Many Americans don't realize it — not long ago, an American friend in Paris almost fell out of his chair when he heard an example of the distressing (and almost unbelievable) bigotry — but another common aspect of
anti-Americanism in Europe is to denigrate the U.S. participation in World War II. Which occurs by contrasting the Yanks' role in defeating the Axis (don't you know?! It was only for greed!) with the Red Army's deeds, which are duly lionized. To the heavens.
In defending Greece at
Thermopylae in 480 BC, 300 Spartans valiantly resisted the Persian army of Xerxes I for three days before falling as martyrs.
Yet, it is not the tens of thousands of Xerxes' Persian soldiers who are hailed as brave, as heroes (even in Iran); it is the Spartans of King Leonidas who lost "only" a few hundred warriors.
Which brings us back to France in the 20th and 21st centuries, where we are constantly told that because the USSR supposedly lost some 50 times more lives than America during World War II, Europe owes the Russians more gratitude than the Americans.
In fact, I have never heard a conversation in France about the war without someone saying:
"But les Ricains (the Yanks — short for les (Amé)ricains) did it only for their own (economic) interests."
We are told that this is in no way pure, unadulterated
anti-Americanism. Really? Are you sure about that? Think about it: In the context of this global conflict, how could anyone say—rightly or wrongly—that "the Belgians or the French or the Danes or the Filipinos fought the war for…
their own interests?" It's nonsense. Utter nonsense. In fact, what it is is a charge used by the left only against the free-market capitalists.
Following
Évelyne Joslain's article on the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe last summer (
Les 4 Vérités # 1495),
one reader reacted with outrage by what he called a "rewriting of history": "The Anglo-American troops," he insisted, "weren't heroes but amateurs fighting for their country's economic interests and nothing else."
In the 1940s, more than 16 million Americans served in the armed forces. Do you really believe that there were tens of millions of parents in America who said, "Yes, beloved son of ours: leave our home (our Home Sweet Home), put on the uniform, get your gun, we want you to risk your life so Coca-Cola can sell more bottles to the French"?!
Many French people don't seem to realize it, but if anyone is fooled by this rewriting of history, it's none other than themselves: with leftist lies, everything is turned upside down.
The Americans, not the communists, are accused of waging war for their "own interests." While the peoples—nay, while entire nations—who are praised for their innate courage are the Soviets, not the Yanks.
Besides, have you noticed, whatever they do, the Americans can't win. ("Damned if you do, damned if you don't.") When they go to war, it's for nefarious reasons. And when they try to stay out of war, they are condemned for their neutrality.
Isn't the truth that the Soviet
carnage in the Great Patriotic War was entirely due to the dictators' inclination to have no regard whatsoever for the lives of their subjects and to consider these soldiers, often poorly trained and "sent to their deaths", as cannon fodder (just like, 2500 years earlier, the Persians of Xerxes)?
Germany and
Japan also lost many lives (far more than the USA or the UK) — should we also praise the cultures of the SS and the fanatical Japanese above that of the Republican and Democratic culture of the GIs (and of their Tommy cousins)?!
Furthermore, is
Monsieur Pichard aware that among the millions of Soviet soldiers who, according to his worshipful prose, died because of "the Red Army's relentless defense of the homeland," hundreds of thousands lost their lives, shot and machine-gunned by… the very same Red Army? Yes, Order No. 227 from the Red Tyrant of the Kremlin forbade soldiers from retreating, ordering the troops behind them to coldly shoot their comrades if they disobeyed and returned, defeated, to the "safety" of the Soviet lines. And how many hundreds of thousands of "valiant" soldiers were in fact prisoners from the Gulags removed forcefully to join the Soviet army?
As for the "Russian steamroller [that] was inexorably advancing eastward," wasn't it due to Uncle Sam's 400,000 jeeps and trucks? This is the opinion of historian
Antony Beevor, who writes that "
Had it not been for the American trucks provided under Lend-lease, the Red Army would never have made it to Berlin before the Americans."
In their memoirs, Averell Harriman and Nikita Khrushchev both quoted
Stalin himself: "America is a country of machines; without these machines, we would lose this war."
Jean-Marie Pichard asserts that history should not be rewritten. Moreover, his contempt for the American people compels him to refer to their pre-war "pro-Hitler lobby" (sic). But in that perspective, one could hardly find a lobby that was more pro-Hitler than... the USSR of the "Little Father of the Peoples."
Let's be realistic — the only ones who waged war for their own interests (economic or otherwise) were dictatorships: Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Imperial Japan, along with—yes—Communist Russia.
You do not have to be of the Jewish faith to agree with the Talmudic saying:
"If you are kind to the cruel, you will eventually become cruel to the kind."
This explains all Leftist politics in general, in any country, and is particularly true of the French indulgence towards the Soviets in the 1940s, contrasted with the mistrust of the supposedly treacherous Americans.