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  36
 | L. Neil Smith's
 THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
 Number 36, February 1, 1998
 
 
 
The Campaign to Ban Land Mines
By Vin Suprynowicz 
[email protected]
 
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
 
     
        "A well-regulated population being necessary to the 
    security of a police state, the right of the Government to 
    keep and destroy arms shall not be infringed."
     
          We're instructed that the reason Mrs. Diana Spencer Windsor's 
death is a tragedy for the entire civilized world is "because of her 
charities."
The late "princess" -- who died following a traffic accident in 
Paris last year -- did indeed take time to visit sick children and 
AIDS sufferers.  That's much to her credit, even if I'm old enough to 
believe it's a tad unseemly to indulge one's charitable instincts in 
the glare of the spotlight.
 But the "charity" we hear most about was Mrs. Windsor's support 
for the campaign to ban land mines.
 The great Russian strategist Marshal Zhukov commented that he 
expected to lose 10 percent of his men if he ordered them to cross a 
minefield -- about the same percentage he expected to lose charging 
across a field defended by a machine gun.
 Therefore, he concluded that if men could be shot for cowardice 
for refusing to charge a machine gun, the commander should have no 
more qualms about ordering his men to advance rapidly across a known 
minefield.
 Since commanders in the West are considerably daintier about 
issuing such orders, land mines -- to this day -- are actually 
considered more effective at slowing down an advancing enemy force, 
than machine guns.
 Land mines allow smaller nations and armies to successfully defend 
prepared positions against larger forces -- or even to dissuade those 
forces from attacking in the first place, sparing many casualties on 
both sides.
 Germany deploys few if any mines to guard against invasion by the 
Swiss.  But tiny nations like Switzerland and Israel employ all they 
can lay their hands on, and wisely so.
 Now, the terrible thing about land mines is that they can remain 
armed, years after hostilities have ceased.  Thus, civilians not 
infrequently are killed or maimed when they return to areas over which 
wars were fought, months or even years before.
 Indeed, the world would be a better place if there were fewer 
mines.  One step in this direction would be for powerful nations to 
eliminate their standing armies -- always so much more willing to 
conduct aggressive operations than civilian militias -- and stop 
conquering their neighbors.  England could set an example by granting 
independence to the sovereign nations of Scotland, Ulster, and Wales.
 In the meantime, it might indeed make sense to sign a convention 
agreeing to develop land mines which either go inert, or (probably 
better) automatically blow themselves up, after a fixed period in the 
ground.
 But attempting to ban mines entirely is not only plain goofy 
(anyone with the motivation can make them in his garage, out of tin 
cans, a handful of nails, and a couple of shotgun shells), but 
presents the same problems as universal victim disarmament ... another 
mental aberration which seems to have incubated largely in England.
 Why were whole villages recently massacred in Rwanda, by men with 
machetes?  Because the private ownership of firearms for self-defense 
has long been banned in that former British colony.
 North Korea and Red China don't give a fig for earnest referenda 
adopted in Oslo or Geneva.  But should the United States Army ever be 
ordered -- by mentally deficient nuevo-Chamberlains -- to remove all 
our land mines from the Korean DMZ "as a good-faith example," with the 
result that a desperate North Korean Army promptly seized South Korea, 
would these do-gooders now campaigning for a "land-mine ban" take 
personal responsibility for all the South Korean women raped, all the 
South Korean professors and politicians and industrialists kidnapped, 
jailed, or executed?
 Of course not ... any more than they now accept blame for the 
recent deaths of all the Rwandan families whom they disarmed, so long 
ago.
 They would merely wring their hands and pass another earnest 
resolution, urging the Communists to accept Red Cross inspection of 
their new South Korean labor camps.
 If land mines were banned, after Syria conquered Israel, they 
could then put the Israeli prime minister on trial for the "war crime" 
of deploying land mines, couldn't they?
 If Mrs. Windsor had wanted to make better use of those "charity" 
funds, she could have built factories in undeveloped corners of the 
world, where people need work.  Or she could have bought them all 
guns, to help guarantee their freedom.
 That women now abed in England may choose to live vicariously 
through such a star-crossed "princess" makes a certain amount of 
sense.  They are, after all, born into a society where a person with 
the wrong accent, or skin color, can never hope to do more than dream 
of a royal marriage, and dinner at the Ritz.
 In America, however, we had long prided ourselves -- at least 
until the recent ascent of the welfare-police state -- that anyone 
could achieve wealth and prominence, based on nothing more than his or 
her own labor and native intelligence.
 That's why Americans don't need "princesses" ... right?
 
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las 
Vegas Review-Journal.  Readers may contact him via e-mail at 
[email protected].  The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at 
http://www.nguworld.com/vindex/.  The column is syndicated in the 
United States and Canada via Mountain Media Syndications, P.O. Box 
4422, Las Vegas Nev. 89127.  Vin's forthcoming book, a collection of 
columns with the working title Send In The Waco Killers, will be 
published this May by Huntington Press.
 
 
 
It is moral weakness, rather than villainy,  that accounts for most of 
the evil in the universe -- and feeble-hearted allies, far rather than 
your most powerful enemies,  who are likeliest to do you an injury you 
cannot recover from.
-- Bretta Martyn
 
 
 
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