As we mark the 12th anniversary of 9/11, and less than 24 hours after the president addressed the nation on possible military action against Syria, we are reminded once again of the debt we owe to the men and women—black and white, Christians and atheists, young and old—who have made the ultimate sacrifice for the ongoing security of America and places far beyond.
And, as the president reminded us last night, this is not a recent development, but one that’s been ongoing for almost a century.
The weight of this burden has never been distributed fairly, and there’s a reason for that. Whatever the nation decides with regard to Syria, there is a perfectly understandable level of battle fatigue and war-weariness—especially after the lies, and the loss of life in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But before we’re all tempted to become entirely pessimistic and inward looking, it’s actually worth remembering why the world continues to look to the United States, even when her national interests are not directly threatened. Nobody said it better than Winston Churchill back in 1943 when Europe was in peril and the United States intervened in the Second World War:









