly
-be a subject for discussion. But that there should
-be some action is beyond discussion; unless, indeed,
-we ourselves are content to take the view that
-treaties, conventions, and international engagements
-and agreements of all kinds are to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-treated by us and by everybody else as what
-they have been authoritatively declared to be,
-“scraps of paper,” the writing on which is intended
-for no better purpose than temporarily to
-amuse the feeble-minded.</p>
-
-<p>If the above statements seem in the eyes of my
-German friends hostile to Germany, let me emphasize
-the fact that they are predicated upon a
-course of action which if extended and applied as
-it should be extended and applied would range
-the United States on the side of Germany if any
-such assault were made upon Germany as has
-been made upon Belgium, or if either Belgium or
-any of the other allies committed similar wrong-doing.
-Many Germans assert and believe that
-if Germany had not acted as she did France and
-England would have invaded Belgium and have
-committed similar wrongs. In such case it would
-have been our clear duty to behave toward them
-exactly as we ought now to behave toward Germany.
-But the fact that other powers might
-under other conditions do wrong, affords no justification
-for failure to act on the wrong that has
-actually been committed. It must always be
-kept in mind, however, that we cannot expect the
-nation against whose actions we protest to accept
-our position as warranted, unless we make it clear
-that we have both the will and the power to interfere
-on behalf of that nation if in its turn it is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-oppressed. In other words, we must show that
-we believe in right and therefore in living up to
-our promises in good faith; and, furthermore, that
-we are both able and ready to put might behind
-right.</p>
-
-<p>As I have before said, I think that the party
-in Germany which believes in a policy of aggression
-represents but a minority of the nation. It
-is powerful only because the great majority of
-the German people are rightfully in fear of aggression
-at the expense of Germany, and sanction
-striking only because they fear lest they themselves
-be struck. The greatest service that could
-be rendered to peace would be to convince Germany,
-as well as other powers, that in such event
-we would do all we could on behalf of the power
-that was wronged. Extremists in England,
-France, and Russia talk as if the proper outcome
-of the present war would be the utter dismemberment
-of Germany and her reduction to impotence
-such as that which followed for her upon the
-Thirty Years’ War. I have actually received letters
-from Frenchmen and Englishmen upbraiding
-me for what they regard as a pro-German
-leaning in these articles I have written. To these
-well-meaning persons I can only say that Americans
-who remember the extreme bitterness felt
-by Northerners for Southerners, and Southerners
-for Northerners, at the end of the Civil War, are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-saddened but in no wise astonished that other
-peoples should show a like bitterness. I can only
-repeat that to dismember and hopelessly shatter
-Germany would be a frightful calamity for mankind,
-precisely as the dismemberment and shattering
-of the British Empire or of the French
-Republic would be. It is right that the United
-States should regard primarily its own interests.
-But I believe that I speak for a considerable number
-of my countrymen when I say that we ought
-not solely to consider our own interests. Above
-all, we should not do as the present administration
-does; for it refuses to take any concrete action
-in favor of any nation which is wronged; and yet
-it also refuses to act so that we may ourselves be
-sufficient for our own protection.</p>
-
-<p>We ought not to trust in words unbacked by
-deeds. We should be able to defend ourselves.
-We should also be ready and able to join in preventing
-the infliction of disaster of the kind of
-which I speak upon any civilized power, great or
-small, whether it be at the present time Belgium,
-or at some future day Germany or England,
-Holland, Sweden or Hungary, Russia or Japan.</p>
-
-<p>So much for questions of international right,
-and of our duty to others in international affairs.
-Now for our duty to ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>A sincere desire to act well toward other nations
-must not blind us to the fact that as yet the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-standard of international morality is both low
-and irregular. The behavior of the great military
-empires of the Old World, in reference to
-their treaty obligations and their moral obligations
-toward countries such as Belgium, Finland,
-and Korea, shows that it would be utter folly for
-us in any grave crisis to trust to anything save our
-own preparedness and resolution for our safety.
-The other day there appeared in the newspapers
-extracts from a translation of a report made by an
-officer of the Prussian army staff outlining the
-plan of operations by Germany in the event of
-war with America. Great surprise was expressed
-by innocent Americans that such plans
-should be in existence, and certain gentlemen who
-speak for Germany denied that the report (which
-was printed and openly sold in Germany in
-pamphlet form) was “official.” Neither the resentment
-expressed nor yet the denials were
-necessary. One feature of the admirable preparedness
-in which Germany and Japan stand
-so far above all other nations, and especially
-above our own, is their careful consideration of
-hostilities with all possible antagonists. Bernhardi’s
-famous books treat of possible war with
-Austria, and possible attack by Austria upon Germany,
-although the prime lessons that they teach
-are those contained in the possibility of war as it
-has actually occurred, with Germany and Austria<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-in alliance. This does not indicate German hostility
-to Austria; it merely indicates German
-willingness to look squarely in the face all possible
-facts. Of course, and quite properly, the German
-General Staff has carefully considered the question
-of hostilities with America, and, of course, plans
-were drawn up with minute care and prevision
-at the time when there was friction between the
-two countries over Samoa, at the time when
-Admiral Dietrich clashed with Dewey in Manila
-Bay, and on the later occasion when there was
-friction in connection with Venezuela. This did
-not represent any special German ill will toward
-America. It represented the common-sense&mdash;albeit
-somewhat cold-blooded&mdash;consideration of
-possibilities by Germany’s rulers; and the failure
-to give this consideration would have reflected
-severely upon these rulers&mdash;although I do not regard
-some of the actions proposed as proper from
-the standpoint of warfare as the United States has
-practised it. To become angry because such plans
-exist would be childish. To fail to profit by our
-knowledge that they certainly do exist would,
-however, be not merely childish but imbecile. I
-have myself become personally cognizant of the
-existence of such plans for operations against us,
-and of the larger features of their details, in two
-cases, affecting two different nations.</p>
-
-<p>The essential feature of these plans was (and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-doubtless is) the seizure of some of our great coast
-cities and the terrorization of these cities so as to
-make them give enormous ransoms; ransoms of
-such size that our own country would be crippled,
-whereas our foes would be enabled to run the war
-against us with a handsome profit to themselves.
-These plans are based, of course, upon the belief
-that we have not sufficient foresight and intelligence
-to keep our navy in first-class condition,
-and upon not merely the belief but the knowledge
-that our regular army is so small and our utter
-unpreparedness otherwise so great that on land
-we would be entirely helpless against a moderate-sized
-expeditionary force belonging to any first-class
-military power. Foreign military and naval
-observers know well that our navy has been used
-during the last eighteen months in connection with
-the Mexican situation in such manner as to accomplish
-the minimum of results as regards Mexico,
-while at the same time to do the maximum of
-damage in interrupting the manœuvring and the
-gun practice of our fleets. They regard Messrs.
-Wilson and Bryan as representative of the American
-people in their entire inability to understand
-the real nature of the forces that underlie
-international relations and the importance of preparedness.
-They are entirely cold-blooded in their
-views of us. Foreign rulers may despise us for
-our supine unpreparedness, and for our readiness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-to make treaties, taken together with our refusal
-to fulfil these treaties by seeking to avert wrong
-done to others. But their contempt will not
-prevent their using this nation as arbiter in order
-to bring about peace if to do so suits their purposes;
-and if, on the contrary, one or the other
-of the several great military empires becomes the
-world mistress as the result of this war, that
-power will infringe our rights whenever and to
-the extent that it deems it advantageous to do
-so, and will make war upon us whenever it believes
-that such war will be to its own advantage.</p>
-
-<p>In the event of such a war against us it is well
-to remember that the spiritless and selfish type
-of neutrality which we have observed in the
-present war will be remembered by all other
-nations on whichever side they have been engaged
-in this contest, and will give each of them
-more or less satisfaction in the event of disaster
-befalling us. These nations, if they come to a
-deadlock as the result of this war, will not be
-withheld by any sentiment of indignation against
-or contempt for us from utilizing the services of
-the President as a medium for bringing about
-peace, if this seems the most convenient method
-of getting peace. But, whether they do this or
-not, they will retain a smouldering ill will toward
-us, one and all of them; and if we were assailed
-it would be utterly quixotic, utterly foolish of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-any one of them to come to our aid no matter
-what wrongs were inflicted upon us. It would be
-quite impossible for any power to treat us worse
-than Belgium has been treated by Germany or
-to attack us with less warrant than was shown
-when Belgium was attacked. Bombs have been
-continually dropped by the Germans in the city
-of Paris and in other cities, wrecking private
-houses and killing men, women, and children at
-a time when there was no pretense that any
-military attacks were being made upon the cities,
-or that any other object was served than that
-of terrorizing the civilian population. Cities have
-been destroyed and others held to huge ransom.
-All these practices are forbidden by the Hague
-conventions. Inasmuch as we have not made a
-single protest against them when other powers
-have suffered, it would be both ridiculous and
-humiliating for us to make even the slightest
-appeal for assistance or to expect any assistance
-from any other powers if ever we in our turn
-suffer in like fashion. It would be purely our
-affair. We would have no right to expect that
-other powers would take the kind of action
-which we ourselves have refused to take. It
-would be our time to take our medicine, and it
-would be folly and cowardice to make wry faces
-over it or to expect sympathy, still less aid, from
-outsiders. As I have already stated, my own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-view is most strongly that, if we are assailed in
-accordance with the plans of foreign powers
-above mentioned, it would be our business positively
-to refuse to allow any city to ransom itself,
-and sternly to accept the destruction of New
-York, or San Francisco, or any other city as the
-alternative of such ransom. Our duty would be
-to accept these disasters as the payment rightfully
-due from us to fate for our folly in having
-listened to the clamor of the feeble folk among
-the ultrapacificists, and in having indorsed the
-unspeakable silliness of the policy contained in
-the proposed all-inclusive arbitration treaties of
-Mr. Taft and in the accomplished all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties of Messrs. Wilson and Bryan.</p>
-
-<p>I very earnestly hope that this nation will
-ultimately adopt a dignified and self-respecting
-policy in international affairs. I earnestly hope
-that ultimately we shall live up to every international
-obligation we have undertaken&mdash;exactly
-as we did live up to them during the seven and
-a half years while I was President. I earnestly
-hope that we shall ourselves become one of the
-joint guarantors of world peace under such a
-plan as that I in this book outline, and that we
-shall hold ourselves ready and willing to act as a
-member of the international posse comitatus to
-enforce the peace of righteousness as against any
-offender big or small. This would mean a great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-practical stride toward relief from the burden of
-excessive military preparation. It would mean
-that a long step had been taken toward at least
-minimizing and restricting the area and extent of
-possible warfare. It would mean that all liberty-loving
-and enlightened peoples, great and small,
-would be freed from the haunting nightmare of
-terror which now besets them when they think
-of the possible conquest of their land.</p>
-
-<p>Until this can be done we owe it to ourselves as
-a nation effectively to safeguard ourselves against
-all likelihood of disaster at the hands of a foreign
-foe. We should bring our navy up to the highest
-point of preparedness, we should handle it purely
-from military considerations, and should see that
-the training was never intermitted. We should
-make our little regular army larger and more
-effective than at present. We should provide for
-it an adequate reserve. In addition, I most heartily
-believe that we should return to the ideal held
-by our people in the days of Washington although
-never lived up to by them. We should follow
-the example of such typical democracies as Switzerland
-and Australia and provide and require military
-training for all our young men. Switzerland’s
-efficient army has unquestionably been the chief
-reason why in this war there has been no violation
-of her neutrality. Australia’s system of military
-training has enabled her at once to ship large<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-bodies of first-rate fighting men to England’s aid.
-Our northern neighbors have done even better
-than Australia; perhaps special mention should
-be made of St. John, Newfoundland, which has
-sent to the front one in five of her adult male
-population, a larger percentage than any other
-city of the empire; a feat probably due to the
-fact that in practically all her schools there is
-good military training, while her young men have
-much practice in shooting tournaments. England
-at the moment is saved from the fate of Belgium
-only because of her navy; and the small size of her
-army, her lack of arms, her lack of previous preparations
-doubtless afford the chief reason why this
-war has occurred at all at this time. There would
-probably have been no war if England had followed
-the advice so often urged on her by the
-lamented Lord Roberts, for in that case she would
-have been able immediately to put in the field
-an army as large and effective as, for instance,
-that of France.</p>
-
-<p>Training of our young men in field manœuvres
-and in marksmanship, as is done in Switzerland,
-and to a slightly less extent in Australia, would
-be of immense advantage to the physique and
-morale of our whole population. It would not
-represent any withdrawal of our population from
-civil pursuits, such as occurs among the great
-military states of the European Continent. In<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-Switzerland, for instance, the ground training is
-given in the schools, and the young man after
-graduating serves only some four months with the
-branch of the army to which he is attached, and
-after that only about eight days a year, not counting
-his rifle practice. All serve alike, rich and poor,
-without any exceptions; and all whom I have
-ever met, the poor even more than the rich, are
-enthusiastic over the beneficial effects of the
-service and the increase in self-reliance, self-respect,
-and efficiency which it has brought. The
-utter worthlessness of make-believe soldiers who
-have not been trained, and who are improvised on
-the Wilson-Bryan theory, will be evident to any
-one who cares to read such works as Professor
-Johnson’s recent volume on Bull Run. Our people
-should make a thorough study of the Swiss and
-Australian systems, and then adapt them to our
-own use. To do so would not be a stride toward
-war, as the feeble folk among the ultrapacificists
-would doubtless maintain. It would be the most
-effectual possible guarantee that peace would
-dwell within our borders; and it would also make
-it possible for us not only to insure peace for ourselves,
-but to have our words carry weight if we
-spoke against the commission of wrong and injustice
-at the expense of others.</p>
-
-<p>But we must always remember that no institutions
-will avail unless the private citizen has the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-right spirit. When a leading congressman, himself
-with war experience, shows conclusively in
-open speech in the House that we are utterly unprepared
-to do our duty to ourselves if assailed,
-President Wilson answers him with a cheap
-sneer, with unworthy levity; and the repeated
-warnings of General Wood are treated with the
-same indifference. Nevertheless, I do not believe
-that this attitude on the part of our public servants
-really represents the real convictions of the
-average American. The ideal citizen of a free
-state must have in him the stuff which in time
-of need will enable him to show himself a first-class
-fighting man who scorns either to endure or
-to inflict wrong. American society is sound at
-core and this means that at bottom we, as a
-people, accept as the basis of sound morality not
-slothful ease and soft selfishness and the loud
-timidity that fears every species of risk and
-hardship, but the virile strength of manliness
-which clings to the ideal of stern, unflinching
-performance of duty, and which follows whithersoever
-that ideal may lead.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">128</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">SELF-DEFENSE WITHOUT MILITARISM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> other day one of the typical ultrapacificists
-or peace-at-any-price men put
-the ultrapacificist case quite clearly, both
-in a statement of his own and by a quotation of
-what he called the “golden words” of Mr. Bryan
-at Mohonk. In arguing that we should under no
-conditions fight for our rights, and that we should
-make no preparation whatever to secure ourselves
-against wrong, this writer pointed out
-China as the proper model for America. He did
-this on the ground that China, which did not
-fight, was yet “older” than Rome, Greece, and
-Germany, which had fought, and that its example
-was therefore to be preferred.</p>
-
-<p>This, of course, is a position which saves the
-need of argument. If the average American wants
-to be a Chinaman, if China represents his ideal,
-then he should by all means follow the advice of
-pacificists like the writer in question and be a
-supporter of Mr. Bryan. If any man seriously
-believes that China has played a nobler and more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-useful part in the world than Athens and Rome
-and Germany, then he is quite right to try to
-Chinafy the United States. In such event he
-must of course believe that all the culture, all the
-literature, all the art, all the political and cultural
-liberty and social well-being, which modern Europe
-and the two Americas have inherited from
-Rome and Greece, and that all that has been done
-by Germany from the days of Charlemagne to
-the present time, represent mere error and confusion.
-He must believe that the average German
-or Frenchman or Englishman or inhabitant of
-North or South America occupies a lower moral,
-intellectual, and physical status than the average
-coolie who with his fellows composes the overwhelming
-majority of the Chinese population.
-To my mind such a proposition is unfit for debate
-outside of certain types of asylum. But those
-who sincerely take the view that this gentleman
-takes are unquestionably right in copying China
-in every detail, and nothing that I can say will
-appeal to them.</p>
-
-<p>The “golden words” of Mr. Bryan were as
-follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>I believe that this nation could stand before the world
-to-day and tell the world that it did not believe in war,
-that it did not believe that it was the right way to settle
-disputes, that it had no disputes which it was not willing
-to submit to the judgment of the world. If this nation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-did that, it not only would not be attacked by any other
-nation on the earth, but it would become the supreme
-power in the world.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of course, it is to be assumed that Mr. Bryan
-means what he says. If he does, then he is willing
-to submit to arbitration the question whether
-the Japanese have or have not the right to send
-unlimited numbers of immigrants to this shore.
-If Mr. Bryan does not mean this, among other
-specific things, then the “golden words” in question
-represent merely the emotionalism of the professional
-orator. Of course if Mr. Bryan means
-what he says, he also believes that we should not
-have interfered in Cuba and that Cuba ought now
-to be the property of Spain. He also believes
-that we ought to have permitted Colombia to
-reconquer and deprive of their independence the
-people of Panama, and that we should not have
-built the Panama Canal. He also believes that
-California and Texas ought now to be parts of
-Mexico, enjoying whatever blessings complete
-abstinence from foreign war has secured that
-country during the last three years. He also believes
-that the Declaration of Independence was
-an arbitrable matter and that the United States
-ought now to be a dependency of Great Britain.
-Unless Mr. Bryan does believe all of these things
-then his “golden words” represent only a rhetorical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-flourish. He is Secretary of State and the
-right-hand man of President Wilson, and President
-Wilson is completely responsible for whatever he
-says and for the things he does&mdash;or rather which
-he leaves undone.</p>
-
-<p>Now, it is quite useless for me to write with
-any view to convincing gentlemen like Mr. Bryan
-and the writer in question. If they really do
-represent our fellow countrymen, then they are
-right in holding up China as our ideal; not the
-modern China, not the China that is changing
-and moving forward, but old China. In such
-event Americans ought frankly to class themselves
-with the Chinese. That is where, on this theory,
-they belong. If this is so, then let us fervently
-pray that the Japanese or Germans or some other
-virile people that does not deify moral, mental,
-and physical impotence, may speedily come to rule
-over us.</p>
-
-<p>I am, however, writing on the assumption that
-Americans are still on the whole like their forefathers
-who followed Washington, and like their
-fathers who fought in the armies of Grant and
-Lee. I am writing on the assumption that, even
-though temporarily misled, they will not permanently
-and tamely submit to oppression, and that
-they will ultimately think intelligently as to what
-they should do to safeguard themselves against
-aggression. I abhor unjust war, and I deplore<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-that the need even for just war should ever occur.
-I believe we should set our faces like flint against
-any policy of aggression by this country on the
-rights of any other country. But I believe that
-we should look facts in the face. I believe that
-it is unworthy weakness to fear to face the truth.
-Moreover, I believe that we should have in us
-that fibre of manhood which will make us follow
-duty whithersoever it may lead. Unquestionably,
-we should render all the service it is in our power
-to render to righteousness. To do this we must
-be able to back righteousness with force, to put
-might back of right. It may well be that by following
-out this theory we can in the end do our
-part in conjunction with other nations of the
-world to bring about, if not&mdash;as I hope&mdash;a world
-peace, yet at least an important minimizing of the
-chances for war and of the areas of possible war.
-But meanwhile it is absolutely our duty to prepare
-for our own defense.</p>
-
-<p>This country needs something like the Swiss
-system of war training for its young men. Switzerland
-is one of the most democratic governments
-in the world, and it has given its young men such
-an efficient training as to insure entire preparedness
-for war, without suffering from the least
-touch of militarism. Switzerland is at peace now
-primarily because all the great military nations
-that surround it know that its people have no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-intention of making aggression on anybody and
-yet that they are thoroughly prepared to hold
-their own and are resolute to fight to the last
-against any invader who attempts either to subjugate
-their territory or by violating its neutrality
-to make it a battle-ground.</p>
-
-<p>A bishop of the Episcopal Church recently
-wrote me as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>How lamentable that we should stand idle, making no
-preparations to enforce peace, and crying “peace” when
-there is none! I have scant sympathy for the short-sightedness
-of those who decry preparation for war as a
-means of preventing it.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The manager of a land company in Alabama
-writes me urging that some one speak for reasonable
-preparedness on the part of the nation. He
-states that it is always possible that we shall be
-engaged in hostilities with some first-class power,
-that he hopes and believes that war will never
-come, but adds:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>I may not believe that my home will burn down or
-that I am going to die within the period of my expectancy,
-but nevertheless I carry fire and life insurance to
-the full insurable value on my property and on my life
-to the extent of my ability. The only insurance of our
-liberties as a people is full preparation for a defense adequate
-against any attack and made in time to fully meet
-any attack. We do not <em>know</em> the attack is coming; but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-to wait until it does come will be too late. Our present
-weakness lies in the wide-spread opinion among our people
-that this country is invincible because of its large population
-and vast resources. This I believe is true if, and
-only if, we use these resources or a small part of them to
-protect the major part, and if we train at least a part of
-our people how to defend the nation. Under existing
-conditions we can hardly hope to have an effective army
-in the field in less time than eight or ten months. To-day
-not one per cent of our people know anything about
-rifle shooting.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>I quote these two out of many letters, because
-they sum up the general feeling of men of vision.
-Both of my correspondents are most sincerely
-for peace. No man can possibly be more anxious
-for peace than I am. I ask those individuals who
-think of me as a firebrand to remember that during
-the seven and a half years I was President not
-a shot was fired at any soldier of a hostile nation
-by any American soldier or sailor, and there was
-not so much as a threat of war. Even when the
-state of Panama threw off the alien yoke of Colombia
-and when this nation, acting as was its
-manifest duty, by recognizing Panama as an independent
-state stood for the right of the governed
-to govern themselves on the Isthmus, as well as
-for justice and humanity, there was not a shot
-fired by any of our people at any Colombian. The
-blood recently shed at Vera Cruz, like the unpunished
-wrongs recently committed on our people<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-in Mexico, had no parallel during my administration.
-When I left the presidency there was not
-a cloud on the horizon&mdash;and one of the reasons
-why there was not a cloud on the horizon was that
-the American battle fleet had just returned from
-its sixteen months’ trip around the world, a trip
-such as no other battle fleet of any power had
-ever taken, which it had not been supposed could
-be taken, and which exercised a greater influence
-for peace than all the peace congresses of the last
-fifty years. With Lowell I most emphatically believe
-that peace is not a gift that tarries long in
-the hands of cowards; and the fool and the weakling
-are no improvement on the coward.</p>
-
-<p>Nineteen centuries ago in the greatest of all
-books we were warned that whoso loses his life
-for righteousness shall save it and that he who
-seeks to save it shall lose it. The ignoble and
-abject gospel of those who would teach us that
-it is preferable to endure disgrace and discredit
-than to run any risk to life or limb would defeat
-its own purpose; for that kind of submission to
-wrong-doing merely invites further wrong-doing,
-as has been shown a thousand times in history
-and as is shown by the case of China in our own
-days. Moreover, our people, however ill-prepared,
-would never consent to such abject submission;
-and indeed as a matter of fact our publicists and
-public men and our newspapers, instead of being<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-too humble and submissive, are only too apt to
-indulge in very offensive talk about foreign nations.
