Near the middle of the 19th Century, American
fisherman sought whales near the waters close to Japan. As would
happen, some of the vessels would flounder and beach upon Japanese
shores.
The crews were interned by the Tokugawa government and subsequently became the object of ransom.
The United States government realized the Japanese position was little more than extortion and, in 1846, dispatched a naval
squadron under the command of Commodore James Biddle to negotiate an agreement with
Edo (later to be called Tokyo.) The aim was to deter the Japanese from
exploiting the sea disasters. Biddle was also charged with reclaiming the American whaling crewmen.
Since Edo Bay was too shallow to accommodate the massive US warships,
the Japanese dispatched small boats out to Biddle's squadron to escort
the commodore and his aides to the emperor's palace. A Japanese sailor
unceremoniously shoved Commodore Biddle to the bottom of one of the
small boats.
The Japanese officers who witnessed this were
embarrassed by this dishonorable act by one of their enlisted men and
expected that Biddle would, justifiably in their code, shoot the offender
on sight. Biddle, however, did the Western, honorable thing. He
regarded the sailor's behavior as unfortunate but not worthy of
execution.
To the Western mind, the commodore's response would
be lauded as a magnanimous gesture of forgiveness. To the Japanese,
however, Biddle's course indicated an inherent weakness of character.
The word soon reached the palace that the Americans were not honorable
men. The emperor refused to confer with the delegation and the American
seaman would stay in Japanese custody for another seven years until
Commodore Matthew Perry entered Edo Bay with guns firing at ships full
of Samurai warriors. The Japanese honored that type of approach. Perry opened Japan and the whalers were released.
History is replete with examples when weakness emboldens an enemy (e.g.
the 1938 Munich Conference.) President Obama's empty rhetoric and lack
of policy direction only encourages the jihadist states to dismiss us
as ineffective. He does not understand the need to deal from a position
of definite assertiveness rather than from dishonorable appeasement.
In 1853, we learned the lessons of the history of 1846. Unfortunately, this president denies the lessons of history, and as Georges Santayana alluded, Obama is doomed to repeat the mistakes of
those who compromise on conviction. Even sadder, Israel and even our
own national security are both at risk.
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