In relation to my previous review about Picking Up Plans in Palma here now is a guest post from blogger/writer Matthew Quinn! Let him take it away with a little treatise on World Domination!
Guest Post by Matthew W. Quinn
In fiction, whenever there’s an Evil Empire
to be found, world domination is their goal. S.M. Stirling’s Draka
believed their social system could not survive so long as there was any
alternative and so sought self-preservation through world domination. J.R.R.
Tolkien’s Sauron called
himself King of Men and Lord of the Earth. There’s plenty of real-life
precedent — Hitler sought to dominate Europe and in his second book revealed he
thought that a Nazified Europe’s last and greatest enemy would be the United
States. The first Soviet leaders believed in World Revolution and
even Stalin’s “socialism in one country” was not a permanent
renunciation of that goal. Even Osama bin Laden, a pirate rather than a
Dark Lord, demanded
the United States convert to Islam.
In the Afrikanerverse, the world where “Coil
Gun” and “Picking
Up Plans In Palma” take place, there was no Nazism, this world’s version of
WWII destroyed the USSR and its motley collection of “anti-imperialist” allies,
and an early chastisement of the Wahabis left radical Islam a purely local
phenomenon. Instead, the Evil Empire is the Afrikaner Confederation, a white
supremacist (for a certain value of “white” that changes based on geography and
political convenience) empire stretching from Cape Town to the southern fringes
of the Sudan and from the Bight of Biafra across the Red Sea and southern
Arabia into India and southeast Asia. Alongside a collection of traditionalist
and authoritarian allies like the Hejaz, an enlarged Persia, a Sikh regime
governing our world’s Pakistan, and the Kingdom of Thailand, the Afrikaners
stand for what they view as traditional values and God-ordained hierarchies in
the face of the corrosive Enlightenment liberalism characterizing the United
States and its allies in the League of Democracies.
And unlike in our world, this Cold War ends
with a bang rather than a whimper. “Coil Gun” takes place the opening night of
WWIII, in which the Afrikaners use Australian backing for Indian nationalist
rebels and refusal to submit to their vengeful demands as a casus belli to launch a nuclear
first-strike on the United States.
What is the Afrikaners’ aim? Some Americans
would claim this was the Confederation’s long-awaited bid for world domination,
to impose their hierarchical social order and stern religion on all mankind.
And it’s not like there wouldn’t be members of the Confederation’s ruling Theonomic Party
eager “to bring the whole world into obedience to Christ.”
However, despite both sides’ lip service,
the Confederation’s war aims are surprisingly limited for something that looks like
a grab for all the marbles. They’re more interested in destroying all League
members and allies on their immediate borders in Africa, Asia, and the Indian
Ocean, either conquering them outright or reducing them to puppets. Returning
Europe and the United States to
the faith once for all delivered unto the saints, though a welcome thought,
is not a realistic aim, and crippling the League of Democracies militarily and
economically for a generation or more will work just as well. It’s true that
history has seen conquerors try to take on everybody at once (most fail sooner or later, but some do well), but most
conquerors have far more limited aims. Not only are the Afrikaners generally a
prudent people, but picking a fight with the Chinese Empire (a neutral Great
Power they’re sparred with before) at the same time they challenge this world’s
NATO (spanning Europe, North America, and Japan) would daunt all but the most
deranged.
Unfortunately (for the Afrikaners), as
depicted in “Coil Gun,” things don’t work out. Always remember how no battle
plan survives contact with the enemy. In this case, despite the Afrikaners
shooting first, the League of Democracies’ orbital military infrastructure is
able to not only withstand their attack and prevent significant damage to their
respective homelands but totally devastates the Afrikaners and their allies.
This is what happens when
you don’t educate most of your population to the degree needed for them to
reach their full potential and when
you have to spend lots of resources on the instruments of war and repression
rather than on science.