-Of all the nations of the world we are the
-one that combines the greatest amount of wealth
-with the smallest ability to defend that wealth.
-Surely one does not have to read history very
-much or ponder over philosophy a great deal in
-order to realize the truth that the one certain way
-to invite disaster is to be opulent, offensive, and
-unarmed. There is utter inconsistency between
-the ideal of making this nation the foremost commercial
-power in the world and of disarmament
-in the face of an armed world. There is utter inconsistency
-between the ideal of making this
-nation a power for international righteousness
-and at the same time refusing to make us a power
-efficient in anything save empty treaties and
-emptier promises.</p>
-
-<p>I do not believe in a large standing army.
-Most emphatically I do not believe in militarism.
-Most emphatically I do not believe in any policy
-of aggression by us. But I do believe that no
-man is really fit to be the free citizen of a free
-republic unless he is able to bear arms and at
-need to serve with efficiency in the efficient army
-of the republic. This is no new thing with me.
-For years I have believed that the young men of
-the country should know how to use a rifle and
-should have a short period of military training<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-which, while not taking them for any length of
-time from civil pursuits, would make them
-quickly capable of helping defend the country in
-case of need. When I was governor of New York,
-acting in conjunction with the administration at
-Washington under President McKinley, I secured
-the sending abroad of one of the best officers in
-the New York National Guard, Colonel William
-Cary Sanger, to study the Swiss system. As President
-I had to devote my attention chiefly to
-getting the navy built up. But surely the sight
-of what has happened abroad ought to awaken
-our people to the need of action, not only as regards
-our navy but as regards our land forces also.</p>
-
-<p>Australia has done well in this respect. But
-Switzerland has worked out a comprehensive
-scheme with practical intelligence. She has not
-only solved the question of having men ready to
-fight, but she has solved the question of having
-arms to give these men. At present England is in
-more difficulty about arms than about men, and
-some of her people when sent to the front were
-armed with hunting rifles. Our own shortcomings
-are far greater. Indeed, they are so lamentable
-that it is hard to believe that our citizens
-as a whole know them. To equip half the number
-of men whom even the British now have in the
-field would tax our factories to the limit. In
-Switzerland, during the last two or three years<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-of what corresponds to our high-school work the
-boy is thoroughly grounded in the rudiments of
-military training, discipline, and marksmanship.
-When he graduates he is put for some four to six
-months in the army to receive exactly the training
-he would get in time of war. After that he serves
-eight days a year and in addition often joins
-with his fellows in practising at a mark. He
-keeps his rifle and accoutrements in his home and
-is responsible for their condition. Efficiency is
-the watchword of Switzerland, and not least in
-its army. At the outbreak of this terrible war
-Switzerland was able to mobilize her forces in
-the corner of her territory between France and
-Germany as quickly as either of the great combatants
-could theirs; and no one trespassed upon
-her soil.</p>
-
-<p>The Swiss training does not to any appreciable
-extent take the man away from his work. But it
-does make him markedly more efficient for his
-work. The training he gets and his short service
-with the colors render him appreciably better
-able to do whatever his job in life is, and, in addition,
-benefit his health and spirits. The service
-is a holiday, and a holiday of the best because of
-the most useful type.</p>
-
-<p>There is no reason whatever why Americans
-should be unwilling or unable to do what Switzerland
-has done. We are a far wealthier country<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-than Switzerland and could afford without the
-slightest strain the very trifling expense and the
-trifling consumption of time rendered necessary
-by such a system. It has really nothing in common
-with the universal service in the great conscript
-armies of the military powers. No man
-would be really taken out of industry. On the
-contrary, the average man would probably be
-actually benefited so far as doing his life-work
-is concerned. The system would be thoroughly
-democratic in its workings. No man would be
-exempted from the work and all would have to
-perform the work alike. It would be entirely
-possible to arrange that there should be a certain
-latitude as to the exact year when the four or six
-months’ service was given.</p>
-
-<p>Officers, of course, would need a longer training
-than the men. This could readily be furnished
-either by allowing numbers of extra students to
-take partial or short-term courses at West Point
-or by specifying optional courses in the high
-schools, the graduates of these special courses
-being tested carefully in their field-work and being
-required to give extra periods of service and
-being under the rigid supervision of the regular
-army. There could also be opportunities for promotion
-from the ranks for any one who chose to
-take the time and the trouble to fit himself.</p>
-
-<p>The four or six months’ service with the colors<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-would be for the most part in the open field.
-The drill hall and the parade-ground do not teach
-more than five per cent of what a soldier must
-actually know. Any man who has had any experience
-with ordinary organizations of the National
-Guard when taken into camp knows that
-at first only a very limited number of the men
-have any idea of taking care of themselves and
-that the great majority suffer much from dyspepsia,
-just because they do not know how to
-take care of themselves. The soldier needs to
-spend some months in actual campaign practice
-under canvas with competent instructors before
-he gets to know his duty. If, however, he has
-had previous training in the schools of such a type
-as that given in Switzerland and then has this
-actual practice, he remains for some years efficient
-with no more training than eight or ten days a
-year.</p>
-
-<p>The training must be given in large bodies. It
-is essential that men shall get accustomed to the
-policing and sanitary care of camps in which there
-are masses of soldiers. Moreover, officers and
-especially the higher officers are wholly useless in
-war time unless they are accustomed to handle
-masses of men in co-operation with one another.</p>
-
-<p>There are small sections of our population out
-of which it is possible to improvise soldiers in a
-short time. Men who are accustomed to ride<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-and to shoot and to live in the open and who are
-hardy and enduring and by nature possess the
-fighting edge already know most of what it is
-necessary that an infantryman or cavalryman
-should know, and they can be taught the remainder
-in a very short time by good officers. Morgan’s
-Virginia Riflemen, Andrew Jackson’s Tennesseans,
-Forrest’s Southwestern Cavalry were all men
-of this kind; but even such men are of real use
-only after considerable training or else if their
-leaders are born fighters and masters of men.
-Such leaders are rare. The ordinary dweller in civilization
-has to be taught to shoot, to walk (or ride
-if he is in the cavalry), to cook for himself, to
-make himself comfortable in the open, and to take
-care of his feet and his health generally. Artillerymen
-and engineers need long special training.</p>
-
-<p>It may well be that the Swiss on an average
-can be made into good troops quicker than our
-own men; but most assuredly there would be
-numbers of Americans who would not be behind
-the Swiss in such a matter. A body of volunteers
-of the kind I am describing would of course not
-be as good as a body of regulars of the same size,
-but they would be immeasurably better than
-the average soldiers produced by any system we
-now have or ever have had in connection with
-our militia. Our regular army would be strengthened
-by them at the very beginning and would be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-set free in its entirety for immediate aggressive
-action; and in addition a levy in mass of the
-young men of the right age would mean that two
-or three million troops were put into the field,
-who, although not as good as regulars, would at
-once be available in numbers sufficient to overwhelm
-any expeditionary force which it would be
-possible for any military power to send to our
-shores. The existence of such a force would render
-the immediate taking of cities like San Francisco,
-New York, or Boston an impossibility and
-would free us from all danger from sudden raids
-and make it impossible even for an army-corps to
-land with any prospect of success.</p>
-
-<p>Our people are so entirely unused to things
-military that it is probably difficult for the average
-man to get any clear idea of our shortcomings.
-Unlike what is true in the military nations of the
-Old World, here the ordinary citizen takes no
-interest in the working of our War Department
-in time of peace. No President gains the slightest
-credit for himself by paying attention to it.
-Then when a crisis comes and the War Department
-breaks down, instead of the people accepting
-what has happened with humility as due to
-their own fault during the previous two or three
-decades, there is a roar of wrath against the unfortunate
-man who happens to be in office at the
-time. There was such a roar of wrath against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-Secretary Alger in the Spanish War. Now, as a
-matter of fact, ninety per cent of our shortcomings
-when the war broke out with Spain
-could not have been remedied by any action on
-the part of the Secretary of War. They were due
-to what had been done ever since the close of the
-Civil War.</p>
-
-<p>We were utterly unprepared. There had been
-no real manœuvring of so much as a brigade
-and very rarely had any of our generals commanded
-even a good-sized regiment in the field.
-The enlisted men and the junior officers of the
-regular army were good. Most of the officers
-above the rank of captain were nearly worthless.
-There were striking exceptions of course, but,
-taking the average, I really believe that it would
-have been on the whole to the advantage of our
-army in 1898 if all the regular officers above
-the rank of captain had been retired and if all
-the captains who were unfit to be placed in the
-higher positions had also been retired. The
-lieutenants were good. The lack of administrative
-skill was even more marked than the lack of
-military skill. No one who saw the congestion of
-trains, supplies, animals, and men at Tampa will
-ever forget the impression of helpless confusion
-that it gave him. The volunteer forces included
-some organizations and multitudes of individuals
-offering first-class material. But, as a whole, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-volunteer army would have been utterly helpless
-against any efficient regular force at the outset of
-the 1898 war, probably almost as inefficient as
-were the two armies which fought one another
-at Bull Run in 1861. Even the efficiency of the
-regular army itself was such merely by comparison
-with the volunteers. I do not believe that any
-army in the world offered finer material than was
-offered by the junior officers and enlisted men of
-the regular army which disembarked on Cuban
-soil in June, 1898; and by the end of the next
-two weeks probably the average individual infantry
-or cavalry organization therein was at least
-as good as the average organization of the same
-size in an Old-World army. But taking the army
-as a whole and considering its management from
-the time it began to assemble at Tampa until
-the surrender of Santiago, I seriously doubt if it
-was as efficient as a really good European or Japanese
-army of half the size. Since then we have
-made considerable progress. Our little army of
-occupation that went to Cuba at the time of the
-revolution in Cuba ten years ago was thoroughly
-well handled and did at least as well as any foreign
-force of the same size could have done. But it
-did not include ten thousand men, that is, it did
-not include as many men as the smallest military
-power in Europe would assemble any day for
-manœuvres.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-This is no new thing in our history. If only
-we were willing to learn from our defeats and
-failures instead of paying heed purely to our successes,
-we would realize that what I have above
-described is one of the common phases of our history.
-In the War of 1812, at the outset of the
-struggle, American forces were repeatedly beaten,
-as at Niagara and Bladensburg, by an enemy one
-half or one quarter the strength of the American
-army engaged. Yet two years later these same
-American troops on the northern frontier, when
-trained and commanded by Brown, Scott, and
-Ripley, proved able to do what the finest troops
-of Napoleon were unable to do, that is, meet the
-British regulars on equal terms in the open; and
-the Tennessee backwoodsmen and Louisiana
-volunteers, when mastered and controlled by the
-iron will and warlike genius of Andrew Jackson,
-performed at New Orleans a really great feat.
-During the year 1812 the American soldiers on
-shore suffered shameful and discreditable defeats,
-and yet their own brothers at sea won equally
-striking victories, and this because the men on
-shore were utterly unprepared and because the
-men at sea had been thoroughly trained and
-drilled long in advance.</p>
-
-<p>Exactly the same lessons are taught by the
-histories of other nations. When, during the
-Napoleonic wars, a small force of veteran French<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-soldiers landed in Ireland they defeated without
-an effort five times their number of British and
-Irish troops at Castlebar. Yet the men whom
-they thus drove in wild flight were the own brothers
-of and often the very same men who a few years
-later, under Wellington, proved an overmatch for
-the flower of the French forces. The nation that
-waits until the crisis is upon it before taking
-measures for its own safety pays heavy toll in
-the blood of its best and its bravest and in bitter
-shame and humiliation. Small is the comfort it
-can then take from the memory of the times
-when the noisy and feeble folk in its own ranks
-cried “Peace, peace,” without taking one practical
-step to secure peace.</p>
-
-<p>We can never follow out a worthy national
-policy, we can never be of benefit to others or to
-ourselves, unless we keep steadily in view as our
-ideal that of the just man armed, the man who is
-fearless, self-reliant, ready, because he has prepared
-himself for possible contingencies; the man
-who is scornful alike of those who would advise
-him to do wrong and of those who would advise
-him tamely to suffer wrong. The great war now
-being waged in Europe and the fact that no neutral
-nation has ventured to make even the smallest
-effort to alleviate<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> or even to protest against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-the wrongs that have been done show with lamentable
-clearness that all the peace congresses of the
-past fifteen years have accomplished precisely
-and exactly nothing so far as any great crisis is
-concerned. Fundamentally this is because they
-have confined themselves to mere words, seemingly
-without realizing that mere words are
-utterly useless unless translated into deeds and
-that an ounce of promise which is accompanied by
-provision for a similar ounce of effective performance
-is worth at least a ton of promise as to which
-no effective method of performance is provided.
-Furthermore, a very serious blunder has been
-to treat peace as the end instead of righteousness
-as the end. The greatest soldier-patriots of history,
-Timoleon, John Hamden, Andreas Hofer,
-Koerner, the great patriot-statesman-soldiers like
-Washington, the great patriot-statesmen like Lincoln
-whose achievements for good depended upon
-the use of soldiers, have all achieved their immortal
-claim to the gratitude of mankind by what<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-they did in just war. To condemn war in terms
-which include the wars these men waged or took
-part in precisely as they include the most wicked
-and unjust wars of history is to serve the devil
-and not God.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> The much advertised sending of food and supplies to Belgium has
-been of most benefit to the German conquerors of Belgium. They
-have taken the money and food of the Belgians and permitted the
-Belgians to be supported by outsiders. Of course, it was far better
-to send them food, even under such conditions, than to let them
-starve; but the professional pacificists would do well to ponder the
-fact that if the neutral nations had been willing to prevent the invasion
-of Belgium, which could only be done by willingness and
-ability to use force, they would by this act of “war” have prevented
-more misery and suffering to innocent men, women, and children
-than the organized charity of all the “peaceful” nations of the world
-can now remove.</p></div>
-
-<p>Again, these peace people have persistently and
-resolutely blinked facts. One of the peace congresses
-sat in New York at the very time that
-the feeling in California about the Japanese question
-gravely threatened the good relations between
-ourselves and the great empire of Japan.
-The only thing which at the moment could practically
-be done for the cause of peace was to
-secure some proper solution of the question at
-issue between ourselves and Japan. But this represented
-real effort, real thought. The peace
-congress paid not the slightest serious attention
-to the matter and instead devoted itself to listening
-to speeches which favored the abolition of the
-United States navy and even in one case the
-prohibiting the use of tin soldiers in nurseries because
-of the militaristic effect on the minds of the
-little boys and girls who played with them!</p>
-
-<p>Ex-President Taft has recently said that it is
-hysterical to endeavor to prepare against war;
-and he at the same time explained that the only
-real possibility of war was to be found “in the
-wanton, reckless, wicked willingness on the part
-of a narrow section of the country to gratify racial<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-prejudice and class hatred by flagrant breach of
-treaty right in the form of state law.” This
-characterization is, of course, aimed at the State
-of California for its action toward the Japanese.
-If&mdash;which may Heaven forfend&mdash;any trouble
-comes because of the action of California toward
-the Japanese, a prime factor in producing it will
-be the treaty negotiated four years ago with
-Japan; and no clearer illustration can be given of
-the mischief that comes to our people from the
-habit our public men have contracted of getting
-cheap applause for themselves by making treaties
-which they know to be shams, which they know
-cannot be observed. The result of such action is
-that there is one set of real facts, those that
-actually exist and must be reckoned with, and
-another set of make-believe facts which do not
-exist except on pieces of paper or in after-dinner
-speeches, which are known to be false but which
-serve to deceive well-meaning pacificists. Four
-years ago there was in existence a long-standing
-treaty with Japan under which we reserved the
-right to keep out Japanese laborers. Every man
-of any knowledge whatever of conditions on the
-Pacific Slope, and, indeed, generally throughout
-this country, knew, and knows now, that any immigration
-in mass to this country of the Japanese,
-whether the immigrants be industrial laborers or
-men whose labor takes the form of agricultural<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-work or even the form of small shopkeeping, was
-and is absolutely certain to produce trouble of
-the most dangerous kind. The then administration
-entered on a course of conduct as regards
-Manchuria which not only deeply offended the
-Japanese but actually achieved the result of uniting
-the Russians and Japanese against us. To
-make amends for this serious blunder the administration
-committed the far worse blunder of endeavoring
-to placate Japanese opinion by the
-negotiation of a new treaty in which our right to
-exclude Japanese laborers, that is, to prevent
-Japanese immigration in mass, was abandoned.
-The extraordinary and lamentable fact in the
-matter was that the California senators acquiesced
-in the treaty. Apparently they took the view,
-which so many of our public men do take and
-which they are encouraged to take by the unwisdom
-of those who demand impossible treaties,
-that they were perfectly willing to please some
-people by passing the treaty because, if necessary,
-the opponents of the treaty could at any time be
-placated by its violation. One item in securing
-their support was the statement by the then administration
-that the Japanese authorities had
-said that they would promise under a “gentlemen’s
-agreement” to keep the immigrants out if
-only they were by treaty given the right to let
-them in. Under the preceding treaty, during<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-my administration, the Japanese government had
-made and had in good faith kept such an agreement,
-the agreement being that as long as the
-Japanese government itself kept out Japanese
-immigrants and thereby relieved us of the necessity
-of passing any law to exclude them, no such
-law would be passed. Apparently the next administration
-did not perceive the fathomless difference
-between retaining the power to enact a
-law which was not enacted as long as no necessity
-for enacting it arose, and abandoning the power,
-surrendering the right, and trusting that the necessity
-to exercise it would not arise.</p>
-
-<p>I immensely admire and respect the Japanese
-people. I prize their good-will. I am proud of
-my personal relations with some of their leading
-men. Fifty years ago there was no possible community
-between the Japanese and ourselves.
-The events of the last fifty years have been so
-extraordinary that now Japanese statesmen, generals,
-artists, writers, scientific men, business
-men, can meet our corresponding men on terms
-of entire equality. I am fortunate enough to
-have a number of Japanese friends. I value their
-friendship. They and I meet on a footing of
-absolute equality, socially, politically, and in
-every other way. I respect and regard them precisely
-as in the case of my German and Russian,
-French and English friends. But there is no use<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-blinking the truth because it is unpleasant. As yet
-the differences between the Japanese who work
-with their hands and the Americans who work
-with their hands are such that it is absolutely
-impossible for them, when brought into contact
-with one another in great numbers, to get on.
-Japan would not permit any immigration in mass
-of our people into her territory, and it is wholly
-inadvisable that there should be such immigration
-of her people into our territory. This
-is not because either side is inferior to the other
-but because they are different. As a matter of
-fact, these differences are sometimes in favor of
-the Japanese and sometimes in favor of the
-Americans. But they are so marked that at this
-time, whatever may be the case in the future,
-friction and trouble are certain to come if there
-is any immigration in mass of Japanese into this
-country, exactly as friction and trouble have
-actually come in British Columbia from this
-cause, and have been prevented from coming in
-Australia only by the most rigid exclusion laws.
-Under these conditions the way to avoid trouble
-is not by making believe that things which are
-not so are so but by courteously and firmly
-facing the situation. The two nations should be
-given absolutely reciprocal treatment. Students,
-statesmen, publicists, scientific men, all travellers,
-whether for business or pleasure, and all men<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-engaged in international business, whether Japanese
-or American, should have absolute right of
-entry into one another’s countries and should be
-treated with the highest consideration while
-therein, but no settlement in mass should be permitted
-of the people of either country in the other
-country. All travelling and sojourning by the
-people of either country in the other country
-should be encouraged, but there should be no
-immigration of workers to, no settlement in, either
-country by the people of the other. I advocate
-this solution, which for years I have advocated,
-because I am not merely a friend but an intense
-admirer of Japan, because I am most anxious
-that America should learn from Japan the great
-amount that Japan can teach us and because I
-wish to work for the best possible feeling between
-the two countries. Each country has interests
-in the Pacific which can best be served by their
-cordial co-operation on a footing of frank and
-friendly equality; and in eastern Asiatic waters
-the interest and therefore the proper dominance
-of Japan are and will be greater than those of any
-other nation. If such a plan as that above advocated
-were once adopted by both our nations
-all sources of friction between the two countries
-would vanish at once. Ultimately I have no question
-that all restrictions of movement from one
-country to the other could be dispensed with.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-But to attempt to dispense with them in our day
-and our generation will fail; and even worse failure
-will attend the attempt to make believe to
-dispense with them while not doing so.</p>
-
-<p>It is eminently necessary that the United States
-should in good faith observe its treaties, and it is
-therefore eminently necessary not to pass treaties
-which it is absolutely certain will not be obeyed,
-and which themselves provoke disobedience to
-them. The height of folly, of course, is to pass
-treaties which will not be obeyed and the disregard
-of which may cause the gravest possible
-trouble, even war, and at the same time to refuse
-to prepare for war and to pass other foolish treaties
-calculated to lure our people into the belief that
-there will never be war.</p>
-
-<p>I advocate that our preparedness take such
-shape as to fit us to resist aggression, not to encourage
-us in aggression. I advocate preparedness
-that will enable us to defend our own shores
-and to defend the Panama Canal and Hawaii
-and Alaska, and prevent the seizure of territory
-at the expense of any commonwealth of the
-western hemisphere by any military power of
-the Old World. I advocate this being done in the
-most democratic manner possible. We Americans
-do not realize how fundamentally democratic our
-army really is. When I served in Cuba it was
-under General Sam Young and alongside of General<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-Adna Chaffee. Both had entered the American
-army as enlisted men in the Civil War.
-Later, as President, I made both of them in succession
-lieutenant-generals and commanders of
-the army. On the occasion when General Chaffee
-was to appear at the White House for the first
-time as lieutenant-general, General Young sent
-him his own starred shoulder-straps with a little
-note saying that they were from “Private Young,
-’61, to Private Chaffee, ’61.” Both of the fine
-old fellows represented the best type of citizen-soldier.
-Each was simply and sincerely devoted
-to peace and justice. Each was incapable of
-advocating our doing wrong to others. Neither
-could have understood willingness on the part of
-any American to see the United States submit
-tamely to insult or injury. Both typified the
-attitude that we Americans should take in our
-dealings with foreign countries.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156">156</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">OUR PEACEMAKER, THE NAVY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> course of the present administration in
-foreign affairs has now and then combined
-officiously offensive action toward foreign
-powers with tame submission to wrong-doing by
-foreign powers. As a nation we have refused to
-do our duty to others and yet we have at times
-tamely submitted to wrong at the hands of others.
-This has been notably true of our conduct in
-Mexico; and we have come perilously near such
-conduct in the case of Japan. It is also true of
-our activities as regards the European war. We
-failed to act in accordance with our obligations
-as a signatory power to the Hague treaties. In
-addition to the capital crime committed against
-Belgium we have seen outrage after outrage perpetrated
-in violation of the Hague conventions,
-and yet the administration has never ventured
-so much as a protest. It has even at times, and
-with wavering and vacillation, adopted policies
-unjust to one or the other of the two sets of combatants.
-But it has immediately abandoned
-these policies when the combatants in violent and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">157</a></span>
-improper fashion overrode them; and it has submitted
-with such tame servility to whatever the
-warring nations have dictated that in effect we
-see, as Theodore Woolsey, the expert on international
-law, has pointed out, the American government
-protecting belligerent interests abroad at
-the expense of neutral interests both at home and
-abroad. Not since the Napoleonic wars have
-belligerents acted with such high-handed disregard
-of the rights of neutrals. Germany was the
-first and greatest offender; and when we failed
-to protest in her case the administration perhaps
-felt ashamed to protest, felt that it was estopped
-from protesting, in other cases. England in its
-turn has violated our neutrality rights, and while
-exercising both force and ingenuity in making
-this violation effective has protested as if she
-herself were the injured party. As a matter of
-fact, England and France should note that in
-view of their command of the seas our war trade
-is of such value to them that certain congressmen,
-whose interest in Germany surpasses their interest
-in the United States, have sought by law
-totally to prohibit it. This proposed&mdash;and thoroughly
-improper&mdash;action is a sufficient answer to
-the charges of the Allies, and should remind them
-how ill they requite the service rendered by our
-merchants when they seek to block all our intercourse
-with other nations. They, however, are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-only to be blamed for short-sightedness; there
-is no reason why they should pay heed to American
-interests. But the administration should represent
-American interests; it should see that while we
-perform our duties as neutrals we should be protected
-in our rights as neutrals; and one of these
-rights is the trade in contraband. To prohibit
-this is to take part in the war for the benefit of
-one belligerent at the expense of another and to
-our own cost.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it would be an ignoble action on
-our part after having conspicuously failed to protest
-against the violation of Belgian neutrality to
-show ourselves overeager to protest against comparatively
-insignificant violations of our own
-neutral rights. But we should never have put
-ourselves in such a position as to make insistence
-on our own rights seem disregard for the rights of
-others. The proper course for us to pursue was,
-on the one hand, scrupulously to see that we did
-not so act as to injure any contending nation,
-unless required to do so in the name of morality
-and of our solemn treaty obligations, and also
-fearlessly to act on behalf of other nations which
-were wronged, as required by these treaty obligations;
-and, on the other hand, with courteous
-firmness to warn any nation which, for instance,
-seized or searched our ships against the accepted
-rules of international conduct that this we could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-not permit and that such a course should not be
-persevered in by any nation which desired our
-good-will. I believe I speak for at least a considerable
-portion of our people when I say that we
-wish to make it evident that we feel sincere good-will
-toward all nations; that any action we take
-against any nation is taken with the greatest reluctance
-and only because the wrong-doing of
-that nation imposes a distinct, although painful,
-duty upon us; and yet that we do not intend ourselves
-to submit to wrong-doing from any nation.</p>
-
-<p>Until an efficient world league for peace is in
-more than mere process of formation the United
-States must depend upon itself for protection
-where its vital interests are concerned. All the
-youth of the nation should be trained in warlike
-exercises and in the use of arms&mdash;as well as in the
-indispensable virtues of courage, self-restraint, and
-endurance&mdash;so as to be fit for national defense.
-But the right arm of the nation must be its navy.
-Our navy is our most efficient peacemaker. In
-order to use the navy effectively we should clearly
-define to ourselves the policy we intend to follow
-and the limits over which we expect our power to
-extend. Our own coasts, Alaska, Hawaii, and the
-Panama Canal and its approaches should represent
-the sphere in which we should expect to be
-able, single-handed, to meet and master any opponent
-from overseas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-I exclude the Philippines. This is because I
-feel that the present administration has definitely
-committed us to a course of action which will
-make the early and complete severance of the
-Philippines from us not merely desirable but
-necessary. I have never felt that the Philippines
-were of any special use to us. But I have
-felt that we had a great task to perform there
-and that a great nation is benefited by doing a
-great task. It was our bounden duty to work
-primarily for the interests of the Filipinos; but
-it was also our bounden duty, inasmuch as the
-entire responsibility lay upon us, to consult our
-own judgment and not theirs in finally deciding
-what was to be done. It was our duty to govern
-the islands or to get out of the islands. It was
-most certainly not our duty to take the responsibility
-of staying in the islands without governing
-them. Still less was it&mdash;or is it&mdash;our duty to
-enter into joint arrangements with other powers
-about the islands; arrangements of confused responsibility
-and divided power of the kind sure
-to cause mischief. I had hoped that we would
-continue to govern the islands until we were
-certain that they were able to govern themselves
-in such fashion as to do justice to other nations
-and to repel injustice committed on them by
-other nations. To substitute for such government
-by ourselves either a government by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-Filipinos with us guaranteeing them against outsiders,
-or a joint guarantee between us and outsiders,
-would be folly. It is eminently desirable
-to guarantee the neutrality of small civilized
-nations which have a high social and cultural
-status and which are so advanced that they do
-not fall into disorder or commit wrong-doing on
-others. But it is eminently undesirable to guarantee
-the neutrality or sovereignty of an inherently
-weak nation which is impotent to preserve order
-at home, to repel assaults from abroad, or to refrain
-from doing wrong to outsiders. It is even
-more undesirable to give such a guarantee with
-no intention of making it really effective. That
-this is precisely what the present administration
-would be delighted to do has been shown by its
-refusal to live up to its Hague promises at the
-very time that it was making similar new international
-promises by the batch. To enter into a
-joint guarantee of neutrality which in emergencies
-can only be rendered effective by force of arms
-is to incur a serious responsibility which ought to
-be undertaken in a serious spirit. To enter into
-it with no intention of using force, or of preparing
-force, in order at need to make it effective, represents
-the kind of silliness which is worse than
-wickedness.</p>
-
-<p>Above all, we should keep our promises. The
-present administration was elected on the outright<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-pledge of giving the Filipinos independence.
-Apparently its course in the Philippines has proceeded
-upon the theory that the Filipinos are now
-fit to govern themselves. Whatever may be our
-personal and individual beliefs in this matter, we
-ought not as a nation to break faith or even to
-seem to break faith. I hope therefore that the
-Filipinos will be given their independence at an
-early date and without any guarantee from us
-which might in any way hamper our future action
-or commit us to staying on the Asiatic coast. I
-do not believe we should keep any foothold whatever
-in the Philippines. Any kind of position by
-us in the Philippines merely results in making
-them our heel of Achilles if we are attacked by a
-foreign power. They can be of no compensating
-benefit to us. If we were to retain complete control
-over them and to continue the course of action
-which in the past sixteen years has resulted
-in such immeasurable benefit for them, then I
-should feel that it was our duty to stay and work
-for them in spite of the expense incurred by us
-and the risk we thereby ran. But inasmuch as
-we have now promised to leave them and as we
-are now abandoning our power to work efficiently
-for and in them, I do not feel that we are warranted
-in staying in the islands in an equivocal
-position, thereby incurring great risk to ourselves
-without conferring any real compensating advantage,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-of a kind which we are bound to take into
-account, on the Filipinos themselves. If the
-Filipinos are entitled to independence then we are
-entitled to be freed from all the responsibility and
-risk which our presence in the islands entails
-upon us.</p>
-
-<p>The great nations of southernmost South America,
-Brazil, the Argentine, and Chile are now so
-far advanced in stability and power that there is
-no longer any need of applying the Monroe Doctrine
-as far as they are concerned; and this also
-relieves us as regards Uruguay and Paraguay
-the former of which is well advanced and neither
-of which has any interests with which we need
-particularly concern ourselves. As regards all
-these powers, therefore, we now have no duty save
-that doubtless if they got into difficulties and desired
-our aid we would gladly extend it, just as,
-for instance, we would to Australia and Canada.
-But we can now proceed on the assumption that
-they are able to help themselves and that any
-help we should be required to give would be given
-by us as an auxiliary rather than as a principal.</p>
-
-<p>Our naval problem, therefore, is primarily to
-provide for the protection of our own coasts and
-for the protection and policing of Hawaii, Alaska,
-and the Panama Canal and its approaches. This
-offers a definite problem which should be solved
-by our naval men. It is for them, having in view<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-the lessons taught by this war, to say what is the
-exact type of fleet we require, the number and
-kind of submarines, of destroyers, of mines, and of
-air-ships to be used against hostile fleets, in addition
-to the cruisers and great fighting craft
-which must remain the backbone of the navy.
-Civilians may be competent to pass on the merits
-of the plans suggested by the naval men, but it
-is the naval men themselves who must make and
-submit the plans in detail. Lay opinion, however,
-should keep certain elementary facts steadily
-in mind.</p>
-
-<p>The navy must primarily be used for offensive
-purposes. Forts, not the navy, are to be used
-for defense. The only permanently efficient type
-of defensive is the offensive. A portion, and a
-very important portion, of our naval strength
-must be used with our own coast ordinarily as a
-base, its striking radius being only a few score
-miles, or a couple of hundred at the outside.
-The events of this war have shown that submarines
-can play a tremendous part. We should
-develop our force of submarines and train the
-officers and crews who have charge of them to
-the highest pitch of efficiency&mdash;for they will be
-useless in time of war unless those aboard them
-have been trained in time of peace. These submarines,
-when used in connection with destroyers
-and with air-ships, can undoubtedly serve to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-minimize the danger of successful attack on our
-own shores. But the prime lesson of the war, as
-regards the navy, is that the nation with a powerful
-seagoing navy, although it may suffer much
-annoyance and loss, yet is able on the whole to
-take the offensive and do great damage to a nation
-with a less powerful navy. Great Britain’s naval
-superiority over Germany has enabled her completely
-to paralyze all Germany’s sea commerce
-and to prevent goods from entering her ports.
-What is far more important, it has enabled the
-British to land two or three hundred thousand
-men to aid the French, and has enabled Canada and
-Australia to send a hundred thousand men from
-the opposite ends of the earth to Great Britain.
-If Germany had had the more powerful navy
-England would now have suffered the fate of
-Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>The capital work done by the German cruisers
-in the Atlantic, the Pacific, and the Indian
-Oceans shows how much can be accomplished in
-the way of hurting and damaging an enemy by
-even the weaker power if it possesses fine ships,
-well handled, able to operate thousands of miles
-from their own base. We must not fail to recognize
-this. Neither must we fail heartily and fully
-to recognize the capital importance of submarines
-as well as air-ships, torpedo-boat destroyers, and
-mines, as proved by the events of the last three<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-months. But nothing that has yet occurred warrants
-us in feeling that we can afford to ease up
-in our programme of building battle-ships and
-cruisers, especially the former. The German submarines
-have done wonderfully in this war; their
-cruisers have done gallantly. But so far as Great
-Britain is concerned the vital and essential feature
-has been the fact that her great battle fleet
-has kept the German fleet immured in its own home
-ports, has protected Britain from invasion, and
-has enabled her land strength to be used to its
-utmost capacity beside the armies of France and
-Belgium. If the men who for years have clamored
-against Britain’s being prepared had had
-their way, if Britain during the last quarter of a
-century had failed to continue the upbuilding of
-her navy, if the English statesmen corresponding
-to President Wilson and Mr. Bryan had seen their
-ideas triumph, England would now be off the map
-as a great power and the British Empire would
-have dissolved, while London, Liverpool, and
-Birmingham would be in the condition of Antwerp
-and Brussels.</p>
-
-<p>The efficiency of the German personnel at sea
-has been no less remarkable than the efficiency
-of the German personnel on land. This is due
-partly to the spirit of the nation and partly to
-what is itself a consequence of that spirit, the
-careful training of the navy during peace under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-the conditions of actual service. When, early in
-1909, our battle fleet returned from its sixteen
-months’ voyage around the world there was no
-navy in the world which, size for size, ship for
-ship, and squadron for squadron, stood at a higher
-pitch of efficiency. We blind ourselves to the
-truth if we believe that the same is true now.
-During the last twenty months, ever since Secretary
-Meyer left the Navy Department, there
-has been in our navy a great falling off relatively
-to other nations. It was quite impossible to
-avoid this while our national affairs were handled
-as they have recently been handled. The President
-who intrusts the Departments of State and
-the Navy to gentlemen like Messrs. Bryan and
-Daniels deliberately invites disaster, in the event
-of serious complications with a formidable foreign
-opponent. On the whole, there is no class of our
-citizens, big or small, who so emphatically deserve
-well of the country as the officers and the
-enlisted men of the army and navy. No navy in
-the world has such fine stuff out of which to make
-man-of-war’s men. But they must be heartily
-backed up, heartily supported, and sedulously
-trained. They must be treated well, and, above
-all, they must be treated so as to encourage the
-best among them by sharply discriminating
-against the worst. The utmost possible efficiency
-should be demanded of them. They are emphatically<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-and in every sense of the word men; and
-real men resent with impatient contempt a policy
-under which less than their best is demanded.
-The finest material is utterly worthless without
-the best personnel. In such a highly specialized
-service as the navy constant training of a purely
-military type is an absolute necessity. At present
-our navy is lamentably short in many different
-material directions. There is actually but one
-torpedo for each torpedo tube. It seems incredible
-that such can be the case; yet it is the case. We
-are many thousands of men short in our enlistments.
-We are lamentably short in certain
-types of vessel. There is grave doubt as to the
-efficiency of many of our submarines and destroyers.
-But the shortcomings in our training are
-even more lamentable. To keep the navy cruising
-near Vera Cruz and in Mexican waters,
-without manœuvring, invites rapid deterioration.
-For nearly two years there has been no
-fleet manœuvring; and this fact by itself probably
-means a twenty-five per cent loss of efficiency.
-During the same periods most of the ships have
-not even had division gun practice. Not only
-should our navy be as large as our position and
-interest demand but it should be kept continually
-at the highest point of efficiency and should
-never be used save for its own appropriate military
-purposes. Of this elementary fact the present<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-administration seems to be completely ignorant.</p>
-
-<p>President Wilson and Secretary Daniels assert
-that our navy is in efficient shape. Admiral
-Fiske’s testimony is conclusive to the contrary,
-although it was very cautiously given, as is
-but natural when a naval officer, if he tells the
-whole truth, must state what is unpleasant for
-his superiors to hear. Other naval officers have
-pointed out our deficiencies, and the newspapers
-state that some of them have been reprimanded
-for so doing. But there is no need for their testimony.
-There is one admitted fact which is absolutely
-conclusive in the matter. There has been
-no fleet manœuvring during the past twenty-two
-months. In spite of fleet manœuvring the navy
-may be unprepared. But it is an absolute certainty
-that without fleet manœuvring it cannot
-possibly be prepared. In the unimportant domain
-of sport there is not a man who goes to see
-the annual football game between Harvard and
-Yale who would not promptly cancel his ticket if
-either university should propose to put into the
-field a team which, no matter how good the players
-were individually, had not been practised as a
-team during the preceding sixty days. If in such
-event the president of either university or the
-coach of the team should announce that in spite
-of never having had any team practice the team<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-was nevertheless in first-class condition, there is
-literally no intelligent follower of the game who
-would regard the utterance as serious. Why
-should President Wilson and Secretary Daniels
-expect the American public to show less intelligence
-as regards the vital matter of our navy
-than they do as regards a mere sport, a mere
-play? For twenty-two months there has been
-no fleet manœuvring. Since in the daily press,
-early in November, I, with emphasis, called attention
-to this fact Mr. Daniels has announced that
-shortly manœuvring will take place; and of course
-the failure to manœuvre for nearly two years
-has been due less to Mr. Daniels than to President
-Wilson’s futile and mischievous Mexican
-policy and his entire ignorance of the needs of
-the navy. I am glad that the administration
-has tardily waked up to the necessity of taking
-some steps to make the navy efficient, and if the
-President and the Secretary of the Navy bring
-forth fruits meet for repentance, I will most
-heartily acknowledge the fact&mdash;just as it has given
-me the utmost pleasure to praise and support
-President Wilson’s Secretary of War, Mr. Garrison.
-But misstatements as to actual conditions
-make but a poor preparation for the work of
-remedying these conditions, and President Wilson
-and Secretary Daniels try to conceal from the
-people our ominous naval shortcomings. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-shortcomings are far-reaching, alike in material,
-organization, and practical training. The navy
-is absolutely unprepared; its efficiency has been
-terribly reduced under and because of the action
-of President Wilson and Secretary Daniels. Let
-them realize this fact and do all they can to
-remedy the wrong they have committed. Let
-Congress realize its own shortcomings. Far-reaching
-and thoroughgoing treatment, continued
-for a period of at least two and in all probability
-three years, is needed if the navy is to be
-placed on an equality, unit for unit, no less
-than in the mass, with the navies of England,
-Germany, and Japan. In the present war the
-deeds of the <i>Emden</i>, of the German submarines,
-of Von Spee’s squadron, have shown not merely
-efficiency but heroism; and the navies of Great
-Britain and Japan have been handled in masterly
-manner. Have the countrymen of Farragut, of
-Cushing, Buchanan, Winslow, and Semmes, of
-Decatur, Hull, Perry, and MacDonough, lost their
-address and courage, and are they willing to sink
-below the standard set by their forefathers?</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that the United States never
-learns by experience but only by disaster. Such
-method of education may at times prove costly.
-The slothful or short-sighted citizens who are
-now misled by the cries of the ultrapacificists
-would do well to remember events connected with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-the outbreak of the war with Spain. I was then
-Assistant Secretary of the Navy. At one bound
-our people passed from a condition of smug confidence
-that war never could occur (a smug confidence
-just as great as any we feel at present)
-to a condition of utterly unreasoning panic over
-what might be done to us by a very weak antagonist.
-One governor of a seaboard State announced
-that none of the National Guard regiments
-would be allowed to respond to the call of
-the President because they would be needed to
-prevent a Spanish invasion of that State&mdash;the
-Spaniards being about as likely to make such
-an invasion as we were to invade Timbuctoo or
-Turkestan. One congressman besought me to
-send a battle-ship to protect Jekyll Island, off the
-coast of Georgia. Another congressman asked
-me to send a battle-ship to protect a summer
-colony which centred around a large Atlantic-coast
-hotel in Connecticut. In my own neighborhood
-on Long Island clauses were gravely inserted
-into the leases of property to the effect
-that if the Spaniards destroyed the property the
-leases should terminate. Chambers of commerce,
-boards of trade, municipal authorities, leading
-business men, from one end of the country to the
-other, hysterically demanded, each of them, that
-a ship should be stationed to defend some particular
-locality; the theory being that our navy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-should be strung along both seacoasts, each ship
-by itself, in a purely defensive attitude&mdash;thereby
-making certain that even the Spanish navy could
-pick them all up in detail. One railway president
-came to protest to me against the choice of Tampa
-as a point of embarkation for our troops, on the
-ground that his railway was entitled to its share
-of the profit of transporting troops and munitions
-of war and that his railway went to New Orleans.
-The very senators and congressmen who had done
-everything in their power to prevent the building
-up and the efficient training of the navy screamed
-and shrieked loudest to have the navy diverted
-from its proper purpose and used to protect unimportant
-seaports. Surely our congressmen and,
-above all, our people need to learn that in time of
-crisis peace treaties are worthless, and the ultrapacificists
-of both sexes merely a burden on and a
-detriment to the country as a whole; that the only
-permanently useful defensive is the offensive, and
-that the navy is properly the offensive weapon of
-the nation.</p>
-
-<p>The navy of the United States is the right
-arm of the United States and is emphatically the
-peacemaker. Woe to our country if we permit
-that right arm to become palsied or even to become
-flabby and inefficient!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">174</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">PREPAREDNESS AGAINST WAR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Military</span> preparedness meets two needs.
-In the first place, it is a partial insurance
-against war. In the next place, it is
-a partial guarantee that if war comes the country
-will certainly escape dishonor and will probably
-escape material loss.</p>
-
-<p>The question of preparedness cannot be considered
-at all until we get certain things clearly in
-our minds. Right thinking, wholesome thinking,
-is essential as a preliminary to sound national
-action. Until our people understand the folly of
-certain of the arguments advanced against the
-action this nation needs, it is, of course, impossible
-to expect them to take such action.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing to understand is the fact that
-preparedness for war does not always insure
-peace but that it very greatly increases the chances
-of securing peace. Foolish people point out nations
-which, in spite of preparedness for war,
-have seen war come upon them, and then exclaim
-that preparedness against war is of no use. Such
-an argument is precisely like saying that the existence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-of destructive fires in great cities shows
-that there is no use in having a fire department.
-A fire department, which means preparedness
-against fire, does not prevent occasional
-destructive fires, but it does greatly diminish and
-may completely minimize the chances for wholesale
-destruction by fire. Nations that are prepared
-for war occasionally suffer from it; but if
-they are unprepared for it they suffer far more
-often and far more radically.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty years ago China, Korea, and Japan were
-in substantially the same stage of culture and
-civilization. Japan, whose statesmen had vision
-and whose people had the fighting edge, began a
-course of military preparedness, and the other two
-nations (one of them in natural resources immeasurably
-superior to Japan) remained unprepared.
-In consequence, Japan has immensely increased
-her power and standing and is wholly free from
-all danger of military invasion. Korea on the
-contrary, having first been dominated by Russia
-has now been conquered by Japan. China has
-been partially dismembered; one half of her territories
-are now subject to the dominion of foreign
-nations, which have time and again waged war
-between themselves on these territories, and her
-remaining territory is kept by her purely because
-these foreign nations are jealous of one another.</p>
-
-<p>In 1870 France was overthrown and suffered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-by far the most damaging and disastrous defeat
-she had suffered since the days of Joan of Arc&mdash;because
-she was not prepared. In the present
-war she has suffered terribly, but she is beyond
-all comparison better off than she was in 1870,
-because she has been prepared. Poor Belgium, in
-spite of being prepared, was almost destroyed,
-because great neutral nations&mdash;the United States
-being the chief offender&mdash;have not yet reached the
-standard of international morality and of willingness
-to fight for righteousness which must be
-attained before they can guarantee small, well-behaved,
-civilized nations against cruel disaster.
-England, because she was prepared as far as her
-navy is concerned, has been able to avoid Belgium’s
-fate; and, on the other hand, if she had been as
-prepared with her army as France, she would
-probably have been able to avert the war and, if
-this could not have been done, would at any rate
-have been able to save both France and Belgium
-from invasion.</p>
-
-<p>In recent years Rumania, Bulgaria, and Servia
-have at times suffered terribly, and in some
-cases have suffered disaster, in spite of being
-prepared for war; but Bosnia and Herzegovina
-are under alien rule at this moment because
-they could no more protect themselves against
-Austria than they could against Turkey. While
-Greece was unprepared she was able to accomplish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-nothing, and she encountered disaster. As soon
-as she was prepared, she benefited immensely.</p>
-
-<p>Switzerland, at the time of the Napoleonic wars,
-was wholly unprepared for war. In spite of her
-mountains, her neighbors overran her at will.
-Great battles were fought on her soil, including one
-great battle between the French and the Russians;
-but the Swiss took no part in these battles. Their
-territory was practically annexed to the French
-Republic, and they were domineered over first by
-the Emperor Napoleon and then by his enemies.
