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History See other History Articles Title: Jefferson Versus the Muslim Pirates Jefferson Versus the Muslim Pirates By Christopher Hitchens When I first began to plan my short biography of Thomas Jefferson, I found it difficult to research the chapter concerning the so-called Barbary Wars: an event or series of events that had seemingly receded over the lost horizon of American history. Henry Adams, in his discussion of our third president, had some boyhood reminiscences of the widespread hero-worship of naval officer Stephen Decatur, and other fragments and shards showed up in other quarries, but a sound general history of the subject was hard to come by. When I asked a professional military historiana man with direct access to Defense Department archivesif there was any book that he could recommend, he came back with a slight shrug. But now the curious reader may choose from a freshet of writing on the subject. Added to my own shelf in the recent past have been The Barbary Wars: American Independence in the Atlantic World, by Frank Lambert (2005); Jeffersons War: Americas First War on Terror 18011805, by Joseph Wheelan (2003); To the Shores of Tripoli: The Birth of the U.S. Navy and Marines, by A. B. C. Whipple (1991, republished 2001); and Victory in Tripoli: How Americas War with the Barbary Pirates Established the U.S. Navy and Shaped a Nation, by Joshua E. London (2005). Most recently, in his new general history, Power, Faith, and Fantasy: America in the Middle East, 1776 to the Present, the Israeli scholar Michael Oren opens with a long chapter on the Barbary conflict. As some of the subtitlesand some of the dates of publicationmake plain, this new interest is largely occasioned by Americas latest round of confrontation in the Middle East, or the Arab sphere or Muslim world, if you prefer those expressions. In a way, I am glad that I did not have the initial benefit of all this research. My quest sent me to some less obvious secondary sources, in particular to Linda Colleys excellent book Captives, which shows the reaction of the English and American publics to a slave trade of which they were victims rather than perpetrators. How many know that perhaps 1.5 million Europeans and Americans were enslaved in Islamic North Africa between 1530 and 1780? We dimly recall that Miguel de Cervantes was briefly in the galleys. But what of the people of the town of Baltimore in Ireland, all carried off by corsair raiders in a single night? Some of this activity was hostage trading and ransom farming rather than the more labor-intensive horror of the Atlantic trade and the Middle Passage, but it exerted a huge effect on the imagination of the timeand probably on no one more than on Thomas Jefferson. Peering at the paragraph denouncing the American slave trade in his original draft of the Declaration of Independence, later excised, I noticed for the first time that it sarcastically condemned the Christian King of Great Britain for engaging in this piratical warfare, the opprobrium of infidel powers. The allusion to Barbary practice seemed inescapable. One immediate effect of the American Revolution, however, was to strengthen the hand of those very same North African potentates: roughly speaking, the Maghrebian provinces of the Ottoman Empire that conform to todays Algeria, Libya, Morocco, and Tunisia. Deprived of Royal Navy protection, American shipping became even more subject than before to the depredations of those who controlled the Strait of Gibraltar. The infant United States had therefore to decide not just upon a question of national honor but upon whether it would stand or fall by free navigation of the seas. One of the historians of the Barbary conflict, Frank Lambert, argues that the imperative of free trade drove America much more than did any quarrel with Islam or tyranny, let alone terrorism. He resists any comparison with todays tormenting confrontations. The Barbary Wars were primarily about trade, not theology, he writes. Rather than being holy wars, they were an extension of Americas War of Independence. Let us not call this view reductionist. Jefferson would perhaps have been just as eager to send a squadron to put down any Christian piracy that was restraining commerce. But one cannot get around what Jefferson heard when he went with John Adams to wait upon Tripolis ambassador to London in March 1785. When they inquired by what right the Barbary states preyed upon American shipping, enslaving both crews and passengers, Americas two foremost envoys were informed that it was written in the Koran, that all Nations who should not have acknowledged their authority were sinners, that it was their right and duty to make war upon whoever they could find and to make Slaves of all they could take as prisoners, and that every Mussulman who should be slain in battle was sure to go to Paradise. (It is worth noting that the United States played no part in the Crusades, or in the Catholic reconquista of Andalusia.) Ambassador Abd Al-Rahman did not fail to mention the size of his own commission, if America chose to pay the protection money demanded as an alternative to piracy. So here was an early instance of the heads I win, tails you lose dilemma, in which the United States is faced with corrupt regimes, on the one hand, and Islamic militants, on the otheror indeed a collusion between them. It seems likely that Jefferson decided from that moment on that he would make war upon the Barbary kingdoms as soon as he commanded American forces. His two least favorite institutionsenthroned monarchy and state-sponsored religionwere embodied in one target, and it may even be that his famous ambivalences about slavery were resolved somewhat when he saw it practiced by the Muslims. However that may be, it is certain that the Barbary question had considerable influence on the debate that ratified the United States Constitution in the succeeding years. Many a delegate, urging