Right before the Second World War, the regimes in Germany and Japan had become ideological machines that threatened the stability of the entire world. In Germany, Hitler’s totalitarian state mobilized the nation under the creed of racial supremacy. Every institution, schools, media, courts, even churches, was bent into the service of the Nazi worldview. Dissent was crushed through the Gestapo and the SS. Millions were enslaved as forced laborers, while Jews, Roma, the disabled, and political opponents were marked for extermination in an industrial genocide that culminated in the Holocaust. The war itself was framed as a war of annihilation: entire populations in Eastern Europe were targeted for enslavement or eradication in pursuit of the Nazi vision of Lebensraum.
Japan followed a different but equally destructive path. The state fused emperor worship with militant nationalism, demanding absolute loyalty and sacrifice. The cult of the divine emperor justified imperial conquest across Asia, while the Bushidō ethic was weaponized to sanctify death in battle. Surrender was taught to be dishonorable; death for the emperor was glorified as the highest virtue. This fanaticism gave rise to the infamous kamikaze pilots, young men ordered to crash their planes into American ships, and suicidal banzai charges that wasted thousands of lives in hopeless assaults.
What made these regimes so dangerous was the fact that millions embraced them as if they were divine missions. In Germany, Hitler was not merely a political leader; he was exalted as the Führer, the embodiment of the nation’s destiny. His words carried the weight of scripture and were endlessly preached through rallies, broadcasts, and propaganda that blurred the line between politics and liturgy. The Nazi Party created rituals, torchlight parades, salutes, mass rallies at Nuremberg, that functioned like sacred ceremonies, binding the people into a cult of blood and soil. Children were indoctrinated from the earliest age in the Hitler Youth, taught that to die for the Reich was the highest honor.
Japan mirrored this same religious intensity in its own form. The emperor was not a politician but a living god, the divine descendant of the sun goddess Amaterasu. His commands were treated as sacred edicts, and loyalty to him was loyalty to heaven itself. Both systems were, in essence, political religions.
When the Allies finally broke the military power of Germany and Japan, they did more than conquer armies and topple governments, they humiliated the gods themselves. In Germany, Hitler’s suicide in a Berlin bunker shattered the illusion of the Führer as an invincible prophet. The Reich he had promised would last a thousand years lay in ashes after barely twelve. Concentration camps were liberated, and the sacred mission of the Aryan race collapsed into the undeniable reality of gas chambers and mass graves. The god of Nazism had failed, and the religion of racial destiny was exposed as a cult of death.
In Japan, the defeat was even more dramatic. The emperor was forced by the Americans to renounce his divinity publicly.2 The god of the Japanese people became just a man. Hiroshima and Nagasaki obliterated not only two cities but also the myth of divine protection and invincibility. The Bushidō-fueled dream of imperial destiny ended in surrender, and the same soldiers who had once sworn to die for the emperor now watched him bow to the will of foreign occupiers. The sacred aura that had justified conquest, martyrdom, and mass sacrifice was stripped away in an instant.
Within a single generation after their defeat, both Germany and Japan rose from devastation to become stable, prosperous democracies. In Germany, the rubble of the Third Reich gave way to the Wirtschaftswunder, the “economic miracle.” Factories opened, industries modernized, and within decades, West Germany had become one of the leading economies of the world. At the same time, democratic institutions took root: multiparty elections, a strong rule of law, and checks on state power. The same nation that had once waged total war on Europe was now a reliable partner in peace and a cornerstone of the Western alliance.
Japan underwent a parallel transformation. Under American occupation, its feudal-style militarism was dismantled, and a new constitution enshrined parliamentary democracy, civil rights, and limits on state power. Far from returning to conquest, Japan poured its energy into technological advancement, trade, and education. By the 1960s and 1970s, Japan had become an economic powerhouse, exporting innovation and culture around the globe.
When America invaded Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003, it did so with the confidence of a nation that had already proven it could remake shattered societies. The memory of Germany and Japan loomed large in the minds of policymakers. Twice in the 20th century, the United States had not only defeated violent totalitarian regimes but had rebuilt those nations into thriving, democratic allies. Germany and Japan had gone from enemies bent on global domination to pillars of the free world. South Korea, too, had emerged from the chaos of war into prosperity and democracy. Washington assumed Iraq and Afghanistan could follow the same trajectory.
The reasoning seemed straightforward. These countries, like Germany and Japan, were ruled by brutal regimes that had terrorized their people and threatened global security. Saddam Hussein’s Iraq was a police state marked by mass graves, chemical attacks, expansion, and a cult of personality. Afghanistan under the Taliban was a medieval theocracy that harbored terrorists and crushed women under rigid oppression. To American leaders, the situation looked familiar: remove the dictators, topple the regime, and then introduce democratic institutions, free markets, and constitutional limits. With sufficient aid and oversight, the people, freed from tyranny, would naturally embrace liberty and prosperity.
But the American project in Iraq and Afghanistan collapsed into catastrophe. Trillions of dollars were spent, thousands of American lives were lost, and yet the results were the opposite of what Washington envisioned. In Iraq, the fall of Saddam Hussein unleashed a wave of sectarian bloodshed. Shia militias, empowered by newfound dominance, sought revenge and control under the guidance of clerics. Sunnis, stripped of the power they had held for decades, turned to insurgency, eventually fueling Al-Qaeda in Iraq and later the rise of ISIS, the most brutal jihadist movement of the 21st century.
Afghanistan followed an equally devastating trajectory. When U.S. troops withdrew in 2021, the entire system the U.S. built collapsed in mere days. The Taliban returned to Kabul without resistance, reclaiming the very power they had lost twenty years earlier. Instead of producing stable allies, the interventions left behind shattered states and emboldened enemies. In Iraq, America unintentionally created the conditions for Iran’s expansion and ISIS’s rise. In Afghanistan, it fought the longest war in American history only to see the country fall back into the hands of the very regime it had overthrown.
Why did America succeed in Japan and Germany but fail in Iraq and Afghanistan?
The ideologies that dragged Germany and Japan into destruction were powerful, but they were ultimately state-driven constructs, manufactured, amplified, and enforced to unify the nation around a central figure. Both systems functioned like religions, but religions bound to mortal men. Their rituals, their scriptures, their claims to truth, all orbited around a single earthly center. And when those figures fell, the ideologies fell with them. Once the central pillars were broken, the systems they upheld collapsed, leaving a vacuum that could be filled by a new order. This was why democratic institutions and market reforms could take root so quickly: the old gods were dead, and the people were freed from their spell.
But Iraq and Afghanistan were not ruled by a passing ideology or the charisma of a single ruler. Neither Saddam Hussein nor the Taliban was the true god of those societies. The god of Iraq and Afghanistan was Allah, transcendent, untouchable, and eternal. When Saddam swung from the gallows, the faith that ordered life in Iraq remained intact. When the Taliban were driven from Kabul, the theological soil that sustained them was not uprooted. Unlike Hitler or Hirohito, Allah could not be killed, dethroned, or humiliated. This god was the absolute sovereign in the Muslim imagination. And His sovereignty stood in direct contradiction to everything America hoped to impose.
The Globalization of Christian Ethics
Whether in Germany and Japan or in Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States sought to export the very system that had yielded liberty, prosperity, and stability at home, a system built on democratic institutions, free markets, and constitutional limits. The logic seemed straightforward: if this system had birthed the American order, why should it not be universally applicable, capable of rebuilding other shattered nations? This is not to sanitize America’s self-interest or its ambition to secure allies; such motives are part of human nature. Yet what critics denounced as “American imperialism” was, in reality, the engine that turned devastated nations into stable, prosperous allies.
But what America was exporting was never merely a political arrangement. It was an ethical system. The institutions, parliaments, constitutions, markets, were only the outer shell. At their core was a moral framework shaped by centuries of Christian thought: a vision of law, labor, and liberty ordered toward human flourishing. What America carried abroad was not just governance; it was a way of understanding man, power, and society. Christianity had always been concerned with life, and life abundant. Its moral law was ordered toward the good of man: “I came so that you may have life, and have it abundantly” (John 10:10).
Over centuries, this theological conviction was translated into concrete institutions. Augustine’s vision of the two cities, Aquinas’s doctrine of natural law, Locke’s contract theory, and the Protestant work ethic all became building blocks of Western civilization. Power was limited because man was sinful. Labor was dignified because man was made in God’s image. Property and covenant were respected because stewardship was a moral duty. Even the state itself was justified only insofar as it served justice and human flourishing. Church and state were separated in accordance with Christ’s command: “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s” (Matthew 22:21). This separation was not an act of secular rebellion but the natural fulfillment of Christian teaching.
Over time, these Christian ethics became cloaked in secular, humanistic language. As Western civilization matured, Christian ethics were recast in universal terms that transcended explicit theology. The Enlightenment’s language of “natural rights” and “social contracts” was, in truth, the secularized continuation of the Christian vision. Over time, this moral framework was globalized and woven into international charters and institutions. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, for example, enshrines principles that make little sense apart from the Judeo-Christian inheritance: the inherent dignity of the individual, the sanctity of life, and the moral obligation of rulers to serve justice. Nations aspiring to join the modern world could not escape adopting this moral grammar born of Christianity. Whether in constitutions, treaties, or global organizations, the ethical DNA of Christianity, repackaged in secular humanist language, became the assumed foundation of what it meant to be “civilized.”
Postwar nation-building did not require mass conversion to Christianity in order to yield similar outcomes. What mattered was whether a society’s theological soil was compatible with Christian ethics. In Germany, that soil was already present. For centuries, Christian thought had shaped German life, and even under the darkness of Nazism, voices like Dietrich Bonhoeffer reminded the nation of its true foundation. His resistance to Hitler and his theology of costly discipleship embodied a Christian ethic that could not be extinguished. When Hitler fell, Germany did not need to invent a new moral order; it returned to one it had long known. Repentance from Nazism meant rediscovering its Christian inheritance, which allowed democracy, human rights, and rule of law to take root quickly and endure.
Japan, though not historically Christian, possessed cultural and ethical traditions that did not resist Western institutions. The collapse of State Shintō and the emperor cult created a vacuum into which democratic ideals could enter. Japan was able to adapt to constitutional democracy and free markets without a theological clash. While Christianity remained a minority faith, the society proved compatible enough with Judeo-Christian principles of law, rights, and civic order for the system to flourish.
This is an excerpt from my book, Islam, Israel, and the West, Chapter 5: “Foreign Gods.” To order the book click on the image below.