-It was a bitter lesson, but the Swiss learned it.
-Since then they have gradually prepared for war
-as no other small state of Europe has done, and
-it is in consequence of this preparedness that none
-of the combatants has violated Swiss territory in
-the present struggle.</p>
-
-<p>The briefest examination of the facts shows that
-unpreparedness for war tends to lead to immeasurable
-disaster, and that preparedness, while it
-does not certainly avert war any more than the
-fire department of a city certainly averts fire, yet
-tends very strongly to guarantee the nation against
-war and to secure success in war if it should unhappily
-arise.</p>
-
-<p>Another argument advanced against preparedness
-for war is that such preparedness incites war.
-This, again, is not in accordance with the facts.
-Unquestionably certain nations have at times prepared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-for war with a view to foreign conquest.
-But the rule has been that unpreparedness for war
-does not have any real effect in securing peace,
-although it is always apt to make war disastrous,
-and that preparedness for war generally goes hand
-in hand with an increased caution in going to war.</p>
-
-<p>Striking examples of these truths are furnished
-by the history of the Spanish-American states.
-For nearly three quarters of a century after these
-states won their independence their history was
-little else than a succession of bloody revolutions
-and of wars among themselves as well as with outsiders,
-while during the same period there was little
-or nothing done in the way of effective military preparedness
-by one of them. During the last twenty
-or thirty years, however, certain of them, notably
-Argentina and Chile, have prospered and become
-stable. Their stability has been partly caused by,
-and partly accompanied by, a great increase in
-military preparedness. During this period Argentina
-and Chile have known peace as they never
-knew it before, and as the other Spanish-American
-countries have not known it either before or since,
-and at the same time their military efficiency has
-enormously increased.</p>
-
-<p>Proportionately, Argentina and Chile are in
-military strength beyond all comparison more
-efficient than the United States; and if our
-navy is permitted to deteriorate as it has been deteriorating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-for nearly two years, the same statement
-can soon be made, although with more
-qualification, of their naval strength. Preparedness
-for war has made them far less liable to have
-war. It has made them less and not more aggressive.
-It has also made them for the first time
-efficient potential factors in maintaining the Monroe
-Doctrine as coguarantors, on a footing of
-complete equality with the United States. The
-Monroe Doctrine, conceived not merely as a measure
-of foreign policy vital to the welfare of the
-United States, but even more as the proper joint
-foreign policy of all American nations, is by far
-the most efficient guarantee against war that can
-be offered the western hemisphere. By whatever
-name it is called, it is absolutely indispensable
-in order to keep this hemisphere mistress of its
-own destinies, able to prevent any part of it
-from falling under the dominion of any Old World
-power, and able absolutely to control in its own
-interest all colonization on and immigration to
-our shores from either Europe or Asia.</p>
-
-<p>The bloodiest and most destructive war in
-Spanish-American history, that waged by Brazil,
-Argentina, and Uruguay against Paraguay, was
-waged when all the nations were entirely unprepared
-for war, especially the three victorious
-nations. During the last two or three decades
-Mexico, the Central American states, Colombia,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-and Venezuela have been entirely unprepared for
-war, as compared with Chile and Argentina. Yet,
-whereas Chile and Argentina have been at peace,
-the other states mentioned have been engaged in
-war after war of the most bloody and destructive
-character. Entire lack of preparedness for war
-has gone hand in hand with war of the worst type
-and with all the worst sufferings that war can
-bring.</p>
-
-<p>The lessons taught by Spanish-America are
-paralleled elsewhere. When Greece was entirely
-unprepared for war she nevertheless went to
-war with Turkey, exactly as she did when she
-was prepared; the only difference was that in
-the one case she suffered disaster and in the other
-she did not. The war between Italy and Turkey
-was due wholly to the fact that Turkey was not
-prepared&mdash;that she had no navy. The fact that
-in 1848 Prussia was entirely unprepared, and
-moreover had just been engaged in a revolution
-heartily approved by all the ultrapacificists and
-professional humanitarians, did not prevent her
-from entering on a war with Denmark. It merely
-prevented the war from being successful.</p>
-
-<p>Utter and complete lack of preparation on our
-part did not prevent our entering into war with
-Great Britain in 1812 and with Mexico in 1848.
-It merely exposed us to humiliation and disaster
-in the former war; in the latter, Mexico was even<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-worse off as regards preparation than we were.
-As for civil war, of course military unpreparedness
-has not only never prevented it but, on the contrary,
-seems usually to have been one of the
-inciting causes.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that unpreparedness does not mean
-peace ought to be patent to every American who
-will think of what has occurred in this country
-during the last seventeen years. In 1898 we
-were entirely unprepared for war. No big nation,
-save and except our opponent, Spain, was more
-utterly unprepared than we were at that time, nor
-more utterly unfit for military operations. This
-did not, however, mean that peace was secured for
-a single additional hour. Our army and navy had
-been neglected for thirty-three years. This was
-due largely to the attitude of the spiritual forebears
-of those eminent clergymen, earnest social workers,
-and professionally humanitarian and peace-loving
-editors, publicists, writers for syndicates, speakers
-for peace congresses, pacificist college presidents,
-and the like who have recently come forward to
-protest against any inquiry into the military condition
-of this nation, on the ground that to supply
-our ships and forts with sufficient ammunition
-and to fill up the depleted ranks of the army and
-navy, and in other ways to prepare against war,
-will tend to interfere with peace. In 1898 the
-gentlemen of this sort had had their way for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-thirty-three years. Our army and navy had been
-grossly neglected. But the unpreparedness due
-to this neglect had not the slightest effect of
-any kind in preventing the war. The only effect
-it had was to cause the unnecessary and
-useless loss of thousands of lives in the war.
-Hundreds of young men perished in the Philippine
-trenches because, while the soldiers of Aguinaldo
-had modern rifles with smokeless powder,
-our troops had only the old black-powder Springfield.
-Hundreds more, nay thousands, died or
-had their health impaired for life in fever camps
-here in our own country and in the Philippines
-and Cuba, and suffered on transports, because we
-were entirely unprepared for war, and therefore
-no one knew how to take care of our men. The
-lives of these brave young volunteers were the
-price that this country paid for the past action
-of men like the clergymen, college presidents,
-editors, and humanitarians in question&mdash;none of
-whom, by the way, risked their own lives. They
-were also the price that this country paid for having
-had in previous cabinets just such incompetents
-as in time of peace Presidents so often, for
-political reasons, put into American cabinets&mdash;just
-such incompetents as President Wilson has put
-into the Departments of State and of the Navy.</p>
-
-<p>Now and then the ultrapacificists point out the
-fact that war is bad because the best men go to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">183</a></span>
-front and the worst stay at home. There is a certain
-truth in this. I do not believe that we ought
-to permit pacificists to stay at home and escape all
-risk, while their braver and more patriotic fellow
-countrymen fight for the national well-being. It
-is for this reason that I wish that we would provide
-for universal military training for our young
-men, and in the event of serious war make all
-men do their part instead of letting the whole
-burden fall upon the gallant souls who volunteer.
-But as there is small likelihood of any such course
-being followed in the immediate future, I at
-least hope that we will so prepare ourselves in
-time of peace as to make our navy and army
-thoroughly efficient; and also to enable us in time
-of war to handle our volunteers in such shape
-that the loss among them shall be due to the
-enemy’s bullets instead of, as is now the case,
-predominantly to preventable sickness which we
-do not prevent. I call the attention of the ultrapacificists
-to the fact that in the last half century
-all the losses among our men caused by “militarism,”
-as they call it, that is, by the arms of an
-enemy in consequence of our going to war, have
-been far less than the loss caused among these
-same soldiers by applied pacificism, that is, by our
-government having yielded to the wishes of the
-pacificists and declined in advance to make any
-preparations for war. The professional peace<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-people have benefited the foes and ill-wishers of
-their country; but it is probably the literal fact
-to say that in the actual deed, by the obstacles
-they have thrown in the way of making adequate
-preparation in advance, they have caused more
-loss of life among American soldiers, fighting for
-the honor of the American flag, during the fifty
-years since the close of the Civil War than has
-been caused by the foes whom we have fought
-during that period.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> Some of the leading pacificists are men who have made great
-fortunes in industry. Of course industry inevitably takes toll of
-life. Far more lives have been lost in this country by men engaged
-in bridge building, tunnel digging, mining, steel manufacturing, the
-erection of sky-scrapers, the operations of the fishing fleet, and the
-like, than in all our battles in all our foreign wars put together. Such
-loss of life no more justifies us in opposing righteous wars than in
-opposing necessary industry. There was certainly far greater loss of
-life, and probably greater needless and preventable and uncompensated
-loss of life, in the industries out of which Mr. Carnegie made
-his gigantic fortune than has occurred among our troops in war during
-the time covered by Mr. Carnegie’s activities on behalf of peace.</p></div>
-
-<p>But the most striking instance of the utter
-failure of unpreparedness to stop war has been
-shown by President Wilson himself. President
-Wilson has made himself the great official champion
-of unpreparedness in military and naval
-matters. His words and his actions about foreign
-war have their nearest parallel in the words and
-the actions of President Buchanan about civil war;
-and in each case there has been the same use of
-verbal adroitness to cover mental hesitancy. By<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-his words and his actions President Wilson has
-done everything possible to prevent this nation
-from making its army and navy effective and to
-increase the inefficiency which he already found
-existing. We were unprepared when he took
-office, and every month since we have grown still
-less prepared. Yet this fact did not prevent
-President Wilson, the great apostle of unpreparedness,
-the great apostle of pacificism and
-anti-militarism, from going to war with Mexico
-last spring. It merely prevented him, or, to
-speak more accurately, the same mental peculiarities
-which made him the apostle of unpreparedness
-also prevented him, from making the war
-efficient. His conduct rendered the United States
-an object of international derision because of
-the way in which its affairs were managed. President
-Wilson made no declaration of war. He did
-not in any way satisfy the requirements of common
-international law before acting. He invaded a
-neighboring state, with which he himself insisted
-we were entirely at peace, and occupied the most
-considerable seaport of the country after military
-operations which resulted in the loss of the
-lives of perhaps twenty of our men and five or
-ten times that number of Mexicans; and then he
-sat supine, and refused to allow either the United
-States or Mexico to reap any benefit from what had
-been done.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-It is idle to say that such an amazing action
-was not war. It was an utterly futile war and
-achieved nothing; but it was war. We had
-ample justification for interfering in Mexico and
-even for going to war with Mexico, if after careful
-consideration this course was deemed necessary.
-But the President did not even take notice
-of any of the atrocious wrongs Americans had suffered,
-or deal with any of the grave provocations
-we had received. His statement of justification
-was merely that “we are in Mexico to serve mankind,
-if we can find a way.” Evidently he did
-not have in his mind any particular idea of how he
-was to “serve mankind,” for, after staying eight
-months in Mexico, he decided that he could not
-“find a way” and brought his army home. He
-had not accomplished one single thing. At one
-time it was said that we went to Vera Cruz to
-stop the shipment of arms into Mexico. But
-after we got there we allowed the shipments
-to continue. At another time it was said that
-we went there in order to exact an apology for
-an insult to the flag. But we never did exact the
-apology, and we left Vera Cruz without taking
-any steps to get an apology. In all our history
-there has been no more extraordinary example
-of queer infirmity of purpose in an important
-crisis than was shown by President Wilson in this
-matter. His business was either not to interfere<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-at all or to interfere hard and effectively. This
-was the sole policy which should have been allowed
-by regard for the dignity and honor of the
-government of the United States and the welfare
-of our people. In the actual event President
-Wilson interfered, not enough to quell civil war,
-not enough to put a stop to or punish the outrages
-on American citizens, but enough to incur
-fearful responsibilities. Then, having without
-authority of any kind, either under the Constitution
-or in international law or in any other way,
-thus interfered, and having interfered to worse
-than no purpose, and having made himself and
-the nation partly responsible for the atrocious
-wrongs committed on Americans and on foreigners
-generally in Mexico by the bandit chiefs whom
-he was more or less furtively supporting, President
-Wilson abandoned his whole policy and drew
-out of Mexico to resume his “watchful waiting.”
-When the President, who has made himself the
-chief official exponent of the doctrine of unpreparedness,
-thus shows that even in his hands
-unpreparedness has not the smallest effect in
-preventing war, there ought to be little need of
-discussing the matter further.</p>
-
-<p>Preparedness for war occasionally has a slight
-effect in creating or increasing an aggressive and
-militaristic spirit. Far more often it distinctly
-diminishes it. In Switzerland, for instance, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-we can well afford to take as a model for
-ourselves, effectiveness in preparation, and the
-retention and development of all the personal
-qualities which give the individual man the fighting
-edge, have in no shape or way increased the
-militarist or aggressive spirit. On the contrary,
-they have doubtless been among the factors that
-have made the Swiss so much more law-abiding
-and less homicidal than we are.</p>
-
-<p>The ultrapacificists have been fond of prophesying
-the immediate approach of a universally peaceful
-condition throughout the world, which will
-render it unnecessary to prepare against war because
-there will be no more war. This represents
-in some cases well-meaning and pathetic folly. In
-other cases it represents mischievous and inexcusable
-folly. But it always represents folly. At
-best, it represents the inability of some well-meaning
-men of weak mind, and of some men of
-strong but twisted mind, either to face or to
-understand facts.</p>
-
-<p>These prophets of the inane are not peculiar
-to our own day. A little over a century and a
-quarter ago a noted Italian pacificist and philosopher,
-Aurelio Bertela, summed up the future
-of civilized mankind as follows: “The political
-system of Europe has arrived at perfection. An
-equilibrium has been attained which henceforth
-will preserve peoples from subjugation. Few reforms<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-are now needed and these will be accomplished
-peaceably. Europe has no need to fear
-revolution.”</p>
-
-<p>These sapient statements (which have been
-paralleled by hundreds of utterances in the many
-peace congresses of the last couple of decades)
-were delivered in 1787, the year in which the
-French Assembly of Notables ushered in the
-greatest era of revolution, domestic turmoil, and
-international war in all history&mdash;an era which
-still continues and which shows not the smallest
-sign of coming to an end. Never before have
-there been wars on so great a scale as during this
-century and a quarter; and the greatest of all
-these wars is now being waged. Never before,
-except for the ephemeral conquests of certain
-Asiatic barbarians, have there been subjugations
-of civilized peoples on so great a scale.</p>
-
-<p>During this period here and there something
-has been done for peace, much has been done for
-liberty, and very much has been done for reform
-and advancement. But the professional pacificists,
-taken as a class throughout the entire period,
-have done nothing for permanent peace and
-less than nothing for liberty and for the forward
-movement of mankind. Hideous things have
-been done in the name of liberty, in the name
-of order, in the name of religion; and the victories
-that have been gained against these iniquities<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">190</a></span>
-have been gained by strong men, armed, who
-put their strength at the service of righteousness
-and who were hampered and not helped by the
-futility of the men who inveighed against all
-use of armed strength.</p>
-
-<p>The effective workers for the peace of righteousness
-were men like Stein, Cavour, and Lincoln;
-that is, men who dreamed great dreams, but who
-were also pre-eminently men of action, who stood
-for the right, and who knew that the right would
-fail unless might was put behind it. The prophets
-of pacificism have had nothing whatever in common
-with these great men; and whenever they
-have preached mere pacificism, whenever they
-have failed to put righteousness first and to advocate
-peace as the handmaiden of righteousness,
-they have done evil and not good.</p>
-
-<p>After the exhaustion of the Napoleonic struggles
-there came thirty-five years during which there
-was no great war, while what was called “the long
-peace” was broken only by minor international
-wars or short-lived revolutionary contests. Good,
-but not far-sighted, men in various countries,
-but especially in England, Germany, and our
-own country, forthwith began to dream dreams&mdash;not
-of a universal peace that should be founded
-on justice and righteousness backed by strength,
-but of a universal peace to be obtained by the
-prattle of weaklings and the outpourings of amiable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-enthusiasts who lacked the fighting edge.
-About 1850, for instance, the first large peace
-congress was held. There were numbers of kindly
-people who felt that this congress, and the contemporary
-international exposition, also the first
-of its kind, heralded the beginning of a régime of
-universal peace. As a matter of fact, there followed
-twenty years during which a number of
-great and bloody wars took place&mdash;wars far surpassing
-in extent, in duration, in loss of life and
-property, and in importance anything that had
-been seen since the close of the Napoleonic contest.</p>
-
-<p>Then there came another period of nearly thirty
-years during which there were relatively only a
-few wars, and these not of the highest importance.
-Again upright and intelligent but uninformed men
-began to be misled by foolish men into the belief
-that world peace was about to be secured, on a
-basis of amiable fatuity all around and under the
-lead of the preachers of the diluted mush of make-believe
-morality. A number of peace congresses,
-none of which accomplished anything, were held,
-and also certain Hague conferences, which did accomplish
-a certain small amount of real good but
-of a strictly limited kind. It was well worth going
-into these Hague conferences, but only on condition
-of clearly understanding how strictly limited
-was the good that they accomplished. The hysterical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-people who treated them as furnishing a
-patent peace panacea did nothing but harm, and
-partially offset the real but limited good the conferences
-actually accomplished. Indeed, the conferences
-undoubtedly did a certain amount of
-damage because of the preposterous expectations
-they excited among well-meaning but ill-informed
-and unthinking persons. These persons really believed
-that it was possible to achieve the millennium
-by means that would not have been very
-effective in preserving peace among the active boys
-of a large Sunday-school&mdash;let alone grown-up men
-in the world as it actually is. A pathetic commentary
-on their attitude is furnished by the fact
-that the fifteen years that have elapsed since the
-first Hague conference have seen an immense increase
-of war, culminating in the present war,
-waged by armies, and with bloodshed, on a scale
-far vaster than ever before in the history of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>All these facts furnish no excuse whatever for
-our failing to work zealously for peace, but they
-absolutely require us to understand that it is
-noxious to work for a peace not based on righteousness,
-and useless to work for a peace based on
-righteousness unless we put force back of righteousness.
-At present this means that adequate
-preparedness against war offers to our nation its
-sole guarantee against wrong and aggression.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-Emerson has said that in the long run the most
-uncomfortable truth is a safer travelling companion
-than the most agreeable falsehood. The advocates
-of peace will accomplish nothing except mischief
-until they are willing to look facts squarely
-in the face. One of these facts is that universal
-military service, wherever tried, has on the whole
-been a benefit and not a harm to the people of the
-nation, so long as the demand upon the average
-man’s life has not been for too long a time. The
-Swiss people have beyond all question benefited
-by their system of limited but universal preparation
-for military service. The same thing is true
-of Australia, Chile, and Argentina. In every one
-of these countries the short military training given
-has been found to increase in marked fashion the
-social and industrial efficiency, the ability to do
-good industrial work, of the man thus trained.
-It would be well for the United States from every
-standpoint immediately to provide such strictly
-limited universal military training.</p>
-
-<p>But it is well also for the United States to understand
-that a system of military training which
-from our standpoint would be excessive and unnecessary
-in order to meet our needs, may yet
-work admirably for some other nation. The two
-nations that during the last fifty years have made
-by far the greatest progress are Germany and
-Japan; and they are the two nations in which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-preparedness for war in time of peace has been
-carried to the highest point of scientific development.
-The feat of Japan has been something
-absolutely without precedent in recorded history.
-Great civilizations, military, industrial, and artistic,
-have arisen and flourished in Asia again and
-again in the past. But never before has an Asiatic
-power succeeded in adopting civilization of the
-European or most advanced type and in developing
-it to a point of military and industrial efficiency
-equalled only by one power of European blood.</p>
-
-<p>As for Germany, we believers in democracy
-who also understand, as every sound-thinking
-democrat must, that democracy cannot succeed
-unless it shows the same efficiency that is shown
-by autocracy (as Switzerland on a small scale
-has shown it) need above all other men carefully
-to study what Germany has accomplished during
-the last half century. Her military efficiency has
-not been more astounding than her industrial
-and social efficiency; and the essential thing in
-her career of greatness has been the fact that
-this industrial and social efficiency is in part directly
-based upon the military efficiency and in
-part indirectly based upon it, because based upon
-the mental, physical, and moral qualities developed
-by the military efficiency. The solidarity
-and power of collective action, the trained ability
-to work hard for an end which is afar off in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-future, the combination of intelligent forethought
-with efficient and strenuous action&mdash;all these together
-have given her her extraordinary industrial
-pre-eminence; and all of these have been based
-upon her military efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans have developed patriotism of
-the most intense kind, and although this patriotism
-expresses itself in thunderous songs, in speeches
-and in books, it does not confine itself to these
-methods of expression, but treats them merely
-as incitements to direct and efficient action.
-After five months of war, Germany has on the
-whole been successful against opponents which
-in population outnumber her over two to one,
-and in natural resources are largely superior.
-Russian and French armies have from time to
-time obtained lodgement on German soil; but on
-the whole the fighting has been waged by German
-armies on Russian, French, and Belgian
-territory. On her western frontier, it is true,
-she was checked and thrown back after her first
-drive on Paris, and again checked and thrown
-slightly back when, after the fall of Antwerp, she
-attempted to advance along the Belgian coast.
-But in the west she has on the whole successfully
-pursued the offensive, and her battle lines are in
-the enemies’ territory, although she has had to
-face the entire strength of France, England, and
-Belgium.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-Moreover, she did this with only a part of her
-forces. At the same time she was also obliged
-to use immense armies, singly or in conjunction
-with the Austrians, against the Russians on her
-Eastern frontier. No one can foretell the issue
-of the war. But what Germany has already done
-must extort the heartiest admiration for her grim
-efficiency. It could have been done only by a
-masterful people guided by keen intelligence and
-inspired by an intensely patriotic spirit.</p>
-
-<p>France has likewise shown to fine advantage
-in this war (in spite of certain marked shortcomings,
-such as the absurd uniforms of her
-soldiers) because of her system of universal military
-training. England has suffered lamentably
-because there has been no such system. Great
-masses of Englishmen, including all her men
-at the front, have behaved so as to command our
-heartiest admiration. But qualification must be
-made when the nation as a whole is considered.
-Her professional soldiers, her navy, and her upper
-classes have done admirably; but the English
-papers describe certain sections of her people as
-making a poor showing in their refusal to volunteer.
-The description of the professional football
-matches, attended by tens of thousands of spectators,
-none of whom will enlist, makes a decent
-man ardently wish that under a rigid conscription
-law the entire body of players, promoters, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-spectators could be sent to the front. Scotland
-and Canada have apparently made an extraordinary
-showing; the same thing is true of sections,
-high and low, of society in England proper; but
-it is also true that certain sections of the British
-democracy under a system of free volunteering
-have shown to disadvantage compared to Germany,
-where military service is universal. The
-lack of foresight in preparation was also shown
-by the inability of the authorities to furnish arms
-and equipment for the troops that were being
-raised. These shortcomings are not alluded to
-by me in a censorious spirit, and least of all with
-any idea of reflecting on England, but purely that
-our own people may profit by the lessons taught.
-America should pay heed to these facts and profit
-by them; and we can only so profit if we realize
-that under like conditions we should at the
-moment make a much poorer showing than England
-has made.</p>
-
-<p>It is indispensable to remember that in the
-cases of both Germany and Japan their extraordinary
-success has been due directly to that kind
-of efficiency in war which springs only from the
-highest efficiency in preparedness for war. Until
-educated people who sincerely desire peace face
-this fact with all of its implications, unpleasant
-and pleasant, they will not be able to better
-present international conditions. In order to secure<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-this betterment, conditions must be created
-which will enable civilized nations to achieve such
-efficiency without being thereby rendered dangerous
-to their neighbors and to civilization as a
-whole. Americans, particularly, and, to a degree
-only slightly less, Englishmen and Frenchmen
-need to remember this fact, for while the ultrapacificists,
-the peace-at-any-price men, have appeared
-sporadically everywhere, they have of
-recent years been most numerous and noxious in
-the United States, in Great Britain, and in France.</p>
-
-<p>Inasmuch as in our country, where, Heaven
-knows, we have evils enough with which to grapple,
-none of these evils is in even the smallest degree
-due to militarism&mdash;inasmuch as to inveigh
-against militarism in the United States is about
-as useful as to inveigh against eating horse-flesh in
-honor of Odin&mdash;this seems curious. But it is true.
-Probably it is merely another illustration of the
-old, old truth that persons who shrink from grappling
-with grave and real evils often strive to
-atone to their consciences for such failure by empty
-denunciation of evils which to them offer no danger
-and no temptation; which, as far as they are
-concerned, do not exist. Such denunciation is
-easy. It is also worthless.</p>
-
-<p>American college presidents, clergymen, professors,
-and publicists with much pretension&mdash;some
-of it founded on fact&mdash;to intelligence have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">199</a></span>
-praised works like that of Mr. Bloch, who
-“proved” that war was impossible, and like those
-of Mr. Norman Angell, who “proved” that it
-was an illusion to believe that it was profitable.
-The greatest and most terrible wars in history
-have taken place since Mr. Bloch wrote. When
-Mr. Angell wrote no unprejudiced man of wisdom
-could have failed to understand that the two
-most successful nations of recent times, Germany
-and Japan, owed their great national success to
-successful war. The United States owes not only
-its greatness but its very existence to the fact
-that in the Civil War the men who controlled its
-destinies were the fighting men. The counsels of
-the ultrapacificists, the peace-at-any-price men of
-that day, if adopted, would have meant not only
-the death of the nation but an incalculable disaster
-to humanity. A righteous war may at any moment
-be essential to national welfare; and it is a lamentable
-fact that nations have sometimes profited
-greatly by war that was not righteous. Such evil
-profit will never be done away with until armed
-force is put behind righteousness.</p>
-
-<p>We must also remember, however, that the
-mischievous folly of the men whose counsels tend
-to inefficiency and impotence is not worse than
-the baseness of the men who in a spirit of mean
-and cringing admiration of brute force gloss over,
-or justify, or even deify, the exhibition of unscrupulous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-strength. Writings like those of Homer Lea,
-or of Nietzsche, or even of Professor Treitschke&mdash;not
-to speak of Carlyle&mdash;are as objectionable
-as those of Messrs. Bloch and Angell. Our
-people need to pay homage to the great efficiency
-and the intense patriotism of Germany.
-But they need no less fully to realize that this
-patriotism has at times been accompanied by
-callous indifference to the rights of weaker nations,
-and that this efficiency has at times been
-exercised in a way that represents a genuine setback
-to humanity and civilization. Germany’s
-conduct toward Belgium can be justified only in
-accordance with a theory which will also justify
-Napoleon’s conduct toward Spain and his treatment
-of Prussia and of all Germany during the
-six years succeeding Jena. I do not see how any
-man can fail to sympathize with Stein and Schornhorst;
-with Andreas Hofer, with the Maid of
-Saragossa, with Koerner and the Tugendbund;
-and if he does so sympathize, he must extend the
-same sympathy and admiration to King Albert
-and the Belgians.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, it is well for Americans always to remember
-that what has been done to Belgium
-would, of course, be done to us just as unhesitatingly
-if the conditions required it.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the lowest depth is reached by the
-professional pacificists who continue to scream for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-peace without daring to protest against any concrete
-wrong committed against peace. These include
-all of our fellow countrymen who at the
-present time clamor for peace without explicitly
-and clearly declaring that the first condition of
-peace should be the righting of the wrongs of
-Belgium, reparation to her, and guarantee against
-the possible repetition of such wrongs at the expense
-of any well-behaved small civilized power
-in the future. It may be that peace will come
-without such reparation and guarantee but if so
-it will be as emphatically the peace of unrighteousness
-as was the peace made at Tilsit a hundred
-and seven years ago.</p>
-
-<p>When the President appoints a day of prayer
-for peace, without emphatically making it evident
-that the prayer should be for the redress of the
-wrongs without which peace would be harmful,
-he cannot be considered as serving righteousness.
-When Mr. Bryan concludes absurd all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties and is loquacious to peace
-societies about the abolition of war, without daring
-to protest against the hideous wrongs done
-Belgium, he feebly serves unrighteousness. More
-comic manifestations, of course entirely useless
-but probably too fatuous to be really mischievous,
-are those which find expression in the circulation
-of peace postage-stamps with doves on them, or
-in taking part in peace parades&mdash;they might as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-well be antivaccination parades&mdash;or in the circulation
-of peace petitions to be signed by school-children,
-which for all their possible effect might
-just as well relate to the planet Mars.</p>
-
-<p>International peace will only come when the
-nations of the world form some kind of league
-which provides for an international tribunal to
-decide on international matters, which decrees
-that treaties and international agreements are
-never to be entered into recklessly and foolishly,
-and when once entered into are to be observed
-with entire good faith, and which puts the collective
-force of civilization behind such treaties and
-agreements and court decisions and against any
-wrong-doing or recalcitrant nation. The all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties negotiated by the
-present administration amount to almost nothing.
-They are utterly worthless for good. They are
-however slightly mischievous because:</p>
-
-<p>1. There is no provision for their enforcement,
-and,</p>
-
-<p>2. They would be in some cases not only impossible
-but improper to enforce.</p>
-
-<p>A treaty is a promise. It is like a promise to
-pay in the commercial world. Its value lies in
-the means provided for redeeming the promise.
-To make it, and not redeem it, is vicious. A
-United States gold certificate is valuable because
-gold is back of it. If there were nothing back of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-it the certificate would sink to the position of
-fiat money, which is irredeemable, and therefore
-valueless; as in the case of our Revolutionary
-currency. The Wilson-Bryan all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties represent nothing whatever but
-international fiat money. To make them is no
-more honest than it is to issue fiat money. Mr.
-Bryan would not make a good Secretary of the
-Treasury, but he would do better in that position
-than as Secretary of State. For his type of
-fiat obligations is a little worse in international
-than in internal affairs. The all-inclusive arbitration
-treaties, in whose free and unlimited negotiation
-Mr. Bryan takes such pleasure, are of
-less value than the thirty-cent dollars, whose free
-and unlimited coinage he formerly advocated.</p>
-
-<p>An efficient world league for peace is as yet in
-the future; and it may be, although I sincerely
-hope not, in the far future. The indispensable
-thing for every free people to do in the present
-day is with efficiency to prepare against war
-by making itself able physically to defend its
-rights and by cultivating that stern and manly
-spirit without which no material preparation will
-avail.</p>
-
-<p>The last point is all essential. It is not of much
-use to provide an armed force if that force is
-composed of poltroons and ultrapacificists. Such
-men should be sent to the front, of course, for they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-should not be allowed to shirk the danger which
-their braver fellow countrymen willingly face, and
-under proper discipline some use can be made of
-them; but the fewer there are of them in a nation
-the better the army of that nation will be.</p>
-
-<p>A Yale professor&mdash;he might just as well have
-been a Harvard professor&mdash;is credited in the press
-with saying the other day that he wishes the
-United States would take the position that if attacked
-it would not defend itself, and would submit
-unresistingly to any spoliation. The professor
-said that this would afford such a beautiful
-example to mankind that war would undoubtedly
-be abolished. Magazine writers, and writers of
-syndicate articles published in reputable papers,
-have recently advocated similar plans. Men who
-talk this way are thoroughly bad citizens. Few
-members of the criminal class are greater enemies
-of the republic.</p>
-
-<p>American citizens must understand that they
-cannot advocate or acquiesce in an evil course
-of action and then escape responsibility for the
-results. If disaster comes to our navy in the near
-future it will be directly due to the way the navy
-has been handled during the past twenty-two
-months, and a part of the responsibility will be
-shared by every man who has failed effectively
-to protest against, or in any way has made himself
-responsible for, the attitude of the present<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-administration in foreign affairs and as regards
-the navy.</p>
-
-<p>The first and most important thing for us as a
-people to do, in order to prepare ourselves for
-self-defense, is to get clearly in our minds just
-what our policy is to be, and to insist that our
-public servants shall make their words and their
-deeds correspond. As has already been pointed
-out, the present administration was elected on the
-explicit promise that the Philippines should be
-given their independence, and it has taken action
-in the Philippines which can only be justified on
-the theory that this independence is to come in
-the immediate future. I believe that we have
-rendered incalculable service to the Philippines,
-and that what we have there done has shown in
-the most striking manner the extreme mischief
-that would have followed if, in 1898 and the subsequent
-years, we had failed to do our duty in consequence
-of following the advice of Mr. Bryan
-and the pacificists or anti-imperialists of that day.
-But we must keep our promises; and we ought
-now to leave the islands completely at as early a
-date as possible.</p>
-
-<p>There remains to defend&mdash;the United States
-proper, the Panama Canal and its approaches,
-Alaska, and Hawaii. To defend all these is vital
-to our honor and interest. For such defense preparedness
-is essential.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">206</a></span>
-The first and most essential form of preparedness
-should be making the navy efficient. Absolutely
-and relatively, our navy has never been
-at such a pitch of efficiency as in February, 1909,
-when the battle fleet returned from its voyage
-around the world. Unit for unit, there was no
-other navy in the world which was at that time
-its equal. During the next four years we had
-an admirable Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Meyer&mdash;we
-were fortunate in having then and since
-good Secretaries of War in Mr. Stimson and Mr.
-Garrison. Owing to causes for which Mr. Meyer
-was in no way responsible, there was a slight relative
-falling off in the efficiency of the navy, and
-probably a slight absolute falling off during the
-following four years. But it remained very efficient.</p>
-
-<p>Since Mr. Daniels came in, and because of
-the action taken by Mr. Daniels under the direction
-of President Wilson, there has been a most
-lamentable reduction in efficiency. If at this
-moment we went to war with a first-class navy
-of equal strength to our own, there would be a
-chance not only of defeat but of disgrace. It is
-probably impossible to put the navy in really
-first-class condition with Mr. Daniels at its head,
-precisely as it is impossible to conduct our foreign
-affairs with dignity and efficiency while Mr.
-Bryan is at the head of the State Department.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-But the great falling off in naval efficiency has
-been due primarily to the policy pursued by
-President Wilson himself. He has kept the navy
-in Mexican waters. The small craft at Tampico
-and elsewhere could have rendered real service,
-but the President refused to allow them to render
-such service, and left English and German sea
-officers to protect our people. The great war craft
-were of no use at all; yet at this moment he has
-brought back from Mexico the army which could
-be of some use and has kept there the war-ships
-which cannot be of any use, and which suffer
-terribly in efficiency from being so kept. The
-fleet has had no manœuvring for twenty-two
-months. It has had almost no gun practice by
-division during that time. There is not enough
-powder; there are not enough torpedoes; the
-bottoms of the ships are foul; there are grave
-defects in the submarines; there is a deficiency in
-aircraft; the under-enlistments indicate a deficiency
-of from ten thousand to twenty thousand
-men; the whole service is being handled in such
-manner as to impair its fitness and morale.</p>
-
-<p>Congress should summon before its committees
-the best naval experts and provide the battle-ships,
-cruisers, submarines, floating mines, and
-aircraft that these experts declare to be necessary
-for the full protection of the United States. It
-should bear in mind that while many of these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-machines of war are essentially to be used in striking
-from the coasts themselves, yet that others
-must be designed to keep the enemy afar from
-these coasts. Mere defensive by itself cannot permanently
-avail. The only permanently efficient
-defensive arm is one which can act offensively.
-Our navy must be fitted for attack, for delivering
-smashing blows, in order effectively to defend our
-own shores. Above all, we should remember that
-a highly trained personnel is absolutely indispensable,
-for without it no material preparation is of
-the least avail.</p>
-
-<p>But the navy alone will not suffice in time of
-great crisis. If England had adopted the policy
-urged by Lord Roberts, there would probably
-have been no war and certainly the war would
-now have been at an end, as she would have been
-able to protect Belgium, as well as herself, and to
-save France from invasion. Relatively to the
-Continent, England was utterly unprepared; but
-she was a miracle of preparedness compared to us.
-There are many ugly features connected with the
-slowness of certain sections of the English people
-to volunteer and with their deficiency in rifles,
-horses, and equipment; and there have been certain
-military and naval shortcomings; but until
-we have radically altered our habits of thought
-and action we can only say with abashed humility
-that if England has not shown to advantage compared<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-to Germany, she has certainly done far better
-than we would have done, and than, as a matter
-of fact, we actually have done during the past
-twenty-two months, both as regards Mexico and
-as regards the fulfilment of our duty in the situation
-created by the world war.</p>
-
-<p>Congress should at once act favorably along
-the lines recommended in the recent excellent
-report of the Secretary of War and in accordance
-with the admirable plan outlined in the last
-report of the Chief of Staff of the army, General
-Wotherspoon&mdash;a report with which his predecessor
-as Chief of Staff, General Wood, appears
-to be in complete sympathy. Our army should
-be doubled in size. An effective reserve should be
-created. Every year there should be field manœuvres
-on a large scale, a hundred thousand
-being engaged for several weeks. The artillery
-should be given the most scientific training. The
-equipment should be made perfect at every point.
-Rigid economy should be demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Every officer and man should be kept to the
-highest standard of physical and moral fitness.
-The unfit should be ruthlessly weeded out. At
-least one third of the officers in each grade should
-be promoted on merit without regard to seniority,
-and the least fit for promotion should be retired.
-Every unit of the regular army and reserve should
-be trained to the highest efficiency under war conditions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-But this is not enough. There should be at
-least ten times the number of rifles and the quantity
-of ammunition in the country that there are
-now. In our high schools and colleges a system
-of military training like that which obtains in
-Switzerland and Australia should be given. Furthermore,
-all our young men should be trained in
-actual field-service under war conditions; preferably
-on the Swiss, but if not on the Swiss then on
-the Argentinian or Chilean model.</p>
-
-<p>The Swiss model would probably be better
-for our people. It would necessitate only four
-to six months’ service shortly after graduation
-from high school or college, and thereafter only
-about eight days a year. No man could buy a
-substitute; no man would be excepted because of
-his wealth; all would serve in the ranks on precisely
-the same terms side by side.</p>
-
-<p>Under this system the young men would be
-trained to shoot, to march, to take care of themselves
-in the open, and to learn those habits of
-self-reliance and law-abiding obedience which are
-not only essential to the efficiency of a citizen
-soldiery, but are no less essential to the efficient
-performance of civic duties in a free democracy.
-My own firm belief is that this system would help
-us in civil quite as much as in military matters.
-It would increase our social and industrial efficiency.
-It would help us to habits of order and
-respect for law.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-This proposal does not represent anything
-more than carrying out the purpose of the second
-amendment to the Federal Constitution, which
-declares that a well-regulated militia is necessary
-to the security of a free nation. The Swiss army
-is a well-regulated militia; and, therefore it is
-utterly different from any militia we have ever
-had. The system of compulsory training and universal
-service has worked admirably in Switzerland.
-It has saved the Swiss from war. It has
-developed their efficiency in peace.</p>
-
-<p>In theory, President Wilson advocates unpreparedness,
-and in the actual fact he practises, on
-our behalf, tame submission to wrong-doing and
-refusal to stand for our own rights or for the rights
-of any weak power that is wronged. We who
-take the opposite view advocate merely acting as
-Washington urged us to act, when in his first
-annual address he said: “To be prepared for war
-is one of the most effectual means for preserving
-peace. A free people ought not only to be armed
-but disciplined; to which end a uniform and well-digested
-plan is requisite.” Jefferson was not a
-fighting man, but even Jefferson, writing to Monroe
-in 1785, urged the absolute need of building
-up our navy if we wished to escape oppression to
-our commerce and “the present disrespect of the
-nations of Europe,” and added the pregnant
-sentence: “A coward is much more exposed to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-quarrels than a man of spirit.” As President, he
-urged our people to train themselves to arms, so
-as to constitute a citizen soldiery, in terms that
-showed that his object was to accomplish exactly
-what the Swiss have accomplished, and what is
-advocated in this book. In one annual message
-he advocated “the organization of 300,000 able-bodied
-men between the ages of eighteen and
-twenty-five for offense or defense at any time or
-in any place where they may be wanted.” In a
-letter to Monroe he advocated compulsory military
-service, saying: “We must train and classify
-the whole of our male citizenry and make military
-instruction a part of collegiate education. We
-can never be safe until this is done.” The methods
-taken by Jefferson and the Americans of Jefferson’s
-day to accomplish this object were fatally
-defective. But their purpose was the same that
-those who think as we do now put forward.
-The difference is purely that we present efficient
-methods for accomplishing this purpose. Washington
-was a practical man of high ideals who
-always strove to reduce his ideals to practice.
-His address to Congress in December, 1793, ought
-to have been read by President Wilson before
-the latter sent in his message of 1914 with its
-confused advocacy of unpreparedness and its
-tone of furtive apology for submission to insult.
-Washington said: “There is much due to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-United States among nations which will be withheld,
-if not absolutely lost, by the reputation of
-weakness. If we desire to avoid insult, we must
-be able to repel it. If we desire to secure peace
-... it must be known that we are at all times
-ready for war,” and he emphasized the fact that
-the peace thus secured by preparedness for war
-is the most potent method of obtaining material
-prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>The need of such a system as that which I advocate
-is well brought out in a letter I recently received
-from a college president. It runs in part
-as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>What the average young fellow of eighteen to thirty
-doesn’t know about shooting and riding makes an appalling
-total. I remember very well visiting the First
-Connecticut Regiment a day or two before it left for
-service in the Spanish War. A good many of my boys
-were with them and I went to see them off. One fellow
-in particular, of whom I was and am very fond, took me
-to his tent and proudly exhibited his rifle, calling attention
-to the beautiful condition to which he had brought
-it. It certainly was extremely shiny, and I commended
-him for his careful cleansing of his death-dealing weapon.
-Then I discovered that the firing-pin (it was an old
-Springfield) was rusted immovably into its place, and
-that my boy didn’t know that there was any firing-pin.
-He had learned to expect that if you put a cartridge into
-the breech, pulled down the block, and pulled the trigger,
-it would probably go off if he had previously cocked it;
-but he had never done any of these things.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-It was my fortune to grow up amid surroundings and
-in a time when every boy had and used a gun. Any boy
-fourteen years old who was not the proprietor of some
-kind of shooting-iron and fairly proficient in its use was
-in disgrace. Such a situation was unthinkable. So we
-were all fairly dependable shots with a fowling-piece or
-rifle. As a result of this and subsequent experience, I
-really believe that so long as my aging body would endure
-hardship, and provided further that I could be prevented
-from running away, I should be a more efficient soldier
-than most of the young fellows on our campus to-day.</p>
-
-<p>I have watched with much dissatisfaction the gradual
-disappearance of the military schools here in the East.
-There are some prominent and useful ones in the West,
-but they are far too few, and I do not believe there is any
-preliminary military training of any sort in our public
-schools. I fear that the military training required by law
-in certain agricultural and other schools receiving federal
-aid is more or less of a fake; the object seeming to be to
-get the appropriation and make the least possible return.</p>
-
-<p>If in any way you can bring it about that our boys
-shall be taught to shoot, I believe with you that they can
-learn the essentials of drill very quickly when need arises.
-And even so, however, our rulers must learn the necessity
-of having rifles enough and ammunition enough to
-meet any emergency at all likely to occur.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is idle for this nation to trust to arbitration
-and neutrality treaties unbacked by force. It is
-idle to trust to the tepid good-will of other nations.
-It is idle to trust to alliances. Alliances
-change. Russia and Japan are now fighting side
-by side, although nine years ago they were fighting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">215</a></span>
-against one another. Twenty years ago
-Russia and Germany stood side by side. Fifteen
-years ago England was more hostile to Russia,
-and even to France, than she was to Germany.
-It is perfectly possible that after the close of this
-war the present allies will fall out, or that Germany
-and Japan will turn up in close alliance.</p>
-
-<p>It is our duty to try to work for a great world
-league for righteous peace enforced by power;
-but no such league is yet in sight. At present
-the prime duty of the American people is to
-abandon the inane and mischievous principle of
-watchful waiting&mdash;that is, of slothful and timid
-refusal either to face facts or to perform duty.
-Let us act justly toward others; and let us also
-be prepared with stout heart and strong hand to
-defend our rights against injustice from others.</p>
-
-<p>In his recent report the Secretary of War, Mr.
-Garrison, has put the case for preparedness in
-the interest of honorable peace so admirably that
-what he says should be studied by all our people.
-It runs in part as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“This, then, leaves for consideration the imminent
-questions of military policy; the considerations which,
-in my view, should be taken into account in determining
-the same; and the suggestions which occur to me to be
-pertinent in the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>It would be premature to attempt now to draw the
-ultimate lessons from the war in Europe. It is an imperative<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">216</a></span>
-duty, however, to heed so much of what it brings
-home to us as is incontrovertible and not to be changed
-by any event, leaving for later and more detailed and
-comprehensive consideration what its later developments
-and final conclusions may indicate.</p>
-
-<p>For orderly treatment certain preliminary considerations
-may be usefully adverted to. It is, of course, not
-necessary to dwell on the blessings of peace and the
-horrors of war. Every one desires peace, just as every
-one desires health, contentment, affection, sufficient
-means for comfortable existence, and other similarly
-beneficent things. But peace and the other states of
-being just mentioned are not always or even often solely
-within one’s own control. Those who are thoughtful and
-have courage face the facts of life, take lessons from experience,
-and strive by wise conduct to attain the desirable
-things, and by prevision and precaution to protect
-and defend them when obtained. It may truthfully be said
-that eternal vigilance is the price which must be paid in
-order to obtain the desirable things of life and to defend
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In collective affairs the interests of the group are confided
-to the government, and it thereupon is charged with
-the duty to preserve and defend these things. The government
-must exercise for the nation the precautionary,
-defensive, and preservative measures necessary to that
-end. All governments must therefore have force&mdash;physical
-force&mdash;<i>i. e.</i>, military force, for these purposes.
