Behind the Headlines... A World Without the United States
by Melvin Rhodes
Imagine
the unimaginable: The president, in the White House, the vice president, at
the National Observatory, and all Cabinet members, in their respective agency
headquarters, are killed in a terrorist attack on downtown Washington. So are
all members of Congress, except the few who happen to be out of town.
"What happens to the Republic?
At the moment, the answer is alarming: chaos."
So began a disturbing article in
the Dec. 10 Washington Post.
Continuing, the writer added: "The
Sept. 11 attacks and subsequent release of anthrax on Capitol Hill have left
many lawmakers and constitutional experts concerned that the federal government
does not have adequate succession and continuity plans in place to recover from
a catastrophic terrorist attack on Washington."
Pause for a moment and consider:
What would the world be like without America? Can you imagine what our lives
might be like without the superpower on which the world relies so much?
A world without America
The world has not been the same since
Sept. 11. The possibility of an even deadlier terrorist attack on Washington
in the foreseeable future cannot be ruled out. If such an attack were to take
place, it is difficult to imagine how the United States could continue to be
the leader of the free world. The consequences would be unimaginable—except
that the Bible prophesies such a time.
The biblical book of Revelation reveals
that the world will come under the domination of a union of 10 "kings"
(rulers or heads of state) immediately before the return of Jesus Christ (Revelation
17:12-14). What could precipitate the transfer of dominance from the United
States to this European-centered group of nations, which "will give their
power and authority" to a leader the Bible calls "the beast"?
Since World War II the United States
has been the undisputed leader of the Western world. Before the United States,
the British Empire was the world's leading power for well over a century.
The United States and Great Britain share similar values. Nobody alive can remember
a time when one of these nations was not the major force in the world.
Certainly neither the United States
nor Britain has been a perfect world leader. But it is equally certain that
domination by other nations would have made the world an entirely different
place. A look at fairly recent history well illustrates this.
Before the supremacy of the English-speaking
powers, the major Western player was France, whose King Louis XIV (1643-1715)
vainly declared, "I am the state." The concept of the divine right
of kings was essential to centralized state power. Before France, Spain was
dominant. "His Most Catholic Majesty," the king of Spain, saw himself
and his country as instruments of God in spreading the faith of the "one
true catholic church" to the four corners of the earth. If people did not
willingly convert, then there were other means of persuasion.
England and her colonies were to
struggle against these forces of despotism for more than 250 years, from the
time of Queen Elizabeth I (1558-1603) until the Battle of Waterloo in 1815,
when Napoleon's dreams of world conquest were finally defeated.
A century later Germany's kaiser
and later Hitler made further attempts at world conquest. Japan was also set
on imposing her will on the world. Afterwards, Russian and Chinese communism
threatened the peace of the planet.
For most of this time a "multitude
of nations" (Genesis 48:19), biblically prophesied though rarely recognized
as such, was the primary force that defended liberty. After Pearl Harbor that
was to change, with the United States taking over from Great Britain and its
Commonwealth associates the role of the leading military power. However imperfectly,
both Britain and America based their political, economic and religious systems
on the value and freedom of
the individual.
In contrast, most continental-European
nations historically have placed little value on individual freedom; they have
subscribed instead to variants of Louis XIV's famous dictum emphasizing
strong central government at the expense of individual liberty. In Western Europe
this has been tempered since World War II during America's period of supremacy.
A post—Anglo-Saxon world is
frightening to contemplate. Whoever takes over as the dominant power will not
share the values of the United States and Britain. Maybe some of those principles
would remain, but certainly not all.
How it might happen is a topic for
another discussion. But, for the moment, imagine the unimaginable—Washington
gone. What would happen?
Who would lead the West?
"The West" is an all-encompassing
term that goes back to the
Western Roman Empire. When the military and political empire collapsed in the
fifth century, the church became the empire. As historian Paul Johnson put it
in his 1972 book The Offshore Islanders: "The Church was the continuation
of the empire." He added: "Politics and religion
were inseparable."
The Roman Empire was the fourth empire
of Daniel's vision of Daniel 2 and one of the four beasts of Daniel 7.
For 12 centuries, from the time of Emperor Constantine (306-337), when the Roman
church became the state church, until the Protestant Reformation in the 16th
century, the Catholic Church was a powerful force in the history of the West.
During the Protestant Reformation,
England broke with the church of Rome. Theoretically it was now free to act
independently of Rome. But, until its ascendancy was fully realized, England
had to defend herself against continental Catholic powers that were willing
to use force to subdue her. In the course of time Britain became the dominant
Western power. Her multitude of nations girdling the globe were to become the
defenders of the West against the French emperor Napoleon and Germany's
kaiser and Hitler. America was to continue that role as the leader of the free
world.
