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Douglas Murray

ByDouglas Murray, Douglas Murray

Opinion

Analysis: Europeans don't 'get' war

June 10, 2010 12:52
1 min read

My primary realisation of this week has been how many naval-boarding experts you can meet on any given day. My second is how many Europeans don't understand this matter at all.

The American strategist Robert Kagan famously described Americans as being from Mars and Europeans from Venus. Coverage of Israel's naval actions in the British/European press reminded me of this. Defending yourself seems simply "so 20th century".

There used to be a belief that nation states had boundaries they were permitted to patrol which, when breached, could be protected by force. Since the end of the Second World War, and during the Cold war, this perfectly natural state of affairs began to look dated to the transnational progressives whose natural habitats were universities and government. Europeans lived under the protective umbrella of American power, and though wars - both hot and cold - were fought, the idea that nation states in Europe could ever again fight boundary conflicts seemed ridiculous.

Some of us armchair warriors like to point out that if Belgium were a terror state lobbing rockets into France, and France had a naval blockade to stop arms getting into Belgium, then France would have the right to stop Belgian nautical naughtiness by force. A good point well made, we think, and settle back. Except that even if it were a great point, it's a point usually made to the wrong audience. For many modern Britons and Europeans, the very idea of Belgium, France or Britain having any war is laughable.