-The question for each nation when this matter is under
-consideration is, How much force should it have and of
-what should that force consist?</p>
-
-<p>In the early history of our nation there was a natural,
-almost inevitable, abhorrence of military force, because
-it connoted military despotism. Most, if not all, of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-early settlers in this country came from nations where a
-few powerful persons tyrannically imposed their will
-upon the people by means of military power. The consequence
-was that the oppressed who fled to this country
-necessarily connected military force with despotism and
-had a dread thereof. Of course, all this has long since
-passed into history. No reasonable person in this country
-to-day has the slightest shadow of fear of military
-despotism, nor of any interference whatever by military
-force in the conduct of civil affairs. The military and the
-civil are just as completely and permanently separated
-in this country as the church and the state are; the subjection
-of the military to the civil is settled and unchangeable.
-The only reason for adverting to the obsolete condition
-is to anticipate the action of those who will cite
-from the works of the founders of the republic excerpts
-showing a dread of military ascendancy in our government.
-Undoubtedly, at the time such sentiments were
-expressed there was a very real dread. At the present
-time such expressions are entirely inapplicable and do
-not furnish even a presentable pretext for opposing proper
-military preparation.</p>
-
-<p>It also seems proper, in passing, to refer to the frame
-of mind of those who use the word “militarism” as the
-embodiment of the doctrine of brute force and loosely
-apply it to any organized preparation of military force,
-and therefore deprecate any adequate military preparation
-because it is a step in the direction of the contemned
-“militarism.” It is perfectly apparent to any one who
-approaches the matter with an unprejudiced mind that
-what constitutes undesirable militarism, as distinguished
-from a necessary, proper, and adequate preparation of
-the military resources of the nation, depends upon the
-position in which each nation finds itself, and varies with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-every nation and with different conditions in each nation
-at different times. Every nation must have adequate
-force to protect itself from domestic insurrections, to
-enforce its laws, and to repel invasions; that is, every
-nation that has similar characteristics to those of a self-respecting
-man. (The Constitution obliges the United
-States to protect each State against invasion.) If it
-prepares and maintains more military force than is necessary
-for the purposes just named, then it is subject to
-the conviction, in the public opinion of the world, of
-having embraced “militarism,” unless it intends aggression
-for a cause which the public opinion of the world
-conceives to be a righteous one. To the extent, however,
-that it confines its military preparedness to the purposes
-first mentioned, there is neither warrant nor justification
-in characterizing such action as “militarism.” Those
-who would thus characterize it do so because they have
-reached the conclusion that a nation to-day can properly
-dispense with a prepared military force, and therefore
-they apply the word to any preparation or organization
-of the military resources of the nation. Not being able
-to conceive how a reasonable, prudent, patriotic man can
-reach such a conclusion, I cannot conceive any arguments
-or statements that would alter such a state of mind.
-It disregards all known facts, flies in the face of all experience,
-and must rest upon faith in that which has
-not yet been made manifest.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the future may hold in the way of agreements
-between nations, followed by actual disarmament thereof,
-of international courts of arbitration, and other greatly-to-be-desired
-measures to lessen or prevent conflict between
-nation and nation, we all know that at present these
-conditions are not existing. We can and will eagerly
-adapt ourselves to each beneficent development along<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-these lines; but to merely enfeeble ourselves in the
-meantime would, in my view, be unthinkable folly. By
-neglecting and refusing to provide ourselves with the
-necessary means of self-protection and self-defense we
-could not hasten or in any way favorably influence the
-ultimate results we desire in these respects.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">220</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">UTOPIA OR HELL?</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Sherman’s</span> celebrated declaration about
-war has certainly been borne out by what
-has happened in Europe, and above all in
-Belgium, during the last four months. That war
-is hell I will concede as heartily as any ultrapacificist.
-But the only alternative to war, that is to
-hell, is the adoption of some plan substantially
-like that which I herein advocate and which has
-itself been called utopian. It is possible that it is
-utopian for the time being; that is, that nations
-are not ready as yet to accept it. But it is also
-possible that after this war has come to an end
-the European contestants will be sufficiently sobered
-to be willing to consider some such proposal,
-and that the United States will abandon
-the folly of the pacificists and be willing to co-operate
-in some practical effort for the only kind
-of peace worth having, the peace of justice and
-righteousness.</p>
-
-<p>The proposal is not in the least utopian, if by
-utopian we understand something that is theoretically
-desirable but impossible. What I propose is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-a working and realizable Utopia. My proposal is
-that the efficient civilized nations&mdash;those that are
-efficient in war as well as in peace&mdash;shall join in a
-world league for the peace of righteousness. This
-means that they shall by solemn covenant agree
-as to their respective rights which shall not be
-questioned; that they shall agree that all other
-questions arising between them shall be submitted
-to a court of arbitration; and that they
-shall also agree&mdash;and here comes the vital and
-essential point of the whole system&mdash;to act with
-the combined military strength of all of them
-against any recalcitrant nation, against any nation
-which transgresses at the expense of any
-other nation the rights which it is agreed shall
-not be questioned, or which on arbitrable matters
-refuses to submit to the decree of the arbitral
-court.</p>
-
-<p>In its essence this plan means that there shall
-be a great international treaty for the peace of
-righteousness; that this treaty shall explicitly
-secure to each nation and except from the operations
-of any international tribunal such matters
-as its territorial integrity, honor, and vital interest,
-and shall guarantee it in the possession of these
-rights; that this treaty shall therefore by its own
-terms explicitly provide against making foolish
-promises which cannot and ought not to be kept;
-that this treaty shall be observed with absolute<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-good faith&mdash;for it is worse than useless to enter
-into treaties until their observance in good faith
-is efficiently secured. Finally, and most important,
-this treaty shall put force back of righteousness,
-shall provide a method of securing by the
-exercise of force the observance of solemn international
-obligations. This is to be accomplished
-by all the powers covenanting to put their whole
-strength back of the fulfilment of the treaty obligations,
-including the decrees of the court established
-under and in accordance with the treaty.</p>
-
-<p>This proposal, therefore, meets the well-found
-objections against the foolish and mischievous all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties recently negotiated
-by Mr. Bryan under the direction of President
-Wilson. These treaties, like the all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties which President Taft started
-to negotiate, explicitly include as arbitrable, or as
-proper subjects for action by joint commissions,
-questions of honor and of vital national interest.
-No such provision should be made. No such provision
-is made as among private individuals in any
-civilized community. No man is required to “arbitrate”
-a slap in the face or an insult to his wife;
-no man is expected to “arbitrate” with a burglar
-or a highwayman. If in private life one individual
-takes action which immediately jeopardizes
-the life or limb or even the bodily well-being
-and the comfort of another, the wronged party<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-does not have to go into any arbitration with the
-wrong-doer. On the contrary, the policeman or
-constable or sheriff immediately and summarily
-arrests the wrong-doer. The subsequent trial is
-not in the nature of arbitration at all. It is in
-the nature of a criminal proceeding. The wronged
-man is merely a witness and not necessarily an
-essential witness. For example, if, in the streets
-of New York, one man assaults another or steals
-his watch, and a policeman is not near by, the
-wronged man is not only justified in knocking
-down the assailant or thief, but fails in his duty if
-he does not so act. If a policeman is near by, the
-policeman promptly arrests the wrong-doer. The
-magistrate does not arbitrate the question of property
-rights in the watch nor anything about the
-assault. He satisfies himself as to the facts and
-delivers judgment against the offender.</p>
-
-<p>A covenant between the United States and any
-other power to arbitrate all questions, including
-those involving national honor and interest,
-neither could nor ought to be kept. Such a covenant
-will be harmless only if no such questions
-ever arise. Now, all the worth of promises made
-in the abstract lies in the way in which they are
-fulfilled in the concrete. The Wilson-Bryan arbitration
-treaties are to be tested in this manner.
-The theory is, of course, that these treaties are to
-be made with all nations, and this is correct, because<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-it would be a far graver thing to refuse to
-make them with some nations than to refuse to
-enter into them with any nation at all. The proposal
-is, in effect, and disregarding verbiage, that
-all questions shall be arbitrated or settled by the
-action of a joint commission&mdash;questions really
-vital to us would, as a matter of fact, be settled
-adversely to us pending such action. There are
-many such questions which in the concrete we
-would certainly not arbitrate. I mention one,
-only as an example. Do Messrs. Wilson and
-Bryan, or do they not, mean to arbitrate, if
-Japan should so desire, the question whether
-Japanese laborers are to be allowed to come in
-unlimited numbers to these shores? If they do
-mean this, let them explicitly state that fact&mdash;merely
-as an illustration&mdash;to the Senate committee,
-so that the Senate committee shall understand
-what it is doing when it ratifies these treaties.
-If they do not mean this, then let them promptly
-withdraw all the treaties so as not to expose us to
-the charge of hypocrisy, of making believe to do
-what we have no intention of doing, and of making
-promises which we have no intention of keeping.
-I have mentioned one issue only; but there
-are scores of other issues which I could mention
-which this government would under no circumstances
-agree to arbitrate.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way, we must explicitly recognize<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-that all the peace congresses and the like that
-have been held of recent years have done no good
-whatever to the cause of world peace. All their
-addresses and resolutions about arbitration and
-disarmament and such matters have been on the
-whole slightly worse than useless. Disregarding
-the Hague conventions, it is the literal fact that
-none of the peace congresses that have been held
-for the last fifteen or twenty years&mdash;to speak only
-of those of which I myself know the workings&mdash;have
-accomplished the smallest particle of good.
-In so far as they have influenced free, liberty-loving,
-and self-respecting nations not to take
-measures for their own defense they have been
-positively mischievous. In no respect have they
-achieved anything worth achieving; and the present
-world war proves this beyond the possibility
-of serious question.</p>
-
-<p>The Hague conventions stand by themselves.
-They have accomplished a certain amount&mdash;although
-only a small amount&mdash;of actual good.
-This was in so far as they furnished means by
-which nations which did not wish to quarrel were
-able to settle international disputes not involving
-their deepest interests. Questions between nations
-continually arise which are not of first-class
-importance; which, for instance, refer to some
-illegal act by or against a fishing schooner, to
-some difficulty concerning contracts, to some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">226</a></span>
-question of the interpretation of a minor clause
-in a treaty, or to the sporadic action of some hot-headed
-or panic-struck official. In these cases,
-where neither nation wishes to go to war, the
-Hague court has furnished an easy method for
-the settlement of the dispute without war. This
-does not mark a very great advance; but it is an
-advance, and was worth making.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that it is the only advance that the
-Hague court has accomplished makes the hysterical
-outbursts formerly indulged in by the
-ultrapacificists concerning it seem in retrospect
-exceedingly foolish. While I had never shared
-the hopes of these ultrapacificists, I had hoped
-for more substantial good than has actually
-come from the Hague conventions. This was
-because I accept promises as meaning something.
-The ultrapacificists, whether from timidity,
-from weakness, or from sheer folly, seem
-wholly unable to understand that the fulfilment
-of a promise has anything to do with making
-the promise. The most striking example
-that could possibly be furnished has been furnished
-by Belgium. Under my direction as President,
-the United States signed the Hague conventions.
-All the nations engaged in the present
-war signed these conventions, although one or
-two of the nations qualified their acceptance,
-or withheld their signatures to certain articles.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-This, however, did not in the least relieve the
-signatory powers from the duty to guarantee
-one another in the enjoyment of the rights supposed
-to be secured by the conventions. To
-make this guarantee worth anything, it was, of
-course, necessary actively to enforce it against
-any power breaking the convention or acting
-against its clear purpose. To make it really
-effective it should be enforced as quickly against
-non-signatory as against signatory powers; for
-to give a power free permission to do wrong if
-it did not sign would put a premium on non-signing,
-so far as big, aggressive powers are concerned.</p>
-
-<p>I authorized the signature of the United States
-to these conventions. They forbid the violation
-of neutral territory, and, of course, the
-subjugation of unoffending neutral nations, as
-Belgium has been subjugated. They forbid such
-destruction as that inflicted on Louvain, Dinant,
-and other towns in Belgium, the burning of their
-priceless public libraries and wonderful halls and
-churches, and the destruction of cathedrals such
-as that at Rheims. They forbid the infliction of
-heavy pecuniary penalties and the taking of
-severe punitive measures at the expense of civilian
-populations. They forbid the bombardment&mdash;of
-course including the dropping of bombs
-from aeroplanes&mdash;of unfortified cities and of cities<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-whose defenses were not at the moment attacked.
-They forbid such actions as have been committed
-against various cities, Belgian, French, and English,
-not for military reason but for the purpose
-of terrorizing the civilian population by killing
-and wounding men, women, and children who
-were non-combatants. All of these offenses have
-been committed by Germany. I took the action
-I did in directing these conventions to be signed
-on the theory and with the belief that the United
-States intended to live up to its obligations,
-and that our people understood that living up
-to solemn obligations, like any other serious
-performance of duty, means willingness to make
-effort and to incur risk. If I had for one moment
-supposed that signing these Hague conventions
-meant literally nothing whatever beyond
-the expression of a pious wish which any
-power was at liberty to disregard with impunity,
-in accordance with the dictation of self-interest,
-I would certainly not have permitted the United
-States to be a party to such a mischievous farce.
-President Wilson and Secretary Bryan, however,
-take the view that when the United States
-assumes obligations in order to secure small and
-unoffending neutral nations or non-combatants
-generally against hideous wrong, its action is not
-predicated on any intention to make the guarantee
-effective. They take the view that when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-we are asked to redeem in the concrete, promises
-we made in the abstract, our duty is to disregard
-our obligations and to preserve ignoble peace
-for ourselves by regarding with cold-blooded and
-timid indifference the most frightful ravages of
-war committed at the expense of a peaceful
-and unoffending country. This is the cult
-of cowardice. That Messrs. Wilson and Bryan
-profess it and put it in action would be of small
-consequence if only they themselves were concerned.
-The importance of their action is that it
-commits the United States.</p>
-
-<p>Elaborate technical arguments have been made
-to justify this timid and selfish abandonment of
-duty, this timid and selfish failure to work for the
-world peace of righteousness, by President Wilson
-and Secretary Bryan. No sincere believer in disinterested
-and self-sacrificing work for peace can
-justify it; and work for peace will never be worth
-much unless accompanied by courage, effort, and
-self-sacrifice. Yet those very apostles of pacificism
-who, when they can do so with safety, scream
-loudest for peace, have made themselves objects
-of contemptuous derision by keeping silence in
-this crisis, or even by praising Mr. Wilson and
-Mr. Bryan for having thus abandoned the cause
-of peace. They are supported by the men who
-insist that all that we are concerned with is escaping
-even the smallest risk that might follow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-upon the performance of duty to any one except
-ourselves. This last is not a very exalted plea.
-It is, however, defensible. But if, as a nation, we
-intend to act in accordance with it, we must never
-promise to do anything for any one else.</p>
-
-<p>The technical arguments as to the Hague conventions
-not requiring us to act will at once be
-brushed aside by any man who honestly and in
-good faith faces the situation. Either the Hague
-conventions meant something or else they meant
-nothing. If, in the event of their violation, none
-of the signatory powers were even to protest, then
-of course they meant nothing; and it was an act of
-unspeakable silliness to enter into them. If, on
-the other hand, they meant anything whatsoever,
-it was the duty of the United States, as the most
-powerful, or at least the richest and most populous,
-neutral nation, to take action for upholding them
-when their violation brought such appalling disaster
-to Belgium. There is no escape from this
-alternative.</p>
-
-<p>The first essential to working out successfully
-any scheme whatever for world peace is to understand
-that nothing can be accomplished unless
-the powers entering into the agreement act in
-precisely the reverse way from that in which
-President Wilson and Secretary Bryan have acted
-as regards the Hague conventions and the all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties during the past six<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-months. The prime fact to consider in securing
-any peace agreement worth entering into, or that
-will have any except a mischievous effect, is that
-the nations entering into the agreement shall
-make no promises that ought not to be made,
-that they shall in good faith live up to the promises
-that are made, and that they shall put their
-whole strength unitedly back of these promises
-against any nation which refuses to carry out the
-agreement, or which, if it has not made the agreement,
-nevertheless violates the principles which
-the agreement enforces. In other words, international
-agreements intended to produce peace must
-proceed much along the lines of the Hague conventions;
-but a power signing them, as the United
-States signed the Hague conventions, must do so
-with the intention in good faith to see that they
-are carried out, and to use force to accomplish
-this, if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>To violate these conventions, to violate neutrality
-treaties, as Germany has done in the case
-of Belgium, is a dreadful wrong. It represents
-the gravest kind of international wrong-doing.
-But it is really not quite so contemptible,
-it does not show such short-sighted and
-timid inefficiency, <em>and, above all, such selfish indifference
-to the cause of permanent and righteous
-peace</em> as has been shown by us of the United States
-(thanks to President Wilson and Secretary Bryan)<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">232</a></span>
-in refusing to fulfil our solemn obligations by
-taking whatever action was necessary in order
-to clear our skirts from the guilt of tame acquiescence
-in a wrong which we had solemnly undertaken
-to oppose.</p>
-
-<p>It has been a matter of very real regret to me
-to have to speak in the way I have felt obliged
-to speak as to German wrong-doing in Belgium,
-because so many of my friends, not only Germans,
-but Americans of German birth and even
-Americans of German descent, have felt aggrieved
-at my position. As regards my friends, the
-Americans of German birth or descent, I can
-only say that they are in honor bound to regard
-all international matters solely from the standpoint
-of the interest of the United States, and
-of the demands of a lofty international morality.
-I recognize no divided allegiance in American
-citizenship. As regards Germany, my stand
-is for the real interest of the mass of the German
-people. If the German people as a whole
-would only look at it rightly, they would see
-that my position is predicated upon the assumption
-that we ought to act as unhesitatingly in
-favor of Germany if Germany were wronged as
-in favor of Belgium when Belgium is wronged.</p>
-
-<p>There are in Germany a certain number of
-Germans who adopt the Treitschke and Bernhardi
-view of Germany’s destiny and of international<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-morality generally. These men are fundamentally
-exactly as hostile to America as to all other
-foreign powers. They look down with contempt
-upon Americans as well as upon all other
-foreigners. They regard it as their right to subdue
-these inferior beings. They acknowledge
-toward them no duty, in the sense that duty is
-understood between equals. I call the attention
-of my fellow Americans of German origin who
-wish this country to act toward Belgium, not in
-accordance with American traditions, interests,
-and ideals, but in accordance with the pro-German
-sympathies of certain citizens of German
-descent, to the statement of Treitschke that
-“to civilization at large the [Americanizing] of the
-German-Americans means a heavy loss. Among
-Germans there can no longer be any question
-that the civilization of mankind suffers every
-time a German is transformed into a Yankee.”</p>
-
-<p>I do not for one moment believe that the men
-who follow Treitschke in his hatred of and contempt
-for all non-Germans, and Bernhardi in his
-contempt for international morality, are a majority
-of the German people or even a very large
-minority. I think that the great majority of the
-Germans, who have approved Germany’s action
-toward Belgium, have been influenced by the feeling
-that it was a vital necessity in order to save
-Germany from destruction and subjugation by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-France and Russia, perhaps assisted by England.
-Fear of national destruction will prompt men to
-do almost anything, and the proper remedy for
-outsiders to work for is the removal of the fear.
-If Germany were absolutely freed from danger of
-aggression on her eastern and western frontiers, I
-believe that German public sentiment would refuse
-to sanction such acts as those against Belgium.
-The only effective way to free it from this fear is
-to have outside nations like the United States in
-good faith undertake the obligation to defend
-Germany’s honor and territorial integrity, if attacked,
-exactly as they would defend the honor
-and territorial integrity of Belgium, or of France,
-Russia, Japan, or England, or any other well-behaved,
-civilized power, if attacked.</p>
-
-<p>This can only be achieved by some such world
-league of peace as that which I advocate. Most
-important of all, it can only be achieved by the
-willingness and ability of great, free powers to
-put might back of right, to make their protest
-against wrong-doing effective by, if necessary,
-punishing the wrong-doer. It is this fact which
-makes the clamor of the pacificists for “peace,
-peace,” without any regard to righteousness, so
-abhorrent to all right-thinking people. There are
-multitudes of professional pacificists in the United
-States, and of well-meaning but ill-informed persons
-who sympathize with them from ignorance.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-There are not a few astute persons, bankers of
-foreign birth, and others, who wish to take sinister
-advantage of the folly of these persons, in the interest
-of Germany. All of these men clamor for
-immediate peace. They wish the United States
-to take action for immediate peace or for a truce,
-under conditions designed to leave Belgium with
-her wrongs unredressed and in the possession of
-Germany. They strive to bring about a peace
-which would contain within itself the elements of
-frightful future disaster, by making no effective
-provision to prevent the repetition of such wrong-doing
-as has been inflicted upon Belgium. All of
-the men advocating such action, including the
-professional pacificists, the big business men
-largely of foreign birth, and the well-meaning but
-feeble-minded creatures among their allies, and
-including especially all those who from sheer
-timidity or weakness shrink from duty, occupy
-a thoroughly base and improper position. The
-peace advocates of this stamp stand on an exact
-par with men who, if there was an epidemic of
-lawlessness in New York, should come together
-to demand the immediate cessation of all activity
-by the police, and should propose to substitute
-for it a request that the highwaymen, white
-slavers, black-handers, and burglars cease their
-activities for the moment on condition of retaining
-undisturbed possession of the ill-gotten spoils they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-had already acquired. The only effective friend
-of peace in a big city is the man who makes the
-police force thoroughly efficient, who tries to remove
-the causes of crime, but who unhesitatingly
-insists upon the punishment of criminals. Pacificists
-who believe that all use of force in international
-matters can be abolished will do well to
-remember that the only efficient police forces are
-those whose members are scrupulously careful not
-to commit acts of violence when it is possible to
-avoid them, but who are willing and able, when the
-occasion arises, to subdue the worst kind of wrong-doers
-by means of the only argument that wrong-doers
-respect, namely, successful force. What is
-thus true in private life is similarly true in international
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p>No man can venture to state the exact details
-that should be followed in securing such a world
-league for the peace of righteousness. But, not
-to leave the matter nebulous, I submit the following
-plan. It would prove entirely workable,
-if nations entered into it with good faith, and if
-they treated their obligations under it in the spirit
-in which the United States treated its obligations
-as regarded the independence of Cuba, giving
-good government to the Philippines, and building
-the Panama Canal; the same spirit in which
-England acted when the neutrality of Belgium
-was violated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-All the civilized powers which are able and
-willing to furnish and to use force, when force is
-required to back up righteousness&mdash;and only the
-civilized powers who possess virile manliness of
-character and the willingness to accept risk and
-labor when necessary to the performance of duty
-are entitled to be considered in this matter&mdash;should
-join to create an international tribunal
-and to provide rules in accordance with which
-that tribunal should act. These rules would have
-to accept the <i>status quo</i> at some given period; for
-the endeavor to redress all historical wrongs
-would throw us back into chaos. They would
-lay down the rule that the territorial integrity of
-each nation was inviolate; that it was to be guaranteed
-absolutely its sovereign rights in certain
-particulars, including, for instance, the right to
-decide the terms on which immigrants should be
-admitted to its borders for purposes of residence,
-citizenship, or business; in short, all its rights in
-matters affecting its honor and vital interest.
-Each nation should be guaranteed against having
-any of these specified rights infringed upon.
-They would not be made arbitrable, any more
-than an individual’s right to life and limb is
-made arbitrable; they would be mutually guaranteed.
