There
are times in history when conflict prevails and then in time all seems to be
fine.
Maybe
before any country declares war we should pause and think and wait and wait
some more.
Why?
Every war in which the United States has found itself engaged has ended in
victory or a stalemate, but in time we become friends. This is probably true for
most war proclamations throughout history
Back in
1982 there was a 39 year old scrap dealer by the name of Constantine Davidoff,
an Argentinean, who wishes today he could take back an innocent action.
Davidoff
heard about three abandoned whaling stations on the British owned Georgia
islands. It was a chance to make some salvage money with scrap parts. In
December of 81, Davidoff, and seven crewmen, got permission from the British to
inspect the stations. In March he started salvage operations. His Argentinian
salvage men raised a blue and white Argentine flag over the salvage operations.
The flag
was spotted by a group of British researchers camped about 5 miles away. They
got their British dander up about an Argentinian flag flying on British
territory and got on their radio and called London.
Word
spread and in the British Falkland Islands 800 miles to the west, a group of
patriotic islanders broke into the Argentinean National Airlines office in Port
Stanley, put up the British flag and wrote, on the wall '"Tit for
tat".
More
words were exchanged. Argentina complained. The British Government protested
and said that the Davidoff crew landed illegally. They didn't, but distance and
time and inter-department bureaucracy, didn't get permits to the right people
at the right time.
Argentina
said the Davidoff Salvage crew had a right to be there. Britain responded by
sending in an Ice Patrol Boat. Argentina then sent a navy ship to protect the
crew from forcible removal. More meetings were held between the British and
Argentina. Words became angry. Ownership rights were stated and demanded and
days later the Argentinians invaded and the Falkland’s war began. You know the
rest.
Something
different happened in Georgia, but the result is the same. Georgia has always
wanted to regain control of South Ossetia. South Ossetia does not want to be
part of Georgia, they are happy being aligned with Russia as it was when they
were part of the old Soviet Union.
The fighting
apparently began when some South Ossetia militiamen fired across the border at
Georgian troops. This escalated to a Georgian invasion, and then Russia sent in
reinforcements to expel the Georgian troops; fighting continued and people on
both sides died. The super-powers got involved, exchanged words, demands,
edicts and threats and here we go again.
Ill-thought
out, if not stupid actions lead to armed conflict and then ego centered
certainties amplified old and new emotions into a global pissing match and
people died. You'd think that humankind would have learned that lesson by now
on the graves of the innocent.
No comments:
Post a Comment