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Cruise Scientific Visual Statistics Studio Visual Statistics Illustrated |
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Perspective on Wars
of the Western Civilization
Era that started with Columbus sailing to America in 1492 and sometimes called
the Century of Spain, was punctuated by the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) when
the Protestant States of Europe (England, Scandinavian states, some German
principalities and others) were at war with the Empire of Spain. In the series
of wars between the Thirty Years' War and the Napoleonic Wars (1701-11763)
Britain's main adversaries were Spain and France. During the Napoleonic Wars
(1789-1815) the principal adversary of Britain was France and it was the
British-Russian alliance that defeated Napoleon.
The British-Russian alliance which in its final phases also included the United
States as a principal combatant also won the World Wars. The war cycles of the
Western Civilization shows that these wars followed a cycle with average
amplitude of about 50 years. The principal combatants in these wars were Empires
of Britain, France, Spain, Russia, and Austria.
Following the Second World War, the victorious British Empire mutated into an
alliance of countries united to a degree by the common language, common
ideology, common economic interests, and, at the innermost level, by the
Protestant religion with its focus on the Old Testament. Inspection of the above
visualization of the expansion of the British Empire indicates that this new
alliance, centered on the United States and the Great Britain, will continue its
expansion eastward.
![]() Extrapolation of the East-West economic trends |
![]() Observed East-West economic trends |
![]() Linear projection of the deflected trends |
Economic trends Following the disintegration of the Soviet Union, interest in economic determinants of warfare was reflected in the widespread attention paid to Paul Kennedy's (1987) The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500 to 2000. Kennedy convincingly argued that the outcomes of major wars are determined by the economic potential of the adversaries. Within this context arises the question of the mutual interrelatedness of wars and the economic trends.
On a global scale, no division among
civilizations is more marked than that between the civilizations of the East and
the West. Following the decline of the Roman Empire, the economies of the
Eastern countries outperformed the economies of the West. After the conquest of
the Americas by Europeans, the economic trends of the East and West began to
converge. The First World War marks the beginning of the decline of the West. If
that trend would continue, the East and West economic trends would likely
intersect around the turn of the centuries.
However, following the World War II, the slope of these economic trends
flattened and a linear projection of these flattened trends
shows that they are likely to intersect around the fourth decade of the 21st
century. As the 1941-1945 war with Japan delayed the projected intersection of
the economic trends of the East and West economies, it is likely that the
Western countries will try to postpone the gradual disappearance of their
superiority by initiating a war, this time not against Japan, but against China.
As contrasted with the decline of Russia as the world power following the
disintegration of the Soviet Union, China experienced phenomenal economic
growth. As early as 1996, De Mente estimated that "some time before the middle
of the 21st century China will be the most powerful nation on Earth."
![]() China Pincers (U.S. military bases in Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, South Korea, Japan) |
Opening the China pincers The disintegration of the Soviet Union, precipitated by the fall of Berlin wall in 1989, was followed by a rapid succession of wars initiated by the United States and Great Britain, resulting in encircling Russia by the NATO armies, military operations against the Islamic countries of the Middle East, and opening the China pincers. It is likely that the pincers will close, possibly using the Taiwan-China conflict as a trigger, before the economic trends intercept.
![]() Chinese Dragon |
Dragon slayers
China is one of the main enemies of the evangelists. Joseph Lam in his (1997)
book China: The Last Superpower maintains that China is readying herself for a
global contest. The main tenets of the Lam's book approximate that of Samuel
Huntington's (1997) national bestseller The Clash of Civilizations and the
Remaking of World Order.
Among the principal statements of the Lam's book are the following assertions:
Antichrist provided Chinese race with clever substitutes for the Mosaic Law
through religious teachers such as Confucius, Lao Zi, and Buddhism. The Great
Dragon that has ruled China for 3,000 years is none other then the anti-Christ
spirit of Lucifer himself. The Great Dragon chose China as it was as far from
Israel as one could get and as the Himalayan Mountains gave Lucifer the high
ground he adores (Isaiah 14:13-14). Thus it is no surprise that so many forms of
animism, demon worship, Hinduism, and Buddhism have been born in the Himalayan
Mountains.
![]() Valley of Megiddo |
Armageddon, Armageddon
Lam maintains that it is no accident that
Chinese-style Marxism and Islamic fundamentalists are allies against the United
States. During the Armageddon, the Pan-Islamic forces, African forces, Russia's
expeditionary forces and the Chinese People's Army will move toward Israel.
United States, Great Britain, and Israel will fight these forces of evil in the
Megiddo valley.
![]() Biblical gauge of severity of military conflicts |
Biblical gauge of severity of military conflicts
Religion-related narratives seem to measure the
intensity of a massacre by the level of the spilled blood. Descriptions of
taking of the Jerusalem Temple by the Crusaders indicate that the spilled blood
reached to the ankles of the invaders. Another narrative of a carnage, this time
by the Roman Army, again in Judea, asserts that the resulting blood level
carried big boulders to the sea. The prediction of the severity of the military
encounter in the Megiddo valley claims that a river of blood flowing from this
confrontation will be so deep that it will reach up to horses' bridles.
See Also
War-related deflections of economic trends in Eastern and
Western civilizations