his home state to endorse the new document, argued that only a strong federal union could repel the Algerian threat. In The Federalist No. 24, Alexander Hamilton argued that without a federal navy . . . of respectable weight . . . the genius of American Merchants and Navigators would be stifled and lost. In No. 41, James Madison insisted that only union could guard Americas maritime capacity from the rapacious demands of pirates and barbarians. John Jay, in his letters, took a bring-it-on approach; he believed that Algerian Corsairs and the Pirates of Tunis and Tripoli would compel the feeble American states to unite, since the more we are ill-treated abroad the more we shall unite and consolidate at home. The eventual Constitution, which provides for an army only at two-year renewable intervals, imposes no such limitation on the navy. Thus, Lambert may be limiting himself in viewing the Barbary conflict primarily through the lens of free trade. Questions of nation-building, of regime change, of mission creep, of congressional versus presidential authority to make war, of negotiation versus confrontation, of entangling alliances, and of the clash of civilizationsall arose in the first overseas war that the United States ever fought. The nation-building that occurred, however, took place not overseas but in the 13 colonies, welded by warfare into something more like a republic. There were many AmericansJohn Adams among themwho made the case that it was better policy to pay the tribute. It was cheaper than the loss of trade, for one thing, and a battle against the pirates would be too rugged for our people to bear. Putting the matter starkly, Adams said: We ought not to fight them at all unless we determine to fight them forever. The cruelty, exorbitance, and intransigence of the Barbary states, however, would decide things. The level of tribute demanded began to reach 10 percent of the American national budget, with no guarantee that greed would not increase that percentage, while from the dungeons of Algiers and Tripoli came appalling reports of the mistreatment of captured men and women. Gradually, and to the accompaniment of some of the worst patriotic verse ever written, public opinion began to harden in favor of war. From Jeffersons perspective, it was a good thing that this mood shift took place during the Adams administration, when he was out of office and temporarily retired to Monticello. He could thus criticize federal centralization of power, from a distance, even as he watched the construction of a fleetand the forging of a permanent Marine Corpsthat he could one day use for his own ends. At one point, Jefferson hoped that John Paul Jones, naval hero of the Revolution, might assume command of a squadron that would strike fear into the Barbary pirates. While ambassador in Paris, Jefferson had secured Jones a commission with Empress Catherine of Russia, who used him in the Black Sea to harry the Ottomans, the ultimate authority over Barbary. But Jones died before realizing his dream of going to the source and attacking Constantinople. The task of ordering war fell to Jefferson. Michael Oren thinks that he made the decision reluctantly, finally forced into it by the arrogant behavior of Tripoli, which seized two American brigs and set off a chain reaction of fresh demands from other Barbary states. I believebecause of the encounter with the insufferable Abd Al-Rahman and because of his long engagement with Jonesthat Jefferson had long sought a pretext for war. His problem was his own party and the clause in the Constitution that gave Congress the power to declare war. With not atypical subtlety, Jefferson took a shortcut through this thicket in 1801 and sent the navy to North Africa on patrol, as it were, with instructions to enforce existing treaties and punish infractions of them. Our third president did not inform Congress of his authorization of this mission until the fleet was too far away to recall. Once again, Barbary obstinacy tipped the scale. Yusuf Karamanli, the pasha of Tripoli, declared war on the United States in May 1801, in pursuit of his demand for more revenue. This earned him a heavy bombardment of Tripoli and the crippling of one of his most important ships. But the force of example was plainly not sufficient. In the altered mood that prevailed after the encouraging start in Tripoli, Congress passed an enabling act in February 1802 that, in its provision for a permanent Mediterranean presence and its language about the Tripolitan Corsairs, amounted to a declaration of war. The Barbary regimes continued to underestimate their new enemy, with Morocco declaring war in its turn and the others increasing their blackmail. A complete disasterTripolis capture of the new U.S. frigate Philadelphiabecame a sort of triumph, thanks to Edward Preble and Stephen Decatur, who mounted a daring raid on Tripolis harbor and blew up the captured ship, while inflicting heavy damage on the citys defenses. Now there were namesPreble and Decaturfor newspapers back home to trumpet as heroes. Nor did their courage draw notice only in America. Admiral Lord Nelson himself called the raid the most bold and daring act of the age, and Pope Pius VII declared that the United States had done more for the cause of Christianity than the most powerful nations of Christendom have done for ages. (In his nostalgia for Lepanto, perhaps, His Holiness was evidently unaware that the Treaty of Tripoli, which in 1797 had attempted to formalize the dues that America would pay for access to the Mediterranean, stated in its preamble that the United States had no quarrel with the Muslim religion and was in no sense a Christian country. Of course, those secularists like myself who like to cite this treaty must concede that its conciliatory language was part of Americas attempt to come to terms with Barbary demands.) Watching all this with a jaundiced eye was the American consul in Tunis, William Eaton. For him, behavior