-All other matters that could arise between
-these nations should be settled by the international
-court. The judges should act not as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238">238</a></span>
-national representatives, but purely as judges,
-and in any given case it would probably be well
-to choose them by lot, excluding, of course, the
-representatives of the powers whose interests
-were concerned. Then, and most important, the
-nations should severally guarantee to use their
-entire military force, if necessary, against any
-nation which defied the decrees of the tribunal
-or which violated any of the rights which in the
-rules it was expressly stipulated should be reserved
-to the several nations, the rights to their
-territorial integrity and the like. Under such
-conditions&mdash;to make matters concrete&mdash;Belgium
-would be safe from any attack such as that made
-by Germany, and Germany would be relieved
-from the haunting fear its people now have lest
-the Russians and the French, backed by other
-nations, smash the empire and its people.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the contracting powers, a certain
-number of outside nations should be named
-as entitled to the benefits of the court. These
-nations should be chosen from those which are
-as civilized and well-behaved as the great contracting
-nations, but which, for some reason or
-other, are unwilling or unable to guarantee to help
-execute the decrees of the court by force. They
-would have no right to take part in the nomination
-of judges, for no people are entitled to do
-anything toward establishing a court unless they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-are able and willing to face the risk, labor, and self-sacrifice
-necessary in order to put police power
-behind the court. But they would be treated
-with exact justice; and in the event of any one of
-the great contracting powers having trouble with
-one of them, they would be entitled to go into
-court, have a decision rendered, and see the decision
-supported, precisely as in the case of a dispute
-between any two of the great contracting
-powers themselves.</p>
-
-<p>No power should be admitted into the first
-circle, that of the contracting powers, unless it is
-civilized, well-behaved, and able to do its part in
-enforcing the decrees of the court. China, for
-instance, could not be admitted, nor could Turkey,
-although for different reasons, whereas such
-nations as Germany, France, England, Italy,
-Russia, the United States, Japan, Brazil, the
-Argentine, Chile, Uruguay, Switzerland, Holland,
-Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and Belgium would
-all be entitled to go in. If China continues to
-behave as well as it has during the last few
-years it might soon go into the second line of
-powers which would be entitled to the benefits of
-the court, although not entitled to send judges to
-it. Mexico would, of course, not be entitled to
-admission at present into either circle. At present
-every European power with the exception of
-Turkey would be so entitled; but sixty years<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240">240</a></span>
-ago the kingdom of Naples, for instance, would
-not have been entitled to come in, and there are
-various South American communities which at
-the present time would not be entitled to come in;
-and, of course, this would at present be true of
-most independent Asiatic states and of all independent
-African states. The council should have
-power to exclude any nation which completely fell
-from civilization, as Mexico, partly with the able
-assistance of President Wilson’s administration,
-has fallen during the past few years. There are
-various South and Central American states which
-have never been entitled to the consideration as civilized,
-orderly, self-respecting powers which would
-entitle them to be treated on terms of equality in
-the fashion indicated. As regards these disorderly
-and weak outsiders, it might well be that
-after a while some method would be devised to
-deal with them by common agreement of the civilized
-powers; but until this was devised and put
-into execution they would have to be left as at
-present.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, grave difficulties would be encountered
-in devising such a plan and in administering
-it afterward, and no human being can guarantee
-that it would absolutely succeed. But I
-believe that it could be made to work and that it
-would mark a very great improvement over what
-obtains now. At this moment there is hell in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-Belgium and hell in Mexico; and the ultrapacificists
-in this country have their full share of the
-responsibility for this hell. They are not primary
-factors in producing it. They lack the virile
-power to be primary factors in producing anything,
-good or evil, that needs daring and endurance.
-But they are secondary factors; for the man who
-tamely acquiesces in wrong-doing is a secondary
-factor in producing that wrong-doing. Most certainly
-the proposed plan would be dependent upon
-reasonable good faith for its successful working,
-but this is only to say what is also true of every
-human institution. Under the proposed plan there
-would be a strong likelihood of bettering world
-conditions. If it is a Utopia, it is a Utopia of a
-very practical kind.</p>
-
-<p>Such a plan is as yet in the realm of mere speculation.
-At present the essential thing for each
-self-respecting, liberty-loving nation to do is to
-put itself in position to defend its own rights. Recently
-President Wilson, in his message to Congress,
-has announced that we are in no danger and
-will not be in any danger; and ex-President Taft
-has stated that the awakening of interest in our
-defenses indicates “mild hysteria.” Such utterances
-show fatuous indifference to the teachings
-of history. They represent precisely the attitude
-which a century ago led to the burning of Washington
-by a small expeditionary hostile force, and
-to such paralyzing disaster in war as almost to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242">242</a></span>
-bring about the break-up of the Union. In his
-message President Wilson justifies a refusal to
-build up our navy by asking&mdash;as if we were discussing
-a question of pure metaphysics&mdash;“When will
-the experts tell us just what kind of ships we should
-construct&mdash;and when will they be right for ten
-years together? Who shall tell us now what
-sort of navy to build?” and actually adds, after
-posing and leaving unanswered these questions:
-“I turn away from the subject. It is not new.
-There is no need to discuss it.” Lovers of Dickens
-who turn to the second paragraph of chapter XI
-of “Our Mutual Friend” will find this attitude of
-President Wilson toward preparedness interestingly
-paralleled by the attitude Mr. Podsnap took
-in “getting rid of disagreeables” by the use of the
-phrases, “I don’t want to know about them! I
-refuse to discuss them! I don’t admit them!” thus
-“clearing the world of its most difficult problems
-by sweeping them behind him. For they affronted
-him.” If during the last ten years England’s attitude
-toward preparedness for war and the upbuilding
-of her navy had been determined by
-statesmanship such as is set forth in these utterances
-of President Wilson, the island would
-now be trampled into bloody mire, as Belgium
-has been trampled. If Germany had followed
-such advice&mdash;or rather no advice-during the last
-ten years, she would now have been wholly unable
-so much as to assert her rights anywhere.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243">243</a></span>
-Let us immediately make our navy thoroughly
-efficient; and this can only be done by reversing
-the policy that President Wilson has followed for
-twenty-two months. Recently Secretary Daniels
-has said, as quoted by the press, that he intends
-to provide for the safety of both the Atlantic and
-Pacific coasts by dividing our war fleet between
-the two oceans. Such division of the fleet, having
-in view the disaster which exactly similar action
-brought on Russia ten years ago, would be
-literally a crime against the nation. Neither our
-foreign affairs nor our naval affairs can be satisfactorily
-managed when the President is willing
-to put in their respective departments gentlemen
-like Messrs. Bryan and Daniels. President Wilson
-would not have ventured to make either of
-these men head of the Treasury Department,
-because he would thereby have offended the concrete
-interests of American business men. But as
-Secretary of State and Secretary of the Navy the
-harm they do is to the country as a whole. No
-concrete interest is immediately affected; and, as
-it is only our own common welfare in the future,
-only the welfare of our children, only the honor
-and interest of the United States through the
-generations that are concerned, it is deemed safe
-to disregard this welfare and to take chances with
-our national honor and interest.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244">244</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">SUMMING UP</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">“Blessed</span> are the peacemakers,” not merely
-the peace lovers; for action is what makes
-thought operative and valuable. Above
-all, the peace prattlers are in no way blessed.
-On the contrary, only mischief has sprung from
-the activities of the professional peace prattlers,
-the ultrapacificists, who, with the shrill clamor of
-eunuchs, preach the gospel of the milk and water
-of virtue and scream that belief in the efficacy of
-diluted moral mush is essential to salvation.</p>
-
-<p>It seems necessary every time I state my position
-to guard against the counterwords of wilful
-folly by reiterating that my disagreement with
-the peace-at-any-price men, the ultrapacificists, is
-not in the least because they favor peace. I object
-to them, first, because they have proved
-themselves futile and impotent in working for
-peace, and, second, because they commit what is
-not merely the capital error but the crime against
-morality of failing to uphold righteousness as the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245">245</a></span>
-all-important end toward which we should strive.
-In actual practice they advocate the peace of unrighteousness
-just as fervently as they advocate
-the peace of righteousness. I have as little sympathy
-as they have for the men who deify mere
-brutal force, who insist that power justifies wrong-doing,
-and who declare that there is no such
-thing as international morality. But the ultrapacificists
-really play into the hands of these
-men. To condemn equally might which backs
-right and might which overthrows right is to
-render positive service to wrong-doers. It is as
-if in private life we condemned alike both the
-policeman and the dynamiter or black-hand kidnapper
-or white slaver whom he has arrested.
-To denounce the nation that wages war in self-defense,
-or from a generous desire to relieve the
-oppressed, in the same terms in which we denounce
-war waged in a spirit of greed or wanton
-folly stands on an exact par with denouncing
-equally a murderer and the policeman who, at
-peril of his life and by force of arms, arrests the
-murderer. In each case the denunciation denotes
-not loftiness of soul but weakness both of mind
-and of morals.</p>
-
-<p>In a capital book, by a German, Mr. Edmund
-von Mach, entitled “What Germany Wants,”
-there is the following noble passage at the outset:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246">246</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>During the preparation of this book the writer received
-from his uncle, a veteran army officer living in Dresden,
-a brief note containing the following laconic record:</p>
-
-<p>“1793, your great-grandfather at Kostheim.</p>
-
-<p>“1815, your grandfather at Liegnitz.</p>
-
-<p>“1870, myself&mdash;all severely wounded by French bullets.</p>
-
-<p>“1914, my son, captain in the 6th Regiment of Dragoons.</p>
-
-<p>“Four generations obliged to fight the French!”</p>
-
-<p>When the writer turns to his American friends of
-French descent, he finds there similar records, and often
-even greater sorrow, for death has come to many of them.
-In Europe their families and his have looked upon each
-other as enemies for generations, while a few years in
-the clarifying atmosphere of America have made friends
-of former Frenchmen, Germans, Russians, and Englishmen.</p>
-
-<p>Jointly they pray that the present war may not be
-carried to such a pass that an early and honorable peace
-becomes impossible for any one of these great nations.
-Is it asking too much that America may be vouchsafed
-in not too distant a future to do for their respective
-native lands what the American institutions have done
-for them individually, help them to regard each other
-at their true worth, unblinded by traditional hatred or
-fiery passion?</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>It is in the spirit of this statement that we
-Americans should act. We are a people different
-from, but akin, to all the nations of Europe. We
-should feel a real friendship for each of the contesting
-powers and a real desire to work so as to
-secure justice for each. This cannot be done by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-preserving a tame and spiritless neutrality which
-treats good and evil on precisely the same basis.
-Such a neutrality never has enabled and never
-will enable any nation to do a great work for
-righteousness. Our true course should be to judge
-each nation on its conduct, unhesitatingly to antagonize
-every nation that does ill as regards the
-point on which it does ill, and equally without
-hesitation to act, as cool-headed and yet generous
-wisdom may dictate, so as disinterestedly to further
-the welfare of all.</p>
-
-<p>One of the greatest of international duties
-ought to be the protection of small, highly civilized,
-well-behaved, and self-respecting states from
-oppression and conquest by their powerful military
-neighbors. Such nations as Belgium, Holland,
-Switzerland, Uruguay, Denmark, Norway,
-and Sweden play a great and honorable part in
-the development of civilization. The subjugation
-of any one of them is a crime against, the destruction
-of any one of them is a loss to, mankind.</p>
-
-<p>I feel in the strongest way that we should
-have interfered, at least to the extent of the
-most emphatic diplomatic protest and at the
-very outset&mdash;and then by whatever further action
-was necessary&mdash;in regard to the violation of the
-neutrality of Belgium; for this act was the earliest
-and the most important and, in its consequences,
-the most ruinous of all the violations and offenses<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248">248</a></span>
-against treaties committed by any combatant
-during the war. But it was not the only one.
-The Japanese and English forces not long after
-violated Chinese neutrality in attacking Kiao-Chau.
-It has been alleged and not denied that
-the British ship <i>Highflyer</i> sunk the <i>Kaiser Wilhelm
-der Grosse</i> in neutral Spanish waters, this being
-also a violation of the Hague conventions; and
-on October 10th the German government issued
-an official protest about alleged violations of the
-Geneva convention by the French. Furthermore,
-the methods employed in strewing portions of
-the seas with floating mines have been such as to
-warrant the most careful investigation by any
-neutral nations which treat neutrality pacts and
-Hague conventions as other than merely dead
-letters. Not a few offenses have been committed
-against our own people.</p>
-
-<p>If, instead of observing a timid and spiritless
-neutrality, we had lived up to our obligations by
-taking action in all of these cases without regard
-to which power it was that was alleged to have
-done wrong, we would have followed the only
-course that would both have told for world righteousness
-and have served our own self-respect.
-The course actually followed by Messrs. Wilson,
-Bryan, and Daniels has been to permit our own
-power for self-defense steadily to diminish while
-at the same time refusing to do what we were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-solemnly bound to do in order to protest against
-wrong and to render some kind of aid to weak
-nations that had been wronged. Inasmuch as, in
-the first and greatest and the most ruinous case
-of violation of neutral rights and of international
-morality, this nation, under the guidance of Messrs.
-Wilson and Bryan, kept timid silence and dared
-not protest, it would be&mdash;and is&mdash;an act of deliberate
-bad faith to protest only as regards subsequent
-and less important violations. Of course, if,
-as a people, we frankly take the ground that our
-actions are based upon nothing whatever but our
-own selfish and short-sighted interest, it is possible
-to protest only against violations of neutrality
-that at the moment unfavorably affect our
-own interests. Inaction is often itself the most
-offensive form of action; the administration has
-persistently refused to live up to the solemn national
-obligations to strive to protect other unoffending
-nations from wrong; and this conduct
-adds a peculiar touch of hypocrisy to the action
-taken at the same time in signing a couple of score
-of all-inclusive arbitration treaties pretentiously
-heralded as serving world righteousness. If we
-had acted as we ought to have acted regarding
-Belgium we could then with a clear conscience
-have made effective protest regarding every other
-case of violation of the rights of neutrals or of
-offenses committed by the belligerents against one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250">250</a></span>
-another or against us in violation of the Hague
-conventions. Moreover, the attitude of the administration
-has not even placated the powers
-it was desired to please. Thanks to its action,
-the United States during the last five months has
-gained neither the good-will nor the respect of
-any of the combatants. On the contrary, it has
-steadily grown rather more disliked and rather
-less respected by all of them.</p>
-
-<p>In facing a difficult and critical situation, any
-administration is entitled to a free hand until it
-has had time to develop the action which it considers
-appropriate, for often there is more than
-one way in which it is possible to take efficient
-action. But when so much time has passed,
-either without action or with only mischievous
-action, as gravely to compromise both the honor
-and the interest of the country, then it becomes
-a duty for self-respecting citizens to whom their
-country is dear to speak out. From the very
-outset I felt that the administration was following
-a wrong course. But no action of mine could
-make it take the right course, and there was a
-possibility that there was some object aside from
-political advantage in the course followed. I kept
-silence as long as silence was compatible with
-regard for the national honor and welfare. I
-spoke only when it became imperative to speak
-under penalty of tame acquiescence in tame failure<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251">251</a></span>
-to perform national duty. It has become
-evident that the administration has had no plan
-whatever save the dexterous avoidance of all responsibility
-and therefore of all duty, and the
-effort to persuade our people as a whole that this
-inaction was for their interest&mdash;combined with
-other less openly expressed and less worthy efforts
-of purely political type.</p>
-
-<p>There is therefore no longer any reason for
-failure to point out that if the President and Secretary
-of State had been thoroughly acquainted
-in advance, as of course they ought to have been
-acquainted, with the European situation, and if
-they had possessed an intelligent and resolute
-purpose squarely to meet their heavy responsibilities
-and thereby to serve the honor of this
-country and the interest of mankind, they would
-have taken action on July 29th, 30th, or 31st, certainly
-not later than August 1st. On such occasions
-there is a peculiar applicability in the old
-proverb: Nine tenths of wisdom consists in being
-wise in time. If those responsible for the management
-of our foreign affairs had been content to
-dwell in a world of fact instead of a world of third-rate
-fiction, they would have understood that at
-such a time of world crisis it was an unworthy
-avoidance of duty to fuss with silly little all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties when the need of
-the day demanded that they devote all their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252">252</a></span>
-energies to the terrible problems of the day.
-They would have known that a German invasion
-of Switzerland was possible but improbable and
-a German invasion of Belgium overwhelmingly
-probable. They would have known that vigorous
-action by the United States government,
-taken with such entire good faith as to make it
-evident that it was in the interest of Belgium and
-not in the interest of France and England, and
-that if there was occasion it would be taken
-against France and England as quickly as against
-Germany, might very possibly have resulted in
-either putting a stop to the war or in localizing
-and narrowly circumscribing its area. It is, of
-course, possible that the action would have failed
-of its immediate purpose. But even in that case
-it cannot be doubted that it would have been
-efficient as a check upon the subsequent wrongs
-committed.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the opportunity for action limited in
-time. Even if the administration had failed thus
-to act at the outset of the war, the protests
-officially made both by the German Emperor and
-by the Belgian government to the President as
-to alleged misconduct in the prosecution of the
-war not only gave him warrant for action but required
-him to act. Meanwhile, from the moment
-when the war was declared, it became inexcusable
-of the administration not to take immediate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253">253</a></span>
-steps to put the navy into efficient shape, and at
-least to make our military forces on land more respectable.
-It is possible not to justify but to explain
-the action of the administration in using the
-navy for the sixteen months prior to this war in
-such a way as greatly to impair its efficiency; for
-of course when the President selected Mr. Daniels
-as Secretary of the Navy he showed, on the supposition
-that he was not indifferent to its welfare,
-an entire ignorance of what that welfare demanded;
-and therefore the failure to keep the navy efficient
-may have been due at first to mere inability to
-exercise foresight. But with war impending, such
-failure to exercise foresight became inexcusable.
-None of the effective fighting craft are of any
-real use so far as Mexico is concerned. The navy
-should at once have been assembled in northern
-waters, either in the Atlantic or the Pacific, and
-immediate steps taken to bring it to the highest
-point of efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>It is because I believe our attitude should be
-one of sincere good-will toward all nations that I
-so strongly feel that we should endeavor to work
-for a league of peace among all nations rather
-than trust to alliances with any particular group.
-Moreover, alliances are very shifty and uncertain.
-Within twenty years England has regarded
-France as her immediately dangerous opponent;
-within ten years she has felt that Russia was the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254">254</a></span>
-one power against which she must at all costs
-guard herself; and during the same period there
-have been times when Belgium has hated England
-with a peculiar fervor. Alliances must be based
-on self-interest and must continually shift. But
-in such a world league as that of which we speak
-and dream, the test would be conduct and not
-merely selfish interest, and so there would be no
-shifting of policy.</p>
-
-<p>It is not yet opportune to discuss in detail the
-exact method by which the nations of the world
-shall put the collective strength of civilization
-behind the purpose of civilization to do right,
-using as an instrumentality for peace such a
-world league. I have in the last chapter given
-the bare outline of such a plan. Probably at the
-outset it would be an absolute impossibility to
-devise a non-national or purely international
-police force which would be effective in a great
-crisis. The prime necessity is that all the great
-nations should agree in good faith to use their
-combined warlike strength to coerce any nation,
-whichever one it may be, that declines to abide
-the decision of some competent international tribunal.</p>
-
-<p>Our business is to create the beginnings of international
-order out of the world of nations as
-these nations actually exist. We do not have to
-deal with a world of pacificists and therefore we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255">255</a></span>
-must proceed on the assumption that treaties will
-never acquire sanctity until nations are ready to
-seal them with their blood. We are not striving
-for peace in heaven. That is not our affair. What
-we were bidden to strive for is “peace on earth
-and good-will toward men.” To fulfil this injunction
-it is necessary to treat the earth as it is
-and men as they are, as an indispensable pre-requisite
-to making the earth a better place in
-which to live and men better fit to live in it. It
-is inexcusable moral culpability on our part to
-pretend to carry out this injunction in such fashion
-as to nullify it; and this we do if we make believe
-that the earth is what it is not and if our professions
-of bringing good-will toward men are in
-actual practice shown to be empty shams. Peace
-congresses, peace parades, the appointment and
-celebration of days of prayer for peace, and the
-like, which result merely in giving the participants
-the feeling that they have accomplished something
-and are therefore to be excused from hard,
-practical work for righteousness, are empty
-shams. Treaties such as the recent all-inclusive
-arbitration treaties are worse than empty shams
-and convict us as a nation of moral culpability
-when our representatives sign them at the same
-time that they refuse to risk anything to make
-good the signatures we have already affixed to
-the Hague conventions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256">256</a></span>
-Moderate and sensible treaties which mean
-something and which can and will be enforced
-mark a real advance for the human race. As
-has been well said: “It is our business to make
-no treaties which we are not ready to maintain
-with all our resources, for every such ‘scrap of
-paper’ is like a forged check&mdash;an assault on our
-credit in the world.” Promises that are idly
-given and idly broken represent profound detriment
-to the morality of nations. Until no promise
-is idly entered into and until promises that have
-once been made are kept, at no matter what cost
-of risk and effort and positive loss, just so long
-will distrust and suspicion and wrong-doing rack
-the world. No honest lawyer will hesitate to
-advise his client against signing a contract either
-detrimental to his interests or impossible of fulfilment;
-and the individual who signs such a contract
-at once makes himself either an object of
-suspicion to sound-headed men or else an object
-of derision to all men. One of the stock jokes in
-the comic columns of the newspapers refers to
-the man who swears off or takes the pledge, or
-makes an indefinite number of good resolutions
-on New Year’s Day, and fails to keep his pledge
-or promise or resolution; this was one of Mark
-Twain’s favorite subjects for derision. The man
-who continually makes new promises without
-living up to those he has already made, and who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257">257</a></span>
-takes pledges which he breaks, is rightly treated
-as an object for contemptuous fun. The nation
-which behaves in like manner deserves no higher
-consideration.</p>
-
-<p>The conduct of President Wilson and Secretary
-Bryan in signing these all-inclusive treaties at the
-same time that they have kept silent about the
-breaking of the Hague conventions has represented
-the kind of wrong-doing to this nation
-that would be represented in private life by the
-conduct of the individuals who sign such contracts
-as those mentioned. The administration
-has looked on without a protest while the Hague
-conventions have been torn up and thrown to
-the wind. It has watched the paper structure
-of good-will collapse without taking one step to
-prevent it; and yet foolish pacificists, the very
-men who in the past have been most vociferous
-about international morality, have praised it for
-this position. The assertion that our neutrality
-carries with it the obligation to be silent when
-our own Hague conventions are destroyed represents
-an active step against the peace of righteousness.
-The only way to show that our faith in
-public law was real was to protest against the assault
-on international morality implied in the
-invasion of Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>Unless some one at some time is ready to take
-some chance for the sake of internationalism, that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-is of international morality, it will remain what it
-is to-day, an object of derision to aggressive nations.