What, then, is the West?
To people in Britain and the United
States, as well as the peoples of northwestern Europe, the emphasis is on freedom
of the individual, freedom of expression, freedom of religion, democracy, human
rights, economic freedom and property rights. Neither country has been perfect
in these areas, but this is where most people would put their emphasis.
But, in a wider sense, the West comprises
all the nations that can trace their history and culture back to the nations
that were once part of the Western Roman Empire. England and some other countries
of northwestern Europe separated themselves from the Western church in the 1500s.
These states went on to embrace democratic systems of government, with emphasis
on basic freedoms for individual
citizens.
Most of the other Western nations,
however, maintained their loyalty to the "mother church" and, until
well into the 20th century,
retained strictly hierarchical, monarchical forms of government.
But their common cultural heritage
goes back to Rome. Interestingly, the 1957 Treaty of Rome began the long and
arduous process of bringing most of these nations back together in the European
Union.
These nations make up the majority
of Western nations. They have tacitly recognized the American leadership of
the West since 1945. But, if America were to suffer devastating setbacks, what
would these nations do? Would they sit back and let themselves be defeated by
the forces of militant Islam, a force that has threatened them previously in
their history? Would they wait and see if somebody else replaced the United
States as leader of the "free world"? What is the free world, anyway?
Uppermost in their minds would be
the need to preserve their independence, economic well-being and way of life.
Western nations are trading nations. They depend on trade, business and the
prosperity of the capitalist system. Never mind freedom of religion or freedom
of the individual. Historically, those values became important only during Britain's
and America's preeminence. With America gone, who would care about such
expensive niceties? The security of the state would be of paramount importance.
Jobs and the economy would be next
on the list.
Daniel 11 states that, at the time
of the end, a powerful force known as the king of the South will push against
or attack the king of the North (verse 40). This threatens the security and
prosperity of those under the king of the North. They react with massive military
force, suggestive of advanced technology, which is not possible without wealth.
The United States and Canada are
presently in alliance with the other Western nations. But they will not be a
part of the 10 nations that come together in the prophesied revival of the Roman
Empire. These nations most likely will come from the same geographical area
as the nations that made up the original Roman Empire, nations that have signed
the Treaty of Rome, the economic union that is rapidly being transformed into
a political and military union.
An ever-closer union
In recent months some of these countries
have made a dramatic and unprecedented change—the replacement of their
national currencies with one multinational currency, the euro. Of the 15 European
Union (EU) nations, 12 have become a single market to a greater degree than
ever before. At the same time, the 15 are busy negotiating with 10 other European
nations that are likely to be members of the EU by 2005. France and Germany
have proposed a new European constitution that would also unite the EU nations
politically.
Militarily, a significant step has
been taken as a direct consequence of the events of Sept. 11. To the surprise
of everyone concerned, all 15 members of the EU agreed to send troops as part
of the international security force for Afghanistan. This is unprecedented.
Three of the 15 are neutral countries. Never before have all 15 agreed on anything
militarily. This is a reflection of the dramatic shift that has changed thinking
around the world since the terrorist attacks on America.
At the present,
most of the nations of the EU are also members of NATO, the military alliance
that links North America and Western Europe.
After Sept. 11 the United States
asked NATO to invoke Article 5 of the NATO Treaty. This enables any member country
to claim the military support of other members when attacked by a nation from
outside the alliance. Originally this was intended to help any European nation
attacked by the Soviet Union or its allies. Article 5 had never before been
invoked. It is of supreme irony that the first nation to request the invoking
of Article 5 was the United States, until now the ultimate guarantor of the
freedom of the other member states.
It has often been said since the
terrorist attacks on New York and Washington that the world will never be the
same. Yet it will be some time before the implications and consequences
will be fully realized.
Sept. 11 is frequently compared to
the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, America's second-biggest
loss of life in one day. That attack awoke a sleeping giant, the United States.
By the end of the war less than four years later, America was the world's
greatest military power.
Could it be that one of the consequences
of Sept. 11 will be the awakening of another sleeping giant, the European Union,
out of which will rise the final resurrection of the Roman Empire? We shouldn't
rule out this possibility. Make no mistake about it, the prophecies of Daniel
and Revelation concerning the rise of a new end-time superpower will
come to pass. It's our responsibility to watch world trends and events
so we will not be caught unprepared. GN
Recommended Reading
What
does the Bible prophesy about our geopolitical scene at the time
of the end? Never before has mankind so needed to understand the
eye-opening truths you'll discover in the free booklets The
United States and Britain in Bible Prophecy, The Book of Revelation
Unveiled and You Can Understand Bible Prophecy.
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