Posted by
Lawrence Edwards on Sunday, February 04, 2007 1:51:23 PM
In August of 1940, in the middle of what is now known as the Battle of Britain, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, speaking before the House of Commons of the British Parliament said the following;
The gratitude of every home in our Island, in our Empire, and indeed throughout the world, except in the abodes of the guilty, goes out to the British airmen who, undaunted by odds, unwearied in their constant challenge and mortal danger, are turning the tide of the World War by their prowess and by their devotion. Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.
To understand this statement, it is important to put in perspective the numbers involved. “The few” were 2,353 young men from Britain and 574 from overseas who took place in the Battle of Britain, ultimately repelling the air might of Germany. Of these few men, 544 or 18.5% were killed in the period beginning July 10th when the Germans began their air assault on Britain to October 31st when the battle ended. These truly were the few.
In America, we also have “the few”, and over the course of the past four years, as 2006 draws to a close, we have lost just over 3,000 brave Americans who proudly served in all seven branches of the U.S. Military; the Army & Army Reserve, the Navy & Navy Reserve, the Air Force and Air Force Reserve, the Marines and the Marine Corps Reserve, the Coast Guard & the Coast Guard Reserve, the Army National Guard, and the Air National Guard.
What are we to make of these numbers? Should they appall us, or inspire us. In the end, whatever choice we make, there is no doubt that one path leads to Victory and the other to Ignominious Defeat.
In all of World War II, the United Kingdom suffered 450,000 deaths with approximately 68,000 of them being civilians. In total, this represented less than 1% of the population. Alternately, France suffered 562,000 deaths with approximately 267,000 being civilians and a further 83,000 being Jewish Holocaust victims, or 1.35% of the population; Poland suffered 5,600,000 deaths with approximately 2,200,000 being Polish civilians and a further 3,000,000 being Jewish Holocaust victims, or nearly 17% of the population; and the United States suffered 400,000 deaths with approximately 11,000 being civilians. Conversely, the Soviet Union, China, Germany, Indonesia, Japan and China lost 23.2 Million, 10.0 Million, 7.5 Million, 4.0 Million, and 2.6 Million respectively.
Here we have the “so called” Greatest Generation. The war that most American politicians appear to agree was worth the cost, although many did not think so at the time. 400,000 Americans lost to defend Europe and Asia from the clutches of Fanatical Fascism.
But what about other wars that we have fought. The Korean War cost approximately 54,000 American lives. The only Country with a higher death toll was the South Koreans (our Allies) with 227,000, unless, of course, you count the enemy who suffered over 1.5 Million dead. Then of course there was Vietnam where we lost approximately 58,000 American Lives, compared to approximately 224,000 South Vietnamese and 1.1 Million of the enemy. Compare that to the Iran/Iraq war where the Iranians lost over 500,000 men and the Iraqis lost over 375,000.
In the first Gulf War, Coalition deaths were less that 400.
And here we find ourselves with American deaths in the aftermath of the Second Gulf War having exceeded 3,000 brave American Patriots over the course of three plus years. Obviously, it has not been as good for the enemy, but based on the figures above, history tells us that it never is.
What then do we compare this to. How do we put this in perspective?
Do we look at the 42,000 American Deaths each year that come from Motor Vehicle Accidents? No one goes out for a drive looking for a hero’s death, especially knowing that if you do, there is a 40% chance that one of you will be drunk at the time. (As an aside, for any readers who don’t know, there are no drunks dying in any American Combat Zones. General Order One, amongst other things, prohibits the possession, sale, transfer, manufacture or consumption of any alcoholic beverage in a combat zone.)
Do we look at the Murder Rate in America where over 16,000 Americans die each and every year?
Or perhaps we could look to Capital Punishment, that perennial favorite for Liberals to bash. Since 1976, a period of over 30 years, America has executed slightly more than 1,000 of her worst criminals, with another 3,000 violent felons sitting on death row.
I can’t imagine that any law abiding citizen with a hint of intelligence would favor those odds, in that in any given year, you are almost 500 times more likely to lose your life, the victim of murder in America than you are to die as punishment for having committed the murder of another.
Do we look at the 1.4 Million fetal-Americans that are murdered each and every year as Supreme Court sanctioned victims of “so-called” choice?
Or do we look to the 2,973 innocent Americans murdered by Islamic Fanatics on September 11th, 2001, civilians all, by anyone’s definition, not least of all that of the Geneva Convention?
So how do we put all these numbers in perspective?
Over 800 American Soldiers dying a year is certainly no source for celebration, but no more should it be a festering sore that we continually poke and prod in morbid curiosity, only serving to cause ourselves more pain. Each and every one of those soldiers was there because they chose to serve their Country and for that, they are to be admired. For that they are Heroes.
It should also be realized that while there are no accurate figures of the number of Iraqi insurgents; Al-Qaeda fighters; and other assorted miscreants that have been killed, if we extrapolate from the last two so-called quagmires that liberals also like to bash mercilessly as failures: those being Vietnam and to a lesser extent, Korea, the ratio of American to enemy deaths would be either 19 to 1, or 28 to 1, respectively. That would mean that each and every year, between 15,000 and 22,000 of America’s enemies were likewise being killed, which is clearly a victory in and of itself, and could now after three plus years easily represent over 65,000 murderous extremists who have not been left alive to attack Americans closer to home, just as we saw on September 11th, where 19 Islamic Extremists were able to take the lives of almost 3,000 innocent Americans. That is an unfavorable ratio of 158 to 1.
Not even at their most efficient, could the American Abortion Mills cause the carnage that those extremists would do if even a fraction of them made it to American shores to do their deadly work.
That is, unless or course we are foolish enough to convince ourselves that if these insurgents weren’t attacking Americans and Iraqis on the streets of Iraq, that they would instead be sitting peacefully at home in Iraq, Syria and Iran, praising America and devoting their free time to making their own Countries better places to live and thinking of ways to do nice things for their wives.
It is far better that our husbands & wives, and sons & daughters die on foreign battle fields fighting for the Country that they love, than to suffer a needless death, the victim of murder or of a drunk driver who put his or her own pleasure above the cost in human suffering, or dying simply because they went to work in a New York office building.
Make no mistake, America is at war, and will be for some time, and if we are to defend America against her enemies, then we must do so where the odds are in our favor, just as our enemies did on September 11th, 2001. We are deluding ourselves if we think otherwise, and if we do, it is our husbands, wives, chidren, friends and neighbors who will pay the price.