modification was not a sufficient policy; regime change was needed. And he had a candidate. On acceding to the throne in Tripoli, Yusuf Karamanli had secured his position by murdering one brother and exiling another. Eaton befriended this exiled brother, Hamid, and argued that he should become the American nominee for Tripolis crown. This proposal wasnt received with enthusiasm in Washington, but Eaton pursued it with commendable zeal. He exhibited the downside that often goes with such quixotic bravery: railing against treasury secretary Albert Gallatin as a cowardly Jew, for example, and alluding to President Jefferson with contempt. He ended up a supporter of Aaron Burrs freebooting secessionist conspiracy. His actions in 1805, however, belong in the annals of derring-do, almost warranting the frequent comparison made with T. E. Lawrences exploits in Arabia. With a small detachment of marines, headed by Lieutenant Presley OBannon, and a force of irregulars inevitably described by historians as motley, Eaton crossed the desert from Egypt and came at Tripolias Lawrence had come at Aqabafrom the land and not from the sea. The attack proved a total surprise. The city of Darna surrendered its far larger garrison, and Karamanlis forces were heavily engaged, when news came that Jefferson and Karamanli had reached an understanding that could end the war. The terms werent too shabby, involving the release of the Philadelphias crew and a final settlement of the tribute question. And Jefferson took care to stress that Eaton had played a part in bringing it about. This graciousness did not prevent Eaton from denouncing the deal as a sellout. The caravan moved on, though, as the other Barbary states gradually followed Tripolis lead and came to terms. Remember, too, that this was the year of the Battle of Trafalgar. Lord Nelson was not the only European to notice that a new power had arrived in Mediterranean waters. Francis Scott Key composed a patriotic song to mark the occasion. As I learned from Joshua Londons excellent book, the original verses ran (in part): In conflict resistless each toil they endurd, Till their foes shrunk dismayd from the wars desolation: And pale beamed the Crescent, its splendor obscurd By the light of the star-bangled flag of our nation. Where each flaming star gleamed a meteor of war, And the turband head bowed to the terrible glare. Then mixt with the olive the laurel shall wave And form a bright wreath for the brow of the brave. The song was part of the bad-verse epidemic. But brushed up and revised a little for the War of 1812, and set to the same music, it has enjoyed considerable success since. So has the Marine Corps anthem, which begins: From the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli. Its no exaggeration to describe the psychological fallout of this first war as formative of the still-inchoate American character. There is of course another connection between 1805 and 1812. Renewed hostilities with Britain on the high seas and on the American mainland, which did not terminate until the Battle of New Orleans, might have ended less conclusively had the United States not developed a battle-hardened naval force in the long attrition on the North African coast. The Barbary states sought to exploit Anglo-American hostilities by resuming their depredations and renewing their demands for blood money. So in 1815, after a brief interval of recovery from the war with Britain, President Madison asked Congress for permission to dispatch Decatur once again to North Africa, seeking a permanent settling of accounts. This time, the main offender was the dey of Algiers, Omar Pasha, who saw his fleet splintered and his grand harbor filled with heavily armed American ships. Algiers had to pay compensation, release all hostages, and promise not to offend again. President Madisons words on this occasion could scarcely be bettered: It is a settled policy of America, that as peace is better than war, war is better than tribute. The United States, while they wish for war with no nation, will buy peace with none. (The expression the United States is did not come into usage until after Gettysburg.) Oren notes that the stupendous expense of this long series of wars was a partial vindication of John Adamss warning. However, there are less quantifiable factors to consider. The most obvious is commerce. American trade in the Mediterranean increased enormously in the years after the settlement with Algiers, and Americas ability to extend its trade and project its forces into other areas, such as the Caribbean and South America, was greatly enhanced. Then we should attend to what Linda Colley says on the subject of slavery. Campaigns against the seizure of hostages by Muslim powers, and their exploitation as forced labor, fired up many a church congregation in Britain and America and fueled many a press campaign. But even the dullest soul could regard the continued triangular Atlantic slave trade between Africa, England, and the Americas and perceive the double standard at work. Thus, the struggle against Barbary may have helped to force some of the early shoots of abolitionism. Perhaps above all, though, the Barbary Wars gave Americans an inkling of the fact that they were, and always would be, bound up with global affairs. Providence might have seemed to grant them a haven guarded by two oceans, but if they wanted to be anything more than the Chile of North Americaa long littoral ribbon caught between the mountains and the seathey would have to prepare for a maritime struggle as well as a campaign to redeem the unexplored landmass to their west. The U.S. Navys Mediterranean squadron has, in one form or another, been on patrol ever since. Armed Moroccan police officers search for suspects in the streets behind the American Language Center in Casablanca, Morocco, Saturday April 14, 2007 after an explosion. Two brothers strapped with explosives blew themselves up near the American Language Center in Casablanca