Austin American-Statesman

Rhetoric of war out of step with globe moving forward

- JohnYoung He is a former Texas newspaperm­an in Colorado.

CNN does less news and more retrospect­ives these days. Hence, one would have been excused to assume it was showing another century in China the other day.

Missiles nose to tail, soldiers goose-stepping, China was parading every ounce and centimeter of its military might. And for what?

In observing the anniversar­y of World War II’s end, China took the unusual tack of acting like a military behemoth for the first time in years — and to remind itself how much it still hates Japan.

There was much to hate about imperial Japan and what it did to China in the 1940s, but that was 70 years ago. How could relations still be frozen? Let it go. Let it go.

Could we say the same about 50 years of threats and political stasis with Cuba? Could we say the same regarding the drum-beating and chest thumping denouncing a multinatio­nal effort to curb Iran’s nuclear designs?

Yes, we could. Time delivers to mankind new opportunit­ies to move forward. When we see day- light, it is irresponsi­ble to not consider new possibilit­ies.

We moved on in mending relations with Japan, with Germany, with fascist Italy, with Vietnam. It is to President Obama’s credit that he’s the one to see it was time for a change with Cuba.

As for Iran, it is no longer the nation that held American hostages for an interminab­le stretch. Its people are more Westernize­d than ever and more amenable to what the rest of the world offers.

The “great Satan” rhetoric is the pretense of hardliners for whom bellicosit­y is power. The same, of course, applies to hardliners here at home. What a fascinatin­g dynamic it is to see these two camps — enemies — solidly united.

Meanwhile, young Iranians — and young Cubans — want nothing more than the new day that comes with historic change.

So, does the Iranian deal make the world less safe? One has trouble understand­ing how, since rejecting the pact would be a signal to Iran that a peaceable resolution is unattainab­le. Colin Powell said that on a Sunday news program, while stepping forth to support the Iranian agreement.

Meanwhile, on another channel, Dick Cheney had no real rejoinder when an interviewe­r observed the extent to which crushing Iraq’s regime empowered Iran.

It is ironic that one of the most forward-sounding voices of reconcilia­tion in our nation’s history is Dwight Eisenhower, who hated war “as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity.”

Eisenhower also said the world “must avoid becoming a community of dreadful fear and hate, and be, instead, a proud confederat­ion of mutual trust and respect.”

Warlike actions do nothing more than empower those on the other side who talk up war. Actions of engagement and conciliati­on stir the desire of those on the other side who simply want peace.

Say what you will, but the collapse of the Soviet Union came because of the thirst of its people to have some of the things that we have in the West. Among the fruits of “glasnost” were influences like American TV — yes, like “Dallas.”

Sure, we talked tough. We built our military arsenal for the worst. But ultimately, what caused a warlike empire to crumble was more peaceful intentions and the Earth’s turning toward a new day.

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