-Even if nothing more than an emphatic
-protest had been made against what was done
-in Belgium&mdash;it is not at this time necessary for
-me to state exactly what, in my judgment, ought
-to have been done&mdash;the foundations would have
-been laid for an effective world opinion against
-international cynicism. Pacificists claim that
-we have acted so as to preserve the good-will
-of Europe and to exercise a guiding influence in
-the settlement of the war. This is an idea which
-appeals to the thoughtless, for it gratifies our desire
-to keep out of trouble and also our vanity by
-the hope that we shall do great things with small
-difficulty. It may or may not be that the settlement
-will finally be made by a peace congress in
-which the President of the United States will hold
-titular position of headship. But under conditions
-as they are now the real importance of the President
-in such a peace congress will be comparable
-to the real importance of the drum-major when he
-walks at the head of a regiment. Small boys regard
-the drum-major as much more important
-than the regimental commander; and the pacificist
-grown-ups who applaud peace congresses sometimes
-show as regards the drum-majors of these
-congresses the same touching lack of insight which
-small boys show toward real drum-majors. As a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259">259</a></span>
-matter of fact, if the United States enters such a
-congress with nothing but a record of comfortable
-neutrality or tame acquiescence in violated Hague
-conventions, plus an array of vague treaties with
-no relation to actual facts, it will be allowed to
-fill the position of international drum-major and
-of nothing more; and even this position it will be
-allowed to fill only so long as it suits the convenience
-of the men who have done the actual
-fighting. The warring nations will settle the
-issues in accordance with their own strength and
-position. Under such conditions we shall be
-treated as we deserve to be treated, as a nation
-of people who mean well feebly, whose words are
-not backed by deeds, who like to prattle about
-both their own strength and their own righteousness,
-but who are unwilling to run the risks without
-which righteousness cannot be effectively
-served, and who are also unwilling to undergo
-the toil of intelligent and hard-working preparation
-without which strength when tested proves
-weakness.</p>
-
-<p>In this world it is as true of nations as of individuals
-that the things best worth having are
-rarely to be obtained in cheap fashion. There
-is nothing easier than to meet in congresses and
-conventions and pass resolutions in favor of
-virtue. There is also nothing more futile unless
-those passing the resolutions are willing to make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260">260</a></span>
-them good by labor and endurance and active
-courage and self-denial. Readers of John Hay’s
-poems will remember the scorn therein expressed
-for those who “resoloot till the cows come home,”
-but do not put effort back of their words. Those
-who would teach our people that service can be
-rendered or greatness attained in easy, comfortable
-fashion, without facing risk, hardship, and
-difficulty, are teaching what is false and mischievous.
-Courage, hard work, self-mastery, and
-intelligent effort are all essential to successful life.
-As a rule, the slothful ease of life is in inverse
-proportion to its true success. This is true of the
-private lives of farmers, business men, and mechanics.
-It is no less true of the life of the nation
-which is made up of these farmers, business men,
-and mechanics.</p>
-
-<p>As yet, as events have most painfully shown,
-there is nothing to be expected by any nation in a
-great crisis from anything except its own strength.
-Under these circumstances it is criminal in the
-United States not to prepare. Critics have
-stated that in advocating universal military
-service on the Swiss plan in this country, I am
-advocating militarism. I am not concerned with
-mere questions of terminology. The plan I advocate
-would be a corrective of every evil which
-we associate with the name of militarism. It
-would tend for order and self-respect among our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-people. Not the smallest evil among the many
-evils that exist in America is due to militarism.
-Save in the crisis of the Civil War there has been
-no militarism in the United States and the only
-militarist President we have ever had was Abraham
-Lincoln. Universal service of the Swiss type
-would be educational in the highest and best
-sense of the word. In Switzerland, as compared
-with the United States, there are, relatively to
-the population, only one tenth the number of
-murders and of crimes of violence. Doubtless
-other causes have contributed to this, but doubtless
-also the intelligent collective training of the
-Swiss people in habits of obedience, of self-reliance,
-self-restraint and endurance, of applied patriotism
-and collective action, has been a very potent
-factor in producing this good result.</p>
-
-<p>As I have already said, I know of my own
-knowledge that two nations which on certain occasions
-were obliged, perhaps as much by our fault
-as by theirs, to take into account the question
-of possible war with the United States, planned
-in such event to seize the Panama Canal and
-to take and ransom or destroy certain of our
-great coast cities. They planned this partly in
-the belief that our navy would intermittently be
-allowed to become extremely inefficient, just as
-during the last twenty months it has become inefficient,
-and partly in the belief that our people<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262">262</a></span>
-are so wholly unmilitary, and so ridden to death
-on the one hand by foolish pacificists and on the
-other by brutal materialists whose only God is
-money, that we would not show ourselves either
-resolutely patriotic or efficient even in what belated
-action our utter lack of preparation permitted
-us to take. I believe that these nations
-were and are wrong in their estimate of the underlying
-strength of the American character. I believe
-that if war did really come both the ultrapacificists,
-the peace-at-any-price men, and the
-merely brutal materialists, who count all else as
-nothing compared to the gratification of their
-greed for gain or their taste for ease, for pleasure,
-and for vacuous excitement, would be driven
-before the gale of popular feeling as leaves are
-driven through the fall woods. But such aroused
-public feeling in the actual event would be
-wholly inadequate to make good our failure to
-prepare.</p>
-
-<p>We should in all humility imitate not a little of
-the spirit so much in evidence among the Germans
-and the Japanese, the two nations which in
-modern times have shown the most practical type
-of patriotism, the greatest devotion to the common
-weal, the greatest success in developing their
-economic resources and abilities from within,
-and the greatest far-sightedness in safeguarding
-the country against possible disaster from without.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263">263</a></span>
-In the <cite>Journal of the Military Service Institution</cite>
-for the months of November and December
-of the present year will be found a
-quotation from a Japanese military paper, <cite>The
-Comrades’ Magazine</cite>, which displays an amount of
-practical good sense together with patriotism and
-devotion to the welfare of the average man which
-could well be copied by our people and which is
-worthy of study by every intelligent American.
-Germany’s success in industrialism has been as
-extraordinary and noteworthy as her success in
-securing military efficiency, and fundamentally
-has been due to the development of the same
-qualities in the nation.</p>
-
-<p>At present the United States does not begin to
-get adequate return in the way of efficient preparation
-for defense from the amount of money appropriated
-every year. Both the executive and
-Congress are responsible for this&mdash;and of course
-this means that the permanent and ultimate responsibility
-rests on the people. It is really less a
-question of spending more money than of knowing
-how to get the best results for the money that we
-do spend. Most emphatically there should be a
-comprehensive plan both for defense and for expenditure.
-The best military and naval authorities&mdash;not
-merely the senior officers but the best
-officers&mdash;should be required to produce comprehensive
-plans for battle-ships, for submarines, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264">264</a></span>
-air-ships, for proper artillery, for a more efficient
-regular army, and for a great popular reserve
-behind the army. Every useless military post
-should be forthwith abandoned; and this cannot
-be done save by getting Congress to accept or
-reject plans for defense and expenditure in their
-entirety. If each congressman or senator can put
-in his special plea for the erection or retention
-of a military post for non-military reasons, and
-for the promotion or favoring of some given officer
-or group of officers also for non-military reasons,
-we can rest assured that good results can never be
-obtained. Here, again, what is needed is not plans
-by outsiders but the insistence by outsiders upon
-the army and navy officers being required to produce
-the right plans, being backed up when they
-do produce the right plans, and being held to a
-strict accountability for any failure, active or
-passive, in their duty.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, these plans must be treated as part
-of the coherent policy of the nation in international
-affairs. With a gentleman like Mr. Bryan
-in the State Department it may be accepted as
-absolutely certain that we never will have the
-highest grade of efficiency in the Departments of
-War and of the Navy. With a gentleman like
-Mr. Daniels at the head of the navy, it may be
-accepted as certain that the navy will not be
-brought to the level of its possible powers. This<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265">265</a></span>
-means that the people as a whole must demand of
-their leaders that they treat seriously the navy
-and army and our foreign policy.</p>
-
-<p>The waste in our navy and army is very great.
-This is inevitable as long as we do not discriminate
-against the inefficient and as long as we fail to
-put a premium upon efficiency. When I was
-President I found out that a very large proportion
-of the old officers of the army and even of
-the navy were physically incompetent to perform
-many of their duties. The public was wholly
-indifferent on the subject. Congress would not
-act. As a preliminary, and merely as a preliminary,
-I established a regulation that before promotion
-officers should be required to walk fifty
-miles or ride one hundred miles in three days.
-This was in no way a sufficient test of an officer’s
-fitness. It merely served to rid the service of
-men whose unfitness was absolutely ludicrous.
-Yet in Congress and in the newspapers an extraordinary
-din was raised against this test on
-the ground that it was unjust to faithful elderly
-officers! The pacificists promptly assailed it on
-the ground that to make the army efficient was a
-“warlike” act. All kinds of philanthropists, including
-clergymen and college presidents, wrote
-me that my action showed not only callousness of
-heart but also a regrettable spirit of militarism.
-Any officer who because of failure to come up to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266">266</a></span>
-the test or for other reasons was put out of the
-service was certain to receive ardent congressional
-championship; and every kind of pressure was
-brought to bear on behalf of the unfit, while hardly
-the slightest effective championship was given
-the move from any outside source. This was because
-public opinion was absolutely uneducated
-on the subject. In our country the men who in
-time of peace speak loudest about war are usually
-the ultrapacificists whose activities have been
-shown to be absolutely futile for peace, but who
-do a little mischief by persuading a number of
-well-meaning persons that preparedness for war
-is unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>It is not desirable that civilians, acting independently
-of and without the help of military and
-naval advisers, shall prepare minute or detailed
-plans as to what ought to be done for our national
-defense. But civilians are competent to advocate
-plans in outline exactly as I have here advocated
-them. Moreover, and most important, they are
-competent to try to make public opinion effective
-in these matters. A democracy must have proper
-leaders. But these leaders must be able to appeal
-to a proper sentiment in the democracy. It is the
-prime duty of every right-thinking citizen at this
-time to aid his fellow countrymen to understand
-the need of working wisely for peace, the folly
-of acting unwisely for peace, and, above all, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267">267</a></span>
-need of real and thorough national preparedness
-against war.</p>
-
-<p>Former Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte, in
-one of his admirable articles, in which he discusses
-armaments and treaties, has spoken as
-follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Indeed, it is so obviously impolitic, on the part of the
-administration and its party friends, to avow a purpose to
-keep the people in the dark as to our preparedness (or
-rather as to our virtually admitted unpreparedness) to
-protect the national interests, safety, and honor, that a
-practical avowal of such purpose on their part would seem
-altogether incredible, but for certain rather notorious
-facts developed by our experience during the last year
-and three quarters.</p>
-
-<p>It has gradually become evident, or, at least, probable
-that the mind (wherever that mind may be located) which
-determines, or has, as yet, determined, our foreign policy
-under President Wilson, really relies upon a timid neutrality
-and innumerable treaties of general arbitration as
-sufficient to protect us from foreign aggression; and advisedly
-wishes to keep us virtually unarmed and helpless
-to defend ourselves, so that a sense of our weakness may
-render us sufficiently pusillanimous to pocket all insults,
-to submit to any form of outrage, to resent no provocation,
-and to abdicate completely and forever the dignity and
-the duties of a great nation.</p>
-
-<p>In the absence of actual experience, a strong effort of
-the imagination would be required, at least on the part of
-the writer, to conceive of anybody’s not finding such an
-outlook for his country utterly intolerable; but incredulity
-must yield to decisive proof. Even the votaries of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268">268</a></span>
-this novel cult of cowardice, however, are evidently compelled
-to recognize that, as yet, they constitute a very
-small minority among Americans, and, for this reason,
-they would keep their fellow countrymen, as far as may
-be practicable, in the dark as to our national weakness
-and our national dangers; they delight in gagging soldiers
-and sailors and, to the extent of their power, everybody
-else who may speak with any authority, and, if they could,
-would shut out every ray of light which might aid public
-opinion to see things as they are.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* <span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">*</span></div>
-
-<p>There is no room for difference as to the utter absurdity
-of reliance on treaties, no matter how solemn or
-with whomsoever made, as substitutes for proper armaments
-to assure the national safety; Belgium’s fate stares
-in the face any one who should even dream of this. Her
-neutrality was established and guaranteed, not by one
-treaty but by several treaties, not by one power but by
-all the powers; yet she has been completely ruined because
-she relied upon these treaties, refused to violate them herself
-and tried, in good faith, to fulfil the obligations they
-imposed on her.</p>
-
-<p>For any public man, with this really terrible object-lesson
-before his eyes, to seriously ask us to believe that arbitration
-treaties or Hague tribunals or anything else within
-that order of ideas can be trusted to take the place of
-preparation impeaches either his sincerity or his sanity,
-and impeaches no less obviously the common sense of his
-readers or hearers.</p>
-
-<p>A nation unable to protect itself may have to pay a
-frightful price nowadays as a penalty for the misfortune
-of weakness; the Belgians may be, in a measure, consoled
-for their misfortune by the world’s respect and sympathy;
-in the like case, we should be further and justly punished<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269">269</a></span>
-by the world’s unbounded and merited contempt, for our
-weakness would be the fruit of our own ignominious
-cowardice and incredible folly.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Secretary Garrison in his capital report says
-that if our outlying possessions are even insufficiently
-manned our mobile home army will consist
-of less than twenty-five thousand men, only
-about twice the size of the police force of New
-York City. Yet, in the face of this, certain newspaper
-editors, college presidents, pacificist bankers
-and, I regret to say, certain clergymen and philanthropists
-enthusiastically champion the attitude
-of President Wilson and Mr. Bryan in refusing
-to prepare for war. As one of them put it
-the other day: “The way to prevent war is not
-to fight.” Luxembourg did not fight! Does this
-gentleman regard the position of Luxembourg
-at this moment as enviable? China has not recently
-fought. Does the gentleman think that
-China’s position is in consequence a happy one?
-If advisers of this type, if these college presidents
-and clergymen and editors of organs of culture
-and the philanthropists who give this advice spoke
-only for themselves, if the humiliation and disgrace
-were to come only on them, no one would
-have a right to object. They have servile souls;
-and if they chose serfdom of the body for themselves
-only, it would be of small consequence to
-others. But, unfortunately, their words have a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270">270</a></span>
-certain effect upon this country; and that effect
-is intolerably evil. Doubtless it is the influence
-of these men which is largely responsible for the
-attitude of the President. The President attacks
-preparedness in the name of antimilitarism. The
-preparedness we advocate is that of Switzerland,
-the least militaristic of countries. Autocracy may
-use preparedness for the creation of an aggressive
-and provocative militarism that invites and produces
-war; but in a democracy preparedness means
-security against aggression and the best guarantee
-of peace. The President in his message has in
-effect declared that his theory of neutrality, which
-is carried to the point of a complete abandonment
-of the rights of innocent small nations, and
-his theory of non-preparedness, which is carried
-to the point of gross national inefficiency, are both
-means for securing to the United States a leading
-position in bringing about peace. The position
-he would thus secure would be merely that of
-drum-major at the peace conference; and he would
-do well to remember that if the peace that is
-brought about should result in leaving Belgium’s
-wrongs unredressed and turning Belgium over to
-Germany, in enthroning militarism as the chief
-factor in the modern world, and in consecrating
-the violation of treaties, then the United States,
-by taking part in such a conference, would have
-rendered an evil service to mankind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271">271</a></span>
-At present our navy is in wretched shape. Our
-army is infinitesimal. This large, rich republic is
-far less efficient from a military standpoint than
-Switzerland, Holland, or Denmark. In spite of
-the fact that the officers and enlisted men of our
-navy and army offer material on the whole better
-than the officers and men of any other navy or
-army, these two services have for so many years
-been neglected by Congress, and during the last
-two years have been so mishandled by the administration,
-that at the present time an energetic and
-powerful adversary could probably with ease drive
-us not only from the Philippines but from Hawaii,
-and take possession of the Canal and Alaska.
-If invaded by a serious army belonging to some
-formidable Old World empire, we would be for
-many months about as helpless as China; and,
-as nowadays large armies can cross the ocean,
-we might be crushed beyond hope of recuperation
-inside of a decade. Yet those now at the head
-of public affairs refuse themselves to face facts
-and seek to mislead the people as to the facts.</p>
-
-<p>President Wilson is, of course, fully and completely
-responsible for Mr. Bryan. Mr. Bryan
-appreciates this and loyally endeavors to serve
-the President and to come to his defense at all
-times. As soon as President Wilson had announced
-that there was no need of preparations
-to defend ourselves, because we loved everybody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272">272</a></span>
-and everybody loved us and because our mission
-was to spread the gospel of peace, Mr. Bryan came
-to his support with hearty enthusiasm and said:
-“The President knows that if this country needed
-a million men, and needed them in a day, the call
-would go out at sunrise and the sun would go
-down on a million men in arms.” One of the
-President’s stanchest newspaper adherents lost
-its patience over this utterance and remarked:
-“More foolish words than these of the Secretary
-of State were never spoken by mortal man in
-reply to a serious argument.” However, Mr.
-Bryan had a good precedent, although he probably
-did not know it. Pompey, when threatened by
-Cæsar, and told that his side was unprepared,
-responded that he had only to “stamp his foot”
-and legions would spring from the ground. In
-the actual event, the “stamping” proved as effectual
-against Cæsar as Mr. Bryan’s “call”
-would under like circumstances. I once heard
-a Bryanite senator put Mr. Bryan’s position
-a little more strongly than it occurred to Mr.
-Bryan himself to put it. The senator in question
-announced that we needed no regular army, because
-in the event of war “ten million freemen
-would spring to arms, the equals of any regular
-soldiers in the world.” I do not question the
-emotional or oratorical sincerity either of Mr.
-Bryan or of the senator. Mr. Bryan is accustomed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273">273</a></span>
-to performing in vacuo; and both he and
-President Wilson, as regards foreign affairs, apparently
-believe they are living in a world of two
-dimensions, and not in the actual workaday world,
-which has three dimensions. This was equally
-true of the senator in question. If the senator’s
-ten million men sprang to arms at this moment,
-they would have at the outside some four hundred
-thousand modern rifles to which to spring. Perhaps
-six hundred thousand more could spring to
-squirrel pieces and fairly good shotguns. The remaining
-nine million men would have to “spring”
-to axes, scythes, hand-saws, gimlets, and similar
-arms. As for Mr. Bryan’s million men who would
-at sunset respond under arms to a call made at
-sunrise, the suggestion is such a mere rhetorical
-flourish that it is not worthy even of humorous
-treatment; a high-school boy making such a
-statement in a theme would be marked zero by
-any competent master. But it is an exceedingly
-serious thing, it is not in the least a humorous
-thing, that the man making such a statement
-should be the chief adviser of the President in international
-matters, and should hold the highest
-office in the President’s gift.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is Mr. Bryan in any way out of sympathy
-with President Wilson in this matter. The President,
-unlike Mr. Bryan, uses good English and does
-not say things that are on their face ridiculous.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274">274</a></span>
-Unfortunately, his cleverness of style and his entire
-refusal to face facts apparently make him believe
-that he really has dismissed and done away
-with ugly realities whenever he has uttered some
-pretty phrase about them. This year we are in
-the presence of a crisis in the history of the world.
-In the terrible whirlwind of war all the great
-nations of the world, save the United States and
-Italy, are facing the supreme test of their history.
-All of the pleasant and alluring but futile theories
-of the pacificists, all the theories enunciated in
-the peace congresses of the past twenty years,
-have vanished at the first sound of the drumming
-guns. The work of all the Hague conventions,
-and all the arbitration treaties, neutrality treaties,
-and peace treaties of the last twenty years
-has been swept before the gusts of war like withered
-leaves before a November storm. In this
-great crisis the stern and actual facts have shown
-that the fate of each nation depends not in the
-least upon any elevated international aspirations
-to which it has given expression in speech or
-treaty, but on practical preparation, on intensity
-of patriotism, on grim endurance, and on the possession
-of the fighting edge. Yet, in the face of all
-this, the President of the United States sends in a
-message dealing with national defense, which is
-filled with prettily phrased platitudes of the kind
-applauded at the less important type of peace<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275">275</a></span>
-congress, and with sentences cleverly turned to
-conceal from the average man the fact that the
-President has no real advice to give, no real policy
-to propose. There is just one point as to which he
-does show real purpose for a tangible end. He
-dwells eagerly upon the hope that we may obtain
-“the opportunity to counsel and obtain peace in
-the world” among the warring nations and adjures
-us not to jeopardize this chance (for the
-President to take part in the peace negotiations)
-by at this time making any preparations for self-defense.
-In effect, we are asked not to put our
-own shores in defensible condition lest the President
-may lose the chance to be at the head of the
-congress which may compose the differences of
-Europe. In effect, he asks us not to build up the
-navy, not to provide for an efficient citizen army,
-not to get ammunition for our guns and torpedoes
-for our torpedo-tubes, lest somehow or other this
-may make the President of the United States an
-unacceptable mediator between Germany and
-Great Britain! It is an honorable ambition for
-the President to desire to be of use in bringing
-about peace in Europe; but only on condition
-that the peace thus brought is the peace of righteousness,
-and only on condition that he does not
-sacrifice this country’s vital interests for a clatter
-of that kind of hollow applause through which
-runs an undertone of sinister jeering. He must<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276">276</a></span>
-not sacrifice to this ambition the supreme interest
-of the American people. Nor must he believe
-that the possibility of his being umpire will
-have any serious effect on the terrible war game
-that is now being played; the outcome of the game
-will depend upon the prowess of the players. No
-gain will come to our nation, or to any other nation,
-if President Wilson permits himself to be
-deluded concerning the part the United States may
-take in the promotion of European peace.</p>
-
-<p>Peace in Europe will be made by the warring
-nations. They and they alone will in fact determine
-the terms of settlement. The United States
-may be used as a convenient means of getting
-together; but that is all. If the nations of Europe
-desire peace and our assistance in securing it, it
-will be because they have fought as long as they
-will or can. It will not be because they regard us
-as having set a spiritual example to them by
-sitting idle, uttering cheap platitudes, and picking
-up their trade, while they have poured out their
-blood like water in support of the ideals in which,
-with all their hearts and souls, they believe. For
-us to assume superior virtue in the face of the
-war-worn nations of the Old World will not make
-us more acceptable as mediators among them.
-Such self-consciousness on our part will not impress
-the nations who have sacrificed and are
-sacrificing all that is dearest to them in the world,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277">277</a></span>
-for the things that they believe to be the noblest
-in the world. The storm that is raging in Europe
-at this moment is terrible and evil; but it is also
-grand and noble. Untried men who live at ease
-will do well to remember that there is a certain
-sublimity even in Milton’s defeated archangel, but
-none whatever in the spirits who kept neutral,
-who remained at peace, and dared side neither
-with hell nor with heaven. They will also do
-well to remember that when heroes have battled
-together, and have wrought good and evil, and
-when the time has come out of the contest to get
-all the good possible and to prevent as far as possible
-the evil from being made permanent, they
-will not be influenced much by the theory that
-soft and short-sighted outsiders have put themselves
-in better condition to stop war abroad by
-making themselves defenseless at home.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak p1"><a id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors and occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks were corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
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