on Saturday, and police arrested three people, including one wearing an explosives belt, an official and news reports said. (AP Photo) And then, finally, there is principle. It would be simplistic to say that something innate in America made it incompatible with slavery and tyranny. But would it be too much to claim that many Americans saw a radical incompatibility between the Barbary system and their own? And is it not pleasant when the interests of free trade and human emancipation can coincide? I would close with a few staves of Kipling, whose poem Dane-Geld is a finer effort than anything managed by Francis Scott Key: It is always a temptation to an armed and agile nation To call upon a neighbor and to say: We invaded you last nightwe are quite prepared to fight, Unless you pay us cash to go away. And that is called asking for Dane-geld, And the people who ask it explain That youve only to pay em the Dane-geld And then youll get rid of the Dane! Kipling runs briskly through the stages of humiliation undergone by any power that falls for this appeasement, and concludes: It is wrong to put temptation in the pathof any nation, For fear they should succumb and go astray; So when you are requested to pay up or be molested, You will find it better policy to say: We never pay any-one Dane-geld, No matter how trifling the cost; For the end of that game is oppression and shame, And the nation that plays it is lost! It may be fortunate that the United States had to pass this test, and imbibe this lesson, so early in its life as a nation. This article originally appeared in City Journal.
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#1. To: BeAChooser (#0)
when the TREASONOUS QUEER! is defeated in debate about significant issues he always goes back to this Thomas Jefferson thing.
Galatians 3:29 And if ye [be] Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise.
It is a settled policy of America, that as peace is better than war, war is better than tribute. The United States, while they wish for war with no nation, will buy peace with none. Excellent article! I'm too busy lately to post very much - but - this is the one article that I thought worthy of my limited time to comment on. It adds some context to the ongoing problems that we have with certain trouble makers around the world. Have a great week end!
I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it. - Thomas Jefferson
Oh really? Which troublemakers would that be? The ones who are running our foreign policy, making new enemies for us every day? I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it. - Thomas Jefferson And the Bush regime is trampling on the Constitution to take away our liberties; they couldn't have done it without 9/11 and the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"The line separating good and evil passes not through states, nor between classes nor between parties either but right through the human heart." Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
I quit reading at "Christopher Hitchens." I can hear a drunk talk nonsense in any bar in America. Why does anyone listen to Hitchens? His brain is soaked in booze, and he's drunk most of the time he's on TV.
lol
pathetic, isn't it?
I met him in DC at one of FR's gatherings. He smelled, hadn't shaved in a week, and looked like he had wicked hangover.
#8. To: robin (#3) Oh really? Which troublemakers would that be? The persons who claim to be Muslim fundamentalists - but are really economic terrorists who profit in the rare atmosphere of chaos - that they create by blowing up the most innocent and harmless of people. The ones who are running our foreign policy, making new enemies for us every day? Granted the Bush dynasty has failed our nation miserably - through at least several accounts chiefly ineptitude (against a shadow enemy that is undefeatable in the humans sense of reckoning.) and pride And the Bush regime is trampling on the Constitution to take away our liberties; they couldn't have done it without 9/11 and the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Lots of people mention that concept, but I don't think it flies. With the fed.s ass deep in alligators dealing with "real" national enemies, I'd venture to say the fed.s are less able to keep a very close watch on the garden variety of insubordinate citizens. Our fed.s security measures are a response to those - "troublemakers" a.k.a. Muslim fundamentalists - just like Mr. Jefferson's response of mobilizing the nation's navy to deal with the ancestors of the Muslims we are dealing with today. The story won't end with our dealings with the Muslims. They will continue to wear down our economy as other nations look on and then later those same nations that are spectators now, will have their fight with the Muslims. .....and lest those days be shortened - no flesh would be saved alive. Matt. 24 Till that time I like President Madisons admonishment - It is a settled policy of America, that as peace is better than war, war is better than tribute. The United States, while they wish for war with no nation, will buy peace with none.
I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it. - Thomas Jefferson #9. To: robin, tzf90 (#3) You know, them muslim pirates, to hell with them caribbeaners.
''the messianic side of Americans can be tiresome.'' - Nicolas Sarkozy #10. To: christine (#6) (Edited) Yes. He must be published for his shock value, because I've never heard him speak that he didn't sound impaired and idiotic. Not every Englishman with a good vocabulary has anything important to say.
#11. To: Critter (#7) He must have been on his good behavior.
#12. To: all (#11) Anyone who wishes to decide Christopher Hitchens' merits are welcome to do so. Below are a couple of links. You are welcome to add your own. I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it. - Thomas Jefferson Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
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