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revolt against Colombia to acquire what became the Panama Canal
Zone in 1903. The new Panamanian government gave the United
States the French concession to construct the Canal, which the United
States completed in 1914. But President Jimmy Carter returned both
the Zone and the Canal to the Panamanians in 1977.
Yes, in 1945, President Harry Truman ordered the U.S. Army Air
Force to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, thus ending
Japan’s participation in World War II. Yes, for a few years, the
United States was the only power with nuclear
weapons on this planet, but we blackmailed no one. Nor did we take
anyone’s land. By contrast, the Soviet Union incorporated huge
swaths of post-war Poland and Germany.
If we compare the United States to Assyria, Babylonia, Persia,
Greece, and Rome—or for that matter, Ottoman Turkey, Spain,
Portugal, Japan, Russia, Britain, and France—we can only conclude
that the United States was and is the least warlike and least
imperialistic super power in history.
Of course, there is the question of war within the context of a nuclear-
armed Iran. A few years ago, Thomas Friedman of the New York
Times wrote, “I’d rather live with a nuclear Iran because it is
the wisest thing under the circumstances.” Thomas Friedman may
feel this way, but for the leaders of Israel, an Iranian nuclear bomb
and its associated delivery systems raise existential questions.
Can the Jewish state live with an Iran that possesses nuclear weapons
and the means to deliver them? Can it ignore an Iranian leader who
labels the country “a fake regime” that ought to “be wiped off the
face of the Earth?” How should it react to President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad’s plans for a second Holocaust, even as he denies that
the first one ever happened? Millions of Israelis are descendants of
those who died in the Holocaust. In 1981, when Iraq threatened
Israel, Israel’s then prime minister, Menachem Begin, ordered the
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