Commentary
National Review: Sorry, but Trump Is No Eisenhower
This article was originally posted at National Review. When the Western Allies needed a supreme commander for the newly created North Atlantic Treaty Organization in 1949, they unanimously agreed that Dwight Eisenhower was “the only man” for the job. The soldier most responsible for the liberation of Western Europe would help make sure that the Soviet […]
Providence: The Nice Attack and the Clash of Civilizations
This article was originally posted at Providence. There should be no confusion about the identity and motives of the Tunisian man who drove his truck into a crowd celebrating Bastille Day on a promenade in Nice, France, killing at least 84 and injuring hundreds. This is the face of the modern holy warrior, the fanatical foot […]
Books and Culture: C. S. Lewis, George MacDonald, and the Great War
This article was originally posted at Books and Culture. In March 1916, while waiting for a train at Great Bookham Station in Surrey, England, a precocious student with a taste for fantasy walked over to a book stall and bought a copy of Phantastes: A Faerie Romance. The young man’s name was C. S. Lewis. The […]
Providence: NATO’s Gathering Storm
This article was originally posted at Providence. On the eve of the NATO summit in Warsaw last weekend, the Atlantic Council released a report declaring that the Alliance “faces the greatest threat to peace and security in Europe since the end of the Cold War.” The report’s authors, Ambassador Nicholas Burns, lead negotiator on Iran’s nuclear program […]
New York Times: How J.R.R. Tolkien Found Mordor on the Western Front
This article was originally posted at The New York Times. IN the summer of 1916, a young Oxford academic embarked for France as a second lieutenant in the British Expeditionary Force. The Great War, as World War I was known, was only half-done, but already its industrial carnage had no parallel in European history. “Junior officers […]
Weekly Standard: The Somme 1916, and the Funeral of a Great Myth
This article was originally posted at The Weekly Standard. At 7 a.m. on July 1, 1916, the British Army unleashed a hellish assault against German positions on the Western Front in France, along the River Somme. The roar was so loud that it was heard in London, nearly 200 miles away. The barrage—about 3,500 shells a […]
Huffington Post: Jo Cox And The Conscience Of The West
This article was originally posted at The Huffington Post. The brutal murder of British parliamentarian Jo Cox, praised as a relentless and warm-hearted humanitarian, has sent a nation into mourning. A wife and mother of two small children, no British lawmaker fought harder for a more humane immigration policy toward refugees fleeing the Syrian civil war, […]
National Review: Brexit and British Exceptionalism
This article was originally posted at National Review. The desire of many British citizens to leave the European Union is being assailed by American cultural elites as hysteria: a cancerous growth from the blighted soil of nativism, nationalism, and Islamophobia. New York Times columnist Roger Cohen, for example, finds it “unimaginable” that most Britons would vote […]
Providence: The Orlando Massacre and the War on Truth
This article was originally posted at Providence. After beginning his murderous assault on a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida yesterday morning, Omar Mateen called 911 and pledged allegiance to the Islamic State. Within hours, ISIS claimed responsibility for the massacre that left 50 people dead and 53 wounded. The body count, expected to rise, makes the […]
Providence: Faith and a Free Press, Under Assault
This article was originally posted at Providence. The deadly attack by the Islamic State on the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris last January was an omen of things to come: a growing campaign against freedom of the press, much of it driven by religious extremism. The result, according to recent reports, is that media freedom […]