Read Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome Online
Authors: Victor Davis Hanson
Tags: #Princeton University Press, #0691137900
present a united front to their neighbors, by taking their place not in
the train of some great clan lord but as the defenders of an ideal, of
iso-
nomia
, of Athens itself. The first year of what later generations would
term the
dêmokratia
served to demonstrate that such expectations
were not farfetched. As would happen millennia later, in response to
the French, the Russian, and the Iranian revolutions, attempts by rival
powers to snuff out the alarming new cuckoo in the nest were com-
prehensively, indeed triumphantly, rebuffed. Goethe’s famous words on
the battle of Valmy might have been applied with no less justice to the
first great victories of the first great democratic state: “From here and
today there begins a new epoch in the history of the world.”15
As in Persia, then, so in Attica: something restless, dangerous, and
novel had come into being. Between a global monarchy and a tiny city
that prided itself on its people’s autochthony there might have ap-
peared few correspondences, and yet, as events were to prove, both
were now possessed of an ideology that could have no possible tol-
erance of the other. Perhaps, had democracy remained confined to
Athens, a clash might conceivably have been avoided, but revolutions
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invariably prove exportable. In 499, a series of uprisings across Ionia
succeeded in toppling the tyrants who for decades had been serving the
Persians in the role of quislings; democracies were established in their
place; one year later, an Athenian task force joined the rebels in put-
ting Sardis to the torch. The Athenians themselves, however, dispirited
by their failure to capture the city’s acropolis and by their accidental
incineration of a celebrated temple, had no sooner burned the Lydian
capital than they were scampering back to Attica, gripped by nerves
and regret. Yet panicky though they undoubtedly felt at the notion that
the far-seeing and pitiless eye of the King of Kings might soon be fixed
upon them, they would surely have been even more so had they only
appreciated the precise nature of the beast whose tail they had opted
so cavalierly to tweak, for nothing could have been more calculated
to rouse the fury of the most powerful man on the planet. To Darius,
of course, it went without saying that the Ionian insurgency needed
urgently to be suppressed, and that the terrorist state beyond the Ae-
gean had to be neutralized if the northwestern flank of the empire
were ever to be rendered fully secure. The longer the punishment of
Athens was delayed, the greater was the risk that similar nests of rebels
might proliferate throughout the mountainous and inaccessible wilds
of Greece—a nightmare prospect for any Persian strategist. Geopoli-
tics, however, was far from the only prompting at the back of the Great
King’s mind. Stronghold of terrorists Athens might be, but it had also
stood revealed as a peculiarly viperous stronghold of the Lie. It was for
the good of the cosmos, then, as well as for the future stability of Ionia
that Darius began to contemplate carrying his divinely appointed mis-
sion, his war on terror, to Attica. Staging post in a necessary new phase
of imperial expansion and a blow struck against the demonic foes of
Ahura Mazda: the burning of Athens promised to be both.
Yet if the Athenians had little understanding of the motives and ide-
als of the superpower that was now ranged against them, the Persians
in turn were fatally ignorant of what they faced in the democracy. To
the strategists entrusted with the suppression of the Ionian revolt,
there seemed nothing exceptional about the new form of government;
if anything, it seemed only to have intensified the factionalism that for
so long had made fighting the Yauna akin to shooting fish in a barrel.
From Persia with Love 23
In 494, in a climactic confrontation off the tiny island of Lade, it was
Persia’s spymasters as much as its admirals, and its bribes as much as
its battleships, that served to provoke the final disintegration of the Io-
nian insurgency. Four years on, and the preparations for an expedition
against Athens reflected the same core presumption: that rival factions
were bound to end up dooming the city’s resistance. It was no coin-
cidence, for instance, that Datis, the commander of the Persian task
force, should have been a veteran of the Ionian revolt, a general with
such a specialist’s understanding of how the Yauna functioned that he
could actually speak a few words of Greek. Also on the expedition, and
whispering honeyed reassurances into Datis’s ear as to the welcome
that he was bound to receive, was Hippias, the toppled Pisistratid, evi-
dence of the Persians’ perennial obsession with securing the collabo-
ration of native elites. Yet on this occasion, as events were to prove,
they had miscalculated—and fatally so. For their intelligence was worse
than useless; it was out of date.
The Athenian army that confronted the invaders on the plain of
Marathon, blocking the road that led to their city some twenty miles
to the south, did not, as the Ionian fleet at Lade had, disintegrate. True,
Athens had long been perfervid with rumors of fifth columnists and
profiteers from the Great King’s gold, but it was precisely the Athenians’
awareness of the consequent peril that had prompted them to march
out from behind their city’s walls in the first place. During a siege, af-
ter all, there would have been no lack of opportunity for traitors to
open the gates, but out on the field of battle, where the Greek style of
fighting, warriors advancing side by side in a phalanx, meant that all
had to fight as one or else be wiped out, anyone who wished to live,
even a would-be traitor, had no option but to handle his spear and hold
his shield for the good of all. The battle line at Marathon, in short,
could not be bought. It was to the credit of Datis that he eventually
came to recognize this, but still he would not abandon his conviction
that every Greek city ultimately had its price. In due course, after a
stand-off of several days, he resolved to put this to the test. Dividing
his army, he embarked a sizable task force—including, almost certainly,
his cavalry—and sent it around the Attic coast to see if its appearance
in the harbor off Athens would help to unbar the city’s gates. Yet it was
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precisely this same maneuver that gave the Athenian holding force its
chance. Against all expectations, moving against a foe widely assumed
to be invincible, crossing what many of the Athenians themselves must
have dreaded would prove to be a plain of death, they charged an en-
emy that no Greek army had ever before defeated in open battle. The
reward for their courage was a glorious, an immortal victory. Fearful
still of treachery, however, the exhausted and blood-streaked victors
had no time to savor their triumph. Instead, in the full heat of day
they headed straight back for Athens, “as fast as their legs could take
them.”16 They arrived in the very nick of time, for not long afterward
Persian transport ships began to glide toward the city’s harbor. For a
few hours they lay stationary beyond its entrance; then, as the sun set
at last, they raised anchor, swung around, and sailed away. The threat
of invasion was over—for the moment, at any rate.
To be sure, there was no doubt that what had saved Athens on the
battlefield of Marathon was first and foremost the prowess of its own
citizens: not merely their courage but also the sheer pulverizing impact
of their charge, the heavy crunching of spears and shields into oppo-
nents wearing, at most, quilted jerkins for protection and armed, per-
haps, many of them, only with bows and slings. Yet something more
had been in conflict on that fateful day than flesh and metal alone: Mar-
athon had also been a testing of the stereotypes that both sides had of
the other. The Athenians, by refusing to play the role al otted them by
the Persians’ spymasters, had duly served to convince themselves once
and for al that the watchwords of the democracy—comradeship, equal-
ity, liberty—might indeed be more than slogans. Simultaneously, the su-
perpower that for so long had appeared invincible had been shown to
have feet of clay. The Persians might be defeated, after al . “Barbarians,”
the Ionians had always cal ed them, a people whose language was gib-
berish, who went “bah, bah, bah”—and now, in the wake of Marathon,
the Athenians began to do the same. It was a word that perfectly evoked
their dread of what they had been forced to confront on the day of their
great victory, an alien, mil ing numberless horde, jabbering for their de-
struction. Yet “barbarian,” in the wake of such a battle, could also sug-
gest something more: a sneer, a tone of contempt. A self-assurance, in
short, more than fit to go nose to nose with that of a superpower.
From Persia with Love 25
Here, then, was a measure of the decisiveness of Marathon: that it
helped to purge the Athenians of the deep-rooted inferiority complex
the Greeks had traditionally felt whenever they compared themselves
to the great powers of the Near East. Nor, as the Athenians themselves
never wearied of pointing out, had the victory been won on behalf
of their city alone. In its wake, even those Greeks who loathed the
democracy could walk that little bit taller, confident that the qualities
that distinguished them from foreigners might, just perhaps, be the
mark of their superiority. Not, of course, that a temporary reverse on
the distant frontier of their empire had done anything to diminish the
Persians’ own conceit and sense of entitlement; and so it was, ten years
after Marathon, when Xerxes, Darius’s son and heir, embarked on a
full-scale invasion of Greece, that the resulting conflict served to pro-
vide an authentic clash of ideals. Indeed, on the Persian side, Xerxes’
determination to give form to his sense of global mission was such that
it took precedence over purely military considerations. So it was that,
rather than leading a strike force such as Cyrus would have recognized,
capable of descending on the lumbering infantrymen of the enemy
with the same murderous speed that had always proved so lethal to the
Greeks of Ionia, he opted instead to summon a tribute of contingents
from all the manifold subject peoples of his empire, a coalition if not
of the willing then of the submissively dutiful, at any rate. Naturally,
this swelling of his army with a vast babel of poorly armed levies repre-
sented a fearsome headache for his harassed commissariat, but Xerxes
judged that it was necessary to the proper maintenance of his dignity.
After all, to what did the presence in his train of the full astounding
diversity of his tributaries give glorious expression if not his rank as
the lieutenant on earth of Ahura Mazda? Nor was that all. The rumor
of his approach, assiduously fanned by Persian agents, promised fair
to overwhelm the Greeks with sheer terror—or else, at the thought
of all the potential pickings on offer, with greed. It must have seemed
to Xerxes, as he embarked on his great expedition, that the whole of
Greece would end up dropping like overripe fruit into his lap.
But it did not. Indeed, for al the wel -honed bril iance of the invad-
ers’ propaganda chiefs, they found themselves, over the course of the
invasion, being repeatedly outsmarted by the Greeks. What made this
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al the more striking an upset was that the Persians, in the opening
rounds of the campaign, did indeed have genuine triumphs to trumpet.
At the mountain pass of Thermopylae, for instance, their achievement
in dislodging a force of five thousand heavy infantry from a nearly im-
pregnable position, in wiping out hundreds of the supposedly invincible
Spartans, and in kil ing one of their kings was a thumping one. No won-
der that Xerxes invited sailors from his fleet to tour the Hot Gates, “so
that they might see how the Great King deals with those lunatics who
presume to oppose him.”17 No wonder either that the Peloponnesian
land forces, brought the news of Thermopylae, immediately scuttled
back behind the line of the Isthmus of Corinth and refused to reemerge
from their bolt-hole for almost a year. Clearly, then, for any Greek re-
solved to continue the fight, it was essential to transmute the disaster at
the Hot Gates into a display of heroism sufficiently glorious to inspire
the whole of Greece to continued defiance. Indeed, in the immediate
wake of Thermopylae, with their city defenseless before the Persian
juggernaut, the Athenians had, if anything, an even greater stake than
the Spartans in casting the dead king and his bodyguards as martyrs for
liberty. Perhaps, then, it is an index of their success that the Pelopon-