A month or so ago the Sri Lankan army cornered the remnants of the rebel Tamil Tigers and killed them all. Various and sundry Western voices expressed dismay, exclaiming that by killing them they left no one to negotiate with. A spokeswoman for Chatham House, a British NGO, was particularly upset that the Sri Lankan army brutally ended the forty year war with the even more brutal Tamil Tigers by doing it the old fashioned way, by killing them, and expressed their outrage in no uncertain terms. I have thought about this strange way of thinking, and have come to a reluctant conclusion. It seems wars are no longer to be won, but negotiated into a kind of perpetual conflict, in which neither side is defeated, and the casualty count keeps climbing, despite the valiant efforts by such as Chatham House to ameliorate the suffering.
Thank God there were no NGOs
Around in Patton’s day
For they’d have tried him, goodness knows
For getting in the way
Of all good Germans whom they felt
Would likely stop the war
And all good Nazis would be dealt
With kindly, as before
But no, George Patton told his men
The enemy must die
So his Third Army figured then
That Generals do not lie
They cranked up all their Shermans
And in weather bleak and fine
They killed their share of Germans
And they cracked the Siegfried line
So Hodges, Simpson, George and Ike
Killed Germans by the score
They did what NGOs don’t like
They went and won the war
But not today, for goodness sake
The New York Times would frown
If someone on our side would take
The chance to mow them down
And turn his guns on men who try
To kill us every day
It’s not for us to reason why
It’s just for us to pay
The price in blood the left insists
Is penance for our sins
And they would have us slash our wrists
And cheer when bad guy wins