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Thomson / Gale

Declare war on Al Qaeda, not terror

USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education),  Jan, 2007  

As the Bush Administration casts current conflicts with Islamic militants as an ideological struggle similar to battling fascist governments during World War II, a military historian from Duke University, Durham, N.C., says the analogy is inappropriate and lacks an important factor: an official declaration of war.

"We fought World War II against Germany, Japan, and Italy, not fascism. We mobilized, and Congress declared war, as prescribed by the Constitution," stresses professor of history Alex Roland, a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy who has taught both there and at the U.S. Army War College. "Tomorrow, we should mobilize and declare war on Al Qaeda, not terror. World War II was not a war against fascism any more than this is a war against terrorism. Fascism existed before World War II and after World War II, just as terrorism existed before 9/11 and will exist after the current struggle."

Roland adds that the U.S.'s present-day combat operations look more like Vietnam than World War II. "In Vietnam, as now in Iraq, there was no formal declaration of war, but Congress gave its tacit assent by voting funding, and the courts interpreted this as tantamount to war. It is too soon to tell if the war in Iraq will parallel Vietnam, but the 'War on Terror' certainly does not parallel World War II."

COPYRIGHT 2007 Society for the Advancement of Education
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning