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Today’s war-torn Mideast is not yesterday’s Europe

In recent weeks, politicians and pundits have likened the Syrian and Iraqi civil wars to the Thirty Years’ War and the other so-called religious wars that divided Europe in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. It’s easy to see what gave rise to the comparisons. In Europe, the warring parties were mostly Christians, but often one side supported Protestantism and the other Catholicism. In today’s Middle East wars, the combatants are mostly Muslims, but Sunnis and Shiites tend to be on opposite sides.

There are several dangers in making these comparisons, however.

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One is that they reinforce prejudices. Westerners tend to see history as linear, with the passing of years representing progress. Comparing 17th century Europe with today’s Middle East suggests the latter is trailing far behind the West’s historical “progress,” in that it is still struggling with the kind of religious differences that were resolved centuries ago in Europe. That is a dangerous and erroneous assumption.

A view of today’s Middle East as yesterday’s Europe also suggests that the region should be pushing for an “Arab Westphalia,” a settlement similar to the one that ended the terrible Thirty Years’ War in 1648. Unfortunately, Westphalia, or rather what it has come to symbolize, is part of the current problem.

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The Westphalian international order is based on the belief that the world should be divided into sovereign nation states, each responsible for its own internal affairs, while also adhering to common values enshrined as international law. Religion, in this construct, is removed from politics, with the state as neutral guardian for religious rights, which are seen as part of wider human rights. For many in the Middle East, these ideas are simply part of Western imperialism and at odds with a different conception of the relationship between faith and politics.

Another danger with the comparison is that it is based on a faulty and far-too-simplistic understanding of European history. Early-modern European conflicts such as the Thirty Years’ War are often thought of as “religious wars.” But in 17th century Europe, as in the Middle East today, the reality was more complicated.

This provides a major contrast with the present conflicts, which have used religion as a primary motivator. Though contested, the imperial constitution remained acceptable to all parties precisely because it was simply Christian rather than exclusively Protestant or Catholic. Rather than taking religion out of politics, Westphalia continued the line already adopted in the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 of adding to the complexity of the imperial constitution, making it harder for local disputes to polarize around simple, clearly defined issues.

A second striking contrast between the European wars of old and today’s conflicts is the virtual absence in the 17th century of “holy war” arguments. All the belligerents fought using professional soldiers. Even when hard-pressed, the Protestant Bohemian rebels preferred to negotiate with the Muslim Ottoman sultan for regular troops rather than arm their own peasants in a holy war.

The war was still religious in the sense that it was interpreted by clergy of all hues as divine punishment for their congregation’s sins. Instead of taking up arms against their neighbors, parishioners were urged to fight their inner demons, reforming their behavior to correspond to official ideals of piety and obedience.

This suggests at least one commonality between the conflicts in the 17th and 21st centuries. Secularism was, and is, a minority belief. Seventeenth-century Europeans could diverge sharply between militants and moderates. The latter were more pragmatic and appear more reasonable to us today, but they rarely accepted tolerance as anything other than a necessary evil to avoid further bloodshed.

Ultimately, it was pragmatism that prevailed in 1648, even though genuine tolerance proved elusive for centuries. Sometimes half-measures are enough.

Peter H. Wilson is a professor of history at the University of Hull and the author of “The Thirty Years War: Europe’s Tragedy.”

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